institutional barriers to distributed energy: understanding and overcoming

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Institutional Barriers to Distributed Energy: Understanding and Overcoming Chris Dunstan Institute for Sustainable Futures, UTS 21 November 2008

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Institutional Barriers to Distributed Energy: Understanding and Overcoming . Chris Dunstan Institute for Sustainable Futures, UTS 21 November 2008. I-Grid Research Program Structure. CSIRO. Management Committee. P2: Market & Economic Modelling. P3: Optimal Siting & Dispatch of DG. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Institutional Barriers to Distributed Energy: Understanding and Overcoming

Institutional Barriers to Distributed Energy:Understanding and Overcoming

Chris DunstanInstitute for Sustainable Futures, UTS

21 November 2008

Page 2: Institutional Barriers to Distributed Energy: Understanding and Overcoming

I-Grid Research Program Structure

P1: Control Methodology

of DG

P2: Market & Economic

Modelling

P3: Optimal Siting & Dispatch

of DG

P4: Instit Barriers, Stakeholder

Engagement & EconomicModelling

P5: I Grid Social Impacts

P6: I Grid in New

Housing Development

P7:OperationalControl &

Energy Management

Management Committee

Economic regulatory barriers & Solutions

Business deliberation

on I Grid & DE

DANCE Model

D-CODE Model

CSIRO

InstitutionalBarriers

QUT UTS Curtin Uni UniSAUni of Qld Uni of Qld QUT

Page 3: Institutional Barriers to Distributed Energy: Understanding and Overcoming

Why study Institutional Barriers to DE?

Page 4: Institutional Barriers to Distributed Energy: Understanding and Overcoming

Global average temperature

Page 5: Institutional Barriers to Distributed Energy: Understanding and Overcoming

Permanent Arctic ice may disappear by 2030

Page 6: Institutional Barriers to Distributed Energy: Understanding and Overcoming

Scientist warn that if we do not quickly reduce greenhouse pollution, the melting of Greenland ice cp will be unstoppable and raise global sea level by 7 metres

Page 7: Institutional Barriers to Distributed Energy: Understanding and Overcoming

Problem Response

Politics demands

Page 8: Institutional Barriers to Distributed Energy: Understanding and Overcoming

A very senior Australian bureaucratonce said, when advising junior bureaucrats:

“as a bureaucrat, the most important thing you can do …

is to stop things from happening”

(not Sir Humphrey Appleby)

Page 9: Institutional Barriers to Distributed Energy: Understanding and Overcoming

Problem

“Market Failure”

Response

“Market Intervention”

Politics demands

Policy demands

Page 10: Institutional Barriers to Distributed Energy: Understanding and Overcoming

A licence to act.

"Climate change is a result of the greatest market failure the world has seen.” – Sir Nicholas Stern, Nov 2007

"the greatest market failure ever seen". – Prof Ross Garnaut, July 08

Page 11: Institutional Barriers to Distributed Energy: Understanding and Overcoming

“once we have an effective price on carbon through an Emissions Trading scheme, we can do away with a range of inefficient policies and programs…”

MRET, PV Rebate, EEOA, VEET, REES, NEET, etc,

Page 12: Institutional Barriers to Distributed Energy: Understanding and Overcoming

Barriers to Distributed Energy

“Non-Institutional” Barriers include:– Technical barriers– Economic (cost) barriers

Some Institutional Barriers (and market failures)1. Imperfect Information2. “Regulatory failure” and inefficient incentives3. External Costs excluded4. Inefficient pricing (not cost reflective)5. Split Incentives (landlord/tenant problem)6. High transaction costs7. Lack of access to finance8. Cultural norms9. Underdeveloped market for Distributed Energy

Page 13: Institutional Barriers to Distributed Energy: Understanding and Overcoming

Technology Barriers

Economic Barriers

Institutional Barriers

What it does

What it costs

What slows it down

Barriers to Distributed Energy

Page 14: Institutional Barriers to Distributed Energy: Understanding and Overcoming

“United States could reduce emissions by 31% to 46% by 2030”Distributed Energy is crucial to carbon abatement

Page 15: Institutional Barriers to Distributed Energy: Understanding and Overcoming

Institutional Barriers: A framework

Economic outcomes

Environmental/ Social outcomes

Technology Frontier

“Best practice”

Institutional Barriers

Current practice

Page 16: Institutional Barriers to Distributed Energy: Understanding and Overcoming

Disarray

Mispricing

Disinterest

Maladministration Impatience

Ignorance

Barriers to Distributed Energy: “The Seven D.E. Sins”

Confusion

Regulatory barriers

Cultural barriers

Lack of information

Split Incentives: landlord/ tenant etc

High discount rates

Externalities and price structures

Page 17: Institutional Barriers to Distributed Energy: Understanding and Overcoming

0

50

100

150

200

GridPower

Cogen GridPower

Cogen

Indi

cativ

e C

osts

($/M

Wh)

Carbon cost

Innovation risk

Negotiation cost & risk

Capital contributions

Standby charges

Retail etc

Distribution

Transmission

Fuel + O&M

Capital cost

Indicative Impact of Institutional Barriers on Costs

Current Costs

“Real” Costs

Page 18: Institutional Barriers to Distributed Energy: Understanding and Overcoming

Tool 4: Market transformation analysis

Demand0

Supply0

p0

q0 q1

Price

Quantity

Demand1

a

cccc Supply1

b

Page 19: Institutional Barriers to Distributed Energy: Understanding and Overcoming

Overcoming Institutional Barriers: “Moving the Market”

Push PullLi

ft

Page 20: Institutional Barriers to Distributed Energy: Understanding and Overcoming

Regulation Incentives

Information

The Policy Palette

Primary Instruments

Page 21: Institutional Barriers to Distributed Energy: Understanding and Overcoming

Facilitation

Pricing

Targets

Regulation Incentives

Information

The Policy Palette

+ Secondary Instruments

Page 22: Institutional Barriers to Distributed Energy: Understanding and Overcoming

Culture

Facilitation

Pricing

Targets

Regulation Incentives

Information

Facilitation

Pricing

Targets

Regulation Incentives

Information

The Policy Palette - “PIRFICT”

Coordination

Page 23: Institutional Barriers to Distributed Energy: Understanding and Overcoming

Regulation

> Mandatory Audits and Plans> Mandatory information disclosure> Minimum Energy Performance Standards

Page 24: Institutional Barriers to Distributed Energy: Understanding and Overcoming

Targets

> Mandated Targets (regulated)> Policy target (adaptive management)> Aspirational targets (report and review)

Page 25: Institutional Barriers to Distributed Energy: Understanding and Overcoming

InformationInformation

> Benchmarking> Performance labelling> Performance Reporting (no target)> Education and Awareness campaigns> Case studies

Page 26: Institutional Barriers to Distributed Energy: Understanding and Overcoming

FacilitationFacilitation

> High Level Commitment> Accreditation> Training> Audits, Advice and Assistance> Case Studies> Networking> Community Engagement

Page 27: Institutional Barriers to Distributed Energy: Understanding and Overcoming

Incentives

> Cash Rebates> Competitive Subsidies> $ support for Research and Development > Loans and Financial guarantees > Expedited Planning > Public recognition and awards> Prizes

Page 28: Institutional Barriers to Distributed Energy: Understanding and Overcoming

Pricing

> Price in Externalities (Carbon Tax)> Cost reflective tariffs> Dynamic Pricing> Fixed cost vs Variable Cost pricing

Page 29: Institutional Barriers to Distributed Energy: Understanding and Overcoming

Coordination

> Strategic Planning – Plan, Act, Report, Review

> Interagency and intergovernmental cooperation> Coordinating Agency

Page 30: Institutional Barriers to Distributed Energy: Understanding and Overcoming

Example: Residential Energy Efficiency

Reg Targets Info Facil’nFacil’n IncentivesIncentives PricingPricing

Building Shell BASIX NABERS, ACT Disclosure

Heat/Cool MEPS

Hot Water MEPS GGAS GGAS, NRET, CCF

Off peak tariffs?

White Goods MEPS Labelling

Lighting Incandescent ban

GGAS GGAS, VEET

Brown Goods 1W standby

Page 31: Institutional Barriers to Distributed Energy: Understanding and Overcoming

Conclusions

> Understanding institutional barriers important – for good policy and program design – to create a “licence to act”– to build the case for a suite of actions

> Not just about complementing Emissions Trading but also about making it work

> This analysis is a work in progress> Forthcoming Discussion Paper and Industry Forum

– Adelaide, 5 December

Page 32: Institutional Barriers to Distributed Energy: Understanding and Overcoming

www.igrid.net.au

Page 33: Institutional Barriers to Distributed Energy: Understanding and Overcoming

Thank you.

For more information on the I Grid Research program:Web: www.igrid.net.au Tel: 02 9514 4950 (ISF)

Email: [email protected]