Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10487479 | Energy Policy | 2005 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
This paper reports estimates of the long- and short-run elasticities of residential demand for electricity in Australia using the bounds testing procedure to cointegration, within an autoregressive distributive lag framework. In the long run, we find that income and own price are the most important determinants of residential electricity demand, while temperature is significant some of the time and gas prices are insignificant. Our estimates of long-run income elasticity and price elasticity of demand are consistent with previous studies, although they are towards the lower end of existing estimates. As expected, the short-run elasticities are much smaller than the long-run elasticities, and the coefficients on the error-correction coefficients are small consistent with the fact that in the short-run energy appliances are fixed.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Energy
Energy Engineering and Power Technology
Authors
Paresh Kumar Narayan, Russell Smyth,