Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7256933 | Technological Forecasting and Social Change | 2015 | 13 Pages |
Abstract
For fourteen European countries, we model the usage of renewable energy technologies (RETs) in electricity generation within a multi-country growth curve framework. We consider a range of covariates as possible determinants of the differences in growth rates of RET usage between countries and over time. An effective way of capturing the differences between the countries is their division into four groups: slow, normal, fast and very fast growth. This division has more explanatory power than other binary variables such as the use of different incentive schemes. No evidence that changes in the price of fossil fuels (represented by oil) explained changes in the growth of RET usage over time was found. The model developed is evaluated by its accuracy in both point forecasting and density forecasting and it is used to provide forecasts of RET usage up to 2020. Greece and Belgium are identified as the two countries least likely to reach a given threshold for the proportion of RET generated electricity in 2020.
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Authors
Nigel Meade, Towhidul Islam,