Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
995936 Energy Policy 2011 17 Pages PDF
Abstract

This paper proposes a regional and sectoral model of global final energy demand. For the main end-use sectors of consumption (industrial, commercial and public services, residential and road transportation), per-capita demand is expressed as an S-shaped function of per-capita income. Other variables intervene as well, like energy prices, temperatures and technological trends. This model is applied on a panel of 101 countries and 3 aggregates (covering the whole world) and it explains fairly well past variations in sectoral, final consumption since the beginning of the 2000s. Further, the model is used to analyze the dynamics of final energy demand, by sector and in total. The main conclusion concerns the pattern of change for aggregate energy intensity. The simulations performed show that there is no a priori reason for it to exhibit a bell-shape, as reported in the literature. Depending on initial conditions, the weight of basic needs in total consumption and the availability of modern commercial energy resources, various forms might emerge.

Research Highlights► The residential sector accounts for most of final energy consumption at low income levels. ► Its share drops at the benefit of the industrial, services and road transportation sectors in turn. ► Sectoral shares’ pattern is affected by changes in geographic, sociologic and economic factors. ► Final energy intensity may show various shapes and does not exhibit necessarily a bell-shape.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Energy Energy Engineering and Power Technology
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