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Polices for increasing energy efficiency: Thirty years of experience in OECD countries
Authors:Howard Geller  Philip Harrington  Arthur H. Rosenfeld  Satoshi Tanishima  Fridtjof Unander
Affiliation:1. Southwest Energy Efficiency Project, Boulder, CO 80302, USA;2. Department of Infrastructure, Energy & Resources, Tasmania, Australia;3. California Energy Commission, Sacramento, CA 95814, USA;4. International Energy Agency, 75739 Paris Cedex 15, France
Abstract:Energy efficiency improvement was an important phenomenon in the global energy balance over the past 30 years. Without energy efficiency improvements, the OECD nations would have used approximately 49% more energy than was actually consumed as of 1998. This paper first reviews energy intensity trends for the major OECD nations since 1973, considering how much of the overall reduction in E/GDP was due to energy efficiency improvement and how much was due to structural change. The bulk of the paper examines the energy efficiency policies and programs adopted in Japan, United States, and Western Europe, commenting on their effectiveness and energy savings impacts where possible. The paper also reviews the energy efficiency policies and programs adopted in California. This experience shows that well-designed policies can result in substantial energy savings, as demonstrated in the United States where nine specific policies and programs reduced primary energy use in 2002 by approximately 11%. Substantial energy savings also occurred in Japan, some European countries, and in the electricity sector in California.
Keywords:Energy efficiency   Energy intensity trends   Policies and programs
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