Abstract
Many analysts of the energy industry have long believed that energy efficiency offers an enormous “win-win” opportunity: through aggressive energy conservation policies, we can both save money and reduce negative externalities associated with energy use. In 1979, Daniel Yergin and the Harvard Business School Energy Project estimated that the United States could consume 30 or 40 percent less energy without reducing welfare. The central economic question around energy efficiency is whether there are investment inefficiencies that a policy could correct. First, we examine choices made by consumers and firms, testing whether they fail to make investments in energy efficiency that would increase utility or profits.…
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877
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- FWCI
- 23.49
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- 100%
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Authors
2Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Efficient energy use
- Investment (military)
- Credibility
- Economics
- Externality
- Energy (signal processing)
- Empirical evidence
- Public economics
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Affordable and clean energy
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