The mitigation of climate change is thought by many to be a significant environmental concern. In order to mitigate the bulk of carbon emissions from the electricity sector, large market penetration of renewable energy technologies is a key research issue. The goal of the paper is to address the timing of public R&D investment for renewable technologies in the Japanese electricity sector. The model is cast as a dynamic bottom-up energy-system model and numerically optimized, minimizing a total system cost subject to an accumulated carbon emission constraint. Autonomous energy-efficiency improvement and two-factor learning curves describe the technological development process for each energy technology. With the two-factor learning curve, the model shows that the cost of electricity of renewable technologies can be reduced by up to 43% in the year 2100 if there is no constraint on public R&D budget. Renewable energy sources requires substantial R&D support in their initial phase of development; however, the investment pattern would switch to a path of reducing the amount after 2050. The budget of R&D investment is strictly limited; thus, an important policy objective is to design a dynamic investment schedule that will induce sustainable innovations for green technologies.
François Maréchal, Daniel Alexander Florez Orrego, Meire Ellen Gorete Ribeiro Domingos, Réginald Germanier
François Maréchal, Daniel Alexander Florez Orrego, Meire Ellen Gorete Ribeiro Domingos, Réginald Germanier