Economic and environmental impacts of Carbon & Energy taxes in the power sector

dc.contributor.advisorWijayatunga, PDC
dc.contributor.advisorAttalage, RA
dc.contributor.authorSiriwardena, KKW
dc.date.accept2004
dc.date.accept2004
dc.date.accessioned2011-11-30T09:21:00Z
dc.date.available2011-11-30T09:21:00Z
dc.date.issued11/30/2011
dc.description.abstractThis report presents the results and analysis of a study conducted with the objective of investigating the impact on economy wide emissions due to a carbon and energy taxes levied within the electricity generation sector of Sri Lanka. An Input-Output decomposition technique is used to analyze four types of effects that contribute to the overall reduction in equivalent Carbon, NOx and SO2 emissions. These four effects are; fuel mix effect (i.e. the change in emissions due to variation in fuel mix), structural effect (i.e. change in emissions due to changes in technological coefficients), final demand effect (i.e. the change in emissions associated with changes in final demand) and joint effect (i.e. the interactive effect between or among the fuel mix, structural & final demand effects). The polluting fuel sources (e.g. coal) are less preferred under these tax regimes. Of the four effects change in fuel mix in thermal electricity generation and change final demand for electricity were found to be the main contributors in achieving economy wide emission reductions. It was found that a minimum of $50/tC of carbon tax or $1.0/MBtu of energy tax is required to have a significant impact on economy-wide emissions in the Sri Lankan context. This results in an increase in electricity generation cost by approximately Rs 1 /kWh and Rs 0.65 /kWh under carbon and energy tax regimes respectively. The reduction in emissions is also strongly coupled with the value of price elasticity of electricity. Also the study concentrates on tackling the barriers for the promotion of clean and energy efficient technologies in Sri Lanka. Barriers for renewable sources; wind and biomass (dendro thermal) and cleaner technologies; IGCC (coal) and LNG fired combined cycle were identified, based on a survey and strategies are proposed to tackle the major barriers. Analytic Hierarchy Process is used to rank the barriers and the strategies are proposed to address the three major barriers for each technology. For wind a Feed-In-Tariff, geographical diversification and capacity building in commercial banks are suggested. For dendro investment incentive and streamlining of wood production are proposed. Incorporating environment costs into the planning process and delayed implementation are suggested for IGCC and LNG.en_US
dc.identifier.accno82435en_US
dc.identifier.citationSiriwardena, K.K.W. (2004). Economic and environmental impacts of Carbon & Energy taxes in the power sector [Master's theses, University of Moratuwa]. Institutional Repository University of Moratuwa. http://dl.lib.mrt.ac.lk/theses/handle/123/1965
dc.identifier.degreeMPhilen_US
dc.identifier.departmentDepartment of Electrical Engineeringen_US
dc.identifier.facultyEngineeringen_US
dc.identifier.urihttp://dl.lib.mrt.ac.lk/theses/handle/123/1965
dc.subjectElectrical Engineering-Thesisen_US
dc.subjectTHESIS-ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING
dc.subjectEnvironmental Impact-Carbon & Energy
dc.subjectPower sector
dc.titleEconomic and environmental impacts of Carbon & Energy taxes in the power sectoren_US
dc.typeThesis-Abstract

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