Cobenefits and Trade-Offs of Green and Clean Energy: Evidence from the Academic Literature and Asian Case Studies
Sovacool, Benjamin K. | December 2016
Abstract
This working paper assesses the positive cobenefits of promoting green and clean energy in Asia. It first defines what is meant by “clean” energy across the four technological systems of cooking, renewable electricity, energy efficiency, and urban transport. Then, drawn from a synthesis of peer-reviewed articles, it summarizes at least four general types of cobenefits of investing in these systems: (i) diversification and enhanced energy security, (ii) jobs and green growth, (iii) displaced pollution and associated cost savings, and (iv) enhanced resilience and adaptive capacity to things like climate change and natural disasters. It also offers some insight to possible challenges and trade-offs that must be managed when attempting to capture cobenefits. The paper then focuses on four case studies of cobenefits that have been delivered in practice: liquefied petroleum gas stoves in Indonesia, renewable electricity generation in the People’s Republic of China, energy efficiency in Japan, and mass transit in Singapore. The paper concludes with insights for energy analysts and policy makers.
Citation
Sovacool, Benjamin K.. 2016. Cobenefits and Trade-Offs of Green and Clean Energy: Evidence from the Academic Literature and Asian Case Studies. © Asian Development Bank. http://hdl.handle.net/11540/8832. License: CC BY 3.0 IGO.ISSN
2313-6537 (Print)
2313-6545 (e-ISSN)
Keywords
Climate
Climate change
Climate impacts assessment
Energy Development Finance
Energy Technology
Primary Energy
Energy
Climatic change
Climatology
Energy Demand
Alternative energy technology
Energy Sector Reform
Primary Energy Production
Primary Energy Supply
Adaptation
Electric power
Power
Climatic factor
Renewable energy source
Electric power
Energy development
Supply and demand
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