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10/28/2021 11:00

Report by Jacobs University recommends energy market design measures on the way to climate neutrality

Heiko Lammers Corporate Communications & Public Relations
Jacobs University Bremen gGmbH

    Adjustment of the CO2 price, no further renewable energy surcharge (EEG – Renewable Energy Sources Act), and, if possible, complete abolition of the electricity tax – these are key measures recommended in a report by the Bremen Energy Research working group at Jacobs University. It was prepared as part of the recently published lead study "Towards Climate Neutrality (Aufbruch Klimaneutralität)" by the German Energy Agency (dena). The study aims to provide the future German government with concrete solutions for achieving climate neutrality by 2045.

    Ten scientific institutes, more than 75 companies and a top-class advisory board contributed their expertise to the lead study. "Our task at Jacobs University was to identify the key challenges in energy market design to achieve climate neutrality," said Marius Buchmann, Research Associate and project manager for the report at Professor Gert Brunekreeft's Department of Energy Economics. "The measures we recommend should be implementable quickly, preferably in the coming legislative period." Energy market design considers all issues that deal with the generation, transport, consumption and marketing of energy. It aims to establish security of supply, affordability and environmental sustainability in rapidly changing energy markets.

    "In the transformation to climate neutrality, the steering effect of the CO2 price and its adaptation to the requirements of climate neutrality play a key role," Buchmann explained. In addition to adapting the price accordingly, the recommended measures include hedging the investment risks of companies in the basic materials industry, such as the chemical or steel-producing industries. They will have to renew many of their long-lived plants in the near future, but only know in the short term how the CO2 price will develop. The experts suggest that the government should bear the regulatory risk, thereby reducing the financing costs of investments in CO2 abatement technology.

    "Taxes, levies and surcharges distort the incentive effect of an efficient CO2 price," Buchmann said. The authors of the report, entitled "Need for action and further development options in energy market design on the way to climate neutrality," recommend abolishing or reducing them. The costs that have so far been covered by the levies should be borne by the general budget.

    Achieving climate neutrality requires a great deal of infrastructure in the various sectors. Therefore, it is important to align investment incentives across sectors. It is recommended that the grid charging system in the electricity sector be made more flexible. Furthermore, with increasing coupling of the sectors, for example via heat pumps or electrolyzers for the production of hydrogen, the need for coordination of infrastructure planning across sector boundaries increases. As a solution, the report proposes a "participatory system development plan with an interface towards the market driven hydrogen infrastructure." Both the regulated grid operators (electricity and gas) and the investments of the market players would have to be included in the planning.

    About Jacobs University Bremen:
    Studying in an international community. Obtaining a qualification to work on responsible tasks in a digitized and globalized society. Learning, researching and teaching across academic disciplines and countries. Strengthening people and markets with innovative solutions and advanced training programs. This is what Jacobs University Bremen stands for. Established as a private, English-medium campus university in Germany in 2001, it is continuously achieving top results in national and international university rankings. Its more than 1,500 students come from more than 110 countries with around 80% having relocated to Germany for their studies. Jacobs University’s research projects are funded by the German Research Foundation or the EU Research and Innovation program as well as by globally leading companies.
    For more information: http://www.jacobs-university.de


    Contact for scientific information:

    Marius Buchmann, Ph.D.
    Research Associate and Project Manager Working Group "Bremen Energy Research
    Phone: +49 421 200-4868
    Email: m.buchmann@jacobs-university.de


    Original publication:

    Report dena Lead Study: Need for action and further development options in energy market design on the way to climate neutrality (German)
    Authors: Marius Buchmann, Gert Brunekreeft, Christine Brandstätt, Martin Palovic und Anna Pechan
    https://bremen-energy-research.de/news/#n037


    More information:

    http://dena Lead Study: Towards Climate Neutrality (Aufbruch Klimaneutralität)
    https://www.dena.de/en/newsroom/news/dena-pilot-study-towards-climate-neutrality


    Images

    Marius Buchmann is project manager of the Bremen Energy Research working group at Jacobs University.
    Marius Buchmann is project manager of the Bremen Energy Research working group at Jacobs University. ...

    Jacobs University


    Criteria of this press release:
    Business and commerce, Journalists, Scientists and scholars, Students, Teachers and pupils, all interested persons
    Energy
    transregional, national
    Scientific Publications
    English


     

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