Pollutant versus non‑pollutant generation technologies: a CML‑analogous analysis
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- Investigación (FEE) [881]
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Pollutant versus non‑pollutant generation technologies: a CML‑analogous analysisData
2018Cita bibliográfica
Martínez-Fernández, P., De Llano-Paz, F., Calvo-Silvosa, A. & Soares, I. (2018). Pollutant versus non-pollutant generation technologies: a CML-analogous análisis. Environment, Development and Sustainability 20 (1), 199–212. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10668-018-0195-y
Resumo
[Abstract]: In this work, we apply the Modern Portfolio Theory and the Capital Assets
Pricing Model financial tools to a portfolio of CO2-emitting generation technologies under
diverse scenarios. We will calculate the efficient—in the sense of having the minimum risk
for a given level of emissions—portfolios frontier. The Capital Market Line (CML) is the
place where all the possible combinations of a specific efficient portfolio and a pollutionfree portfolio—made up with nuclear and renewable generation technologies—lie. In
Finance, that specific efficient portfolio is called the market portfolio but we will see that
in our case it lacks an evident meaning. Therefore, we will explain which should be the
reference portfolio for power generation planning analysis. Anyway, the fact is that those
combinations are less pollutant than the portfolios in the efficient frontier. Thus, a policymaker can analyse which is their effect on emissions reduction. We will start analysing
the efficient pollutant generation portfolios. Then, we will introduce the CML-analogous
lines (CML-A) to allow the possibility of reducing emissions by combining an efficient
portfolio with a non-pollutant portfolio—this non-pollutant portfolio is free of both
emissions and risk. Results support the necessity of considering the carbon capture and
storage technol- ogy to achieve a less risky generation mix, with less emissions and
allowing a higher diver- sification due to the presence of cleaner fossil fuel technologies.
All of that leads to better levels of energy security.
Palabras chave
Emissions
Power generation portfolios
Portfolio theory
Capital Market Line
Power generation portfolios
Portfolio theory
Capital Market Line
Versión do editor
ISSN
1387-585X