Use this link to cite:
http://hdl.handle.net/2183/32241 Price and income elasticity of natural gas demand in Europe and the effects of lockdowns due to Covid-19
Loading...
Identifiers
Publication date
Authors
Advisors
Other responsabilities
Journal Title
Bibliographic citation
Erias, A.F., Iglesias, E.M. (2022). Price and income elasticity of natural gas demand in Europe and the effects of lockdowns due to Covid-19. Energy Strategy Reviews, 44, 100945. doi: 10.1016/j.esr.2022.100945
Type of academic work
Academic degree
Abstract
[Abstract] We analyse a panel of 25 European-countries to provide novel estimates of monthly own-price, cross-price, and income elasticities of natural-gas-demand from 2005 to 2020. We find that: first, there is an European Standard Behaviour (ESB) with a strong-seasonal component. Second, we identify three different patterns from the ESB: 1) France, Denmark and Estonia present slightly positive elasticities in the short-run and a lack of sensitivity to own-price variations in the long-run –we argue this phenomenon is due to a higher weight of heating demand-. 2) Latvia presents a lower sensitivity to own-price variations than the ESB -we argue due to the role of natural gas as a unique backup technology in the power sector-. 3) In Portugal, natural gas showed the highest own-price elasticities – we argue that natural gas is used mainly in the power sector with substitutive technologies-. Finally, we find that Covid-19-lockdowns highly impacted natural-gas-demand, confirming the “double-heating-effect”.
Description
Editor version
Rights
Atribución 4.0 Internacional








