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http://hdl.handle.net/2183/36763 Power generation and pollutant emissions in the European Union: A mean-variance model
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DeLlano-Paz, F., Calvo-Silvosa, A., Iglesias Antelo, S. & Soares, I. (2018). Power generation and pollutant emissions in the European Union: a mean-variance model. Journal of Cleaner Production, 181, 123-135. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jclepro.2018.01.108
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Abstract
[Abstract]: In this work, portfolio theory is applied to efficient electricity generation from both an economic
and environmental point of view. The proposed model includes all the generation costs for
different technologies, including externalities; the risk derived from them, and a set of
constraints on the emission of pollutant gases, such as carbon dioxide, sulphur dioxide,
nitrogen oxides and particulate matter. Our results show that the EU technology portfolio, as
proposed by the International Energy Agency for the 2030 horizon, is far from efficient. The joint
cost-risk-environmental perspective confirms the need to increase the share of renewable
energy technologies in the European energy mix, including photovoltaic energy, and to promote
wind power as much as possible, to reduce the environmental impact. It is also necessary to
continue to rely on hydro, CCS and nuclear technologies, in order to optimize the cost-risk
tradeoff and the security of supply. In addition, it is concluded that restrictions on other
pollutant gases should be also imposed, because they would contribute to reducing the
environmental impact, with a relatively small increase in terms of cost-risk.
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