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RESEARCH PRODUCT

The adoption of green energy technologies: The role of policies in Austria, Germany, and Switzerland

Michael PenederSpyros ArvanitisChristian RammerTobias StuckiMartin Woerter

subject

020209 energy02 engineering and technology7. Clean energyEnergy policyArticlecountry comparison0502 economics and business0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringenergy technologyenergy innovations050207 economicsta512energiaPublic economicsRenewable Energy Sustainability and the Environmentbusiness.industryfirm-level adoption05 social sciencesEnvironmental resource managementSurvey researchSubsidyOriginal ArticlesRenewable energyinnovaatiotenergiapolitiikka13. Climate actionenergiateknologiaEnergy policy; Energy technology; Firm-level adoption; Energy innovations; Country comparisonbusinessEnergy policy

description

We contribute to the existing research about policy-induced technology adoption in several ways. First, we suggest a new survey design to measure the energy-related policy environment. Second, we simultaneously estimate the policy effects for the adoption propensity and the adoption intensity simultaneously and, third, we compare the policy effects in the three countries, Austria, Germany, and Switzerland. Based on a representative sample of firms for all three countries we find that policies essentially promote the adoption of technologies and they are practically ineffective for the intensity, which poses a great challenge to future policy designs. Voluntary agreements or demand-related factors are among the most important drivers for the adoption propensity of green energy technologies. Given the current institutional framework in the surveyed countries, subsidies are more effective in Austria, taxes are more effective in Germany, and demand-related factors are relatively more effective in Switzerland. ISSN:1543-5075 ISSN:1543-5083

10.1080/15435075.2017.1381612http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6044236