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  • An assessment of the economic impact of climate change on the energy sector in Trinidad and Tobago

  • 2011
  • Signatura:LC/CAR/L.325
  • 47 pp.
  • Documentos de proyecto
  • Publicaciones 2011 NºLC/CAR/L.325
  • ECLAC
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Resumen

The present study complements the climate change policy document by providing an economic analysis of the impact that climate change could have on the energy sector in Trinidad and Tobago under the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change alternative climate scenarios (A2 and B2) as compared to a baseline situation of no climate change.

Results of analyses indicate that, in the short-run, climate change, represented by change in temperature, is not a significant determinant of domestic consumption of energy, electricity in particular, in Trinidad and Tobago. With energy prices subsidized domestically and fixed for years at a time, energy price does not play a role in determining electricity demand. Economic growth, as indicated by Gross Domestic Product (GDP), is the single major determinant of electricity consumption in the short-run. In the long-run, temperature, GDP, and patterns of electricity use, jointly determine electricity consumption.

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