Determinants of willingness-to-pay for attributes of power outage - An empirical discrete choice experiment addressing implications for fuel switching in developing countries

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Determinants of willingness-to-pay for attributes of power outage - An empirical discrete choice experiment addressing implications for fuel switching in developing countries. / Zemo, Kahsay Haile; Kassahun, Habtamu Tilahun; Olsen, Søren Bøye.

In: Energy, Vol. 174, 2019, p. 206-215.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Zemo, KH, Kassahun, HT & Olsen, SB 2019, 'Determinants of willingness-to-pay for attributes of power outage - An empirical discrete choice experiment addressing implications for fuel switching in developing countries', Energy, vol. 174, pp. 206-215. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.energy.2019.02.129

APA

Zemo, K. H., Kassahun, H. T., & Olsen, S. B. (2019). Determinants of willingness-to-pay for attributes of power outage - An empirical discrete choice experiment addressing implications for fuel switching in developing countries. Energy, 174, 206-215. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.energy.2019.02.129

Vancouver

Zemo KH, Kassahun HT, Olsen SB. Determinants of willingness-to-pay for attributes of power outage - An empirical discrete choice experiment addressing implications for fuel switching in developing countries. Energy. 2019;174:206-215. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.energy.2019.02.129

Author

Zemo, Kahsay Haile ; Kassahun, Habtamu Tilahun ; Olsen, Søren Bøye. / Determinants of willingness-to-pay for attributes of power outage - An empirical discrete choice experiment addressing implications for fuel switching in developing countries. In: Energy. 2019 ; Vol. 174. pp. 206-215.

Bibtex

@article{ac3092306b9e426db12cddfc2d4b848c,
title = "Determinants of willingness-to-pay for attributes of power outage - An empirical discrete choice experiment addressing implications for fuel switching in developing countries",
abstract = "In many developing countries, there is a desire to switch from traditional fuel to renewable energy. However, the supply of renewable energy is often characterized by a severe lack of reliability. This paper seeks to answer if, and to what extent, power outages inhibit switching from fuelwood to hydropower based electricity supply, and factors that determine households' willingness to pay to reduce power outages using a unique combination of mixed logit and seemingly unrelated regression models. We find that frequency, duration, timing of power outages and advance notice are important characteristics determining whether households switch to electricity. The less reliable the electricity supply is the less likely households are to switch to it. Therefore, unreliability in electricity supply maintains the current use of fuelwood, resulting in continued environmental and health problems. Hence, policymakers should work to improve reliability to speed up the desired fuel switching process.",
author = "Zemo, {Kahsay Haile} and Kassahun, {Habtamu Tilahun} and Olsen, {S{\o}ren B{\o}ye}",
year = "2019",
doi = "10.1016/j.energy.2019.02.129",
language = "English",
volume = "174",
pages = "206--215",
journal = "Energy",
issn = "0360-5442",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Determinants of willingness-to-pay for attributes of power outage - An empirical discrete choice experiment addressing implications for fuel switching in developing countries

AU - Zemo, Kahsay Haile

AU - Kassahun, Habtamu Tilahun

AU - Olsen, Søren Bøye

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - In many developing countries, there is a desire to switch from traditional fuel to renewable energy. However, the supply of renewable energy is often characterized by a severe lack of reliability. This paper seeks to answer if, and to what extent, power outages inhibit switching from fuelwood to hydropower based electricity supply, and factors that determine households' willingness to pay to reduce power outages using a unique combination of mixed logit and seemingly unrelated regression models. We find that frequency, duration, timing of power outages and advance notice are important characteristics determining whether households switch to electricity. The less reliable the electricity supply is the less likely households are to switch to it. Therefore, unreliability in electricity supply maintains the current use of fuelwood, resulting in continued environmental and health problems. Hence, policymakers should work to improve reliability to speed up the desired fuel switching process.

AB - In many developing countries, there is a desire to switch from traditional fuel to renewable energy. However, the supply of renewable energy is often characterized by a severe lack of reliability. This paper seeks to answer if, and to what extent, power outages inhibit switching from fuelwood to hydropower based electricity supply, and factors that determine households' willingness to pay to reduce power outages using a unique combination of mixed logit and seemingly unrelated regression models. We find that frequency, duration, timing of power outages and advance notice are important characteristics determining whether households switch to electricity. The less reliable the electricity supply is the less likely households are to switch to it. Therefore, unreliability in electricity supply maintains the current use of fuelwood, resulting in continued environmental and health problems. Hence, policymakers should work to improve reliability to speed up the desired fuel switching process.

U2 - 10.1016/j.energy.2019.02.129

DO - 10.1016/j.energy.2019.02.129

M3 - Journal article

VL - 174

SP - 206

EP - 215

JO - Energy

JF - Energy

SN - 0360-5442

ER -

ID: 214510278