Question A:
The high cost of electricity for industrial users in the European Union relative to other big economies is a substantial constraint on growth.
Responses
Responses weighted by each expert's confidence
Question B:
Problems with the intermittency of renewable energy sources mean that over the next five years, electricity prices are more likely to rise than fall.
Responses
Responses weighted by each expert's confidence
Question C:
Substantial European investment in electricity infrastructure is essential to address high prices and unreliable supply.
Responses
Responses weighted by each expert's confidence
Question A Participant Responses
| Participant | University | Vote | Confidence | Bio/Vote History |
|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() Franklin Allen |
Imperial College London | Bio/Vote History | ||
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For manufacturing, it seems clear that high energy prices. Even with some services, the advent of high energy inputs such as AI means the same is becoming true.
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![]() Pol Antras |
Harvard | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Olivier Blanchard |
Peterson Institute | Bio/Vote History | ||
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constraint on growth? I do not see why. Constraint on level? Perhaps. But countries differ in many ways, climate, energy resources, etc, and we do not think of this as a major issue.
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![]() Richard William Blundell |
University College London | Did Not Answer | Bio/Vote History | |
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![]() Maristella Botticini |
Bocconi | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Agnès Bénassy-Quéré |
Paris School of Economics | Bio/Vote History | ||
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One should not overestimate the impact of electricity prices, though. Except in a few sectors (chemicals, paper…), the share of energy costs is one order of magnitude less than that of the payroll.
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![]() Elena Carletti |
Bocconi | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Jean-Pierre Danthine |
Paris School of Economics | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Paul De Grauwe |
LSE | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Jan Eeckhout |
UPF Barcelona | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Xavier Freixas |
Barcelona GSE | Did Not Answer | Bio/Vote History | |
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![]() Nicola Fuchs-Schündeln |
Goethe-Universität Frankfurt | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Jordi Galí |
Barcelona GSE | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Luis Garicano |
LSE | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Yuriy Gorodnichenko |
Berkeley | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Rachel Griffith |
University of Manchester | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Veronica Guerrieri |
Chicago Booth | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Luigi Guiso |
Einaudi Institute for Economics and Finance | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Sergei Guriev |
London Business School | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Patrick Honohan |
Trinity College Dublin | Bio/Vote History | ||
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1. There’s quite a lot of variation between sectors as to the effect. 2. A proper carbon tax is needed to encourage economising on fossil fuels to ensure sustainable growth—and this consideration interacts with electricity prices in a complicated way.
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![]() Beata Javorcik |
University of Oxford | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Jan Pieter Krahnen |
Goethe University Frankfurt | Bio/Vote History | ||
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A high price of energy, if expected to stay high over a prolonged period of time, has two opposing effects on growth: it slows down growth, on the basis of existing productive capital, and it increases innovation that helps lowering the cost of energy.
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![]() Botond Kőszegi |
Central European University | Did Not Answer | Bio/Vote History | |
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![]() Eliana La Ferrara |
Harvard Kennedy | Did Not Answer | Bio/Vote History | |
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![]() Christian Leuz |
Chicago Booth | Bio/Vote History | ||
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High prices are a drag but uncertain if the effect on growth is substantial.
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![]() Thierry Mayer |
Sciences-Po | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Costas Meghir |
Yale | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Marco Pagano |
Università di Napoli Federico II | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Lubos Pastor |
Chicago Booth | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Richard Portes |
London Business School | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Canice Prendergast |
Chicago Booth | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Carol Propper |
Imperial College London | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Imran Rasul |
University College London | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Lucrezia Reichlin |
London Business School | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Ricardo Reis |
London School of Economics | Bio/Vote History | ||
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Relative to the US, much of the gaps in IT sectors that are energy-intensive, and relieve to China, energy prices are as much as 5 times higher.
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![]() Rafael Repullo |
CEMFI | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Hélène Rey |
London Business School | Did Not Answer | Bio/Vote History | |
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![]() Antoinette Schoar |
MIT | Did Not Answer | Bio/Vote History | |
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![]() Kjetil Storesletten |
University of Minnesota | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Daniel Sturm |
London School of Economics | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Silvana Tenreyro |
LSE | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Rick Van der Ploeg |
Oxford | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() John Vickers |
Oxford | Bio/Vote History | ||
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Unclear that it affects growth rate even if it affects output level
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![]() Hans-Joachim Voth |
University of Zurich | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Karl Whelan |
University College Dublin | Did Not Answer | Bio/Vote History | |
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![]() Charles Wyplosz |
The Graduate Institute Geneva | Bio/Vote History | ||
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Sure, but this is what any effort at reducing climate change implies. Electricity is still partly brown.
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Question B Participant Responses
| Participant | University | Vote | Confidence | Bio/Vote History |
|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() Franklin Allen |
Imperial College London | Bio/Vote History | ||
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This seems true some countries like Spain but not in others like France. It depends very much on the mix and what can be used as base load. So it could go either way.
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![]() Pol Antras |
Harvard | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Olivier Blanchard |
Peterson Institute | Bio/Vote History | ||
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again, problem with the logic. Why would a second moment affect the first one? Could be, but I need a story.
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![]() Richard William Blundell |
University College London | Did Not Answer | Bio/Vote History | |
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![]() Maristella Botticini |
Bocconi | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Agnès Bénassy-Quéré |
Paris School of Economics | Bio/Vote History | ||
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Depends on the initial share of renewables, which varies across countries.
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![]() Elena Carletti |
Bocconi | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Jean-Pierre Danthine |
Paris School of Economics | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Paul De Grauwe |
LSE | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Jan Eeckhout |
UPF Barcelona | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Xavier Freixas |
Barcelona GSE | Did Not Answer | Bio/Vote History | |
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![]() Nicola Fuchs-Schündeln |
Goethe-Universität Frankfurt | Bio/Vote History | ||
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I think we will see quite a bit of technological progress that can avoid these problems.
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![]() Jordi Galí |
Barcelona GSE | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Luis Garicano |
LSE | Bio/Vote History | ||
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Average prices will drop as clean energy share increases.. We will also have huge spikes in Europe,, in places where back up power is scarce or interconnections insufficient (Germany, Spain if nukes close). So lower mean much higher variance.
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![]() Yuriy Gorodnichenko |
Berkeley | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Rachel Griffith |
University of Manchester | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Veronica Guerrieri |
Chicago Booth | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Luigi Guiso |
Einaudi Institute for Economics and Finance | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Sergei Guriev |
London Business School | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Patrick Honohan |
Trinity College Dublin | Bio/Vote History | ||
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Role of marginal pricing in EU electricity market means that cost of renewables in influencing price paid to generators is limited. Therefore not obvious that there would be a big effect.
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![]() Beata Javorcik |
University of Oxford | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Jan Pieter Krahnen |
Goethe University Frankfurt | Bio/Vote History | ||
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The intermittency of renewable energy will induce further innovation and investment into network architecture, including attempts to counter the cost of intermittencies, like building storages etc. This investment might stabilize supply and prices alike, without increasing it.
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![]() Botond Kőszegi |
Central European University | Did Not Answer | Bio/Vote History | |
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![]() Eliana La Ferrara |
Harvard Kennedy | Did Not Answer | Bio/Vote History | |
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![]() Christian Leuz |
Chicago Booth | Bio/Vote History | ||
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Addressing intermittency adds costs (if considered in isolation) but at the same time the costs of renewable energy have been on a downward trajectory. So not clear that costs will be higher.
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![]() Thierry Mayer |
Sciences-Po | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Costas Meghir |
Yale | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Marco Pagano |
Università di Napoli Federico II | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Lubos Pastor |
Chicago Booth | Bio/Vote History | ||
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Technology is moving fast.
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![]() Richard Portes |
London Business School | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Canice Prendergast |
Chicago Booth | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Carol Propper |
Imperial College London | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Imran Rasul |
University College London | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Lucrezia Reichlin |
London Business School | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Ricardo Reis |
London School of Economics | Bio/Vote History | ||
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Intermittency leads to prices sometimes spiking but most of the time (and so on average) prices will be low with renewable sources that have low marginal cost of production. Also, renewables share rose in last 15 years and, if you take out taxes and Putin's invasion, prices fell.
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![]() Rafael Repullo |
CEMFI | Bio/Vote History | ||
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What is key is what will happen to the price of the marginal technologies that are required to operate when there is no wind or sun such as gas.
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![]() Hélène Rey |
London Business School | Did Not Answer | Bio/Vote History | |
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![]() Antoinette Schoar |
MIT | Did Not Answer | Bio/Vote History | |
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![]() Kjetil Storesletten |
University of Minnesota | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Daniel Sturm |
London School of Economics | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Silvana Tenreyro |
LSE | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Rick Van der Ploeg |
Oxford | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() John Vickers |
Oxford | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Hans-Joachim Voth |
University of Zurich | Bio/Vote History | ||
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not inevitable but given madcap preferences for renewables among politicians, probably unavoidable
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![]() Karl Whelan |
University College Dublin | Did Not Answer | Bio/Vote History | |
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![]() Charles Wyplosz |
The Graduate Institute Geneva | Bio/Vote History | ||
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Question C Participant Responses
| Participant | University | Vote | Confidence | Bio/Vote History |
|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() Franklin Allen |
Imperial College London | Bio/Vote History | ||
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More expenditure on electricity infrastructure is definitely needed. An important issue is how to spend the money. Nuclear power could play an important role but the time horizon for that is probably more than five years. If the Chinese can bring costs down the wait may be best.
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![]() Pol Antras |
Harvard | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Olivier Blanchard |
Peterson Institute | Bio/Vote History | ||
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Yes, the change in the sources of electricity imply a different geographic distribution system.
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![]() Richard William Blundell |
University College London | Did Not Answer | Bio/Vote History | |
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![]() Maristella Botticini |
Bocconi | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Agnès Bénassy-Quéré |
Paris School of Economics | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Elena Carletti |
Bocconi | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Jean-Pierre Danthine |
Paris School of Economics | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Paul De Grauwe |
LSE | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Jan Eeckhout |
UPF Barcelona | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Xavier Freixas |
Barcelona GSE | Did Not Answer | Bio/Vote History | |
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![]() Nicola Fuchs-Schündeln |
Goethe-Universität Frankfurt | Bio/Vote History | ||
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Next to infrastructure, regulation is also a problem. The markets have to be organized more efficiently.
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![]() Jordi Galí |
Barcelona GSE | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Luis Garicano |
LSE | Bio/Vote History | ||
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We really need to get the grid ready to connect all the solar and wind projects in the pipeline, and to smooth between -country demand and supply fluctuations, and we need to invest in storage solutions too.
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![]() Yuriy Gorodnichenko |
Berkeley | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Rachel Griffith |
University of Manchester | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Veronica Guerrieri |
Chicago Booth | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Luigi Guiso |
Einaudi Institute for Economics and Finance | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Sergei Guriev |
London Business School | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Patrick Honohan |
Trinity College Dublin | Bio/Vote History | ||
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The imperative for tackling climate change of increasing low emission electricity production makes the answer clear.
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![]() Beata Javorcik |
University of Oxford | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Jan Pieter Krahnen |
Goethe University Frankfurt | Bio/Vote History | ||
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See my comments to the 2 previous questions.
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![]() Botond Kőszegi |
Central European University | Did Not Answer | Bio/Vote History | |
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![]() Eliana La Ferrara |
Harvard Kennedy | Did Not Answer | Bio/Vote History | |
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![]() Christian Leuz |
Chicago Booth | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Thierry Mayer |
Sciences-Po | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Costas Meghir |
Yale | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Marco Pagano |
Università di Napoli Federico II | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Lubos Pastor |
Chicago Booth | Bio/Vote History | ||
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The grid must be able to accommodate the intermittency of renewables, whose relative importance is growing.
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![]() Richard Portes |
London Business School | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Canice Prendergast |
Chicago Booth | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Carol Propper |
Imperial College London | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Imran Rasul |
University College London | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Lucrezia Reichlin |
London Business School | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Ricardo Reis |
London School of Economics | Bio/Vote History | ||
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Infrastructure on expanding storage is important. But the most important is interconnection across national markets. This requires some investment but the main barrier is political, because protectionism prevents integration to protect national incumbents.
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![]() Rafael Repullo |
CEMFI | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Hélène Rey |
London Business School | Did Not Answer | Bio/Vote History | |
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![]() Antoinette Schoar |
MIT | Did Not Answer | Bio/Vote History | |
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![]() Kjetil Storesletten |
University of Minnesota | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Daniel Sturm |
London School of Economics | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Silvana Tenreyro |
LSE | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Rick Van der Ploeg |
Oxford | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() John Vickers |
Oxford | Bio/Vote History | ||
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![]() Hans-Joachim Voth |
University of Zurich | Bio/Vote History | ||
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nuclear would be the answer; no new grid adaptations; pays for itself
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![]() Karl Whelan |
University College Dublin | Did Not Answer | Bio/Vote History | |
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![]() Charles Wyplosz |
The Graduate Institute Geneva | Bio/Vote History | ||
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Yes, and that's one reason electricity prices must rise.
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