Organizational Unit:
School of Public Policy

Research Organization Registry ID
Description
Previous Names
Parent Organization
Parent Organization
Includes Organization(s)

Publication Search Results

Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
  • Item
    Sustainable transitions in energy and water systems
    (Georgia Institute of Technology, 2017-08-24) Burkhard, Caroline
    A Multi-Level Perspective (MLP) of Sustainable Transitions is applied to five case studies of technological and policy innovation in energy and water systems. The MLP framework analysis is supported by the policy and engineering literatures of participatory democracy, policy entrepreneurs, and system analysis. Each case study focuses on the subsystems of actors, policy institutions, and public participation in a sustainable transition. In three of the case studies, I develop system and econometric models to evaluate the value of distributed resources and their opportunities for deployment. When evaluating the actions on niche and intermediary actors and their strategies for sustainable transitions, this research suggests that scale may play a bigger role in the development of niche innovations and policies than simply an exploratory space to analyze the success of actors’ strategies. When evaluating the role of policy institutions, this research suggests that strong user preferences, supportive niche policies, and favorable economic landscapes can be insufficient to facilitate a regime change without qualitative changes to the regulatory models. When evaluating the role of the public, this research suggests that neither the niche nor the regime actors are consistently incorporating public participation. Combined, this dissertation speaks to the need for rigorous analytical work, the expansion of the definition of ‘value’ for these niche technologies, as well as the institutions and regulations which dictate how value is determined.
  • Item
    Accelerating energy innovation: Can energy efficiency policy make a difference?
    (Georgia Institute of Technology, 2017-04-06) Kim, Yeong Jae
    The objective of the first essay is to examine the impact of the voluntary environmental policy on technological innovation in household appliance firms. The key hypothesis is that firms participating in the ENERGY STAR program were more likely to innovate in response to the 1997 ENERGY STAR criteria update than firms that did not participate. Because participation in the voluntary environmental policy is not random, a time-varying instrument variable—a participation in the Green Light Program—is used to account for unobserved heterogeneity. NBER patent data from 1990 to 2003 related to the energy efficiency of household appliances is matched with COMPUSTAT to include firm-level financial information. A Poisson fixed effect model with an instrument variable estimator reveals significant evidence regarding the impact of ENERGY STAR on participating firms’ patents. The environmental innovation literature reveals a positive relationship between environmental policy and innovation. However, the impact of the domestic energy efficiency policy on foreign innovation is underexplored. Using global patent data from the European Patent Office World Patent Statistical Database, an identification comes from two quasi-experiments: the Top Runner Program in 1998 and the Energy Policy Act of 2005. We find strong evidence the domestic energy efficiency policy positively affects domestic patenting. In addition, the analysis provides strong evidence the domestic energy policy leads to technological advances in foreign patenting, especially by Japanese inventors. Moreover, we find strong evidence the domestic policy’s uncertainty negatively affects domestic light-emitting diode patenting, specifically among Japanese inventors. The third essay fills the gaps in cognitive process understanding of human behaviors between future gasoline price perception and the willingness to purchase hybrid vehicles. How consumers form future gasoline price beliefs and its impacts on decision making process in underexplored in literature. Using the monthly Michigan Survey of Consumers conducted in July 2008 to November 2008, we pool five cross sections and run a generalized linear model. We find statistically significant evidence that current and long-term future gasoline price perceptions affect the willingness to buy hybrid vehicles. This chapter also shows the long-term future gasoline price perceptions predict better than the short-term future gasoline price beliefs. Understanding the effect of gasoline price on the willingness to buy more fuel-efficient cars has an important policy implication for the gasoline tax and other economic incentives to internalize negative externalities.