Tax Reform for the Energy Transition in Korea’s Power Generation Sector

The tax structure capable of achieving an energy transition in the power sector was analyzed by applying the Pigouvian tax on generation fuels. Under the 2018 Tax Act Amendment, the tax rate criteria for the excise tax on power generation fuels changed from the calorific value to environmental exter...

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Main Authors: Sung-Jin Cho, Yoon Kyung Kim
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-10-01
Series:Energies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/13/19/5233
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spelling doaj-178c970194514b7c814417da6ce4406b2020-11-25T03:43:15ZengMDPI AGEnergies1996-10732020-10-01135233523310.3390/en13195233Tax Reform for the Energy Transition in Korea’s Power Generation SectorSung-Jin Cho0Yoon Kyung Kim1Electriticy Policy Research Team, Korea Energy Economics Institute, Ulsan 44543, KoreaFaculty of College of Social Science, Department of Economics, Ewha Womans University, Seoul 03760, KoreaThe tax structure capable of achieving an energy transition in the power sector was analyzed by applying the Pigouvian tax on generation fuels. Under the 2018 Tax Act Amendment, the tax rate criteria for the excise tax on power generation fuels changed from the calorific value to environmental externalities of the fuel. However, to reverse the merit order of bituminous coal generation with liquefied natural gas (LNG) generation, reflecting only some external costs of the environment as a tax is not enough. In this paper, we established four tax reform scenarios for bituminous coal and LNG considering environmental externalities, and we analyzed the reversal of dispatch priority using the electricity system unit commitment and M-Core economic dispatch model. According to the analysis results, the share of bituminous coal generation will be reduced to 10–20% depending on the scenario, reflecting the relative tax rate equalizing the fuel costs of bituminous coal and LNG power. To achieve an energy transition by reversing the merit order of bituminous coal and LNG generation, the tax rate of bituminous coal must be more than twice that of LNG. Moreover, to achieve an eco-friendly generation mix through tax reform, the external costs of the environment by fuel source should be accurately estimated and efficient taxation that can adequately reflect these external costs of the environment while considering tax fairness, neutrality and simplicity should be established.https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/13/19/5233energy transitionPigouvian taxmerit ordereconomic dispatch model
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sung-Jin Cho
Yoon Kyung Kim
spellingShingle Sung-Jin Cho
Yoon Kyung Kim
Tax Reform for the Energy Transition in Korea’s Power Generation Sector
Energies
energy transition
Pigouvian tax
merit order
economic dispatch model
author_facet Sung-Jin Cho
Yoon Kyung Kim
author_sort Sung-Jin Cho
title Tax Reform for the Energy Transition in Korea’s Power Generation Sector
title_short Tax Reform for the Energy Transition in Korea’s Power Generation Sector
title_full Tax Reform for the Energy Transition in Korea’s Power Generation Sector
title_fullStr Tax Reform for the Energy Transition in Korea’s Power Generation Sector
title_full_unstemmed Tax Reform for the Energy Transition in Korea’s Power Generation Sector
title_sort tax reform for the energy transition in korea’s power generation sector
publisher MDPI AG
series Energies
issn 1996-1073
publishDate 2020-10-01
description The tax structure capable of achieving an energy transition in the power sector was analyzed by applying the Pigouvian tax on generation fuels. Under the 2018 Tax Act Amendment, the tax rate criteria for the excise tax on power generation fuels changed from the calorific value to environmental externalities of the fuel. However, to reverse the merit order of bituminous coal generation with liquefied natural gas (LNG) generation, reflecting only some external costs of the environment as a tax is not enough. In this paper, we established four tax reform scenarios for bituminous coal and LNG considering environmental externalities, and we analyzed the reversal of dispatch priority using the electricity system unit commitment and M-Core economic dispatch model. According to the analysis results, the share of bituminous coal generation will be reduced to 10–20% depending on the scenario, reflecting the relative tax rate equalizing the fuel costs of bituminous coal and LNG power. To achieve an energy transition by reversing the merit order of bituminous coal and LNG generation, the tax rate of bituminous coal must be more than twice that of LNG. Moreover, to achieve an eco-friendly generation mix through tax reform, the external costs of the environment by fuel source should be accurately estimated and efficient taxation that can adequately reflect these external costs of the environment while considering tax fairness, neutrality and simplicity should be established.
topic energy transition
Pigouvian tax
merit order
economic dispatch model
url https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/13/19/5233
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AT yoonkyungkim taxreformfortheenergytransitioninkoreaspowergenerationsector
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