Effects of increasing indigenous coal share in Turkey’s electricity generation mix on key economic and environmental indicators: An extended input–output analysis

The aim of this paper is to evaluate the economic and environmental effects of increasing indigenous coal share in electricity generation by using extended input–output analysis. The policy scenario is a $1 million increase in demand for investment in the coal mining sector. In order to analyze this...

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Main Author: Levent Aydın
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2018-03-01
Series:Energy Exploration & Exploitation
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/0144598717737694
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spelling doaj-63c59b5c06154df3955bb0906e89c8c82020-11-25T04:09:46ZengSAGE PublishingEnergy Exploration & Exploitation0144-59872048-40542018-03-013610.1177/0144598717737694Effects of increasing indigenous coal share in Turkey’s electricity generation mix on key economic and environmental indicators: An extended input–output analysisLevent AydınThe aim of this paper is to evaluate the economic and environmental effects of increasing indigenous coal share in electricity generation by using extended input–output analysis. The policy scenario is a $1 million increase in demand for investment in the coal mining sector. In order to analyze this policy option, we specifically developed an extended input–output analysis associated with disaggregating the electricity sector into electricity generation transmission and distribution and the mining sector into coal and oil–gas mining. Furthermore, we use a range of key economic and environmental indicators to evaluate the effects of increasing indigenous coal production on these indicators. The results indicate that the $1 million increase in final demand for indigenous coal produces an increase in economic output for all sectors of $1,389,241 and an increase in total greenhouse gases of 229,572 CO 2 -equivalents (kg CO 2 -e) as well.https://doi.org/10.1177/0144598717737694
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Levent Aydın
spellingShingle Levent Aydın
Effects of increasing indigenous coal share in Turkey’s electricity generation mix on key economic and environmental indicators: An extended input–output analysis
Energy Exploration & Exploitation
author_facet Levent Aydın
author_sort Levent Aydın
title Effects of increasing indigenous coal share in Turkey’s electricity generation mix on key economic and environmental indicators: An extended input–output analysis
title_short Effects of increasing indigenous coal share in Turkey’s electricity generation mix on key economic and environmental indicators: An extended input–output analysis
title_full Effects of increasing indigenous coal share in Turkey’s electricity generation mix on key economic and environmental indicators: An extended input–output analysis
title_fullStr Effects of increasing indigenous coal share in Turkey’s electricity generation mix on key economic and environmental indicators: An extended input–output analysis
title_full_unstemmed Effects of increasing indigenous coal share in Turkey’s electricity generation mix on key economic and environmental indicators: An extended input–output analysis
title_sort effects of increasing indigenous coal share in turkey’s electricity generation mix on key economic and environmental indicators: an extended input–output analysis
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Energy Exploration & Exploitation
issn 0144-5987
2048-4054
publishDate 2018-03-01
description The aim of this paper is to evaluate the economic and environmental effects of increasing indigenous coal share in electricity generation by using extended input–output analysis. The policy scenario is a $1 million increase in demand for investment in the coal mining sector. In order to analyze this policy option, we specifically developed an extended input–output analysis associated with disaggregating the electricity sector into electricity generation transmission and distribution and the mining sector into coal and oil–gas mining. Furthermore, we use a range of key economic and environmental indicators to evaluate the effects of increasing indigenous coal production on these indicators. The results indicate that the $1 million increase in final demand for indigenous coal produces an increase in economic output for all sectors of $1,389,241 and an increase in total greenhouse gases of 229,572 CO 2 -equivalents (kg CO 2 -e) as well.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/0144598717737694
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