dc.description.abstract |
This paper analyzes Pakistan’s energy sector issues and highlights (i)
the importance of the link between energy and the environment, and (ii)
the central importance of energy efficiency for high return demand-side
solutions to meet the country’s energy needs. The paper argues that energy
planning should integrate the external cost of energy use in deciding about
the composition of supply: coal, oil, gas, hydropower, renewable, nuclear,
and solar. By utilizing external cost estimates made by the European
Commission for Europe, and the US National Academy of Sciences, a total
cost (external + internal) ranking of primary energy sources for Pakistan is
estimated. This estimate is at the low end of the cost spectrum because
classic pollutants—sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, carbon monoxide—in
Pakistan are significantly higher than in Europe or the US. The paper also
discusses the experiences of China and OECD countries in increasing
energy-wide efficiency. A central lesson emerging from the analysis is that
Pakistan will have to significantly increase its energy-related research and
development expenditure in order to adequately address its energy sector
issues. A quadrupling from 0.25 % of gross domestic product is
recommended over a decade. |
en_US |