Energy News  
ENERGY NEWS
Energy efficiency may encourage greater demand
by Brooks Hays
Tilburg, Netherlands (UPI) Jan 13, 2016


GE to move headquarters to Boston for tech gains
New York Jan 13, 2016 - US industrial conglomerate General Electric said Wednesday it was moving its corporate headquarters to Boston to gain a technology edge from the city's concentrated pool of talent. "Greater Boston is home to 55 colleges and universities. Massachusetts spends more on research and development than any other region in the world, and Boston attracts a diverse, technologically-fluent workforce focused on solving challenges for the world," said Jeff Immelt, GE chairman and chief executive, in a statement. US media suggested there were tax motives behind the move, since corporate taxes were raised last year in the neighboring state of Connecticut, where GE has had its headquarters in Fairfield for more than 40 years. GE said though that it had been mulling the relocation for more than three years, and in June 2015 launched a formal review of 40 potential locations. "Boston was selected after a careful evaluation of the business ecosystem, talent, long-term costs, quality of life for employees, connections with the world and proximity to other important company assets," GE said. It said it already employs nearly 5,000 people across Massachusetts, in various businesses including aviation and energy. GE said the relocation would have no significant impact on its finances, citing incentives provided by Massachusetts and Boston. It said it also would sell its offices in Fairfield and at 30 Rockefeller Plaza in New York to help offset the cost of the move. About 800 employees will work at the Boston headquarters. The relocation will be done in stages, with the full move completed by 2018.

Conserving energy may not be as simple as boosting energy efficiency standards. According to new research by Dutch economist Erdal Aydin, lower energy bills lead to higher demand -- complicating the push to shrink consumption.

The research is Aydin's PhD thesis and yet to be peer-reviewed or published, but the findings follow basic macroeconomic logic.

Aydin, a postdoctoral candidate at Tilburg University, arrived at his conclusions after analyzing the effects of the European Union's two main energy efficiency policies -- strengthened efficiency standards for appliances and home insulation.

To do so, Aydin analyzed energy use in 13 European nations over the course of three decades.

"To that end, I used data on energy consumption and energy efficiency policies in the residential sector in Europe between 1980 and 2009," Aydin said in a press release. "I was able to show that the mandatory energy labels for household appliances as well as the stricter building regulations have led to a decrease in energy consumption."

But consumption is different than demand.

Further analysis revealed a phenomenon known as the rebound effect, whereby people use their energy efficient appliances more often or turn the thermostat in their newly insulated home up higher -- thus, offsetting energy efficiency gains.

In surveying energy-use behaviors among Dutch homeowners and apartment-renters, Aydin found a strong rebound effect, offsetting roughly a third of the usage reductions achieved by strengthened efficiency standards.

"Homeowners are more economical than people who are renting," Aydin pointed out. "Homeowners showed a rebound effect of 26.7 percent; for tenants, it was 41.3 percent."

"The rebound effect is larger for low incomes than for high incomes," he added. "Moreover, this effect is larger in households whose energy consumption was above average to start with."

Aydin hopes his work will be used to more accurately predict the effects of new energy policies.


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