7.5.2 Energy Pricing
Within Countries
For the market to stimulate investments in energy efficiency, energy prices
must reflect the full cost of providing energy to end users. While this is true
for all end-use sectors, it is particularly relevant in the buildings sector,
because of the political interest in keeping energy prices low to homeowners
in countries with administered price systems. Where energy prices are subsidised,
homeowners and commercial building owners and managers receive muted signals
on the benefits of investing in efficiency, undercutting the potential market
for energy-efficient products. In countries with administered price systems,
the industrial sector often subsidises the housing sector. These cross-sector
subsidizes can make industries less competitive. If the housing subsidies were
paid by governments, taxes would need to be increased or funds diverted from
other public services, such as education or health care.
A World Bank study of the effect of energy price increases in six countries--Columbia,
Ghana, Indonesia, Malaysia, Turkey and Zimbabwe--found that eliminating subsidies
does not cause disproportionate hardship for the poor, lower economic growth,
create inflation or reduce industrial competitiveness, but does improve public
revenues (Hope, 1995). The consumption of commercial fuel increases greatly
with income, according to the study, so energy subsidies largely benefit non-poor,
urban households. A study of subsidised household energy prices in transition
economies also concluded that they benefited the rich more than the poor (Freund,
1995). One approach is a staged removal of energy subsidies, which creates a
market for investments in energy-saving products and services.
The landlord-tenant relationship can create problems unique to the buildings
sector when the landlord pays the energy costs, but has little control over
the energy-using practices of the tenant. For tenants, if energy services are
free, there is no incentive to use energy wisely. Technical problems may also
make it difficult to make homeowners and tenants responsible for the energy
they use. In many high-rise multifamily buildings, heat is delivered to apartments
through vertical pipes, making it difficult and costly to try to measure the
energy used by each individual apartment unit. In new buildings, this problem
can be addressed by building codes that require that heating systems be designed
to serve individual, metered apartment units.
Even in market economies, energy prices rarely include the full societal costs
of related environmental externalities. These costs are reflected in adverse
health impacts and environmental degradation. If the market mechanism is to
exercise its full potential for achieving environmental goals, the price of
energy needs to incorporate these environmental externalities.
Among Countries
The lessons learned from in-country technology transfer programmes also need
to be recognised in international programmes. This is particularly important
for countries moving toward market economies. During this transition, it is
often useful to ask: Who is paying the energy costs?. Someone is. It may be
municipalities through subsidies, industries through cross-sector subsidises,
or energy supply industries through unrecovered costs. Whoever is paying these
costs will have an interest in reforms. It is also useful to track the flow
of energy from source to end use, to identify the changes in ownership, to metre
the quantity of energy in each transaction, to measure the performance of each
owner, and to move toward a system of rewards and penalties that improves the
overall efficiency of the energy delivery system.
Multilateral and bilateral assistance programmes can encourage the movement
to full-cost energy pricing by ensuring that any projects that are supported
incorporate progress toward market reforms. The Russian Enterprise Housing Divestiture
Project of the World Bank exemplifies this approach. The Bank is providing loans
of US$300 million for basic energy efficiency measures in a total of 3,500 residential
apartment buildings in six Russian cities. The participating cities are undertaking
policy reforms designed to reduce housing maintenance and utility costs. The
World Bank is also initiating a similar project in Lithuania.
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