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Journal article

How Can Blockchain Technology Accelerate Energy Efficiency Interventions? A Use Case Comparison

From

Technology - Transitions and System Innovation, UNEP DTU Partnership, Department of Technology, Management and Economics, Technical University of Denmark1

UNEP DTU Partnership, Department of Technology, Management and Economics, Technical University of Denmark2

Department of Technology, Management and Economics, Technical University of Denmark3

Mitigation Analysis and Data Management, UNEP DTU Partnership, Department of Technology, Management and Economics, Technical University of Denmark4

Centre for Technology Entrepreneurship, Technical University of Denmark5

Technical University of Berlin6

This paper qualitatively evaluates the application of blockchain technology for three energy efficiency use cases. To achieve the Sustainable Development Agenda, energy efficiency improvements have to double by 2030. However, the adoption of energy efficiency interventions is slow due to several market barriers.

Blockchain technology is a nascent technology with the potential to address these barriers or even fundamentally change energy system designs, by enabling transparent, decentralised, and tamper-resilient systems. Nevertheless, a blockchain application comes with trade-offs and needs to be considered on a case by case basis.

In this paper, we examine the benefits and constraints of a blockchain application for three different approaches to achieving energy efficiency: (i) peer-to-peer (P2P) energy trading; (ii) White Certificate Scheme (WCS); and (iii) Energy Service Companies (ESCOs). For each of these cases, we apply a decision framework to assess blockchain feasibility and outline a potential blockchain-based design.

The analysis shows that blockchain functions are case dependent and that an application creates different governance and system designs due to varying case characteristics. We discuss how the identified blockchain adoption barriers can be overcome and stress the need for policy action to advance the development of pilot studies.

By decentralising system governance, blockchain enables innovative designs that can accelerate the implementation of energy efficiency interventions.

Language: English
Publisher: MDPI AG
Year: 2020
Pages: 5869
ISSN: 19961073
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.3390/en13225869
ORCIDs: Schletz, Marco Christian , Salomo, Søren , Cardoso, Ana and Prata Dias, Gabriela

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