Posts

What if universal time-of-use tariffs were introduced? [40]

Summary of the Article: Making TOU tariffs universal —so every customer pays higher prices during peak hours and lower prices during off‑peak/solar hours—would align retail prices with system costs, flatten peak demand , improve renewable integration , and reduce fuel and capacity costs. Evidence from large‑scale programs (California, Ontario, UK) and meta‑analyses indicates TOU consistently shifts load away from peaks , with savings and emissions benefits magnified when paired with smart meters , automation, EV charging, and storage. [cpuc.ca.gov] , [brattle.com] , [cpuc.ca.gov] In India, the Electricity (Rights of Consumers) Amendment Rules, 2023 already mandate ToD/TOU for C&I consumers (from April 1, 2024 ) and for other classes (by April 1, 2025 , except agriculture), with ≥20% lower tariffs in “solar hours” and ≥10–20% higher in peak hours . Successful universalization hinges on smart‑meter coverage , consumer protection, and tariff design guardrails set by regulators and D...

What if developing countries leapfrogged to renewables only? [39]

Summary of the Article: If developing countries went straight to renewables —skipping a long fossil fuel phase—they could secure lower long‑run power costs , reduce exposure to fuel‑price volatility, cut air‑pollution morbidity, and align with trade regimes that increasingly penalize high‑carbon supply chains. The feasibility hinges on four enablers: (1) cost‑competitive renewables plus storage now available at scale, (2) fit‑for‑purpose grids and decentralized systems for last‑mile access, (3) de‑risked finance to close a persistent capital cost gap, and (4) domestic industrial policy to manage supply‑chain concentration and create jobs. Recent data show that in 2024, 91% of newly commissioned utility‑scale renewables undercut the cheapest new fossil alternative, with global utility‑scale solar PV LCOE ≈ $0.043/kWh and onshore wind ≈ $0.034/kWh ; utility‑scale battery costs have also fallen dramatically since 2010. [unep.org] , [icapcarbonaction.com] For India , where near‑unive...

What if energy poverty was eradicated by 2030? [38]

Summary of the Article: Eradicating energy poverty by 2030—i.e., achieving universal access to affordable, reliable, sustainable, and modern energy for households and productive uses—would yield outsized gains in health, education, gender equity, and economic productivity. Today, ~685 million people lack electricity (2022) and ~2.1 billion lack clean cooking ; progress has slowed post‑pandemic, with a first‑time reversal in global electrification in 2022. Achieving universal access by 2030 would require (i) accelerated grid and decentralized renewables scale‑up, (ii) affordability instruments (lifeline tariffs, targeted subsidies), and (iii) massive last‑mile financing, particularly in Sub‑Saharan Africa and parts of Asia. [worldbank.org] [iea.org] , [trackingsd....esmap.org] India’s near‑universal electrification and rapid smart‑metering rollout provide a replicable playbook for reliability and cost recovery, while clean cooking requires sustained support (LPG affordability, last‑...

What if global emission trading became mandatory? [36]

Summary of the Article: Mandating a global emissions trading system (ETS) would synchronize carbon prices, accelerate least‑cost abatement, and unlock capital flows from high‑emitting to low‑cost mitigation regions. Yet success would hinge on credible caps, robust MRV (monitoring, reporting, verification), market integrity , and equity mechanisms for developing economies. Existing blueprints— EU ETS , China’s expanding ETS , Article 6 under the Paris Agreement, and sectoral mechanisms like CORSIA —show feasibility and pitfalls. For India, compulsion would intersect with the Carbon Credit Trading Scheme (CCTS) and EU CBAM exposure , demanding rapid alignment of baselines, registry, and verification, plus targeted industrial decarbonization (steel, aluminum, cement). Immediate priorities: harden data and governance, ring‑fence revenues for transition, and negotiate Article 6 rules that recognize domestic intensity‑based pathways . [climate.ec.europa.eu] , [icapcarbonaction.com] , [u...