J
Jan Stede
Researcher at German Institute for Economic Research
Publications - 17
Citations - 120
Jan Stede is an academic researcher from German Institute for Economic Research. The author has contributed to research in topics: Emissions trading & Efficient energy use. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 17 publications receiving 57 citations.
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Bridging the industrial energy efficiency gap – Assessing the evidence from the Italian white certificate scheme
TL;DR: The Italian white certificate scheme is the main national policy instrument to incentivise energy efficiency of the industrial sector, with savings from white certificates amounting to 2% of Italy's 2012 primary energy consumption as mentioned in this paper.
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The role of aggregators in facilitating industrial demand response: Evidence from Germany
TL;DR: In this paper, the role of aggregators in industrial demand response is examined based on the results from semi-structured interviews with German demand response aggregators, as well as a wider stakeholder online survey.
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A green COVID-19 recovery of the EU basic materials sector: identifying potentials, barriers and policy solutions
Olga Chiappinelli,Timo Gerres,Karsten Neuhoff,Frederik Lettow,Heleen de Coninck,Balázs Felsmann,Eugénie Joltreau,Gauri Khandekar,Pedro Linares,Jörn C. Richstein,Aleksander Śniegocki,Jan Stede,Tomas Wyns,Cornelis Zandt,Lars Zetterberg +14 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explore climate-friendly projects that could be part of the COVID-19 recovery while jump-starting the transition of the European basic materials industry, based on a literature review.
Posted Content
Demand response in Germany: Technical potential, benefits and regulatory challenges
TL;DR: In this article, the availability of demand response as a system resource depends on the underlying type of demand and the available capacity available for at least one hour in Germany, but this often requires investment in storage capacity for intermediate products.
Posted Content
Carbon Pricing of Basic Materials: Incentives and Risks for the Value Chain and Consumers
TL;DR: In this article, the authors quantified potential carbon leakage risks, distributional implications and additional revenues associated with different mechanisms: an import-only border carbon adjustment (BCA), a symmetric BCA, and an excise for embodied carbon emissions at a fixed benchmark level in combination with continued free allocation.