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Jorge Blazquez

Researcher at BBVA Compass

Publications -  39
Citations -  724

Jorge Blazquez is an academic researcher from BBVA Compass. The author has contributed to research in topics: Renewable energy & Energy mix. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 37 publications receiving 535 citations.

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Angel or Devil: China's Trade Impact on Latin American Emerging Markets

TL;DR: The authors studied China's exporting and importing structure, using a database of 620 different goods, and built two indices of trade competition to compare Chinese impacts over 1998-2004 on 34 economies, of which 15 are Latin American.
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The renewable energy policy Paradox

TL;DR: In this article, the incompatibility between electricity liberalization and renewable policy, regardless of the country, location or renewable technologies, is identified as long as market clear prices with short term marginal costs, and renewable technology's marginal cost is close to zero and not dispatchable.
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The unstudied barriers to widespread renewable energy deployment: Fossil fuel price responses

TL;DR: In this article, the authors build a standard economic framework to test the validity of this assumption, particularly in the case of coal and gas fired power generation, and find that it is likely that the cost of fossil fuel power generation will respond to the large scale penetration of renewables, thus making the renewable energy transition slower or more costly than anticipated.
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On some economic principles of the energy transition

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide a simple framework for the energy transition, pointing out that some scenarios have a higher probability and that the current energy transition is driven by policies rather than by technology improvements.
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Assessing the cost of renewable energy policy options – A Spanish wind case study

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors assess the cost effectiveness of wind energy policy options by using a costbenefit analysis approach and find that the most cost effective option for promoting wind energy development from the government perspective is to use an investment credit policy given the capital intensive nature of wind technology.