Hot Weather and Hourly Electricity Demand in Italy

28 Pages Posted: 20 Aug 2018

See all articles by Anna Alberini

Anna Alberini

University of Maryland - Department of Agricultural & Resource Economics

Giuseppe Prettico

Joint Research Center

Chang Shen

University of Maryland, College Park, Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics (AREC), Students

Jacopo Torriti

University of Surrey - Centre for Environmental Strategy

Date Written: August 19, 2018

Abstract

Power generation is a major source of greenhouse gas emissions, and is in turn likely to be heavily affected by climate change. Earlier analyses have shown that in Southern Europe, including Italy, there is a V-shaped relationship between temperature and electricity usage. Higher temperatures were found to lead to sharp increases in electricity usage. But those analyses were based on electricity delivered to all sectors (residential, commercial, and industrial), and cooling demand is likely to be driven primarily by the latter two. In this paper, we use hourly electricity demand from a sample of Italian residences over a full year to examine how sensitive residential demand is to temperature. Our regression model includes a rich set of household-by-time fixed effects to control for dwelling characteristics and equipment, family composition, work and business schedules, demand for lighting, and seasonal habits other than temperature. We find that demand stays within a relatively narrow range (and is thus relatively flat) up to temperatures of about 23° C, and increases sharply with temperature thereafter. We perform various checks to see if this shape varies across market zones, household income, and ownership of electrical appliance. We find that temperature accounts for a very small share of daily electricity demand. Only on exceptionally hot summer days (as in an exercise where we “assign” to the sample the same temperature as in one of the hottest summers on record, that of 2003) can temperature account for 12% of hourly electricity use.

Keywords: residential electricity consumption; temperature and electricity load; climate change

Suggested Citation

Alberini, Anna and Prettico, Giuseppe and Shen, Chang and Torriti, Jacopo, Hot Weather and Hourly Electricity Demand in Italy (August 19, 2018). USAEE Working Paper No. 18-357, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3234746 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3234746

Anna Alberini (Contact Author)

University of Maryland - Department of Agricultural & Resource Economics ( email )

Symmons Hall, Rm 2200
University of Maryland
College Park, MD 20742-5535
United States
301-405-1267 (Phone)
301-314-9091 (Fax)

Giuseppe Prettico

Joint Research Center ( email )

Ispra
Italy

Chang Shen

University of Maryland, College Park, Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics (AREC), Students ( email )

College Park, MD
United States

Jacopo Torriti

University of Surrey - Centre for Environmental Strategy ( email )

University of Surrey
Guildford, GU2 7XH
United Kingdom

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