Uniform taxation of electricity: incentives for flexibility and cost redistribution among household categories

Philipp Andreas Gunkel*, Febin Kachirayil, Claire Marie Bergaentzlé, Russell McKenna, Dogan Keles, Henrik Klinge Jacobsen

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Abstract

Recent European developments have shown a rapid adoption of residential solar PV with increased self-consumption and self-sufficiency levels. A major driver for their economic viability is the electricity tax exemption for the consumption of self-produced electricity. This leads to large residential PV capacities and potentially overburdened distribution grids. Moreover, the tax exemption favoring wealthier households capable of making capital-intensive investments in solar panels has prompted debates regarding energy equity and the suitable taxation level for self-consumption. This study investigates the implementation of uniform electricity taxes on all consumption, irrespective of the origin of the production, by means of a case study of 155,000 hypothetical Danish prosumers. The results show that the new taxation policy redistributes costs dependent on household consumption and their PV usage. As more consumption is taxed, the tax level can be reduced by 38%, leading to 61% of all households seeing net savings of up to 23% off their yearly tax bill. High-occupancy houses save an average of 116 €/year at the expense of single households living in large dwellings who pay 55 €/year more. Implementing a uniform electricity tax in combination with a reduced overall tax level can (a) maintain overall tax revenues and (b) increase the interaction of batteries with the grid while reducing behind-the-meter operations. In the end, the implicit cross-subsidy is removed by taxing self-consumption uniformly, leading to a cost redistribution supporting occupant-dense households and encouraging the grid-side flexibility of prosumers. This policy measure improves economic efficiency and greater use of technology with positive system-wide impacts while redistributing tax contributions by alleviating the regressive tax design.

Original languageEnglish
Article number107024
JournalEnergy Economics
Volume127
Number of pages22
ISSN0140-9883
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2023

Keywords

  • Electricity tax
  • Electrification
  • Energy system analysis
  • Household characteristics
  • Residential electricity consumption

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