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Impact of domestic energy-efficiency policies on foreign innovation: The case of lighting technologies
Abstract Fostering the global development of low-carbon technology is crucial to mitigating greenhouse gas emissions. This paper analyzes the effect of energy-efficiency policies on lighting patenting between 1992 and 2007, using data for 19 OECD countries. We examine levels of energy-efficiency RDD however, the technology-push policy does not. These findings suggest that demand-pull policies can help to transform international markets for low-carbon technology innovation, and they underscore the importance of the often-overlooked international dimension of domestic energy-efficiency policies. To the extent that our findings are generalizable, our research suggests that governance processes that strengthen energy performance standards and steady investment in RD&D could spur energy innovation in industrialized nations across the world.
- University of East Anglia United Kingdom
- KDI School Korea (Republic of)
- Georgia Institute of Technology United States
- KDI School Korea (Republic of)
- Georgia Institute of Technology United States
690, 330, Economics of Innovation, Negative Binomial Model, International Technology Diffusion
690, 330, Economics of Innovation, Negative Binomial Model, International Technology Diffusion
