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Astrid Kander. Photo.

Astrid Kander

Professor

Astrid Kander. Photo.

East versus West: Energy intensity in coal-rich Europe, 1800–2000

Author

  • Hana Nielsen
  • Paul Warde
  • Astrid Kander

Summary, in English

This paper presents a stylized graph of the energy intensities in two typical European sets of countries: the East and the West, in parallel to the existing research on the European North – South. The coal-rich West and East differ from the coal-poor South and North, in that their pattern is an inverted U-curve, while both North and South have consistently declining energy intensities. Energy intensity peaks about 50 years earlier in the West than in the East. For the first time we have been able to demonstrate that the gap between the West and East actually started in the 1950s, and to single out the main drivers behind the East European inefficiency. It was not general systematic wastefulness or lack of innovations, but surprisingly for a planned economy, it was the inefficiency in the expanding electricity system that accounted for most of the effect, together with the structural change towards heavy industrial production. As much of the industrial production became electrified and powered by less efficient electricity, this had a snowball effect through the whole value chain of the production. The negative impact of the planned economy on energy intensity was largest between 1948 and 1970.

Department/s

  • Department of Economic History

Publishing year

2018

Language

English

Pages

75-83

Publication/Series

Energy Policy

Volume

122

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Elsevier

Topic

  • Economic History

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1873-6777