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Analyzing sustainable energy in developing countries: Selected South African case studies

This thesis demonstrates the use of selected Energy-Environment-Economic (E3) modelling techniques to provide insight to developing country issues. The work focuses on analyzing combinations of technologies and energy use to satisfy potential requirements of consumers at the lowest cost to society....

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Main Author: Howells, Mark Idwal
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Energy Research Centre 2014
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access_status_str Open Access
author Howells, Mark Idwal
author_browse Howells, Mark Idwal
author_facet Howells, Mark Idwal
author_sort Howells, Mark Idwal
collection Thesis
description This thesis demonstrates the use of selected Energy-Environment-Economic (E3) modelling techniques to provide insight to developing country issues. The work focuses on analyzing combinations of technologies and energy use to satisfy potential requirements of consumers at the lowest cost to society. (Tools such as MARKAL- of the Energy International Energy Agency's (IEA) Technology Systems Analysis Program (ETSAP) - are used often). The thesis shows how these models may be adapted in novel ways to tackle different challenges in different contexts. The applications covered range from macro-economic problems to the micro-economic village level analysis of fuel and appliance use. The thesis demonstrates through a national (South African) analysis selected greenhouse gas (GHG) mitigation potentials. By examining markets in low-income areas dependent on biomass it shows relationships between institutional- and information-failure and traditional fuel use. Using the increased functionality available in the TIMES model (the successor to the afore-mentioned MARKAL), detailed dynamics of low income fuel use are simulated. By adopting simplifications, a robust, simple and critical analysis of an energy subsidy is made. Using a Multi-Criteria Decision Analysis (MCDA) approach a range of GHG mitigation options are compared in a developing country context. The thesis reports on environmentally friendly development paths derived from the application of the Goal Programming extension of MARKAL. Finally it questions the appropriateness of the Clean Development Mechanism's policy of supporting only 'additional' GHG mitigation in certain circumstances. In an appendix it develops an efficient industrial data collection process using an MCDA analysis. The main theme of this thesis is to show how suitable modelling can not only warn of inefficiency in development policies, but also indicate technical scenarios of how such inefficiencies are best remedied. Key words: South Africa, Energy-Environment-Economic Modelling, MARKAL, TIMES, Efficiency, MCDA, Greenhouse gas, Goal Programming, Clean Development Mechanism
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:21.255Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2014
publishDateRange 2014
publishDateSort 2014
publisher Energy Research Centre
publisherStr Energy Research Centre
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/4163 Analyzing sustainable energy in developing countries: Selected South African case studies Howells, Mark Idwal Mechanical Engineering This thesis demonstrates the use of selected Energy-Environment-Economic (E3) modelling techniques to provide insight to developing country issues. The work focuses on analyzing combinations of technologies and energy use to satisfy potential requirements of consumers at the lowest cost to society. (Tools such as MARKAL- of the Energy International Energy Agency's (IEA) Technology Systems Analysis Program (ETSAP) - are used often). The thesis shows how these models may be adapted in novel ways to tackle different challenges in different contexts. The applications covered range from macro-economic problems to the micro-economic village level analysis of fuel and appliance use. The thesis demonstrates through a national (South African) analysis selected greenhouse gas (GHG) mitigation potentials. By examining markets in low-income areas dependent on biomass it shows relationships between institutional- and information-failure and traditional fuel use. Using the increased functionality available in the TIMES model (the successor to the afore-mentioned MARKAL), detailed dynamics of low income fuel use are simulated. By adopting simplifications, a robust, simple and critical analysis of an energy subsidy is made. Using a Multi-Criteria Decision Analysis (MCDA) approach a range of GHG mitigation options are compared in a developing country context. The thesis reports on environmentally friendly development paths derived from the application of the Goal Programming extension of MARKAL. Finally it questions the appropriateness of the Clean Development Mechanism's policy of supporting only 'additional' GHG mitigation in certain circumstances. In an appendix it develops an efficient industrial data collection process using an MCDA analysis. The main theme of this thesis is to show how suitable modelling can not only warn of inefficiency in development policies, but also indicate technical scenarios of how such inefficiencies are best remedied. Key words: South Africa, Energy-Environment-Economic Modelling, MARKAL, TIMES, Efficiency, MCDA, Greenhouse gas, Goal Programming, Clean Development Mechanism 2014-07-30T17:16:37Z 2014-07-30T17:16:37Z 2008 Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/4163 eng application/pdf Energy Research Centre Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Mechanical Engineering
Howells, Mark Idwal
Analyzing sustainable energy in developing countries: Selected South African case studies
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Analyzing sustainable energy in developing countries: Selected South African case studies
title_full Analyzing sustainable energy in developing countries: Selected South African case studies
title_fullStr Analyzing sustainable energy in developing countries: Selected South African case studies
title_full_unstemmed Analyzing sustainable energy in developing countries: Selected South African case studies
title_short Analyzing sustainable energy in developing countries: Selected South African case studies
title_sort analyzing sustainable energy in developing countries selected south african case studies
topic Mechanical Engineering
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/4163
work_keys_str_mv AT howellsmarkidwal analyzingsustainableenergyindevelopingcountriesselectedsouthafricancasestudies