Tackling Complexity of the Just Transition in the EU: Evidence from Romania
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. The Complex Issue of Energy Transition—Literature Review
- The MLP distinguishes between niches, socio-technical regimes, and a socio-technical landscape. It also talks about transition as a regime shift, relying on inter-level interactions [21].
- The Shift Index relates to three composite indices: foundations, flows, and impact. The indices act as waves for change, as the authors see the interactions in a sinuate evolution, in which the processes overlap and the momentum is driven by all three forces [25].
1.1.1. East–West Divide in the Energy Transition
1.1.2. Energy Mix and Coal Phase-Out
1.1.3. A Brief Overview of the Romanian Context
- During 2017–2019, the installed power decreased from 24,714 MW at the beginning of 2017 to 20,696 MW at the end of 2019; Romania lost more than 4000 MW in this period primarily due to the reduction of coal (−1453 MW) and oil and gas (−2553 MW) during the three years, while biomass and photovoltaic slightly increased. Complementarily, hydropower and wind power decreased.
- In 2019, compared to 2018, the variation of production by types of resources decreased in the most primary sources of power, with values between 0.94% for nuclear production and 13.56% for oil and gas production. At the same time, there were essential increases in production from renewable sources, respectively wind (+7.14%), biomass (+27.56), and photovoltaic (+0.34%). Hydropower production decreased by 10.28% compared to the previous year. According to the Transelectrica annual report [71], this situation was caused by the decrease in hydraulicity in inland rivers from 97% in 2018, a normal year, to 85% in the year 2019, a subnormal year. However, given that the production of renewable sources is very volatile (variations in production over 1000 MW between concomitant intervals), the integration in the National Electrical System of wind power plants was facilitated, to no small extent, due to variation of the production in the hydropower plants.
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Cluster Analysis Methodology
- STAGE 1: clustering based on energy mix: Production of electricity and derived heat by type of fuel (NRG_BAL_PEH), Energy intensity (NRG_IND_EI), Energy efficiency (NRG_IND_EFF)
- STAGE 2: clustering based on pollutants: Tons of PM2.5 to 1 Billion. EUR GDP, Tons of SO2 to 1 Billion EUR GDP, Tons of NOx to 1 Billion EUR GDP ([env_air_emis])
- STAGE 3: clustering based on coal as part of the economy: Share of fossil fuels in gross available energy (NRG_IND_FFGAE), Number of companies in Mining and Quarrying in Total number of companies ([sbs_sc_ind_r2]), Population employed in Mining and Quarrying in Total population employed ([lfsa_egan2])
- STAGE 4: clustering based on relevant socio-economic indicators: GDP per capita (NAMA_10_PC), Arrears on utility bills—EU-SILC survey [ilc_mdes07], Final consumption expenditure of households by consumption purpose (COICOP 3 digit) [nama_10_co3_p3], Population unable to keep home adequately warm by poverty status (SDG_07_60).
2.2. Efficiency Analysis Methodology
2.3. Scenario Methodology
3. Results
3.1. Cluster Analysis
- Stage 1: Energy efficiency—direct correlation of 67% with production of electricity;
- Stage 2: PM 2.5 directly correlated with SO2 (57%), PM 2.5 directly correlated with NOx (83%), NOx directly correlated with SO2 (80%);
- Stage 3: Number of companies in M&Q directly correlated with population employed in M&Q (75%), population employed in M&Q directly correlated with % population (62%); and
- Stage 4: Population unable to keep home adequately warm by poverty status directly correlated with arrears on utility bills (65%).
- Production of electricity directly correlated with no. of companies in M&Q (62%) and with the population in M&Q (64%);
- Energy intensity directly correlated with pollutants (PM 2.5—65%, SO2—75%, NOx—74%), with the % of population in M&Q (64%) and indirectly correlated to GDP per capita (−62%);
- Energy efficiency directly correlated with no. of companies in M&Q (68%);
- PM 2.5 directly correlated with % population in M&Q (60%) and indirectly correlated to GDP per capita (−65%) + energy intensity;
- SO2 directly correlated with % population in M&Q (82%) + energy intensity;
- NOx directly correlated with % population in M&Q (78%), arrears in utility bills (67%), population unable to keep home adequately warm (55%) + energy intensity and indirectly correlated to GDP per capita (−71%); and
- % population in M&Q directly correlated with % expenses per family (56%) + see above.
- All pollutants were clustered into one variable (the mean average of the three variables).
- All variables with correlations higher than 75% were eliminated; therefore % population in M&Q was eliminated.
- In the second application of the correlation matrix, the only correlations higher than 75% were energy intensity vs. pollutant (78%) and no. of companies M&Q and population in M&Q (75%), which led to elimination from the analysis of the energy intensity and population in M&Q.
- Cluster 1: The Czech Republic, Germany, Spain, France, Italy, Hungary, Portugal, Slovenia, Slovakia, Sweden, and the UK.
- Cluster 2: Bulgaria, Greece, Cyprus, and Lithuania.
- Cluster 3: Estonia, Croatia, Latvia, Romania, and Finland.
- Cluster 4: Belgium, Denmark, Ireland, Luxembourg, Malta, the Netherlands, and Austria.
- Cluster 5: Poland.
3.2. Efficiency in Energy Production Analysis
3.3. Scenario Development
4. Discussion
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Clusters resulted from raw data | |||||||||
Stage 1 | Stage 2 | Stage 3 | Stage 4 | Integrative | |||||
Country | Cluster | Country | Cluster | Country | Cluster | Country | Cluster | Country | Cluster |
Austria | 1 | The Czech Republic | 1 | Belgium | 1 | Belgium | 1 | Belgium | 1 |
Belgium | 1 | Cyprus | 1 | Denmark | 1 | Germany | 1 | Denmark | 1 |
Croatia | 1 | Bulgaria | 2 | Estonia | 1 | France | 1 | Ireland | 1 |
Cyprus | 1 | Estonia | 2 | Ireland | 1 | The Netherlands | 1 | France | 1 |
Denmark | 1 | Poland | 2 | Croatia | 1 | Austria | 1 | The Netherlands | 1 |
Estonia | 1 | Greece | 3 | Cyprus | 1 | Finland | 1 | Austria | 1 |
Finland | 1 | Croatia | 3 | Latvia | 1 | Sweden | 1 | Finland | 1 |
Hungary | 1 | Latvia | 3 | Lithuania | 1 | The UK | 1 | Sweden | 1 |
Ireland | 1 | Lithuania | 3 | Luxembourg | 1 | Bulgaria | 2 | Germany | 2 |
Latvia | 1 | Romania | 3 | Hungary | 1 | Greece | 2 | The UK | 2 |
Lithuania | 1 | Spain | 4 | Malta | 1 | Croatia | 2 | Bulgaria | 3 |
Luxembourg | 1 | Hungary | 4 | Slovenia | 1 | Latvia | 2 | The Czech Republic | 3 |
Malta | 1 | Portugal | 4 | Bulgaria | 2 | Lithuania | 2 | Estonia | 3 |
Slovakia | 1 | Slovenia | 4 | The Czech Republic | 2 | Hungary | 2 | Greece | 3 |
Slovenia | 1 | Slovakia | 4 | Spain | 2 | Poland | 2 | Spain | 3 |
Sweden | 1 | Belgium | 5 | Italy | 2 | Romania | 2 | Croatia | 3 |
The Czech Republic | 2 | Denmark | 5 | Romania | 2 | Slovakia | 2 | Italy | 3 |
Italy | 2 | Germany | 5 | Germany | 3 | The Czech Republic | 3 | Cyprus | 3 |
The Netherlands | 2 | Ireland | 5 | The UK | 3 | Estonia | 3 | Latvia | 3 |
Spain | 2 | France | 5 | Greece | 4 | Spain | 3 | Lithuania | 3 |
Poland | 3 | Italy | 5 | France | 4 | Italy | 3 | Hungary | 3 |
Bulgaria | 4 | Luxembourg | 5 | The Netherlands | 4 | Cyprus | 3 | Malta | 3 |
France | 4 | Malta | 5 | Austria | 4 | Malta | 3 | Portugal | 3 |
Greece | 4 | The Netherlands | 5 | Portugal | 4 | Portugal | 3 | Romania | 3 |
Portugal | 4 | Austria | 5 | Slovakia | 4 | Slovenia | 3 | Slovenia | 3 |
Romania | 4 | Finland | 5 | Finland | 4 | Luxembourg | 4 | Slovakia | 3 |
The UK | 4 | Sweden | 5 | Sweden | 4 | Denmark | 5 | Luxembourg | 4 |
Germany | 5 | The UK | 5 | Poland | 5 | Ireland | 5 | Poland | 5 |
Clusters resulted from standardized data | |||||||||
Stage 1 | Stage 2 | Stage 3 | Stage 4 | Integrative | |||||
Country | Cluster | Country | Cluster | Country | Cluster | Country | Cluster | Country | Cluster |
Spain | 1 | Spain | 1 | Spain | 1 | Cyprus | 1 | Cyprus | 1 |
France | 1 | France | 1 | France | 1 | Lithuania | 1 | Lithuania | 1 |
Italy | 1 | Italy | 1 | Italy | 1 | Portugal | 1 | Portugal | 1 |
The UK | 1 | The UK | 1 | The UK | 1 | Bulgaria | 2 | Bulgaria | 2 |
Bulgaria | 2 | Bulgaria | 2 | Bulgaria | 2 | Greece | 2 | Greece | 2 |
Estonia | 2 | Estonia | 2 | Estonia | 2 | The Czech Republic | 3 | The Czech Republic | 3 |
Malta | 2 | Malta | 2 | Malta | 2 | Croatia | 3 | Croatia | 3 |
The Czech Republic | 3 | The Czech Republic | 3 | The Czech Republic | 3 | Latvia | 3 | Latvia | 3 |
Poland | 3 | Poland | 3 | Poland | 3 | Poland | 3 | Poland | 3 |
Belgium | 4 | Belgium | 4 | Belgium | 4 | Slovenia | 3 | Slovenia | 3 |
Denmark | 4 | Denmark | 4 | Denmark | 4 | Slovakia | 3 | Slovakia | 3 |
Ireland | 4 | Ireland | 4 | Ireland | 4 | Luxembourg | 4 | Luxembourg | 4 |
Greece | 4 | Greece | 4 | Greece | 4 | Belgium | 5 | Belgium | 5 |
Croatia | 4 | Croatia | 4 | Croatia | 4 | Denmark | 5 | Denmark | 5 |
Cyprus | 4 | Cyprus | 4 | Cyprus | 4 | Germany | 5 | Germany | 5 |
Latvia | 4 | Latvia | 4 | Latvia | 4 | Estonia | 5 | Estonia | 5 |
Lithuania | 4 | Lithuania | 4 | Lithuania | 4 | Ireland | 5 | Ireland | 5 |
Luxembourg | 4 | Luxembourg | 4 | Luxembourg | 4 | Spain | 5 | Spain | 5 |
Hungary | 4 | Hungary | 4 | Hungary | 4 | France | 5 | France | 5 |
The Netherlands | 4 | The Netherlands | 4 | The Netherlands | 4 | Italy | 5 | Italy | 5 |
Austria | 4 | Austria | 4 | Austria | 4 | Hungary | 5 | Hungary | 5 |
Portugal | 4 | Portugal | 4 | Portugal | 4 | Malta | 5 | Malta | 5 |
Romania | 4 | Romania | 4 | Romania | 4 | The Netherlands | 5 | The Netherlands | 5 |
Slovenia | 4 | Slovenia | 4 | Slovenia | 4 | Austria | 5 | Austria | 5 |
Slovakia | 4 | Slovakia | 4 | Slovakia | 4 | Romania | 5 | Romania | 5 |
Finland | 4 | Finland | 4 | Finland | 4 | Finland | 5 | Finland | 5 |
Sweden | 4 | Sweden | 4 | Sweden | 4 | Sweden | 5 | Sweden | 5 |
Germany | 5 | Germany | 5 | Germany | 5 | The UK | 5 | The UK | 5 |
Appendix B
Extracted Coal (mil.tons) and Generated Energy (TWh) for CEO and CEH | ||||||
CEO | 2014 | 2015 | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 |
Extracted Coal (mil.tons) | 21.5 | 21.028 | 19.439 | |||
Generated energy (TWh) | 13.3 | 14.92 | 14.14 | 12.4 | ||
CEH | 2014 | 2015 | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 |
Extracted Coal (mil.tons) | 1.122 | 0.824 | 0.737 | 0.574 | 0.529 | |
Generated Energy (TWh) | 2.711 | 1.842 | 1.423 | 1.199 | 0.960 | |
Generated Energy (in Mwh and Gj) by CEO and CEH | ||||||
Generated energy (MWh) | 2014 | 2015 | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 |
CEO | 13,300,000 | 0 | 0 | 14,920,000 | 14,140,000 | 12,400,000 |
CEH | 2,710,552 | 1,842,437 | 1,422,566 | 1,199,156 | 960,020 | 0 |
Generated Energy (Gj) | 2014 | 2015 | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 |
CEO | 47,880,000 | 0 | 0 | 53,712,000 | 50,904,000 | 44,640,000 |
CEH | 9,757,987 | 6,632,773.2 | 5,121,238 | 4,316,962 | 3,456,072 | 0 |
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Emissions/Source | CEO | CEH | Total |
---|---|---|---|
CO2 | 5141.304 | 349.063 | 5490.37 |
SO2 | 11.83 | 0.867 * | 12.63 |
NOx | 14.286 | 0.970 * | 15.26 |
Particulate matter (PM 2.5) | 0.76 | 0.052 * | 0.82 |
Efficiency ** | 33% | 29% | |
Lifespan of powerplants in Romania | 39 | 44 |
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Voicu-Dorobanțu, R.; Volintiru, C.; Popescu, M.-F.; Nerău, V.; Ștefan, G. Tackling Complexity of the Just Transition in the EU: Evidence from Romania. Energies 2021, 14, 1509. https://doi.org/10.3390/en14051509
Voicu-Dorobanțu R, Volintiru C, Popescu M-F, Nerău V, Ștefan G. Tackling Complexity of the Just Transition in the EU: Evidence from Romania. Energies. 2021; 14(5):1509. https://doi.org/10.3390/en14051509
Chicago/Turabian StyleVoicu-Dorobanțu, Roxana, Clara Volintiru, Maria-Floriana Popescu, Vlad Nerău, and George Ștefan. 2021. "Tackling Complexity of the Just Transition in the EU: Evidence from Romania" Energies 14, no. 5: 1509. https://doi.org/10.3390/en14051509
APA StyleVoicu-Dorobanțu, R., Volintiru, C., Popescu, M. -F., Nerău, V., & Ștefan, G. (2021). Tackling Complexity of the Just Transition in the EU: Evidence from Romania. Energies, 14(5), 1509. https://doi.org/10.3390/en14051509