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Energy saving may kill: Evidence from the Fukushima nuclear accident

By: He, Guojun and Tanaka, Takanao.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: American Economic Journal: Applied Economics Description: 15(2), Apr, 2023: p.377-414. In: American Economic Journal: Applied EconomicsSummary: Following the Fukushima nuclear accident, Japan gradually shut down all its nuclear power plants, causing a countrywide power shortage. In response the government launched large-scale energy-saving campaigns to reduce electricity consumption. Exploiting the electricity-saving targets across regions and over time, we show that the campaigns significantly increased mortality, particularly during extremely hot days. The impact is primarily driven by people using less air conditioning, as encouraged by the government. Nonpecuniary incentives can explain most of the reduction in electricity consumption. Our findings suggest there exists a trade-off between climate change mitigation and climate change adaptation.- Reproduced
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Articles Articles Indian Institute of Public Administration
15(2), Apr, 2023: p.377-414 Available AR128933

Following the Fukushima nuclear accident, Japan gradually shut down all its nuclear power plants, causing a countrywide power shortage. In response the government launched large-scale energy-saving campaigns to reduce electricity consumption. Exploiting the electricity-saving targets across regions and over time, we show that the campaigns significantly increased mortality, particularly during extremely hot days. The impact is primarily driven by people using less air conditioning, as encouraged by the government. Nonpecuniary incentives can explain most of the reduction in electricity consumption. Our findings suggest there exists a trade-off between climate change mitigation and climate change adaptation.- Reproduced

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