Agent‐based models (ABMs) have recently seen much application to the field of climate mitigation policies. They offer a more realistic description of micro behavior than traditional climate policy models by allowing for agent heterogeneity, bounded rationality and nonmarket interactions over social networks. This enables the analysis of a broader spectrum of policies. Here, we review 61 ABM studies addressing climate‐energy policy aimed at emissions reduction, product and technology diffusion, and energy conservation. This covers a broad set of instruments of climate policy, ranging from carbon taxation, and emissions trading through adoption subsidies to information provision tools such as smart meters and eco‐labels. Our treatment pays specific attention to behavioral assumptions and the structure of social networks. We offer suggestions for future research with ABMs to answer neglected policy questions.
%0 Journal Article
%1 castro2020review
%A Castro, Juana
%A Drews, Stefan
%A Exadaktylos, Filippos
%A Foramitti, Joël
%A Klein, Franziska
%A Konc, Théo
%A Savin, Ivan
%A van den Bergh, Jeroen
%D 2020
%I Wiley
%J Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change
%K agentbasedmodelling climatechange energy policy renewables review
%P e647
%R 10.1002/wcc.647
%T A review of agent-based modeling of climate-energy policy
%U https://doi.org/10.1002/wcc.647
%X Agent‐based models (ABMs) have recently seen much application to the field of climate mitigation policies. They offer a more realistic description of micro behavior than traditional climate policy models by allowing for agent heterogeneity, bounded rationality and nonmarket interactions over social networks. This enables the analysis of a broader spectrum of policies. Here, we review 61 ABM studies addressing climate‐energy policy aimed at emissions reduction, product and technology diffusion, and energy conservation. This covers a broad set of instruments of climate policy, ranging from carbon taxation, and emissions trading through adoption subsidies to information provision tools such as smart meters and eco‐labels. Our treatment pays specific attention to behavioral assumptions and the structure of social networks. We offer suggestions for future research with ABMs to answer neglected policy questions.
@article{castro2020review,
abstract = {Agent‐based models (ABMs) have recently seen much application to the field of climate mitigation policies. They offer a more realistic description of micro behavior than traditional climate policy models by allowing for agent heterogeneity, bounded rationality and nonmarket interactions over social networks. This enables the analysis of a broader spectrum of policies. Here, we review 61 ABM studies addressing climate‐energy policy aimed at emissions reduction, product and technology diffusion, and energy conservation. This covers a broad set of instruments of climate policy, ranging from carbon taxation, and emissions trading through adoption subsidies to information provision tools such as smart meters and eco‐labels. Our treatment pays specific attention to behavioral assumptions and the structure of social networks. We offer suggestions for future research with ABMs to answer neglected policy questions.},
added-at = {2020-04-02T14:43:21.000+0200},
author = {Castro, Juana and Drews, Stefan and Exadaktylos, Filippos and Foramitti, Joël and Klein, Franziska and Konc, Th{\'{e}}o and Savin, Ivan and van den Bergh, Jeroen},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2ee48cdbc6fab71b0f738f35a6accf314/pbett},
doi = {10.1002/wcc.647},
interhash = {e85a8ade564418d1c9263e2e5e406705},
intrahash = {ee48cdbc6fab71b0f738f35a6accf314},
journal = {Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change},
keywords = {agentbasedmodelling climatechange energy policy renewables review},
month = apr,
pages = {e647},
publisher = {Wiley},
timestamp = {2020-04-02T14:43:21.000+0200},
title = {A review of agent-based modeling of climate-energy policy},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1002/wcc.647},
year = 2020
}