Report#:SR/OIAF/99-01
Preface
Executive Summary
Introduction
CCTI
Tax Initiatives
Research and Development Support
Energy-Efficient Appliances and Equipment
Completed
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Preface
In February 1999, the Administration sent its fiscal year 2000
budget request to the U.S. Congress. It includes more than $4 billion in programs related
to climate change. Nearly $1.8 billion of the funding is proposed for tax incentives,
research and development, and other spending for the Climate Change Technology Initiative
(CCTI). CCTI includes tax credits to serve as incentives for energy efficiency
improvements and renewable technologies for buildings, light-duty vehicles, industry, and
electricity generation. Other funding covers research, development, and deployment for
energy-efficient and renewable technologies, more efficient generating technologies, and
carbon sequestration research.
The analysis in this report was undertaken
at the request of the Committee on Science of the U.S. House of Representatives. In its
request, the Committee asked the Energy Information Administration (EIA) to analyze
"the impact of specific policies on the reduction of carbon emissions and their
impact on U.S. energy use and prices . . . in the 2008-2012 time
frame," as noted in the first letter in the Appendix. The second letter from the
Committee specified that EIA "analyze the impact of the President's Climate Change
Technology Initiative, as defined for the 2000 budget, on reducing carbon emissions from
the levels forecast in the Annual Energy Outlook 1999 reference case."
The projections and quantitative analysis
in this report were conducted primarily using the National Energy Modeling System (NEMS),
an energy-economy model of U.S. energy markets designed, developed, and maintained by EIA,
which is used each year to provide the projections in the Annual Energy Outlook.
Chapter 1 of this report provides background discussion of CCTI and the methodology of the
analysis. Chapters 2, 3, and 4, respectively, analyze the impacts of the tax credits;
research, development, and deployment programs; and funding for accelerated appliance
standards proposed in CCTI.
The legislation that established EIA
in 1977 vested the organization with an element of statutory independence. EIA does not
take position on policy questions. It is the responsibility of EIA to provide timely, high
quality information and to perform objective, credible analyses in support of the
deliberations of both public and private decisionmakers. This report does not purport to
represent the official position of the U.S. Department of Energy or the Administration.

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File last modified:
April 14, 1999
URL:
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