Exploring policy options to spur the expansion of ethanol production and consumption in Brazil: An agent-based modeling approach
Authored by J A Moncada, J A Verstegen, J A Posada, M Junginger, Z Lukszo, A Faaij, M Weijnen
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.enpol.2018.09.015
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Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
ODD
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
The Brazilian government aims to increase the share of biofuels in the
energy mix to around 18\% by 2030, which implies an increase of ethanol
production from currently 27 bin liters to over 50 bin liters per year.
Biofuel policies play an important role in ethanol production,
consumption, and investment in processing capacity. Nevertheless, a
clear understanding of how current policies affect the evolution of the
market is lacking. We developed a spatially-explicit agent-based model
to analyze the impact of different blend mandates and taxes levied on
gasoline, hydrous, and anhydrous ethanol on investment in processing
capacity and on production and consumption of ethanol. The model uses
land use projections by the PCRaster Land Use Change model and
incorporates the institutions governing the actors' strategic decision
making with regard to production and consumption of ethanol, and the
institutions governing the interaction among actors. From the
investigated mix of policy measures, we find that an increase of the
gasoline tax leads to the highest increased investments in sugarcane
processing capacity. We also find that a gasoline tax above 1.23 R\$/1
and a tax exemption for hydrous ethanol may lead to doubling the
production of ethanol by 2030 (relative to 2016).
Tags
Agent-based modeling
Uncertainty
Supply chain
Optimization
systems
Brazil
Energy
Framework
Lessons
Ethanol
Gasoline
Sugarcane
Institutional analysis
Biofuel policies
Substitute