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Chrysostomos Tabakis
KDI School of Public Policy and Management, Sejong-si 30149, Korea

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Journal article
Published: 15 September 2020 in Sustainability
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: We investigate the bioelectricity potential of South Korea and the ramifications of the introduction of biomass use in electricity production for the Korean electricity market. The novelty of our study lies in that we consider a broad portfolio of biomass-energy technologies and carefully analyze their potential economic and environmental implications for South Korea given its biomass availability. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study to attempt this in the context of South Korea. We first offer a preliminary assessment of South Korea’s theoretical biomass potential from forestry residues, livestock manure, and staple crops and of the amount of electricity that could be generated using these different biomass feedstocks. Our analysis suggests that biomass can be used to produce a substantial portion of the total electricity consumed annually in South Korea. In addition, out of all the feedstocks and technologies considered, pyrolysis of forestry residues could potentially impact the electricity market the most. Next, we simulate different bioelectricity supply shocks while randomly perturbing our model’s demand and supply elasticity parameters using the Monte Carlo methodology. Our results demonstrate that the introduction of bioelectricity could significantly affect South Korea’s electricity market as well as its CO2 emissions.

ACS Style

Gal Hochman; Chrysostomos Tabakis. The Potential Implications of the Introduction of Bioelectricity in South Korea. Sustainability 2020, 12, 7602 .

AMA Style

Gal Hochman, Chrysostomos Tabakis. The Potential Implications of the Introduction of Bioelectricity in South Korea. Sustainability. 2020; 12 (18):7602.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Gal Hochman; Chrysostomos Tabakis. 2020. "The Potential Implications of the Introduction of Bioelectricity in South Korea." Sustainability 12, no. 18: 7602.

Journal article
Published: 03 September 2020 in Sustainability
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We investigated the biofuel potential of South Korea and the implications of the introduction of biofuels for the Korean fuel market. We approximated the upper-bound biomass potential from forestry residues, livestock manure, and staple crops and calculated the amount of fuel that could be produced using these different biomass feedstocks. Our assessment suggests that biomass can be used to produce a significant portion of the fuel consumed annually in South Korea, with the most promising feedstock being forestry residues. Out of all the technologies considered, the production of cellulosic ethanol from forestry residues could potentially impact the fuel market the most. The key novelty of our study lies in that we considered a broad portfolio of biofuel technologies and carefully examined their potential economic and environmental implications for South Korea given its biomass availability (which we estimated).

ACS Style

Gal Hochman; Chrysostomos Tabakis. Biofuels and Their Potential in South Korea. Sustainability 2020, 12, 7215 .

AMA Style

Gal Hochman, Chrysostomos Tabakis. Biofuels and Their Potential in South Korea. Sustainability. 2020; 12 (17):7215.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Gal Hochman; Chrysostomos Tabakis. 2020. "Biofuels and Their Potential in South Korea." Sustainability 12, no. 17: 7215.

Journal article
Published: 27 June 2016 in Economic Inquiry
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This paper documents that antidumping (AD) "echoing" (i.e., different countries sequentially imposing AD measures on the same product from the same exporter) is common practice among users of AD. We develop a dynamic game where two competing importers can impose AD measures on a third exporting country in one of two periods, if at all. Assuming that governments are politically motivated (favoring their import-competing industry), AD echoing occurs only for intermediate values of a country's political-economy parameter. This result is confirmed by our econometric analysis, demonstrating that countries' political-economy-driven AD actions are interdependent and should not be analyzed in isolation

ACS Style

Chrysostomos Tabakis; Maurizio Zanardi. ANTIDUMPING ECHOING. Economic Inquiry 2016, 55, 655 -681.

AMA Style

Chrysostomos Tabakis, Maurizio Zanardi. ANTIDUMPING ECHOING. Economic Inquiry. 2016; 55 (2):655-681.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Chrysostomos Tabakis; Maurizio Zanardi. 2016. "ANTIDUMPING ECHOING." Economic Inquiry 55, no. 2: 655-681.