Added Dec 25, 2013
3 min
Effects of construction activities on residential electricity consumption: Evidence from Singapore’s public housing estates
Abstract
This study aims to empirically test the effects of negative environmental externalities (i.e. noise pollution) due to construction activities within half to one kilometer (km) radius and how households react to such externalities by increasing the use of air-conditioners to mitigate noise from the construction work. We use a unique dataset of electricity consumption by public housing residents in Singapore measured at the building level and merge it with the dataset of construction sites for the periods from 2009 to 2011. Using a difference-in-differences approach, we find that electricity consumption by the households living close to the construction sites increases by 6% compared to the households who are not affected by noises from construction sites during the construction periods, after controlling for building and month of the year fixed effects. The results remain robust after controlling for spatial autocorrelated lag and error terms. The economic cost of the construction externalities for each household amounts to approximately S$98 per annum. We also find that the increases in electricity consumption of the affected households were persistent, and the electricity consumption of the affected households did not revert to the pre-construction levels, after the removal of the negative externality.
JEL Classification
D10, Q40, R10
Suggested Citation
Agarwal, Sumit and Rengarajan, Satyanarain and Sing, Tien Foo and Vollmer, Derek, Effects of Construction Activities on Residential Electricity Consumption: Evidence from Singapore's Public Housing Estates (November 24, 2015). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2371314 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2371314
Partners
Rengarajan Styanarain, Tien Foo Sing, and Derek Vollmer
Newsletter
Subscribe to my newsletter for new updates!