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Journal Article

Reaching a climate agreement: compensating for energy market effects of climate policy

Authors

  • Peterson
  • S.
  • Weitzel
  • M.

Publication Date

DOI

10.1080/14693062.2015.1064346

JEL Classification

D58 H22 H23 H87 Q48 Q52

Key Words

burden sharing

emission trading

Emissionshandel

Energiemarkt

Energy market

International climate Regime

Outcome-based allocation

Steuern

taxes

Related Topics

Climate

Because of large economic and environmental asymmetries among world regions and the incentive to free ride, an international climate regime with broad participation is hard to reach. Most of the proposed regimes are based on an allocation of emissions rights that is perceived as fair. Yet, there are also arguments to focus more on the actual welfare implications of different regimes and to focus on a ‘fair’ distribution of resulting costs. In this article, the computable general equilibrium model DART is used to analyse the driving forces of welfare implications in different scenarios in line with the 2 °C target. These include two regimes that are often presumed to be ‘fair’, namely a harmonized international carbon tax and a cap and trade system based on the convergence of per capita emissions rights, and also an ‘equal loss’ scenario where welfare losses relative to a business-as-usual scenario are equal for all major world regions. The main finding is that indirect energy market effects are a major driver of welfare effects and that the ‘equal loss’ scenario would thus require large transfer payments to energy exporters to compensate for welfare losses from lower world energy demand and prices.

Kiel Institute Expert

  • Prof. Dr. Sonja Peterson
    Kiel Institute Researcher

More Publications

Subject Dossiers

  • Two women inspect a solar panel

    Climate and Energy

Research Center

  • Global Transformation