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Journal Article

Strategic uncertainty, indeterminacy, and the formation of international environmental agreements

Oxford Economic Papers, Vol. 69(2), 432-452

Authors

  • Narita
  • D.
  • Wagner
  • U.J.

Publication Date

DOI

10.1093/oep/gpx001

JEL Classification

Q54; O33; H87

Key Words

dynamic game

International environmental agreements (IEAs)

long-term abatement targets

technology choice

Since the end of the Kyoto Protocol, global climate negotiations have shifted away from setting binding short-run targets on emissions towards placing long-term limits on global warming. We investigate how this alters the incentives for participation in a technology-centred international environmental agreement (IEA) where countries choose between conventional abatement and a breakthrough abatement technology that exhibits a network externality. When switching technologies is costly, we obtain that equilibrium adoption is indeterminate because the future adoption rate is subject to strategic uncertainty. Participation in an IEA that mandates the adoption of the breakthrough technology will be complete only if countries expect that all other countries will adopt eventually. Long-run temperature targets can be regarded as a device to coordinate countries’ expectations on that outcome.

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