Skip to main navigation Skip to main content Skip to page footer

Journal Article

The Consequences of Unilateral Withdrawals from the Paris Agreement

Authors

  • Larch
  • M.
  • Wanner
  • J.

Publication Date

DOI

10.1016/j.euroecorev.2024.104699

JEL Classification

F14; F18; Q56

Key Words

carbon leakage

climate change

fossil fuel supply

international trade

Related Topics

International Trade

Globalization

Climate

International cooperation is at the core of multilateral climate policy. How is its effectiveness harmed by individual countries dropping out of the global mitigation effort? We develop a multisector structural trade model with emissions from production and a constant elasticity of fossil fuel supply function to simulate the consequences of unilateral withdrawals from the Paris Agreement. Taking into account both direct and leakage effects, we őnd that a US withdrawal would eliminate more than a third of the world emissions reduction (31.8% direct effect and 6.4% leakage effect), while a potential Chinese withdrawal lowers the world emission reduction by 24.1% (11.9% direct effect and 12.2% leakage effect). The substantial leakage is primarily driven by technique effects induced by falling international fossil fuel prices.

Kiel Institute Expert

  • Prof. Dr. Joschka Wanner
    Kiel Institute Researcher

More Publications

Subject Dossiers

  • Two women inspect a solar panel

    Climate and Energy

  • View over cargo ship deck with containers

    International Trade

  • People demonstrating against war in the Ukraine

    War against Ukraine

Research Center

  • Trade