The Regulatory Choice of Noncompliance in Emissions Trading Programs

University of Massachusetts Department of Resource Economics Working Paper No. 2006-7

32 Pages Posted: 18 Oct 2006

See all articles by John Stranlund

John Stranlund

University of Massachusetts at Amherst - College of Natural Resources & the Environment - Department of Resource Economics

Date Written: October 2006

Abstract

This paper addresses the following question: To achieve a fixed aggregate emissions target cost-effectively, should emissions trading programs be designed and implemented to achieve full compliance, or does allowing a certain amount of noncompliance reduce the costs of reaching the emissions target? The total costs of achieving the target consist of aggregate abatement costs, monitoring costs, and the expected costs of collecting penalties from noncompliant firms. Under common assumptions, I show that allowing noncompliance is cost-effective only if violations are enforced with an increasing marginal penalty. However, one can design a policy that induces full compliance with a constant marginal penalty that meets the aggregate emissions target at lower expected costs. This last result does not depend on setting an arbitrarily high constant marginal penalty. In fact, the marginal penalty need not be higher than the equilibrium marginal penalty under the policy with the increasing marginal penalty, and can actually be lower. Finally, tying the marginal penalty directly to the permit price allows the policy objective to be achieved without any knowledge of firms' abatement costs.

Keywords: Compliance, Enforcement, Emissions Trading, Monitoring, Transferable Permits

JEL Classification: L51, Q28

Suggested Citation

Stranlund, John, The Regulatory Choice of Noncompliance in Emissions Trading Programs (October 2006). University of Massachusetts Department of Resource Economics Working Paper No. 2006-7, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=938452 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.938452

John Stranlund (Contact Author)

University of Massachusetts at Amherst - College of Natural Resources & the Environment - Department of Resource Economics ( email )

Stockbridge Hall
80 Campus Center Way
Amherst, MA 01003-9246
United States
413-545-6328 (Phone)

Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?

Paper statistics

Downloads
67
Abstract Views
810
Rank
612,885
PlumX Metrics