Climate Policy and Ancillary Benefits - A Survey and Integration into the Modelling of International Negotiations on Climate Change
26 Pages Posted: 1 Nov 2007 Last revised: 30 Jul 2008
Date Written: November 2007
Abstract
Currently informal and formal international negotiations on climate change take place in an intensive way since the Kyoto Protocol expires already in 2012. A post-Kyoto regulation to combat global warming is not yet stipulated. Due to rapidly increasing greenhouse gas emission levels, industrialized countries urge major polluters from the developing world like China and India to participate in a future agreement. Whether these developing countries will do so, depends on the prevailing incentives to participate in international climate protection efforts. This paper identifies ancillary benefits of climate policy to provide important incentives to attend a new international protocol and to positively affect the likelihood of accomplishing a post-Kyoto agreement which includes commitments of developing countries.
Keywords: ancillary benefits, climate change, international negotiations, chicken game
JEL Classification: Q54, F51, H41
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
The Influence of Climate Change Considerations on Energy Policy: The Case of Russia
By Anil Markandya, Alexander Golub, ...
-
Global Warming and Local Dimming: The Statistical Evidence
By J.r. Magnus, Bertrand Melenberg, ...
-
Coalition Formation and the Ancillary Benefits of Climate Policy
By Michael Finus and Dirk T. G. Rübbelke
-
Integrating Local, Regional and Global Assessment in China's Air Pollution Control Policy
-
Local and Global Externalities, Environmental Policies and Growth
By Karen Pittel and Dirk T. G. Rübbelke
-
Effects of the CDM on Poverty Eradication and Global Climate Protection
By Dirk T. G. Rübbelke and Nathan Rive