Balancing Cost and Emissions Certainty: An Allowance Reserve for Cap-and-Trade
30 Pages Posted: 27 Aug 2008 Last revised: 18 Dec 2022
There are 2 versions of this paper
Balancing Cost and Emissions Certainty: An Allowance Reserve for Cap-and-Trade
Date Written: August 2008
Abstract
On efficiency grounds, the economics community has to date tended to emphasize price-based policies to address climate change -- such as taxes or a "safety-valve" price ceiling for cap-and-trade -- while environmental advocates have sought a more clear quantitative limit on emissions. This paper presents a simple modification to the idea of a safety valve: a quantitative limit that we call the allowance reserve. Importantly, this idea may bridge the gap between competing interests and potentially improve efficiency relative to tax or other price-based policies. The last point highlights the deficiencies in several previous studies of price and quantity controls for climate change that do not adequately capture the dynamic opportunities within a cap-and-trade system for allowance banking, borrowing, and intertemporal arbitrage in response to unfolding information.
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Experience with Market-Based Environmental Policy Instruments
-
Taxes Versus Quotas for a Stock Pollutant
By Michael Hoel and Larry S. Karp
-
Taxes and Quotas for a Stock Pollutant with Multiplicative Uncertainty
By Michael Hoel and Larry S. Karp
-
Cost Heterogeneity and the Potential Savings from Market-Based Policies
-
Abatement-Cost Heterogeneity and Anticipated Savings from Market-Based Environmental Policies
-
Balancing Cost and Emissions Certainty: An Allowance Reserve for Cap-and-Trade
By Brian C. Murray, Richard G. Newell, ...
-
Beyond the Throwaway Society: An Incentive Approach to Regulating Municipal Solid Waste