1. Assessment of Net Mitigation in the Context of International Greenhouse Gas Emissions Control Mechanisms
- Author
-
Strand, Jon
- Subjects
CLIMATE CHANGE ECONOMICS ,CARBON LEAKAGE ,GLOBAL EMISSIONS ,CARBON FINANCE ,ECONOMIC BEHAVIOR ,GASES ,PRICE OF OFFSETS ,DISCOUNT RATES ,ALLOCATION ,HFC‐23 ,EMISSION ALLOWANCES ,EMISSIONS CAPS ,CLIMATE POLICIES ,ECONOMIC ACTOR ,POLICY MAKERS ,GREENHOUSE GAS CONTROL ,EMISSIONS ,RENEWABLE ENERGY ,INCOME ,INVESTMENTS ,NEGATIVE IMPACTS ,EMISSIONS REDUCTION ,INCENTIVES ,ALLOWANCE ,OFFSET PRICE ,GAS ,EMISSION REDUCTION UNITS ,FOSSIL FUELS ,EMISSIONS ALLOCATIONS ,ABATEMENT ,GLOBAL EMISSION ,GREENHOUSE GAS ,MARGINAL COST ,POWER PLANTS ,MODELS ,EMISSIONS LEVELS ,MARKETS ,FINANCE ,LEAD ,POLICY APPROACH ,EMISSIONS POLICY ,PRICES ,ENERGY ECONOMICS ,GLOBAL EMISSIONS REDUCTION ,BASELINE” EMISSIONS ,CERTIFIED EMISSIONS REDUCTIONS ,EMISSIONS BASELINE ,INTERNATIONAL OFFSETS ,OFFSET PROJECTS ,FREE‐ALLOCATION ,CARBON EMISSIONS ,GREENHOUSE GAS MITIGATION ,GHGS ,OFFSETS ,CONSUMPTION ,LOWER PRICES ,EMISSIONS ABATEMENT ,EMISSIONS MITIGATION ,DISCOUNT RATE ,ASYMMETRIC INFORMATION ,EMISSION REDUCTIONS ,OFFSETS DISCOUNTING ,GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS ,MARKET ,FOSSIL FUEL ,HISTORICAL EMISSIONS ,SUPPLY ,FOSSIL‐FUEL ,NATIONAL EMISSIONS ,INTERNATIONAL GREENHOUSE GAS ,CAP‐AND‐TRADE POLICY ,GREENHOUSE ,EMISSIONS REDUCTIONS ,CONVENTION ON CLIMATE CHANGE ,ENERGY POLICY ,FREE ALLOCATION ,DEMAND ,CLIMATE CHANGE ,ECONOMIC THEORY ,ENERGY PRODUCTION ,EMISSIONS GROWTH ,CATALYSTS ,ELECTRICITY ,EMISSIONS‐MITIGATION ,CARBON ,ENERGY ,COAL ,EMISSIONS TAXES ,CARBON MARKET ,CARBON CREDITS ,FORESTS ,ENERGY SUBSIDIES ,DOMESTIC EMISSIONS ,GLOBAL CARBON MARKET ,ALLOWANCE ALLOCATION ,EMISSIONS TARGETS ,TEMPERATURE ,LOWER PRICE ,PUBLIC ECONOMICS ,EMISSIONS CONTROL ,ALLOWANCES ,ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS ,EMISSIONS PRICES ,ELECTRICITY SECTOR ,AIR ,EFFICIENCY IMPROVEMENTS ,POLICIES ,CLIMATE‐POLICY ,POLICY ,VARIABLE COST ,EMISSIONS LEAKAGE ,EMISSION REDUCTION ,CO2 ,PRICE ,CLIMATE POLICY ,EMISSIONS INTENSITY ,EMISSIONS QUOTAS ,GREENHOUSE GASES ,FEASIBILITY ,EMISSION LEVELS ,FRAMEWORK CONVENTION ON CLIMATE CHANGE ,FUELS ,CARBON TAXES ,POLICY RESPONSE ,CLIMATE‐ POLICY ,OFFSET PRICES ,PURCHASES OF OFFSETS ,BENEFITS ,CARBON TAX ,EMISSIONS CONSTRAINTS ,RESOURCE ECONOMICS ,CAPS ,ECONOMIC ANALYSIS ,ENERGY EFFICIENCY ,CLIMATE ,GAS EMISSIONS ,ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION ,GHG ,EMISSION ,GLOBAL GREENHOUSE GAS ,ET ,ENVIRONMENTAL ECONOMICS - Abstract
This paper discusses the scope for market mechanisms, already established for greenhouse gas mitigation in Annex 1 countries that ratified the Kyoto Protocol, for implementing "net mitigation," defined here as mitigation beyond Annex 1 countries' formal mitigation requirements under the Kyoto Protocol. Such market mechanisms could be useful for establishing and extending greenhouse gas mitigation targets also under the Paris Agreement from December 2015. Net mitigation is considered in two possible forms: as a "net atmospheric benefit," or as an “own contribution” by offset host countries. A main conclusion is that a “net atmospheric benefit” is possible at least in the short run, best implemented via stricter baselines against which offsets are credited; but it can also take the form of offset discounting whereby offset buyers are credited fewer credits. The latter, although generally inefficient, can be a second-best response to certain imperfections in the offset market, which are discussed in the paper. There is less merit for claiming that "own contributions" can lead to additional mitigation under existing mechanisms.
- Published
- 2016