nep-env New Economics Papers
on Environmental Economics
Issue of 2017‒11‒12
28 papers chosen by
Francisco S. Ramos
Universidade Federal de Pernambuco

  1. Energy Price Reform: A Guide for Policymakers By David Coady; Ian Parry; Baoping Shang
  2. Permit allocation rules and investment incentives in emissions trading systems By Florens Flues; Kurt van Dender
  3. Emissions Leakage, Environmental Policy and Trade Frictions By J. Scott Holladay; Mohammed Mohsin; Shreekar Pradhan
  4. IMPACT AND DISTRIBUTION OF CLIMATIC DAMAGES: A METHODOLOGICAL PROPOSAL WITH A DYNAMIC CGE MODEL APPLIED TO GLOBAL CLIMATE NEGOTIATIONS By Valeria Costantini; Giorgia Sforna; Anil Markandya; Elena Paglialunga
  5. Competitiveness and Ecological Impacts of Green Energy Technologies. Firm-level Evidence for the DACH Region By Michael Peneder; Spyros Arvanitis; Christian Rammer; Tobias Stucki; Martin Wörter
  6. The Safe Carbon Budget By Rick van der Ploeg
  7. The impact of Energy Prices on Employment and Environmental Performance : Evidence from French Manufacturing Establishments By Giovanni Marin; Francesco Vona
  8. Directed technological change in a post-Keynesian ecological macromodel By Asjad Naqvi; Engelbert Stockhammer
  9. The Basic Environmental Economics of The Circular Economy By Peter Birch Sørensen
  10. EU ETS- broken beyond repair ? An analysis based on Faster principles By Xavier Timbeau; Pawel Wiejski
  11. Paris after Trump: An Inconvenient Insight By Christoph Böhringer; Thomas F. Rutherford
  12. Low-Emission Energy Outlook in a Small Island Developing States – The case of Sao Tome And Principe By Rita Sousa; Adérito Santana; Inês Mourão
  13. Green Technology Adoption and the Business Cycle By Jean-Marc Bourgeon; Margot Hovsepian
  14. Public preferences and valuation of new malaria risk By Mehmet Kutluay; Roy Brouwer; Haripriya Gundimeda; Nitin Lokhande; Richard S. J. Tol
  15. Transboundary Externalities and Reciprocal Taxes: A Differential Game Approach By Charles F. Mason
  16. Natural Disasters and Political Engagement: Evidence from the 2010-11 Pakistani Floods By Fair, C. Christine; Kuhn, Patrick; Malhotra, Neil; Shapiro, Jacob
  17. Economic Growth, Income Distribution, and Climate Change By Rezai, Armon; Taylor, Lance; Foley, Duncan K.
  18. Gestión integral del agua y del territorio: apuntes para afrontar los retos de sostenibilidad del sector agua y saneamiento By Alberto CARDONA LOPEZ
  19. Petchey's (2015) Extension of Oates & Schwab's (1988) Efficiency Result Revisited By Thomas Eichner; Rüdiger Pethig
  20. The Effect of Oil Spills on Infant Mortality: Evidence from Nigeria By Anna Bruederle; Roland Hodler
  21. A Market Mechanism for Sustainable and Efficient Resource Use under Uncertainty By Martin F. Quaas; Ralph Winkler
  22. Sustainability with endogenous discounting By John M. Hartwick; Ngo Van Long
  23. Water and local development in Huamantanga: a pathway interpretation of opportunities and risks of the Law of Compensation and Reward Mechanisms for Ecosystem Services in Peru By Bastiaensen, Johan; Velarde, Patricia; Pérez, Katya; Van Hecken, Gert; De Bièvre, Bert
  24. Updating Allowance Allocations in Cap-and-Trade: Evidence from the NOx Budget Program By Ian Lange; Peter Maniloff
  25. Correlation analysis of Environmental actions, Environmental consciousness, and Recognition of Environmental labels By Fujisawa, Mieko; Hirayu, Naoko
  26. Los Biocombustibles: Desarrollos recientes y tendencias internacionales. By Arturo Leonardo Vásquez Cordano; Ricardo De la Cruz Sandoval; Francisco Coello Jaramillo
  27. Updating Allowance Allocations in Cap-and-Trade: Evidence from the NOx Budget Program By Ian A. Lange; Peter Maniloff
  28. Sustainability of an Economy Relying on Two Reproducible Assets By Robert D. Cairns; Stellio Del Campo; Vincent Martinet

  1. By: David Coady; Ian Parry; Baoping Shang
    Abstract: This essay reviews the conceptual and quantitative literature on the efficient system of fossil fuel energy prices in different countries for reflecting supply and environmental costs, as well as the environmental, fiscal, and economic benefits from energy price reform. Drawing on recent experiences in numerous countries, the ingredients for successful reform are then discussed (e.g., the need for a comprehensive reform strategy and for compensating vulnerable groups). Low energy prices, fiscal pressures, and momentum for climate action provide an especially conducive environment for price reform and much is happening rapidly on the ground, however there is a long way to go to reap the enormous benefits at stake (e.g., at the global level, over a 20 percent reduction in carbon emissions and revenues gains of 4 percent of GDP).
    Keywords: energy price reform, efficient taxation, environmental externalities, reform experiences
    JEL: Q31 Q38
    Date: 2017
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ces:ceswps:_6342&r=env
  2. By: Florens Flues (OECD); Kurt van Dender (OECD)
    Abstract: This paper argues that, in situations where choices are made between mutually exclusive investment projects and where there are economic rents, free allocation of tradable emission permits in emissions trading systems can weaken incentives for firms to invest in less carbon-intensive technologies compared to the case where permits would be auctioned. The reason is that permit allocation rules affect economic rents differentially when different product benchmarks apply to products that are close substitutes. Examples of permit allocation rules favouring more emission-intensive technologies for outputs that are close substitutes are found in the California Cap and Trade Program and in the European Union Emissions Trading System. This lack of technology-neutrality is exacerbated in the long run as future patterns of substitutability between technologies are uncertain. Free permit allocation can broaden support for carbon pricing, but this paper shows that this carries a cost in terms of environmental effectiveness if it discourages investment in low-carbon assets.
    Keywords: average carbon prices, benchmarks, California Cap and Trade Program, carbon pricing, decarbonisation, emissions trading systems, EU ETS, permit allocation, technology neutrality
    JEL: D04 H23 H32 L51 Q48
    Date: 2017–11–15
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:oec:ctpaaa:33-en&r=env
  3. By: J. Scott Holladay (Department of Economics, University of Tennessee); Mohammed Mohsin (Department of Economics, University of Tennessee); Shreekar Pradhan (King Abdullah Petroleum Studies And Research Center)
    Abstract: We develop a two-good general equilibrium model of a small open economy to decompose a country's unilateral strengthening of environmental policy's effects on pollution emissions in the rest of the world, known as emissions leakage. We show analytically and numerically that the level of emissions leakage depends on the level of trade friction in the service sector. In the model, production in the manufacturing sector is associated with pollution emissions, and production in the service sector is clean. In a special case with free trade in manufacturing and no trade in services, no leakage occurs. Allowing for trade in services, we solve for the relationship between trade frictions in the service sector and leakage. At lower levels of service sector's trade friction, leakage from a small strengthening of environmental regulation decreases (increases) if services are imported (exported). Finally, we simulate the model, calibrating the to the Canadian economy to compare these effects' relative sizes over a range of plausible parameter values. Leakage is about 18% lower when using trade friction levels estimated from the literature rather than assuming no trade friction in services.
    Keywords: Climate change, emissions leakage, trade costs, trade in services
    JEL: H23 Q54 F18
    Date: 2017–10
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ten:wpaper:2017-07&r=env
  4. By: Valeria Costantini; Giorgia Sforna; Anil Markandya; Elena Paglialunga
    Abstract: The UNFCCC Parties Paris Agreement entered into force on 4 November 2016 represents a step forward in involving all countries in mitigation actions, even though still based on a voluntary approach and lacking the involvement of some major polluting countries. The underinvestment in mitigation actions depends on market and policy failures and the absence of market signals internalizing the economic losses due to climatic damage contributes to underestimating potential benefits from global action. We highlight how crucial is the vulnerability of a country to climate change in defining the threat and action strategies. A dynamic climate-economy CGE model is developed by including a monetary evaluation of regional damages associated with climate change. By considering alternative damage estimations, results show that internalizing climatic costs changes the bargaining position of countries in climate negotiations. Consequently, damage costs should be given greater importance when defining the implementation of a global climate agreement.
    Keywords: Climate change damage costs; Climate negotiations; Burden sharing; Mitigation costs; GTAP; CGE.
    JEL: C68 H23 O44 Q54
    Date: 2017–10
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:rtr:wpaper:0226&r=env
  5. By: Michael Peneder (WIFO); Spyros Arvanitis; Christian Rammer; Tobias Stucki; Martin Wörter
    Abstract: For a large sample of enterprises in Germany, Austria and Switzerland (the "DACH" region) we study the impact of policy instruments such as energy-related taxes, subsidies, standards and negotiated agreements, or other regulations on the firm's ecological and economic performance. To identify the causal linkages, we build a system of twelve equations, first tracking the impacts of policy on the adoption of green energy technologies for distinct areas. In a second set of equations, we estimate the perceived impacts of adoption on the firm's energy efficiency, carbon emissions and competitiveness. The results confirm a differentiated pattern of channels through which policy can affect the firm's energy efficiency and carbon emissions, while having a neutral impact on its competitiveness.
    Keywords: Environmental policy, energy efficiency, technology adoption, innovation, Porter hypothesis
    Date: 2017–10–30
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:wfo:wpaper:y:2017:i:544&r=env
  6. By: Rick van der Ploeg
    Abstract: Cumulative emissions drive peak global warming and determine the safe carbon budget compatible with staying below 2oC or 1.5oC. The safe carbon budget is lower if uncertainty about the transient climate response is high and risk tolerance low. Together with energy costs this budget determines the constrained welfare-maximizing carbon price and how quickly fossil fuel is replaced by renewable energy and how much of it is abated. This price is the sum of a gradual damages component familiar from the unconstrained optimal carbon price highlighted in economic studies and a Hotelling component for the additional price needed to ensure that the safe carbon budget is never violated familiar from IAM studies. If policy makers ignore damages, as in the cost-minimizing temperature constraint literature, a more rapidly rising carbon price results. The alternative of adjusting damages upwards to factor in the peak warming constraint leads initially to a higher carbon price which rises less rapidly.
    Keywords: peak warming target, climate uncertainty, risk tolerance, Pigouvian damages, Hotelling rule, carbon price
    JEL: Q54
    Date: 2017
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ces:ceswps:_6620&r=env
  7. By: Giovanni Marin (University of Urbino "Carlo Bo"; SEEDS, Ferrara, Italy.); Francesco Vona (OFCE, Sciences Po Paris, France)
    Abstract: This paper evaluates the historical influence of energy prices on a series of measures of environmental and economic performance for a panel of French manufacturing establishments over the period 1997-2010. The focus on energy prices is motivated by the fact that changes in environmental and energy policies have been dominated by substantial reductions in discounts for large consumers, making the evaluation of each policy in isolation exceedingly difficult. To identify price effects, we construct a shift-share instrument that captures only the exogenous variation in establishmentspecific energy prices. Our results highlight a trade-off between environmental and economic goals: although a 10 percent increase in energy prices brings about a 6 percent reduction in energy consumption and to a 11 percent reduction in CO2 emissions, such an increase also has a modestly negative impact on employment (-2.6 percent) and very small impact on wages and productivity. The negative employment effects are mostly concentrated in energyintensive and trade-exposed sectors. Simulating the effect of a carbon tax, we show that job losses for the most exposed sectors can be quite large. However, these effects are upper bounds and we show that they are significantly mitigated in multi-plant firms by labor reallocation across establishments.
    Keywords: Energy prices, establishment performance, environmental and energy policy
    JEL: Q52 Q48 H23 D22
    Date: 2017–10–23
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:fce:doctra:1726&r=env
  8. By: Asjad Naqvi; Engelbert Stockhammer
    Abstract: This paper presents a post-Keynesian ecological macro model that combines three strands of literature: the directed technological change mechanism developed in mainstream endogenous growth theory models, the ecological economic literature which highlights the role of green innovation and material flows, and the post-Keynesian school which provides a framework to deal with the demand side of the economy, financial flows, and inter- and intra-sectoral behavioral interactions. The model is stock-flow consistent and introduces research and development (R&D) as a component of GDP funded by private firm investment and public expenditure. The economy uses three complimentary inputs – Labor, Capital, and (non-renewable) Resources. Input productivities depend on R&D expenditures, which are determined by relative changes in their respective prices. Two policy experiments are tested; a Resource tax increase, and an increase in the share of public R&D on Resources. Model results show that policy instruments that are continually increased over a long-time horizon have better chances of achieving a "green" transition than one-off climate policy shocks to the system, that primarily have a short-run effect.
    Keywords: directed technological change, research and development, green transition, ecological economics, post-Keynesian economics, stock-flow consistency
    JEL: E12 O33 Q57
    Date: 2017–10
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:pke:wpaper:pkwp1714&r=env
  9. By: Peter Birch Sørensen (Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen)
    Abstract: This paper sets up a Ramsey model with exhaustible natural resources to study the optimal recycling of polluting raw materials and household waste products. During the process of economic development it is optimal for the economy to go through an initial “linear” phase with no recycling followed by a “circular” phase where some materials and waste products are recycled to alleviate growing natural resource scarcity and environmental degradation. Ensuring the optimal degree of recycling in a market economy requires a Pigouvian tax on non-recycled raw materials combined with a subsidy to recycling of household waste and a tax on man-made wealth to internalize the environmental cost of capital accumulation.
    Keywords: Circular economy, linear economy, optimal recycling, Hotelling rule, Pigouvian taxation, Environmental Kuznets Curve
    JEL: Q53 Q58 H21
    Date: 2017–11
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:kud:epruwp:17-04&r=env
  10. By: Xavier Timbeau (OFCE-Sciences PO Paris, France); Pawel Wiejski (European Affairs Programme of Sciences Po Paris)
    Abstract: The EU ETS is one of the main European climate policies, covering 45 percent of EU’s greenhouse gas emissions. Its main goal is to limit emissions cost-effectively, and to trigger innovations using a strong price signal, making low-carbon technologies more competitive. While emissions reduction targets for 2020 have already been achieved, the exact role of the ETS in this success remains controversial. The assessment is crucial, as more and more countries and regions plan to adopt similar policies to achieve their targets expressed in the Intended Nationally Determined Contributions, communicated at the Paris Conference of the Parties. The EU ETS, as the longest running and largest carbon market in the world, will undoubtedly serve as a point of reference. This paper attempts to provide a comprehensive analysis of the policy. First part outlines the historical development of emission trading systems, as well as the development of the EU ETS since its inception in 2005. Second part uses FASTER principles developed by the World Bank and the OECD to perform a multi-criteria, qualitative analysis of the EU ETS in its current form. Third part concentrates on the upcoming revision for the fourth phase, evaluating whether the proposals correctly address the policy’s shortcomings. It also provides some alternative reform proposals.
    Keywords: Cap-and-trade, EU ETS, Market stability reserve, Carbon price
    JEL: H23 H87 Q56
    Date: 2017–10–26
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:fce:doctra:1724&r=env
  11. By: Christoph Böhringer; Thomas F. Rutherford
    Abstract: With his announcement to pull the US out of the Paris Agreement US President Donald Trump has snubbed the international climate policy community. Key remaining parties to the Agreement such as Europe and China might call for carbon tariffs on US imports as a sanctioning instrument to coerce US compliance. Our analysis, however, reveals an inconvenient insight for advocates of carbon tariffs: given the possibility of retaliatory tariffs across all imported goods, carbon tariffs do not constitute a credible threat for the US. A tariff war with its main trading partners China and Europe might make the US worse off than compliance with the Paris Agreement but China, in particular, should prefer US defection to a tariff war.
    Keywords: Paris Agreement, US withdrawal, carbon tariffs, optimal tariffs, tariff war, computable general equilibrium
    JEL: Q58 D58
    Date: 2017
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ces:ceswps:_6531&r=env
  12. By: Rita Sousa (NIPE and School of Economics and Management, University of Minho); Adérito Santana (National Institute of Meteorology of Sao Tome and Principe); Inês Mourão (CAOS, Sustainability)
    Abstract: This work proposes a combination of a cost-efficacy, multicriteria and partial equilibrium analyses, to support the evaluation of viable options for low-carbon and resilient development, in a Small Island Developing State. We present reference and mitigation scenarios to 2030, including measures of renewable electricity, both in the grid and isolated; transports replacement; and energy efficiency in households and services sectors, including improved stoves, efficient street lighting and implementation of household LEDs. We report the marginal abatement cost curve for such measures and the results of a multicriteria qualitative assessment, showing strong support for the implementation of 4MW of renewable electricity in mini-hydropower plants, 12MW in solar PV power, and 1MW in an isolated minihydropower plant. We quantify energy and emissions saved in the mitigation scenario and a new energy balance. Overall, we estimate possible reductions in emissions in 2030 of 29% in electricity generation, and 0.25% in final energy demand, totalizing 9% fewer emissions in the country in 2030. The combined methodology shows higher emission savings than those reported by the country in its National Determined Contribution to the UNFCCC. This study aims to support the idea that SIDS should put forth robust low-carbon development roadmaps, in addition to adaptation strategies
    Keywords: Energy outlook; low emission scenarios; multi-criteria analysis; cost-efficacy analysis; LEAP; Small Island Developing States.
    Date: 2017
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:nip:nipewp:11/2017&r=env
  13. By: Jean-Marc Bourgeon; Margot Hovsepian
    Abstract: We analyze the adoption of green technology in a dynamic economy affected by random shocks where demand spillovers are the main driver of technological improvements. Firms’ beliefs and consumers’ anticipations drive the path of the economy. We derive the optimal policy of investment subsidy and the expected time and likelihood of reaching a targeted level of environmental quality under economic uncertainty. This allows us to estimate the value that should be given to the environment in order to avoid an environmental catastrophe as a function of the strength of spillover effects.
    Keywords: growth, sustainability, uncertainty
    JEL: E30 O30 O44 Q50
    Date: 2017
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ces:ceswps:_6485&r=env
  14. By: Mehmet Kutluay (Institute for Environmental Studies, Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam; Tinbergen Institute, Amsterdam/Rotterdam); Roy Brouwer (Department of Economics, University of Waterloo, Canada; Institute for Environmental Studies, Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam); Haripriya Gundimeda (Department of Economics, IIT Bombay, Mumbai); Nitin Lokhande (Department of Economics, IIT Bombay, Mumbai); Richard S. J. Tol (Department of Economics, University of Sussex; Institute for Environmental Studies, Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam; Department of Spatial Economics, Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam; Tinbergen Institute, Amsterdam; CESifo, Munich)
    Abstract: After years of decline, malaria prevalence may increase in the future due to climate change, and spread to areas that have not experienced the disease before. Any policy that aims to mitigate or adapt to this scenario needs to take into account the economic benefits of avoided malaria (willingness to pay - WTP). Much work has been done on WTP, but not much is known about how WTP changes with the probability of becoming ill. To this end a survey is carried out in Mumbai, India, to compare respondents' WTP to avoid malaria across risky and less-risky areas. We find WTP to be 10% higher in risky areas than in less-risky areas. We also observe WTP to increase by more than 15% between malaria-experienced and naïve respondents, indicating a familiarity premium. These findings indicate higher welfare returns to climate change mitigation policies than previously thought.
    Keywords: malaria; willingness to pay; discrete choice experiment
    JEL: I12 Q51
    Date: 2017–10
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:sus:susewp:1917&r=env
  15. By: Charles F. Mason
    Abstract: I investigate the interaction between a country that imports a commodity whose production contributes to a stock pollution, such as electricity, from a country that produces that commodity. If the transboundary externality is priced improperly, the application of a feed-in tariff or border tax adjustment can provide an indirect policy instrument. But the imposition of such a tariff or tax creates an incentive for the producing country to deploy some sort of pollution controlling instrument. This, in turn, creates a strategic interaction between the two countries. Because the externality is inked to a stock pollutant, this strategic interaction will play out over time, which induces a dynamic game. In this modeling context, I describe the nature of the strategic interaction, and characterize the Markov-perfect equilibrium.
    Keywords: transboundary pollution, differential game, tariff, tax
    JEL: C73 Q54 Q58
    Date: 2017
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ces:ceswps:_6561&r=env
  16. By: Fair, C. Christine (?); Kuhn, Patrick (?); Malhotra, Neil (Stanford University); Shapiro, Jacob (?)
    Abstract: How natural disasters affect politics in developing countries is an important question, given the fragility of fledgling democratic institutions in some of these countries as well as likely increased exposure to natural disasters over time due to climate change. Research in sociology and psychology suggests traumatic events can inspire pro-social behavior and therefore might increase political engagement. Research in political science argues that economic resources are critical for political engagement and thus the economic dislocation from disasters may dampen participation. We argue that when the government and civil society response effectively blunts a disaster's economic impacts, then political engagement may increase as citizens learn about government capacity. Using diverse data from the massive 2010-11 Pakistan floods, we find that Pakistanis in highly flood-affected areas turned out to vote at substantially higher rates three years later than those less exposed. We also provide speculative evidence on the mechanism. The increase in turnout was higher in areas with lower ex ante flood risk, which is consistent with a learning process. These results suggest that natural disasters may not necessarily undermine civil society in emerging developing democracies.
    Date: 2017–05
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ecl:stabus:3549&r=env
  17. By: Rezai, Armon; Taylor, Lance; Foley, Duncan K.
    Abstract: We present a model based on Keynesian aggregate demand and labor productivity growth to study how climate damage affects the long-run evolution of the economy. Climate change induced by greenhouse gas lowers profitability, reducing investment and cutting output in the short and long runs. Short-run employment falls due to deficient demand. In the long run productivity growth is slower, lowering potential income levels. Climate policy can increase incomes and employment in the short and long runs while a continuation of business-as-usual leads to a dystopian income distribution with affluence for few and high levels of unemployment for the rest.
    Keywords: climate change, economic growth, integrated assessment, demand and distribution, energy productivity, unemployment
    Date: 2017
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:wiw:wus045:5831&r=env
  18. By: Alberto CARDONA LOPEZ
    Abstract: El documento Conpes 3343 de marzo 10 de 2005 “Lineamientos y estrategias de desarrollo sostenible para los sectores de agua, ambiente y desarrollo territorial” muestra las razones que motivaron en su momento el debate sobre la necesidad de abordar con enfoque ambiental, algunas políticas sectoriales. Para el efecto, el 3343 planteó lineamientos y estrategias de desarrollo sostenible desde una perspectiva de acciones de la Agenda Gris que complementaran la Agenda Verde. Aunque estos términos ya no son de uso cotidiano, parece claro que los enfoques netamente sectoriales no resultan suficientes en momentos en los cuales el cambio climático y la seguridad hídrica, imponen la necesidad de repensar hacia el futuro y teniendo como referente el agua, la manera como se vienen gestionando el ambiente y el ordenamiento territorial. En este orden de ideas se presentan los resultados de la búsqueda emprendida, en pos de identificar experiencias y enfoques que en la actualidad ayudan a entender cómo puede la gestión sectorial (en agua potable y saneamiento) complementarse para responder de manera más integral a los retos que le impone la sostenibilidad ambiental y el desarrollo sostenible. Se extracta luego algunas conclusiones y se formula una recomendación para profundizar el tema tratado. Se incluye además la bibliografía consultada y el glosario con los acrónimos utilizados.
    Keywords: sector agua y saneamiento, planeación sectorial, política pública, gestión integral del recurso hídrico, gestión ambiental, sostenibilidad del agua y del territorio.
    JEL: Q2 R5
    Date: 2017–10–23
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:col:000118:015812&r=env
  19. By: Thomas Eichner; Rüdiger Pethig
    Abstract: Oates and Schwab (1988) consider an economy with mobil capital and jurisdictions that suffer from local pollution. They show that welfare-maximizing jurisdictions implement the first-best, if they take prices as given and have at their disposal a capital tax and an environmental standard. Petchey (2015) claims that the efficiency result of Oates and Schwab can be extended to a large price-influencing jurisdiction. In the present note we show that the concept of Pareto efficiency cannot be applied in Petchey’s model. Next, we expand his model by a second jurisdiction and prove that Petchey’s claim is false, i.e. we show that the allocation implemented by a large price-influencing jurisdiction that sets an environmental standard and a capital tax fails to be (Pareto) efficient.
    Keywords: pollution, environmental standards, mobile capital, taxes
    JEL: H23 H71
    Date: 2017
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ces:ceswps:_6315&r=env
  20. By: Anna Bruederle; Roland Hodler
    Abstract: Oil spills can lead to irreversible environmental degradation and pose hazards to human health. We are the first to study the causal effects of onshore oil spills on neonatal and infant mortality rates. We use spatial data from the Nigerian Oil Spill Monitor and the Demographic and Health Surveys, and rely on the comparison of siblings conceived before and after nearby oil spills. We find that nearby oil spills double the neonatal mortality rate. These effects are fairly uniform across locations and socio-economic backgrounds. We also provide some evidence for negative health effects of nearby oil spills on surviving children.
    Keywords: oil spills, Nigeria, infant mortality, child health
    JEL: I10 I18 J13 Q53
    Date: 2017
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ces:ceswps:_6653&r=env
  21. By: Martin F. Quaas; Ralph Winkler
    Abstract: Sustainability and efficiency are potentially conflicting social objectives in natural resource management. We propose a market mechanism to allocate use rights over a stochastic resource to private managers. The mechanism endogenously determines the maximal tenure length guaranteeing that the sustainability goal is obeyed for sure over the entire period. In addition, the mechanism achieves efficiency, i.e. it maximizes the expected present value of resource rents that accrue to society. Potential applications include improved fishing agreements between developing countries and distant-water fishing fleets.
    Keywords: auctioning-refunding-mechanism, efficient resource allocation, renewable resources, stochastic resource dynamics, sustainability
    JEL: Q20 D44 D82
    Date: 2017
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ces:ceswps:_6524&r=env
  22. By: John M. Hartwick; Ngo Van Long
    Abstract: We construct a dynamic competitive model with a stock of man-made capital and several stocks of natural resources and ask under what conditions consumption will be constant if in nitesimal households with heterogeneous preferences and endowments discount their utility ows at an endogenous rate that depends some macroeconomic variables. We show that for consumption to be constant, this function must be the marginal product ofcapital function. We demonstrate that Hartwicks Rule (that along the constant consumption path, resource rents must be invested in man-made capital) holds in a modi ed form that takes account of natural growth of resource stocks.
    JEL: Q01 Q32
    Date: 2017–10–30
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:cir:cirwor:2017s-19&r=env
  23. By: Bastiaensen, Johan; Velarde, Patricia; Pérez, Katya; Van Hecken, Gert; De Bièvre, Bert
    Abstract: Peru is one of the first countries in the world to introduce a specific law for the promotion and regulation of Payments for Ecosystem Services (PES). This ‘Law on Compensation and Reward Mechanisms for Ecosystem Services’ (MRSE-Law) mainly aims to protect and restore ecosystems that provide critical services to the Peruvian population, including hydrological services for year round water provisioning. Since many of the water-related services are produced and affected by poor communities in the uplands of critical watersheds, the PES-arrangements under the MRSE-Law are also held to contribute to reduce poverty and exclusion of and within these communities. Through a case-study of an innovative water management initiative in the village of Huamantanga, which could potentially benefit from the new mechanisms under the MRSE-Law, this paper adopts a pathways perspective to study the risks and opportunities of a water-related PES-arrangement in line with the MRSE-Law. It shows how such an arrangement is inevitably articulated with and embedded within the on-going power-laden institutional bricolage that generates the currently dominant ‘alfalfa-cattle market pathway’, which tends to undermine peasant community control and increases privatization and social differentiation. This raises concerns about the ultimate impact of the proposed MRSE-project, which might end up dispossessing poorer local farmers from their access to the mountain pastures without providing adequate alternatives. However, the participatory and peasant-community based features of the incubating process and the flexible MRSE-legal provisions provide some opportunities to counterbalance this emerging risk.
    Keywords: Peru; Payments for Ecosystem Services; PES
    Date: 2017–09
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:iob:dpaper:2017001&r=env
  24. By: Ian Lange (Division of Economics and Business, Colorado School of Mines); Peter Maniloff (Division of Economics and Business, Colorado School of Mines)
    Abstract: The level and distribution of the costs of tradable allowance schemes are important determinants of whether the regulation is ultimately enacted. Theoretical and simulation models have shown that updating allowance allocations based on firm emissions or output can improve the efficiency of the scheme by acting as a production subsidy. Using the U.S. NOx Budget Program (NBP) as a case study, this analysis tests whether power plants in states which chose an updating allocation increase their electricity production relative to plants in states that chose a fixed allocation. Results find that updating allocations led to a 5 percentage point increase in capacity factors for natural gas combined cycle generators and no effect or a modest decrease for coal generators. These findings imply that an updating allocations confers a modest but meaningful subsidy to production relative to a fixed allocation and that firm responses are heterogeneous based on production technology and market conditions.
    Keywords: cap-and-trade, electricity, climate change
    JEL: Q48 Q58 L94
    Date: 2017–10
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:mns:wpaper:wp201701&r=env
  25. By: Fujisawa, Mieko; Hirayu, Naoko
    Abstract: The purpose of our research is to clarify the relationship between environmental actions, environmental consciousness, and the extent to which environmental labels are recognized. There are significant differences in the individual perception of environmental problems, and it is important to encourage environmental actions while taking into consideration these differences. Then in this research, we assumed a relationship between actions that are conscious of environmental problems (environmental actions), and the extent to which commonly known environmental labels are recognized, and how consciousness of environmental problems fluctuates high or low (environmental consciousness); and conducted an online questionnaire survey to investigate these issues. To illustrate concrete environmental actions, we took advantage of the registration for energy visualization provided by a power company (through the “electric household account book), and efforts to reduce electricity usage (reduction efforts) and the agreement on power peak shift (peak shift agreement). From the questionnaire result, we found that environmental actions are influenced by environmental consciousness, and differences in the extent to which environmental labels are recognized. We are able to explore the possibility of inducing environmental actions not only for consumers with high environmental consciousness, but also to others by using effective ways of explaining new concepts, etc. Therefore, we intend to examine the relationship between environmental actions, the mechanism of providing information, and how this information is understood by conducting a new survey.
    Keywords: Environmental Actions, Environmental Consciousness, Recognition of Environmental Labels, Electric Household account book, The Peak Shit of Electric Power, Questionnaire Survey, Intervention of Information, HEMS
    JEL: Q5
    Date: 2017–08–22
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:pra:mprapa:80913&r=env
  26. By: Arturo Leonardo Vásquez Cordano (Chief Economist and Manager of the Bureau of Regulatory Policy and Economic Analysis at Osinergmin, Vice-President of the Commission of Free Competition at the Peruvian Antitrust and Consumer Protection Authority (Indecopi), as well as Professor at GERENS Graduate School of Business in Lima, Peru.); Ricardo De la Cruz Sandoval (Especialista económico de Hidrocarburos.); Francisco Coello Jaramillo (Analista económico de Hidrocarburos.)
    Abstract: En este documento de trabajo se realiza una síntesis de las características de los principales biocombustibles (biodiesel y etanol) y sus etapas de producción. Asimismo, se presenta un resumen del análisis del ciclo de vida que mide finalmente el balance energético de los biocombustibles realizado por Bruinsma (2009) para el caso de la palma y la jatropha. Se discuten posteriormente las principales características del mercado internacional de biocombustibles incluyendo los porcentajes mínimos en la participación de mercado, la evolución del consumo, la evolución de la oferta, los principales agentes en Europa y América Latina así como la evolución de los precios internacionales y las tendencias que organismos internacionales han identificado. Luego se analiza el mercado local de biocombustibles donde se realiza una síntesis del marco legal e institucional, la producción nacional, la demanda, comercio internacional, los costos de producción. Posteriormente, se analizan los riesgos y retos del mercado de biocombustibles incluyendo las barreras al comercio internacional, los problemas que se han identificado en el desarrollo de los biocombustibles y las disyuntivas implícitas en su promoción, todo ello bajo una mirada que enfatiza las lecciones de política para el Perú.
    JEL: C68 D91 O13 Q51 Q52 Q55
    Date: 2016–11
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ose:wpaper:36&r=env
  27. By: Ian A. Lange; Peter Maniloff
    Abstract: The level and distribution of the costs of tradable allowance schemes are important determinants of whether the regulation is ultimately enacted. Theoretical and simulation models have shown that updating allowance allocations based on firm emissions or output can improve the efficiency of the scheme by acting as a production subsidy. Using the U.S. NOx Budget Program (NBP) as a case study, this analysis tests whether power plants in states which chose an updating allocation increase their electricity production relative to plants in states that chose a fixed allocation. Results find that updating allocations led to a 5 percentage point increase in capacity factors for natural gas combined cycle generators and no effect or a modest decrease for coal generators. These findings imply that an updating allocations confers a modest but meaningful subsidy to production relative to a fixed allocation and that firm responses are heterogeneous based on production technology and market conditions.
    Keywords: updating allocation, tradable permits, electricity
    JEL: Q48
    Date: 2017
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ces:ceswps:_6666&r=env
  28. By: Robert D. Cairns; Stellio Del Campo; Vincent Martinet
    Abstract: Evaluating the sustainability of a society requires a system of shadow or accounting values derived from the sustainability objective. As a first step toward the derivation of such shadow values for a maximin objective, this paper studies an economy composed of two reproducible assets, each producing one of two consumption goods. The effect of the substitutability between goods in utility is studied by postulating, in turn, neoclassical diminishing marginal substitutability, perfect substitutability and perfect complementarity. The degree of substitutability has strong effects on the maximin solution, affecting the regularity or non-regularity of the program, and on the accounting values. This has important consequences for the computation of genuine savings and the sustainability prospects of future generations.
    Keywords: sustainable development, maximin, sustainability accounting, substitutability
    JEL: O44 Q56
    Date: 2017
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ces:ceswps:_6314&r=env

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