Subglobal climate agreements and trade in energy intensive commodities
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Date
2011-02Type
- Working Paper
ETH Bibliography
yes
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Abstract
Subglobal climate policies induce changes in international competitiveness and favor a relocation of carbon-emitting activities. We argue that many energy-intensive activities are also capital-intensive, so that carbon policies could affect rents rather than abatement or location. Taking copper as an example, we formulate a plant-level spatial equilibrium model of the industry, and we estimate a set of elasticities to calibrate the behavioral parameters of the model. Given 2007 market conditions, Monte Carlo simulations suggest that a $50/tCO2 tax in industrialized countries induces emissions reductions of less than one percent in the copper industry, with a mean emission leakage rate of 25%. Our results conform with empirical findings on the pollution haven effect but challenge projections from computable general equilibrium models. Show more
Publication status
publishedJournal / series
MIT Center for Energy and Environmental Policy Research Working Paper 2011-003 (CEEPR WP 2011-003)Publisher
MIT Center for Energy and Environmental Policy ResearchSubject
Pollution haven effect; Climate policy; International environmental agreements; Carbon leakage; International trade; Copper industryOrganisational unit
03797 - Rutherford, Thomas
02651 - Center for Energy Policy and Economics (CEPE) / Centre for Energy Policy and Economics (CEPE)
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ETH Bibliography
yes
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