Authors
Richard G Newell, William Pizer, Daniel Raimi
Publication date
2014/10
Journal
Annual Review of Resource Economics
Volume
6
Pages
191-215
Description
Carbon markets are substantial and expanding. There are many lessons from experience over the past 9 years: fewer free allowances, careful moderation of low and high prices, and a recognition that trading systems require adjustments that have consequences for market participants and market confidence. Moreover, the emerging international architecture features separate emissions trading systems serving distinct jurisdictions. These programs are complemented by a variety of other types of policies alongside the carbon markets. This architecture sits in sharp contrast to the integrated global trading architecture envisioned 15 years ago by the designers of the Kyoto Protocol and raises a suite of new questions. In this new architecture, jurisdictions with emissions trading have to decide how, whether, and when to link with one another, and policy makers must confront how to measure both the comparability of …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
RG Newell, WA Pizer, D Raimi - Annu. Rev. Resour. Econ., 2014