Title: Evaluating potential for incentive based policy
1Evaluating potential for incentive based policy
- Jeff Connor, CSIRO Adelaide
- Jeff.Connor_at_CSIRO.AU
2What are policy instruments?
- Typical environmental economics textbook
typology - Not (primarily) incentive based
- Output or performance standards
- Input, practice or process standards
- Information, education, morale suasion
- Incentive based
- Price based
- Environmental charges
- Incentive payments ( tendering)
- Quantity based
- Tradeable permits
- Environmental offsets
- Market barrier elimination
3The promise of incentive based policy (IBP)
- Early economic theory (e.g. Baumol and Oates,
1975) found potential for cost savings from MBI
like tax and cap and trade under first best
market conditions - Two main reasons
- Increased flexibility with outcome based policy
relative to technology standards - Opportunity to reallocate mitigation effort from
high to low cost mitigation sources relative to
uniform standards - Experience with MBI policy for point source
somewhat confirmed theory (e.g. US SO2 trading)
4The challenge of designing incentive based policy
for diffuse source emissions (where simple
economics failed)
- Example
- In 37 US point source diffuse source credit
trading programs only 6 recorded trades (Kuch,
2003) - In some cases where trade has occurred mitigation
plus transactions exceed point source mitigation
costs without trade (Fang and Easter, 2003) - Key challenges
- Focussing on performance with flexibility in
compliance when actual outcome monitoring is
technically infeasible or very costly - High transactions cost on for agencies of
administration, auditing, monitoring performance
with many small disperse sources - Complex information processing requirement for
program participants on the supply side of a
market for environmental services to can
appreciation for potential profitability of MBI
policy participation, and to participate
5What is real world environmental policy?
- Policy instrument mix
- Standards and/or
- Information
- Environmental charges
- Tendering
- Cap and Trade
- Offsets
- bundle of design features
- Basis (emissions, inputs, outputs)
- Timing (banking, borrowing, on implementation, on
outcome) - Targeting, Differentiating (all sources, most
significant sources, varying charges, permit
requirement etc. by source) - Transactions requirements (investigation,
information gathering requirements of agencies
participants)
6A framework for evaluating potential for new
policy (to improve efficiency)
- Goal - Moving from standard environmental
economics (ceteris paribus) - Simplify real world to perfect market conditions,
recommend Pareto efficient single instrument - To not ceteris paribus - consider all challenges
to implementing policy and realising efficiency
gain) - Framework
- Evaluate how biophysical, technical,
institutional, and economic context determines - Feasibility - What contexts make some policy
infeasible - Efficiency - What contexts make some policies
likely to be inefficient - Evaluate how policy can be crafted as a mix of
instrument types with design features to overcome
feasibility and efficiency impediments
7Policy Option Screening Logic
Table 3 MBI screening framework overview
8Institutional feasibility
9Monitoring feasibility
10Evaluating efficiency potential
- All IBP involves some form of market with demand
and supply - Auctions
- agencies demand for environmental action
- Participants supply environmental action
- Cap and Trade
- Participants as demanders and suppliers of
emissions permits - Efficiency impediments factors that shift
demand or supply curves, limiting potential for
transactions, trade gains
11To identify impediments to MBI efficiency
comprehensively we began lit.
- Theoretical (comparative static analysis)
investigations in near perfect market conditions
(e.g. Baumol and Oates, 1975 Dale, 1968
Montgomery, 1972) - Theoretical investigations in second best
setting (with asymmetric information, where
proxies rather actual emissions are measurable,
outcomes are uncertain ect.) (e.g. Griffin and
Bromely, 1982 Segerson, 1988 Shortle and Dunn,
2001). - Adoption literature (Rogers, Pannell et al 2004)
- Social context literature (Ostrom)
- Modelling studies focussed on diffuse source
water quality issues (e.g. House and Hefland,
1995), and - Qualitatively of quantitatively evaluations of
MBI experience diffuse source issues (e.g. Feng
and Easter, 2003 Norris, Brown and Batie, 2002
Randall, 2003 Schray, 2003) or point source
issues (Stavins, 2001, Harrington et al, 2004).
12lit identifying impediment we can be sorted by
considering failure of efficiency conditions
13Findings relating context to efficiency
impediment significance
14Designs to overcome impediments
15Case study NZ freshwater lake nitrate pollution
- Nitrogen in grazing stock excreta leaching to
groundwater is cause of algal bloom and clarity
loss in Taupo and Rotorua lakes - Best estimate - 20 reduction in nitrate load
required to ensure against further decline in
visibility in Lake Taupo - Conceptually, such reductions achievable with
uniformly applied specific practice requirements - efficiency policies should a) involve
performance based goals, b) allow flexibility in
practices to reach goals, and c) relate
incentives to environmental performance. - Possibilities
16Conceptually possible MBI approaches
- A charge or payment on performance (k.g. of
nitrate load) or proxy (head of livestock)
differentiate on observed site characteristics
(soil, distance to lake) - Tendering incentive payments prioritised based on
estimated cost effectiveness - Offset - preclude more livestock grazing
intensification without compensating reductions
to guarantee a net nitrate load reduction. - Tradeable permit approach - cap nitrate load
allow meeting cap by reducing loading, using
their permitted amount or buying permits.
17What is institutionally feasible?
- Limited (short run) potential for Quantity based
instruments RMA requires no consents for the use
of land, particularly in an agricultural context - While limits can be defined in local plans,
entitlements to continue land uses at current
intensity and type (Section 10 and 20A of the
RMA) create uncertainty - In the longer run - New standards can be
introduced under Section 43 of the RMA, and 2005
RMA amendments allow credit trade, offsets - Charges are institutionally possible but it may
be difficult to charge at rates sufficient to
reduce nitrates enough
18What is technically feasible?
- Direct monitoring of emission and impact is not
possible - Need for auditable performance proxy (e.g.
stocking rate) way to relate this to
performance (e.g. differentiated impact per head
based on proximity, soil type, timing of grazing
ect.) - Overseer model a potential basis
19Potential efficiency impediments and design
solutions identified
- 1. Administration costs many small diffuse
sources, means the administrative cost of
addressing all sources likely high. Solutions
Targeting the most significant sources - 2. Transaction costs of participation
particularly for tradeable credit approaches
Solution complementary information policy to
help landholder understand feasibility and cost
of impact reduction and trading options - 3. Environmental monitoring and modelling a
nitrogen balance auditing system is as basis for
a farm level tradable nitrogen credit or charge
system is technically feasible but could
introduce cost of agency and participant side
(Dwyer, 2002).
20Impediments and solutions
- 4. Variation in cost of abatement ? further
biophysical evaluation would be required to
assess potential differences in cost
effectiveness across sources. - 5. Market size the relatively small geographic
area of the watershed suggests that there may be
potential for thin markets for tradeable permits
or auction style payment policy. But not charges - 6. Risk of higher than expected environmental
damage ? - 7. Segments possible (likely?) that a proportion
of the population may not be particularly
responsive to incentives for reasons such as
credit/time preferences, social attitudes and
risk preferences. Solutions - complementary
information, or finance policies
21General conclusions from context determines
impediments, impediments determine design thinking
-
- Multiple significant impediments likely for most
diffuse source environmental issues - The right solution is typically multiple
instruments, policy as a bundle of design
attributes tailored to address relevant
impediments - Different solutions for different market
segment often best - Tradeoffs likely in design choices between demand
side cost saving benefits of targeting,
differentiation, and supply side information
costs of complex information requirements - Cooperative rather than competitive solutions
make efficiency sense in some contexts