Title: Climate Agreements and Technology Policy
1Climate Agreements and Technology Policy
- Rolf Golombek
- Lavutslippsutvalget
- March 6th 2006
2Emission reductions - principles
- Two main questions
- How much to reduce emissions?
- Radical abatement is possible, but very costly
worthwhile? - Costs vs. benefits
- For given emission target how to obtain cost
effectiveness? - Choice of instruments/policies
- Technology important
- Abatement costs depend on technology
- Instruments affect prices, profits and thus RD
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3- Is the answer more and better technnology?
- Technology development requires resources, which
have have opportunity costs - How much to spend on RD?
- What type of RD?
- General answer Benefits vs. costs to determine
RD - Most knowledge is imported Technology level in
Norway depends on RD in other countries through
technology spillovers - Own choices of abatement should also depend on
choices taken by other countries - GHG Total emissions matters
- International environmental agreements
4Outline of talk
- Constraints on own choices
- International climate agreement
- Types of international climate agreement
- First-best (no constraints on instruments)
- Second-best (constraints on instruments)
- Ranking of second-best agreements
- Price of carbon, technology subsidy, technology
level
5Constraints on own choices international
climate agreements
- Total emissions among signatories may be given
(quota agreement) - Domestic actions may have no impact on total
emissions among the signatories - If Norway has a radical abatement target
- Throw, not sell, quotas economic loss
- Have pushed up prices on permits
- May other signatories demand redistribution of
quotas? (No) - Instruments might be given by the agreement (e.g.
tax agreement) - If Norway has a radical abatement target
- Increase the imposed tax (or stricter standards)
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6Constraints on own choices international
climate agreements
- Technology agreement definiton?
- Agreement on RD subsidy or RD level and/or
technology standards - If Norway has a radical abatement target
- No problem (except own costs)
7International climate agreements
- Different climate agreements will have different
prices on carbon and different RD policies - Costs for Norway will differ across types of
agreement - Can we rank the prices and subsidies?
- Need a point of reference
- Total emissions
- Second-best agreements
8International climate agreements basic results
- When technology is given (standard model)
- Quota and tax agreement equivalent
- The market supports efficient solution
- When technology is not given technology depends
on RD in all countries through technology
spillovers - Quota agreement dominates tax agreeemnt
- The market does not support efficient solution
9What makes technology change standard economic
theory
- Economists are simple (or simle minded?)
- Technology level tomorrow Technolog level today
(predetermined) investment today - Takes time to change technology level
- Investment by private firms determined by
profitability - Present and future prices, costs, subsidies,
taxes - Regulations, patents, standards and market
structue (winner takes all?) - Modifications
- Technology spillovers you learn from others
- not only own RD expenditures matters
- Own learning may also depend on own skills
- Learn more if your skills are high
10International climate agreements externalities
- Emissions of GHGs
- Harmful effects for all countries ( too much
emissions in a free market ) - Use a carbon tax to obtain efficiency
- RD investments
- Positive spillovers to all other firms ( too
litttle RD in a free market ) - Stimulate (subsidize) RD investments to obtain
efficiency - Standard economic theory
- Two externalities require two instruments to
obtain efficiency (first-best outcome) - First-best agreement Use a carbon tax and RD
policy (RD subsidy) - No RD policy elements in Kyoto agreement
- Assume
- International agreements have no RD policy
elements - RD policy determined by individual countries
- Second-best agreements
11Second best international climate agreements
framework
- Two types of agreements
- Quota or tax
- Three levels of decisions
- Group of all countries
- Maximizes global welfare
- Determines quota allocations or common carbon tax
- Each country
- Maximizes own welfare
- Determines RD subsidy (technology policy)
- Each firm
- Maximizes own profits
- Determines abatement and RD investments
- RD is increasing in RD subsidy and price of
carbon
12Second best international climate agreements
quota vs. tax
- Quota and tax agreement Each country neglects
that own RD are beneficial for other countries - National RD subsidies too low
- First-best outcome is not reached
- Tax agreement
- Imposed common tax exceeds the countrys desired
tax rate ( marginal damage costs) - Incentive to decrease abatement, accomplished
through reduced RD subsidy - Quota agreement better than tax agreement
13Second best international climate agreements
ranking
- RD subsidy
- First-best gtQuotaNo AgreementgtTax
- Price of carbon
- QuotagtFirst-bestgtTaxgtNo Agreement
- Technology level
- Depends on price of carbon and RD subsidy
- QuotagtNo AgreementgtTax
- If international spillovers are small
First-bestgtQuota
14Non-second best int. climate agreements Common
level of emissions
- Ranking of technology level
- QuotagtTax
15Main results
- Emissions are man made possible to reduce
emissions, but abatement is costly and beneficial - Climate policy in Norway depends on type of
international climate agreement - Price of carbon, RD subsidy and technology level
differ across types of agreements - Costs of reaching a climate target in Norway
depends on whether there is an int. climate
agreement and type of agreeement