Thursday, January 28, 2016

New OxCARRE Research: Second-Best Renewable Subsidies to De-Carbonize the Economy: Commitment and the Green Paradox


A new OxCARRE research paper is available from

Armon Rezai (Vienna University of Economics and Business [wu.ac.at]) and
Frederick van der Ploeg (OxCarre, oxcarre.ox.ac.uk)

writing on

Second-Best Renewable Subsidies to De-Carbonize the Economy: Commitment and the Green Paradox
Abstract
Climate change must deal with two market failures: global warming and learning by doing in renewable use. The first-best policy consists of an aggressive renewables subsidy in the near term and a gradually rising and falling carbon tax. Given that global carbon taxes remain elusive, policy makers have to use a second-best subsidy. In case of credible commitment, the second-best subsidy is set higher than the social benefit of learning. It allows the transition time and peak warming close to first-best levels at the cost of higher fossil fuel use (weak Green Paradox). If policy makers cannot commit, the second-best subsidy is set to the social benefit of learning. It generates smaller weak Green Paradox effects, but the transition to the carbon-free takes longer and cumulative carbon emissions are higher. Under first-best and second best with pre-commitment peak warming is 2.1 - 2.3 °C, under second best without commitment 3.5°C, and without any policy temperature 5.1°C above pre-industrial levels. Not being able to commit yields a welfare loss of 95% of initial GDP compared to first best. Being able to commit brings this figure down to 7%.
Paper available here [oxcarre.ox.ac.uk] 

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