Author/Authors
DeCanio، نويسنده , , Stephen J.، نويسنده ,
DocumentNumber
3540549
Title Of Article
The political economy of global carbon emissions reductions
شماره ركورد
2761
Latin Abstract
The discussion about what reductions in greenhouse gas emissions are required and how the emissions rights might be distributed globally has fostered the belief that there is a fundamental conflict between the rich nations of the “North” and the poor but populous nations of the “South.” The argument is that grandfathering the rights will only reinforce existing global inequalities, while per capita distribution of the rights would lead to such huge transfers of wealth to the South as to be unacceptable to the North. However, a very simple general equilibrium model highlighting key elements of the global economy shows that this perception is incorrect under a plausible interpretation of the goal of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change to “avoid dangerous anthropogenic interference with the climate system.” Instead of using an economic damage function to determine the optimal level of emissions reductions, the modelʹs utility functions are calibrated to reflect scientific understanding of what would be required to stabilize the atmosphere at safe concentrations of greenhouse gases. Among policy options that would accomplish this, the United States has a preference for grandfathering the allocation of emissions rights over a per capita allocation, but this preference is not strong and could be offset by other geopolitical considerations.
From Page
915
NaturalLanguageKeyword
Global environmental policy , climate change , Fossil fuels , International negotiations , Political economy , Allocation of emissions rights , Distribution
JournalTitle
Studia Iranica
To Page
924
To Page
924
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