Title of article
Emission allowances and mitigation costs of China and India resulting from different effort-sharing approaches
Author/Authors
Bas J. van Ruijven، نويسنده , , Matthias Weitzel، نويسنده , , Michel G.J. den Elzen، نويسنده , , Andries F. Hof، نويسنده , , Detlef P. van Vuuren، نويسنده , , Sonja Peterson ، نويسنده , , Daiju Narita، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Pages
19
From page
116
To page
134
Abstract
To meet ambitious global climate targets, mitigation effort in China and India is necessary. This paper presents an analysis of the scientific literature on how effort-sharing approaches affect emission allowances and abatement costs of China and India. We find that reductions for both China and India differ greatly in time, across- and within approaches and between concentration stabilisation targets. For China, allocated emission allowances in 2020 are substantially below baseline projections. Moreover, they may be below 2005 emission levels, particularly for low concentration targets (below 490 ppm CO2-eq). Effort-sharing approaches based on allocating reduction targets lead to relatively lower reductions for China than approaches that are based on allocating emission allowances. For 2050, emission allowances for China are 50–80% below 2005 levels for low concentration targets with minor differences between approaches. Still, mitigation costs of China (including emissions trading) remain mostly below global average. According to literature, Chinese emission allowances peak before 2025–2030 for low concentration targets. India’s emission allowances show high increases compared to 2005 levels. If emission trading is allowed, financial revenues from selling credits might compensate mitigation costs in most approaches, even for low concentration targets. India’s emission allowances peak around 2030–2040 for all concentration targets.
Keywords
Climate policy , China , India
Journal title
Energy Policy
Serial Year
2012
Journal title
Energy Policy
Record number
973939
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