The Economic and Environmental Implications of the US Repudiation of the Kyoto Protocol and the Subsequent Deals in Bonn and Marrakech
Preprint
- 1 April 2002
- preprint
- Published by Elsevier in SSRN Electronic Journal
Abstract
Taking account of sinks credits as agreed in Bonn and Marrakech, this paper illustrates how market power could be exerted in the absence of the US ratification under Annex 1 trading and explores the potential implications of the non-competitive supply behavior for the international market of tradable permits, compliance costs for the remaining Annex 1 countries to meet their revised Kyoto targets, and the environmental effectiveness. Our results show that the US withdrawal from the Kyoto Protocol has had by far the greatest impact on the environmental effectiveness of the Protocol. This would lead to no real emission reduction in all remaining Annex 1 regions. As the biggest single buyer on the permit market, the absence of US ratification would significantly reduce the demand for permits. Consequently, the price of permits under Annex 1 trading would drop to zero. While all remaining Kyoto-constrained Annex 1 countries would enjoy meeting their revised Kyoto targets at zero costs, seller countries with excess supply of hot air would lose all their revenues under perfect Annex 1 trading. Given the former Soviet Union (FSU) and the Eastern European countries (EEC) as the dominant suppliers of emissions permits on the international market, it seems likely that they would exert market power to maximize their revenues from permit sales. Depending on how market power is exerted, our results show that the overall compliance costs of all remaining Annex 1 regions in the case of FSU cooperating with EEC could reach as much as two times that in the case of only FSU acting as a monopoly. But no matter how market power is exerted, all Kyoto-constrained Annex 1 regions are better off with emissions trading in terms of their compliance costs than with no trading at all. Moreover, curtailing permit supply by market power will cut the amount of hot air being emitted into the atmosphere by more than half and at the same time, increases Annex 1 domestic abatement efforts. Thus, the overall environmental effectiveness is increased, although it is much less under the market power scenarios examined than in the case of the ratification of all Annex 1 regions including the US.Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Is Kyoto Fatally Flawed? An Analysis with MacGEMSSRN Electronic Journal, 2002
- Technological Change in Economic Models of Environmental Policy: A SurveySSRN Electronic Journal, 2002
- Stable CoalitionsSSRN Electronic Journal, 2002
- Market Power in International Emission Trading - The Impacts of U.S. Withdrawal from the Kyoto ProtocolSSRN Electronic Journal, 2001
- An assessment of the EU proposal for ceilings on the use of Kyoto flexibility mechanismsEcological Economics, 2001
- U.S. Rejection of the Kyoto Protocol: The Impact on Compliance Costs and CO2 EmissionsSSRN Electronic Journal, 2001
- Stable International Environmental Agreements: An Analytical ApproachSSRN Electronic Journal, 2001
- Market Power and Emissions Trading: Theory and Laboratory ResultsPacific Economic Review, 2000
- The Design and Implementation of an International Trading Scheme for Greenhouse Gas EmissionsEnvironment and Planning C: Government and Policy, 2000
- Marginal abatement costs of CO2 emission reductions, geographical flexibility and concrete ceilings: an assessment using the POLES modelEnergy Policy, 1999