Supplementarity: An Invitation to Monopsony?
- 1 October 2000
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in The Energy Journal
- Vol. 21 (4) , 29-59
- https://doi.org/10.5547/issn0195-6574-ej-vol21-no4-2
Abstract
Article 17 of the Kyoto Protocol allows Annex B parties to meet their greenhouse gas emissions commitments by emissions trading so long as such trading is "supplemental" to domestic abatement actions. Whether and how "supplemental" should be defined is one of the most contentious issues in the post-Kyoto climate negotiations. We demonstrate that implementing supplementarity by imposing concrete ceilings on permit imports in a market for tradable emissions rights gives rise to monopsonistic effects similar to those that characterize a buyers' cartel. We assess the EUproposal on supplementarity in this context. Our results show that, under the most favorable assumptions, the proposal avoids the redistributive effects of an import limit, albeit at added cost. Under less favorable assumptions, namely, that the required demonstrations of verifiable abatement cannot be made, the EU proposal severely limits emissions trading and the associated reductions in the costs of achieving the Kyoto commitments.Keywords
This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- Marginal abatement costs of CO2 emission reductions, geographical flexibility and concrete ceilings: an assessment using the POLES modelEnergy Policy, 1999
- Multi-gas assessment of the Kyoto ProtocolNature, 1999
- Clubs, Ceilings and CDM: Macroeconomics of Compliance with the Kyoto ProtocolThe Energy Journal, 1999
- Effects of Restrictions on International Permit Trading: The MS-MRT ModelThe Energy Journal, 1999
- The Effects on Developing Countries of the Kyoto Protocol and Carbon Dioxide Emissions TradingPublished by World Bank ,1998
- Market Power in a System of Tradeable CO2, QuotasThe Energy Journal, 1996
- Fairness in a tradeable-permit treaty for carbon emissions reductions in Europe and the former Soviet UnionEnvironmental and Resource Economics, 1994