Sulfur Dioxide Control by Electric Utilities: What Are the Gains from Trade?
- 1 December 2000
- journal article
- research article
- Published by University of Chicago Press in Journal of Political Economy
- Vol. 108 (6) , 1292-1326
- https://doi.org/10.1086/317681
Abstract
Title IV of the 1990 Clean Air Act Amendments (CAAA) established a market for transferable sulfur dioxide (SO2) emission allowances among electric utilities. This market offers firms facing high marginal abatement costs the opportunity to purchase the right to emit SO2 from firms with lower costs, and this is expected to yield cost savings compared to a command‐and‐control approach to environmental regulation. This paper uses econometrically estimated marginal abatement cost functions for power plants affected by Title IV of the CAAA to evaluate the performance of the SO2 allowance market. Specifically, we investigate whether the much‐heralded fall in the cost of abating SO2, compared to original estimates, can be attributed to allowance trading. We demonstrate that, for plants that use low‐sulfur coal to reduce SO2 emissions, technical change and the fall in prices of low‐sulfur coal have lowered marginal abatement cost curves by over 50 percent since 1985. The flexibility to take advantage of these changes is the main source of cost reductions, rather than trading per se. In the long run, allowance trading may achieve cost savings of $700–$800 million per year compared to an “enlightened” command‐and‐control program characterized by a uniform emission rate standard. The cost savings would be twice as great if the alternative to trading were forced scrubbing. However, a comparison of potential cost savings in 1995 and 1996 with modeled costs of actual emissions suggests that most trading gains were unrealized in the first two years of the program.Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- COSTS AND BENEFITS OF REDUCING AIR POLLUTANTS RELATED TO ACID RAINContemporary Economic Policy, 1998
- Cost Functions and Nonlinear Prices: Estimating a Technology with Quality-Differentiated InputsThe Review of Economics and Statistics, 1998
- Note on The Seemingly Indefinite Extension of Power Plant Lives, A Panel ContributionThe Energy Journal, 1998
- Revenue-Raising versus Other Approaches to Environmental Protection: The Critical Significance of Preexisting Tax DistortionsThe RAND Journal of Economics, 1997
- THE SO2EMISSIONS TRADING PROGRAM: COST SAVINGS WITHOUT ALLOWANCE TRADESContemporary Economic Policy, 1996
- The clean air act's sulfur dioxide emissions market: Estimating the costs of regulatory and legislative interventionResource and Energy Economics, 1995
- Utility investment behavior and the emission trading marketResources and Energy, 1992
- Dual Measures of Monopoly and Monopsony Power: An Application to Regulated Electric UtilitiesThe Review of Economics and Statistics, 1989
- Cost-Minimizing Regulation of Sulfur Emissions: Regional Gains in Electric PowerThe Review of Economics and Statistics, 1985
- Environmental Regulations and Productivity Growth: The Case of Fossil-fueled Electric Power GenerationJournal of Political Economy, 1983