Allocating remaining carbon budgets and mitigation costs

dc.contributor
Universitat Rovira i Virgili. Departament d'Economia
dc.contributor.author
Duro Moreno, Juan Antonio
dc.contributor.author
Giménez-Gómez, José Manuel
dc.contributor.author
Sánchez-Soriano, Joaquín
dc.contributor.author
Vilella Bach, Misericòrdia
dc.date.accessioned
2023-06-06T06:52:09Z
dc.date.accessioned
2024-12-10T13:29:35Z
dc.date.available
2023-06-06T06:52:09Z
dc.date.available
2024-12-10T13:29:35Z
dc.date.created
2022-07-21
dc.date.issued
2022
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/2072/535074
dc.description.abstract
The concept of carbon budgets has become a key and effective tool in terms of communicating the existing environmental challenge and monitoring environmental policy, in the context of the Paris agreement. In this sense, the literature has addressed different mechanisms to distribute them by countries/groups according to reasonable distribution principles, among which fairness and efficiency play an essential role. Given the problem of agreeing on indicators by countries, the paper proposes the use of claims models as a basis for this distribution, which avoid using indicators and only have to agree on elements defining the distribution rules. In this sense and based on a reference of the available global Carbon Budget (Mercator) for 2018-2050, and the CO2 forecasts taken from the intermediate scenario SSP2-45 (Middle of the road) considered by the IPCC (2021), different distribution rules are addressed proposed by the literature (equality, proportional, and α-min) and are evaluated for the available groups of countries. Two relevant exercises are proposed beyond the initial distribution based on the previous theoretical rules: first, evaluate the cost of these distributions in terms of the welfare of each group (in particular, in terms of GDP); and two, use the GDP costs themselves to propose new distribution rules that are cost-efficient. The results imply having not only a global cost-efficient distribution proposal but also an annual path. We understand that the work is useful not only in terms of its methodological proposal but also as an alternative guide that structures future distribution policies. Keywords: allocation methods; claims; carbon budgets; climate change mitigation; equity JEL classification: D7; H4; H8; Q58; Q54
eng
dc.format.extent
31 p.
cat
dc.language.iso
eng
cat
dc.publisher
ECO-SOS, Centre de Recerca en Economia i Sostenibilitat
cat
dc.relation.ispartofseries
Documents de treball del Departament d'Economia;2022-02
dc.rights
L'accés als continguts d'aquest document queda condicionat a l'acceptació de les condicions d'ús establertes per la següent llicència Creative Commons:http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
dc.source
RECERCAT (Dipòsit de la Recerca de Catalunya)
dc.subject.other
Anhídrid carbònic
cat
dc.subject.other
Canvis climàtics--Mitigació
cat
dc.title
Allocating remaining carbon budgets and mitigation costs
cat
dc.type
info:eu-repo/semantics/workingPaper
cat
dc.subject.udc
502
cat
dc.embargo.terms
cap
cat
dc.rights.accessLevel
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess


Documents

2022002.pdf

1020.Kb PDF

This item appears in the following Collection(s)