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Economics of Climate Policy and Collective Decision Making

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Economics of Climate Policy and Collective Decision Making. / Bürgenmeier, B; Baranzini, A; Ferrier, C et al.
In: Climatic Change, Vol. 79, 08.11.2006.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Bürgenmeier, B, Baranzini, A, Ferrier, C, Germond-Duret, C, Ingold, K, Perret, S, Rafaj, P, Kypreos, S & Wokaun, A 2006, 'Economics of Climate Policy and Collective Decision Making', Climatic Change, vol. 79. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10584-006-9147-x

APA

Bürgenmeier, B., Baranzini, A., Ferrier, C., Germond-Duret, C., Ingold, K., Perret, S., Rafaj, P., Kypreos, S., & Wokaun, A. (2006). Economics of Climate Policy and Collective Decision Making. Climatic Change, 79. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10584-006-9147-x

Vancouver

Bürgenmeier B, Baranzini A, Ferrier C, Germond-Duret C, Ingold K, Perret S et al. Economics of Climate Policy and Collective Decision Making. Climatic Change. 2006 Nov 8;79. doi: 10.1007/s10584-006-9147-x

Author

Bürgenmeier, B ; Baranzini, A ; Ferrier, C et al. / Economics of Climate Policy and Collective Decision Making. In: Climatic Change. 2006 ; Vol. 79.

Bibtex

@article{f041ef62236c424aa57f4113cebf2e6b,
title = "Economics of Climate Policy and Collective Decision Making",
abstract = "This paper explores the reasons why economic instruments of climate change are reluctantly applied and stresses the need for interdisciplinary research linking economic theory and empirical testing to deliberative political procedures. It is divided in three parts. The first one recalls the main issues in implementing Cost-Benefit Analysis such as information problems, uncertainties, discounting the future and irreversibilities. The second part shows how these issues can be treated in integrated assessment and techno-economic models and presents a case study, which shows thatThe chosen scenario tends to stabilize atmospheric CO2 concentration at around 550 ppm in the long run.Exclusion of possibility to trade CO2 emission permits under a cap regime would increase the cost of emission abatement for OECD countries.Combining different flexibility instruments might lead to significant gains in the overall cost of climate policy.The third part presents results of a survey conducted among the main economic and environmental associations in Switzerland. The survey reveals conflicting views on economic instruments. It shows how the social acceptability of these instruments can be improved in taking explicitly into account these opposing views of special interest groups. Therefore, policy scenarios should be selected in combining techno-economic models with empirical studies about their political and normative context.",
author = "B B{\"u}rgenmeier and A Baranzini and C Ferrier and Celine Germond-Duret and K Ingold and S Perret and P Rafaj and S Kypreos and A Wokaun",
year = "2006",
month = nov,
day = "8",
doi = "10.1007/s10584-006-9147-x",
language = "English",
volume = "79",
journal = "Climatic Change",
issn = "0165-0009",
publisher = "Springer Netherlands",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Economics of Climate Policy and Collective Decision Making

AU - Bürgenmeier, B

AU - Baranzini, A

AU - Ferrier, C

AU - Germond-Duret, Celine

AU - Ingold, K

AU - Perret, S

AU - Rafaj, P

AU - Kypreos, S

AU - Wokaun, A

PY - 2006/11/8

Y1 - 2006/11/8

N2 - This paper explores the reasons why economic instruments of climate change are reluctantly applied and stresses the need for interdisciplinary research linking economic theory and empirical testing to deliberative political procedures. It is divided in three parts. The first one recalls the main issues in implementing Cost-Benefit Analysis such as information problems, uncertainties, discounting the future and irreversibilities. The second part shows how these issues can be treated in integrated assessment and techno-economic models and presents a case study, which shows thatThe chosen scenario tends to stabilize atmospheric CO2 concentration at around 550 ppm in the long run.Exclusion of possibility to trade CO2 emission permits under a cap regime would increase the cost of emission abatement for OECD countries.Combining different flexibility instruments might lead to significant gains in the overall cost of climate policy.The third part presents results of a survey conducted among the main economic and environmental associations in Switzerland. The survey reveals conflicting views on economic instruments. It shows how the social acceptability of these instruments can be improved in taking explicitly into account these opposing views of special interest groups. Therefore, policy scenarios should be selected in combining techno-economic models with empirical studies about their political and normative context.

AB - This paper explores the reasons why economic instruments of climate change are reluctantly applied and stresses the need for interdisciplinary research linking economic theory and empirical testing to deliberative political procedures. It is divided in three parts. The first one recalls the main issues in implementing Cost-Benefit Analysis such as information problems, uncertainties, discounting the future and irreversibilities. The second part shows how these issues can be treated in integrated assessment and techno-economic models and presents a case study, which shows thatThe chosen scenario tends to stabilize atmospheric CO2 concentration at around 550 ppm in the long run.Exclusion of possibility to trade CO2 emission permits under a cap regime would increase the cost of emission abatement for OECD countries.Combining different flexibility instruments might lead to significant gains in the overall cost of climate policy.The third part presents results of a survey conducted among the main economic and environmental associations in Switzerland. The survey reveals conflicting views on economic instruments. It shows how the social acceptability of these instruments can be improved in taking explicitly into account these opposing views of special interest groups. Therefore, policy scenarios should be selected in combining techno-economic models with empirical studies about their political and normative context.

U2 - 10.1007/s10584-006-9147-x

DO - 10.1007/s10584-006-9147-x

M3 - Journal article

VL - 79

JO - Climatic Change

JF - Climatic Change

SN - 0165-0009

ER -