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Analysis of some environmental policy instruments

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conference contribution
posted on 2024-11-13, 15:48 authored by Juergen Seufert, Brian Andrew
Benjamin Franklin once said that "[i]n this world nothing can be said to be certain, except death and taxes" (Franklin, 1840 p.410) and a significant body of the scientific literature, including the IPCC, have indicated that the climate change problem has become such a pressing issue that we now face a stark choice between the premature death of hundreds of millions of the people on this planet (from storm, flood, starvation, war or pestilence) and the use of taxation or other financial strategies to change the relative cost of carbon intensive sources of energy compared to the cost of 'green' sources of energy. A change in the relative cost of 'green energy' will not itself solve the problem, but it is a necessary (though not sufficient) step if there is to be the required behavioural change which will support the application of engineering solutions to the problem which has been signalled by a large group of climate scientists. This paper addresses possible approaches to solving the problem of climate change by reducing greenhouse gas emissions (GHGEs). It considers the European Union's emissions trading scheme (ETS) as an example of a market and government failure to achieve a reduction in emissions through a neoliberal approach to pricing emissions. The North American Acid Rain Program is also discussed as a more successful market-based example, though it also exhibited considerable price volatility and in reducing the amount of SO2 in the atmosphere it is making the global warming issue worse. The discussion then focuses on the design features of a carbon tax and some alternative policy instruments that could contribute to a solution to the problem and it raises the main advantages of a carbon tax over an ETS.

History

Citation

Seufert, J. H. & Andrew, B. (2013). Analysis of some environmental policy instruments. The RMIT Accounting for Sustainability Conference (pp. 1-25). Australia: RMIT University.

Pagination

1-25

Language

English

RIS ID

79830

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