《京都议定书》和二氧化碳排放交易对发展中国家的影响

A. Ellerman, H. Jacoby, A. Decaux
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引用次数: 58

摘要

《联合国气候变化框架公约》(United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change)并未正式批准二氧化碳排放权交易,但调查允许此类交易对工业化国家和发展中国家的影响是有意义的。作者研究了《京都议定书》下分配给附件B国家的限额交易,并将其结果与附件B国家在没有交易的情况下实现其《京都议定书》目标的情况进行了比较。在交易方案中,前苏联是二氧化碳排放许可的主要卖方,而日本、欧盟和美国是主要买方。据估计,与不进行交易相比,许可交易可以将达到《京都议定书》目标的总成本降低约50%。发展中国家虽然不从事贸易,但却受到贸易的影响。例如,有贸易的石油价格和对其他发展中国家出口产品的需求要高于没有贸易的情况。作者还考虑到,如果发展中国家自愿接受与“一切照旧”排放量相等的排放上限,并被允许将低于这些上限的减排量出售给附件B国家,可能会发生什么。排放交易的收益可能大到足以激励买卖双方支持这一体系。事实上,如果一个二氧化碳排放权的全球市场具有竞争性,那么这个市场可以将实现《京都议定书》目标的成本降低近90%。然而,交易收益的分配可能使竞争结果不太可能出现:在完全竞争条件下,绝大多数交易收益流向了许可的买方,而不是卖方。然而,即使是配额供应受到限制的市场,也可以大大降低附件B国家实现《京都议定书》目标的成本,同时为选择出售配额的发展中国家带来利润。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Effects on Developing Countries of the Kyoto Protocol and Carbon Dioxide Emissions Trading
The trading of rights to emit carbon dioxide has not officially been sanctioned by the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, but it is of interest to investigate the consequences, both for industrial (Annex B) and developing countries, of allowing such trades. The authors examine the trading of caps assigned to Annex B countries under the Kyoto Protocol and compare the outcome with a world in which Annex B countries meet with their Kyoto targets without trading. Under the trading scenario the former Soviet Union is the main seller of carbon dioxide permits and Japan, the European Union, and the United States are the main buyers. Permit trading is estimated to reduce the aggregate cost of meeting the Kyoto targets by about 50 percent, compared with no trading. Developing countries, though they do not trade, are nonetheless affected by trading. For example, the price of oil and the demand for other developing country exports are higher with trading than without. The authors also consider what might happen if developing countries were to voluntarily accept caps equal to Business as Usual Emissions and were allowed to sell emission reductions below these caps to Annex B countries. The gains from emissions trading could be big enough to give buyers and sellers incentive to support the system. Indeed, a global market for rights to emit carbon dioxide could reduce the cost of meeting the Kyoto targets by almost 90 percent, if the market were to operate competitively. The division of trading gains, however, may make a competitive outcome unlikely: Under perfect competition, the vast majority of trading gains go to buyers of permits rather than to sellers. Even markets in which the supply of permits is restricted can, however, substantially reduce the cost to Annex B countries of meeting their Kyoto targets, while yielding profits to developing countries that elect to sell permits.
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