1 / 17

Economic Efficiency of Renewable Portfolio Standards in the Presence of Cap-and-Trade

Economic Efficiency of Renewable Portfolio Standards in the Presence of Cap-and-Trade. Kenneth Gillingham Yale School of Forestry & Environmental Studies Arthur van Benthem Stanford University. Motivation.

inigo
Download Presentation

Economic Efficiency of Renewable Portfolio Standards in the Presence of Cap-and-Trade

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Economic Efficiency of Renewable Portfolio Standards in the Presence of Cap-and-Trade Kenneth Gillingham Yale School of Forestry & Environmental Studies Arthur van Benthem Stanford University

  2. Motivation • Throughout the world, there has been a push for a cap-and-trade (CAT) system on carbon emissions at the same time as a renewable portfolio standard (RPS) • Recent US Senate and House climate bill proposals • Current EU climate policy (binding cap; voluntary RPS) Question: Why would we ever want an RPS if we already have a CAT?

  3. Specific Questions • What would we have to believe for an RPS to be economic-efficiency improving if we already have CAT? • What market failures would need to be present? • How important would we have to believe those market failures are? • Does the RPS in current/proposed U.S. climate policy improve economic efficiency? • What is the loss in economic efficiency from not adopting a first-best policy?

  4. Outline of Research Project • Theoretical Model • Modeling market failures • Simulation Model • Partial-equilibrium model calibrated to the U.S. economy • Market failures made more explicit than in previous work

  5. Proposed ACES in the U.S.

  6. Many state-level RPS policies already • An RPS was proposed in concert with ACES • Already numerous state-level RPS policies Source: US DOE EERE (2011)

  7. Market Failures • Three Market Failures • Externality from carbon dioxide (and other) emissions • R&D spillovers • Learning-by-doing (LBD) spillovers • Starting point intuition: • If we only have an environmental externality and we internalize it, RPS must be efficiency-reducing • But RPS may help address R&D and LBD spillovers…

  8. R&D Market Failure Intuition • Two period model • Cost functions • Profits • Competitive equilibrium vs. social optimum

  9. R&D Market Failure Intuition • Competitive equilibrium underprovides R&D investment • Degree of appropriability is given by • By symmetry, r0i=R0,-i/(N-1), and we can specify • aR is fraction of R&D investment that is appropriable • This enables representative firm approach versus

  10. Learning-by-doing Market Failure

  11. Partial-Equilibrium Model • Simple partial equilibrium model • Two sectors: electricity (E) and industry (I) • Electricity can be renewable (R) or fossil (F) • Quantities qF, qR and qI • Carbon intensities bF, bI (bR = 0) • Marginal environmental damage t • Cost functions Ci(qi) (i = R,F,I) • Demand pE(qF+qR) and pI(qI) • For simplicity, assume:

  12. Modeling Cap-and-trade and RPS • Cap-and-trade – emissions must be less than • RPS – fraction of electricity generation by fossil fuels must be less than

  13. Social Planner vs Decentralized • More general social planner’s problem: • Compare to the representative agent problem with a cap-and-trade and an RPS:

  14. RPS helps to address innovation market failures – but imperfectly • Let’s compare the first order conditions of the two problems: R&D overinvestment R&D underinvestment

  15. Several Propositions If no innovation market failures exist: • Adding a binding RPS to an existing cap reduces the optimal permit price With both environmental and innovation market failures: • In the absence of R&D subsidies, the permit price should be set higher than the marginal damages • In the absence of a CAT, a small binding RPS will always be economic efficiency-improving • With a CAT, a small binding RPS will always be economic-efficiency improving

  16. What Does this Mean for Policy? • This is where the simulation model comes in… • We parameterize and calibrate the model to the US economy *PRELIMINARY FINDINGS* • Under our base case set of assumptions: • We find that it is going to be very difficult to justify any large-scale RPS policy • Without a CAT, it appears that the socially optimal RPS policy may not be too far from some of the state-level policies

  17. Acknowledgments • We would like to thank Larry Goulder of Stanford University for his thoughtful comments about this project

More Related