Is International Emissions Trading Always Beneficial?

Joint Program Report
Is International Emissions Trading Always Beneficial?
Babiker, M., J. Reilly and L. Viguier (2002)
Joint Program Report Series, 26 pages

Report 93 [Download]

Abstract/Summary:

Economic efficiency is a major argument for the inclusion of an international emission permit trading system under the Kyoto Protocol. Using a partial equilibrium framework, energy system models have shown that implementing tradable permits for greenhouse gases internationally could reduce compliance costs associated with the emission targets. However, we show that international emission trading could be welfare decreasing under a general equilibrium framework. We describe a case of immiserizing growth in the sense of Bhagwati where the negative terms of trade and tax-interaction effects wipeout the primary income gains from emission trading. Immiserizing emission trading occurs only when there are pre-existing distortions in the economy. Simulation results based on a CGE model developed at MIT (the EPPA model) show that under an EU-wide emission trading regime the introduction of a permit trading system cause welfare losses for some of the trading countries.

Citation:

Babiker, M., J. Reilly and L. Viguier (2002): Is International Emissions Trading Always Beneficial?. Joint Program Report Series Report 93, 26 pages (http://globalchange.mit.edu/publication/14143)
  • Joint Program Report
Is International Emissions Trading Always Beneficial?

Babiker, M., J. Reilly and L. Viguier

Report 

93
26 pages
2002

Abstract/Summary: 

Economic efficiency is a major argument for the inclusion of an international emission permit trading system under the Kyoto Protocol. Using a partial equilibrium framework, energy system models have shown that implementing tradable permits for greenhouse gases internationally could reduce compliance costs associated with the emission targets. However, we show that international emission trading could be welfare decreasing under a general equilibrium framework. We describe a case of immiserizing growth in the sense of Bhagwati where the negative terms of trade and tax-interaction effects wipeout the primary income gains from emission trading. Immiserizing emission trading occurs only when there are pre-existing distortions in the economy. Simulation results based on a CGE model developed at MIT (the EPPA model) show that under an EU-wide emission trading regime the introduction of a permit trading system cause welfare losses for some of the trading countries.