Rethinking the Kyoto Emissions Targets

Joint Program Reprint • Journal Article
Rethinking the Kyoto Emissions Targets
Babiker, M.H. and R.S. Eckaus (2002)
Climatic Change, 54(4):399-414

Reprint 2002-4 [Read Full Article]

Abstract/Summary:

The international allocation of responsibilities for reductions in greenhouse gas emissions, as foreseen in the Kyoto Protocol, would create a public good. Yet the 1990 level of emissions that is used in the Protocol, as the base from which the reductions would be made, and the reductions targets themselves, are quite arbitrary and not based on a specific target for the future world climate. In addition, the particular allocations of greenhouse gas emissions restrictions among countries do not have a principled logic. This arbitrariness has led to allocations that impose sharply different costs on the participating countries that have no consistent relation to their income or wealth.
        Calculations are presented of the implications of alternative allocations of emissions reductions that do have a plausible ethical basis: equal per capita reductions, equal country shares in reductions, equalized welfare costs, and emulation of the allocations of the United Nations budget. All of these would reach the overall Kyoto target at lower overall costs than the emissions allocations in the Protocol itself. This would be achieved through the participation of the developing countries, in which the costs of emissions reductions are relatively low. In addition, use of any of the alternative allocations analyzed here would eliminate the wholly capricious accommodation given to the countries of the Former Soviet Union and Eastern Europe.
        The additional costs to the developing countries, for most of the alternative allocations, are so low that the Annex B countries could pay them to accede to a new emissions reduction schedule and still have lower costs than those imposed by the Kyoto allocations. This conclusion puts the Annex B countries in the anachronistic position of advocating an arbitrary and relatively high cost allocation of emissions reductions. The lower cost alternative is to make such an unequivocal commitment for reimbursement to the non-Annex B countries that they would be persuaded to reduce their own emissions. Everyone would gain from that.

© Springer

 

Citation:

Babiker, M.H. and R.S. Eckaus (2002): Rethinking the Kyoto Emissions Targets. Climatic Change, 54(4):399-414 (http://globalchange.mit.edu/publication/14390)
  • Joint Program Reprint
  • Journal Article
Rethinking the Kyoto Emissions Targets

Babiker, M.H. and R.S. Eckaus

2002-4
54(4):399-414

Abstract/Summary: 

The international allocation of responsibilities for reductions in greenhouse gas emissions, as foreseen in the Kyoto Protocol, would create a public good. Yet the 1990 level of emissions that is used in the Protocol, as the base from which the reductions would be made, and the reductions targets themselves, are quite arbitrary and not based on a specific target for the future world climate. In addition, the particular allocations of greenhouse gas emissions restrictions among countries do not have a principled logic. This arbitrariness has led to allocations that impose sharply different costs on the participating countries that have no consistent relation to their income or wealth.
        Calculations are presented of the implications of alternative allocations of emissions reductions that do have a plausible ethical basis: equal per capita reductions, equal country shares in reductions, equalized welfare costs, and emulation of the allocations of the United Nations budget. All of these would reach the overall Kyoto target at lower overall costs than the emissions allocations in the Protocol itself. This would be achieved through the participation of the developing countries, in which the costs of emissions reductions are relatively low. In addition, use of any of the alternative allocations analyzed here would eliminate the wholly capricious accommodation given to the countries of the Former Soviet Union and Eastern Europe.
        The additional costs to the developing countries, for most of the alternative allocations, are so low that the Annex B countries could pay them to accede to a new emissions reduction schedule and still have lower costs than those imposed by the Kyoto allocations. This conclusion puts the Annex B countries in the anachronistic position of advocating an arbitrary and relatively high cost allocation of emissions reductions. The lower cost alternative is to make such an unequivocal commitment for reimbursement to the non-Annex B countries that they would be persuaded to reduce their own emissions. Everyone would gain from that.

© Springer

 

Supersedes: 

Rethinking the Kyoto Emissions Targets