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ERE11: International Environmental Problems • International externalities – Optimisation analysis – Game-theory analysis • Acid rain • Depletion of the ozone layer • Climate change Last week • Instruments of Environmental Policy • Criteria, incl. cost-effectiveness • Instruments – Institutional – Command and control – Market based • A comparison International Externalities • International externalities are the unintended and uncompensated by-product of one country‘s consumption or production on another country‘s welfare • Natural and environmental resources do not respect administrative borders, so exploitation of shared (water) and mobile (fish) resources as well as persistent emissions (water, air) lead to international externalities; so do resources such as biodiversity Pollution flows over national boundaries No spillover Unidirectional spillover Country X Country Y UX=UX (MX) UY=UY (MY) Country X UX=UX (MX) Reciprocal spillovers Country Y UY=UY (MX, MY) Country X Country Y UX=UX (MX, MY) UY=UY (MX, MY) Non-Cooperative Solution • For all countries, optimal emissions are such that the marginal benefits of emitting equal the marginal costs to the country itself • Objective function maxUi Ui (Mi ) • Necessary conditions dUi 0 dMi • So, even in the cases with spillover effects, this will be ignored and does not influence the choice of emission level Cooperative Solution • For all countries, optimal emissions are such that the marginal benefits of emitting equal sum of the marginal costs to all countries • In our example: maxU UX UY • Unidirectional solution UX UX (MX ); UY UY (MX , MY ) dUX dUY U 0 MX dMX dMX • Reciprocal solution dUX dUY U 0 MX dMX dMX dUY U 0 MY dMY UX UX (MX , MY ); UY UY (MX , MY ) dUX dUY U 0 MY dMY dMY Unidirectional externality MU XX MU XY • UY UY (MX , MY ) MU XX Non-cooperative Cooperative dUX 0 dMX dUX dU Y dMX dMX MU XY * M X* Mˆ X MX Emissions Insights • A non-cooperative solution ignores externalities, and is therefore not optimal • A cooperative solution is in the best interest of all together, although not necessarily in the interest of each individual • Under some conditions, a cooperative solution generates enough surplus to compensate the losers of cooperation – but it is the losers of pollution that pay Game Theory • To analyse choices where – the outcome of a decision by one player depends on the decisions of the other players – decisions of others are not known in advance • The pay-off to doing pollution control or not depends on one‘s own choice and that of others • Tool to explain characteristics of effective international environmental agreements Prisoner‘s Dilemma Pay-offs (net benefits): x Pollute (x) Abate (x) Pollute (y) 0,0 5,-2 Abate (y) -2,5 3,3 y • Emission reduction costs 7 units for the one abating • Emission reduction creates a benefit of 5 units for each Achieving Cooperation • How to achieve at least partial cooperation? • Self-enforcing agreements – No signatory can gain by unilaterally withdrawing from the agreement – No non-signatory can gain by unilaterally acceding to the agreement • The role of commitment • Side-payments and other benefits of cooperation – E.g. trade linkages Trade and the environment • Prospects for international environmental cooperation might be increased by trade linkages • International trade brings welfare to all countries • However, if countries do not internalise their environmental externalities, trade may hurt welfare • Indeed, lax environmental regulation can be a competitive advantage • This is frequently quoted as a reason to restrict international trade, but improved environmental policy would be a better Stability of Cooperative Solutions • Bargaining solutions are more difficult to achieve when – – – – A high number of parties is affected Bargaining power is unevenly divided Gains and losses from cooperation differ widely Property rights are non-existent/not well defined – Bargaining is about public goods – Costs of bargaining are relatively large – Uncertainty about costs and benefits is larger Acid Rain • Acidification became apparent in Europe in the 1960s and led to research on causes, consequences and remedies • Sources are sulphur dioxide and nitrous oxide – SO2: Fossil-fuel combustion, in power plants and vehicles – NOX: From transport and via ammonia from agriculture • Once in the atmosphere pollutants travel long distances (1000m) before being deposited after a couple of days • Acid rain can be dry and wet – dry deposition: direct uptake by vegetation – wet deposition: acidic substances in rain drops Consequences • Increased acidity of lakes – aluminium poisoning, salt and oxygen starvation • Increased acidity of soils and air – Forest damage, through roots and leaves • Human health, through acidic air and water • Damages to some stone, metal, glass • Loss of visibility Acid Rain Policy in Europe • In Europe, acid deposition is falling • What are the factors influencing the abatement effort • Emission problems are relatively concentrated – Vehicles also contributed to urban air pollution – Power plants typically operated by semi-governments • There was strong public demand, and a not excessively expensive technical fix • Coal, the dirtiest fuel, was becoming less and less competitive • Eastern European industry collapsed • The EU acted as an international political institution Ozone Depletion • Ozone is formed by ultraviolet light, destructed by oxides of chlorine, nitrogen and hydrogen • Ozone concentrations are highly variable • Anthropogenic emissions of CFCs have increased the decay rate of ozone, leading to the ozone hole – CFCs are extremely stable and travel around for years – They climb higher and higher until the sun is strong enough to break down the molecules • CFCs originate from equipment – aerosol propellants, cushioning foams, cleaning materials, and refrigerative material 1978-1987 Consequences and Countermeasures • The increase of UV radiation leads to – Skin cancer (40 million cases, 1 million deaths) – Affects immune systems; causes blindness – Genetic damages – Damage to marine plankton • CFC’s are industrial products that can be replaced by other substances that fulfill the same role – HFC’s are slightly worse and slightly more expensive Ozone Policy • Vienna, 1985: Threat recognised; agreement on information sharing • Montreal, 1988: 24 mainly OECD countries agree to phase out production and consumption of CFCs • London, 1990: 59 nations agree to accelerate and extend the Montreal Protocol • Jan 2001: Consumption and production of CFCs is forbidden in the OECD and in most developing countries • Main instrument: Substitution Ozone Policy (2) • Why this success? After all, the ozone hole is a stronger externality than acid rain, and a global deal was reached • Strong public demand • Availability of a cheap, technological fix • Developing countries bribed with money, technology, WTO access • Illegal trade and waste remains a problem Climate Change • Fossil fuel combustion and cement production emit carbon dioxide • Coal mining, agriculture and organic waste lead to methane emissions • Agriculture, fossil fuel combustion and nylon production lead to nitrous oxide emissions • A range of other activities lead to emissions of other greenhouse gases • These emissions change the radiative balance of the atmosphere, and thus climate The Greenhouse Effect Solar radiation passes through the clear atmosphere Most radiation is absorbed by the earth‘s surface and warms it Some solar radiation is reflected by the earth and the atmosphere Some of the infrared radiation passes through the atmosphere, and some is absorbed and re-emitted in all directions by greenhouse gas molecules. The effect of this is to warm the earth‘s surface and the lower atmosphere Infrared radiation is emitted from the earth‘s surface Anthropogenic emission of greenhouse gases broken down by sector for the year 2000 (EDGAR 3.2) Climate Change (2) • Climate change affects everything that depends on climate – – – – – – – – – Sea level Unmanaged ecosystems Agriculture Water resources Energy consumption and production Human health Infrastructure Tourism And so on Climate Change (3) • Some of the impacts are negative, others are positive • In general, poorer, hotter countries are more vulnerable than richer, cooler countries • A few degrees of warming would mean positive, monetary impacts but negative impacts for the majority of people • More than a few degrees of warming would imply net negative impacts Climate Change (4) • Greenhouse gas emission reduction is complicated, as we are dealing with a wide range of activities of almost everybody • However, energy and transport are the prime emitters • Accelerating energy-saving and a gradual shift to carbon-free energy sources (solar, wind, hydro, nuclear, biomass) would be fairly cheap • More ambitious, rapid emission reduction could be very costly Climate Change Policy • To date, climate policy is mostly talking • The Rio 1992 convention set-up a framework treaty • Kyoto 1997 filled in a lot of details but left many crucial elements undefined • At the moment, the international negotiations are stuck, and national policies are waiting for the world • What‘s the difference with ozone hole and acid rain? Climate v Ozone, Acid • • • • More countries More sectors No cheap technological fix in sight Significant number of people remains unconvinced • Issue is more complex, and scientific uncertainty and illiteracy are greater • So far, international climate policy has confirmed economic theory ...