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Choice of Policy Measures in Annex B Countries and Impacts on Non-Annex B Countries Workshop on Mitigation of Climate Change Socio-Economic Impacts of Mitigation Hotel Maritim, Bonn W. David Montgomery, Ph.D. Policy Approaches Under Consideration • Broad market based approaches have received most attention in studies of global economic impacts of climate change policy – Cap and Trade systems – Fuel or carbon taxes • Increasing focus on “sectoral” measures in all Annex B countries as policies are implemented – Applied to specific economic sectors or industries – Based on technical standards, sector-specific limits, or fiscal measures • Questions this raises – What are the impacts of “sectoral” or “bottom-up” measures on non-Annex B countries? – How do the impacts differ, depending on the sector regulated or instruments chosen? – What can be done to minimize adverse impacts? Economy-Wide “Top-Down” Policies Include Emission Trading and Uniform Taxes on Carbon Content Prospective Region Policy Category Policy Measure Emissions Economy wide cap & trade Trading Schemes Carbon tax Sectoral emissions cap and trade for electricity and industrial sectors Tax on all fuels based on carbon content (essentially the same as a tax on CO2 emissions) North America EU X X Select Countries X X Select Countries X Rest of World Region Where Currently Implemented/ Proposed North America EU X Select Countries Rest of World Fiscal and Incentive Based Sectoral Policies Target Specific Fuels or Sectors Region Where Currently Implemented/ Proposed Prospective Region Policy Category Fiscal Policies Subsidies & Incentives Policy Measure * Rail and infrastructure susbidies to reduce traffic * Changes in operating practices of vehicles fleets incentives) (e.g., anti-idling credit and production Capital for renewable electricity Tax Credit for Bio-Fuels Production; Tax exemption on bio-fuels (or natural gas) at pump Fiscal Policies Taxes Tax credit for hybrid, diesel, fuel cell vehicles Border taxes on imports from non-complying countries Oil import fee Tax on transportation fuels based on carbon content North America EU Rest of World North America EU X X X X X X X X Select Technologies X X X X X X X X X Rest of World Select Countries & Technologies Select Countries X X X X X X X X Bottom Up Measures Are Typically Sector and Technology Specific Region Where Currently Implemented/ Proposed Prospective Region Policy Category Command and Control Approaches Policy Measure Auto Standards for CO2 Emissions and tighter CAFÉ Standards Ban on new coal fired powerplants Voluntary/ Mandatory Sectoral Carbon Intensity Reduction Target Mandatory Carbon per Capita Reduction Target Energy Efficiency * Energy efficiency requirments for lighting and buidling materials in commercial and industrial sectors Renewable Portfolio Standards and Renewable Trading Schemes Mandatory biofuels concentration by volume in transportation fuels Increasing Minimum Appliance Efficiency Standards North America EU X X Rest of World Select Regions Select Countries Canada North America EU Rest of World X Select Regions Select Countries X Select Countries X X Select Countries Select Regions X Select Countries X X X Select States/ Regions X Select Countries X X Select Regions X X X X X Spillover Effects Of Broad Market Based Approaches Are Well-established • Adverse impacts on most non-Annex B countries – Reduction in Annex B income reduces demand for imports – Increase in Annex B production costs increases real price of exports – Result is adverse shift in terms of trade for developing countries • Potentially beneficial impacts on exporters of energy-intensive products – Increase in cost of EIS production in Annex B increases demand and price received for EIS exports – Reduction in cost of energy imports due to lower world oil prices reduces non-Annex B costs – Result is potential terms of trade improvement for large EIS exporters • Large adverse impacts on energy exporters – Reduction in energy use reduces energy imports and world energy prices – All energy exporting countries suffer adverse effects • Patterns of spillover effects are governed by trade and macroeconomic relationships Paths for Spillover Effects Matter When Sectoral Policies Are Considered • Spillover effects arise from changes in Annex B – Quantities of energy produced and consumed – Costs of production of manufactured goods and some services – Overall levels of economic activity • These translate into terms of trade effects through – Direct effects in energy markets - Changes in demand for imported energy – Substitution effects, mostly in markets for energy intensive goods - Willingness to pay for imports - Competitiveness of exports – Income effects in all markets - Overall level of demand for imports Impacts of Sectoral Measures Depend on the Sectors and Measures Involved • Patterns of spillover effects are determined by which fuels and sectors are targeted by a policy Policy Target and Measure Spillover Path Oil Imports All sectors, Emission trading Transportation Sector, Regulatory Policy Industrial Sector, Regulatory Policy Power Generation, Emission Cap or Regulation 0 + implies policy increases spillovers through indicated path - implies policy decreases spillovers through indicated path Industry Cost + 0 + + GDP - How Different Regions Are Impacted Depends on the Path of Spillovers • Changes in different pathways create different types of adverse effects Region Affected Annex B Oil exporters Large, EIS exporter Other non-Annex B Spillover Path Oil imports Industry cost GDP + + + + - - + implies change in path is beneficial to indicated country - implies change in path is adverse to indicated country The Choice of Sector Specific Policies Will Influence Where Adverse Impacts Appear • Adverse impacts depend on – the sector that is regulated and – how it is regulated • Regulations that increase the cost of industrial sectors – May benefit countries that export energy intensive goods to Annex B countries – Are likely to move terms of trade adversely to poorer countries that export resources and agricultural products and import manufactured goods • Policies that reduce use of transportation fuels have large adverse effects on oil exporters – Direct reduction in consumption, oil imports and world oil price – No possible favorable movements in the terms of trade Using MS-MRT to Quantify Relative Effects of Sectoral Policies • MS-MRT is a computable general equilibrium trade model based on the GTAP dataset – Fully dynamic, forward-looking model with Armington trade structure – Discussed in TAR and documented in Energy Journal and Journal of Energy and Natural Resource Economics – Being updated to GTAP6 data and current IEA World Energy Outlook – Generic sectoral policy scenarios were explored to quantify the connections between choice of policies and nature of adverse impacts Regions in MS-MRT usa United States, eur Europe (EU 15) jpn Japan eeu Eastern Europe rus Russia chn China ind India oec Oil exporting countries row Rest of world Sectors and goods GAS Natural gas ELE Electricity OIL Refined oil products COL Coal CRU Crude oil EIS Energy-intensive industries TRN Transportation OTH Other goods and services Policy Scenarios for Meeting Kyoto Targets • UET "Universal emissions trade." This is the benchmark "low-cost" reference case in which the Annex-B countries trade emissions within and across boundaries. Russia is capped at BaU (no "hot-air") but participates in trading. US is assumed to remain outside the Kyoto Protocol in 2015. • NTR "No international emissions trade." The Annex-B countries/regions each adopt efficient carbon abatement programs with equalized abatement costs across all sources, yet there is no trading between Annex-B countries. Sectoral shares of emission reduction in this case provide the basis for scenarios that shift burden to specific sectors. • TRN "Regulated Transportation." No emissions trading and sectoral Annex-B instruments. Regulatory measures require 10% greater emission reduction in transportation than NTR and corresponding less in utilities and industry. • UTL "Regulated Utilities." Analogous to TRN, but with 10% greater share of emission reduction for electric utilities. • IND "Regulated Industry." Analogous to UTL with 10% greater share of emission reduction undertaken by both electric utilities and EIS. • TRNX “Transportation exempted." No emission limit on transportation, with compliance achieved through greater reductions in other sectors. Regional Economic Welfare Under Alternative Policies Percent Change in Consumption in 2015 from Baseline 0.2 0.1 0 -0.1 NTR10 2015 UET10 2015 -0.2 TRN10 2015 UTL10 2015 -0.3 IND10 2015 TRNX 2015 -0.4 -0.5 -0.6 -0.7 chn jpn ind usa eur oec row Implications of the Scenarios • Across all scenarios, oil exporters suffer the largest adverse effects – Loss to oil exporters is consistently larger than impact on any Annex B region • The degree of harm to oil exporters is directly tied to stringency of transportation sector policies – Exempting transportation reduces harm close to zero – Greater reliance on transportation measures increases harm • Other Annex B countries are affected as expected – Large exporters of energy-intensive goods may gain through improved competitiveness, but these gains would be erased if Annex B countries protect industries – The rest of non-Annex B countries suffer adverse affects Why Do Adverse Impacts Differ? • Impacts depend on which sectors and fuels are targeted – Policies with similar effects on energy use and demand for imports have similar spillover effects – Even if bottom-up policies are assumed to have no cost to the Annex B economy, they have adverse spillover effects – Reduction in oil imports lowers world oil price and causes harm to all countries with significant oil exports • Policies that target transportation increase harm to oil exporters • Impacts of sectoral policies that give preferential treatment to Annex B industry need to be examined more carefully to determine how non-Annex B competitors are affected Remedies for Spillover Effects -- For Further Research • Direct financial compensation – Estimating compensation requires modeling terms of trade and oil prices that would prevail “but-for” climate policies – Oil exporters suffer the largest adverse effects • Special tariff concessions – Difficult to target to those with most harm • Revision of fuel taxation – Exempting transportation sector or replacing gasoline revenues with carbon tax revenues reduces cost to EU countries, and – Reduce adverse impacts on oil exporters • Removal of coal subsidies – Should improve economic efficiency in Annex B and lowers emissions – Would shift more of the emission reduction away from oil consumption