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On Emissions Trading and Market Structure: Cap-and-Trade versus Intensity Standards
Authors:Frans P de Vries  Bouwe R Dijkstra  Matthew McGinty
Institution:1. Division of Economics, Stirling Management School, University of Stirling, Stirling, FK9 4LA, UK
2. School of Economics, University of Nottingham, University Park, Nottingham, NG7 2RD, UK
3. Department of Economics, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, PO Box 413, Bolton Hall 862, Milwaukee, WI?, 53201, USA
Abstract:This paper examines the interdependence between imperfect competition and emissions trading. We particularly analyze the long run equilibrium in a two-sector (‘clean’ and ‘dirty’) model with Cournot competition among firms who face a fixed cost of production. The clean sector is defined as the sector with the highest long run cost margin on emissions. We compare the welfare implications of a cap-and-trade scheme with an emissions trading scheme based on relative intensity standards. It is shown that a firm’s long run equilibrium output in the clean or dirty sector does not depend on the emissions trading format, but only depends on the fixed cost of producing in the respective sector. Intensity standards can result in clean firms selling allowances to dirty firms, or dirty firms selling to clean firms. The former outcome yields higher welfare. It is demonstrated that cap-and-trade outperforms the intensity-based trading scheme in terms of long run welfare with free entry and exit. With intensity standards the size of the clean sector is too large.
Keywords:
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