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Effective Carbon Prices

image of Effective Carbon Prices

Economic textbooks predict that taxes and emission trading systems are the cheapest way for societies to reduce emissions of CO2. This book shows that this is also the case in the real world. It estimates the costs to society of reducing CO2 emissions in 15 countries using a broad range of policy instruments in 5 of the sectors that generate most emissions: electricity generation, road transport, pulp & paper and cement, as well as households’ domestic energy use. It finds wide variations in the costs of abating each tonne of CO2 within and among countries, as well as in the sectors examined and across different types of policy instruments. Market-based approaches like taxes and trading systems consistently reduced CO2 at a lower cost than other instruments. Capital subsidies and feed-in tariffs were among the most expensive ways of reducing emissions.

English Also available in: French

OECD's approach to estimate effective carbon prices

Comparisons of the effective price put on carbon by policies in difference sectors and countries provide valuable insights into the cost-effectiveness of alternative policies to reduce greenhouse emissions (GHGs), and their potential impacts on competiveness. The carbon prices can be explicit, such as carbon taxes or prices of emission allowances in GHG emission trading systems, or they can be implicit, reflecting the cost to society per tonne of CO2eq abated as a result of any type of policy measure that have an impact on GHG emissions. This chapter provides further information about the specific methodology used to estimate effective carbon prices in this project, explains the selection of policies for inclusion in the study, and discusses strengths and weaknesses of the approach used.

English Also available in: French

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