Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
993045 | Energy Policy | 2011 | 10 Pages |
The impacts of the availability of low-carbon technologies on the regional distribution of mitigation costs are analyzed in a global multi-regional integrated assessment model. Three effects on regional consumption losses are distinguished: domestic measures, trade of fossil energy carriers and trade of emission permits. Key results are: (i) GDP losses and a redirection of investments in the energy system towards capital-intensive technologies are major contributions to regional consumption losses. (ii) A devaluation of tradable fossil energy endowments contributes largely to the mitigation costs of fossil fuel exporters. (iii) In case of reduced availability of low-carbon technologies, the permit market volume and associated monetary redistributions increase. The results suggest that the availability of a broad portfolio of low-carbon technologies could facilitate negotiations on the permit allocation scheme in a global cap-and-trade system.
► We analyze the distribution of climate change mitigation costs among world regions. ► We quantify contributions from various effects on regional costs. ► The interference of world trade and low-carbon technologies is essential. ► A broad portfolio of technologies helps international negotiations.