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Cleaner generation,free-riders,and environmental integrity: clean development mechanism and the power sector
Institution:1. Department of Water Engineering, College of Agriculture, Lorestan University, Khorramabad 68149-84649, Iran;2. Department of Water Engineering, College of Agriculture, Shiraz University, Shiraz 71441-65186, Iran;1. Centre for Energy and Environmental Markets, School of Economics, University of New South Wales, Sydney 2052, NSW, Australia;2. Zurich University of Applied Sciences, School of Management and Law, Winterthur, Switzerland;1. Agricultural and Applied Economics Department and the Food and Agricultural Policy Research Institute, University of Missouri, United States;2. Office of the Chief Economist, United States Department of Agriculture, United States;3. World Agricultural Outlook Board, Office of the Chief Economist, United States Department of Agriculture, United States;4. Agricultural and Applied Economics Department and the Food and Agricultural Policy Research Institute, University of Missouri, United States;1. School of Management, Sichuan Agricultural University, Chengdu, Sichuan, China;2. Department of Agricultural Economics and Agribusiness & AgCenter, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA, USA;3. School of Public Affairs, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, Zhejiang, China;4. Southwest Center for Poverty Alleviation and Development Research, Sichuan Agricultural University, Chengdu, Sichuan, China
Abstract:This article provides a first-cut estimate of the potential impacts of the clean development mechanism (CDM) on electricity generation and carbon emissions in the power sector of non-Annex 1 countries. We construct four illustrative CDM regimes that represent a range of approaches under consideration within the climate community. We examine the impact of these CDM regimes on investments in new generation, under illustrative carbon trading prices of US$ 10 and 100/t C. In the cases that are most conducive to CDM activity, roughly 94% of new generation investments remains identical to the without-CDM situation, with only 6% shifting from higher to lower carbon intensity technologies. We estimate that the CDM would bolster renewable energy generation by as little as 15% at US$ 10/t C, or as much as 300% at US$ 100/t C.A striking finding comes from our examination of the potential magnitude of the “free-rider” problem, i.e. crediting of activities that will occur even in the absence of the CDM. The CDM is intended to be globally carbon-neutral — a project reduces emissions in the host country but generates credits that increase emissions in the investor country. However, to the extent that unwarranted credits are awarded to non-additional projects, the CDM would increase global carbon emissions above the without-CDM emissions level. Under two of the CDM regimes considered, cumulative free-riders credits total 250–600 Mt C through the end of the first budget period in 2012. This represents 10–23% of the likely OECD emissions reduction requirement during the first budget period. Since such a magnitude of free-rider credits from non-additional CDM projects could threaten the environmental integrity of the Kyoto protocol, it is imperative that policy makers devise CDM rules that encourage legitimate projects, while effectively screening out non-additional activities.
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