8.3 Interface between Domestic Policies and International Regimes
For every country, the costs of achieving a given level of abatement will be
dramatically affected by the interface between its domestic policy and international
regimes. Since a co-ordination on the basis of simple reporting mechanisms has
not be adopted from the outset because it would not have been stringent enough
for UNFCCC objectives, some studies were devoted to clarifying the differences
between the two main tools for co-ordinating climate policies: country emissions
quotas or agreed carbon taxes.
Theoretically, both solutions are equivalent in a world with complete information
(the optimal quota leads to the same marginal abatement cost as the optimal
level). However, Pizer (1997), building on a seminal work by Weitzman (1974),
demonstrated that this is not the case if uncertainties about climate damages
and GHG abatement costs are considered. Indeed, welfare losses due to an error
of anticipation are not the same in these two approaches, depending upon whether
the steepness of marginal abatement cost curve is higher or lower than the steepness
of the damage curve. If the marginal abatement cost curve is steeper, then it
is preferable to agree on a pre-determined level of taxation because if this
level is either too low or too high, the resulting welfare losses trough climate
impacts will not be dramatic. This is the case in most modelling efforts as
long as there is no large probability of dramatic non-linearity in climate systems
over the middle term. This policy conclusion can be reverted if one considers
a high level of risk-aversion to catastrophic events (which makes the damage
curve steeper), or a large proportion of no regret policies (which
make the mitigation cost curve flatter). The main message, however, is that
in a tax harmonization approach, the costs of complying with commitments on
climate policies are known in advance (but the outcome is not predictable),
while in a quota approach the outcome is observable but there is an uncertainty
about the resultant costs. In this respect, emissions trading is logically a
companion tool to a system of emissions quotas, to hedge against the distributional
implications of surprises regarding abatement costs and emissions baselines.
After the Berlin Mandate (1995), a quota co-ordination approach was implicitly
adopted and the focus of analysis was placed on linkages between emissions trading
regimes and national policies. Contrary to the preceding period, very few works
were devoted to the case of co-ordinated carbon taxes. Hourcade et al.,
(2000a) confirmed that, because of the existing uneven distribution of income,
discrepancies in pre-existing taxation levels, and differences in national energy
and carbon intensities, a uniform carbon tax would result in very differentiated
losses in welfare across countries, unless appropriate compensation transfers
operated. However, a differentiated taxation does not minimize total abatement
expenditures (rich countries would have to tap more expensive abatement potentials)
and creates distortions in international competition. The suggested solution,
a uniform tax for carbon-intensive industry exposed to international competition
and a differentiated taxation for households, has to be at least adapted to
the Kyoto framework which does not preclude the use of carbon taxes but changes
the condition of their applicability. However, the underlying issue of how to
minimize abatement expenditures while guaranteeing a fair distribution of welfare
costs still remains.
Under the Kyoto framework, the interface between domestic policies and the
international regime passes through three main channels: the impact of international
emissions permit trading (under Article 17), international trading in project-related
credits (under Articles 6 and 12 (Read, 1999)) on abatement costs, and spillover
effects across economies through commercial and capital flows.
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