ABSTRACT

The EU emissions trading scheme is the largest emissions control scheme in the world, capping almost half of European CO2 emissions. As the scheme emerges from its pilot phase, this special issue of Climate Policy journal analyses the lessons learned from the last two years and their implications for phase II. The volume presents some of the key analyses that helped inform the European Commission's decisions on national allocation plans, with research ranging from detailed country-by-country comparisons to more generic analysis that puts forward the case for harmonization. Challenging calls to seperate electricity from other sectors, a macroeconomic study suggests that the biggest efficiency gains come from inter-sectoral trading, even more than international trading. Empirical papers, which look at the expected scarcity of allowances in the market and merge models for the power and non-power sectors to project emissions and contrast these to the aggregate allocation volume, are complemented by two numerical simulations of trade and distributional effects, estimating the efficiency gains of the EU ETS in phase I and assessing allocation and distribution effects in the RGGI context.

chapter 2|34 pages

EU emissions trading: an early analysis of national allocation plans for 2008–2012

ByRegina Betz, Karoline Rogge, Joachim Schleich

chapter 3|16 pages

Emission projections 2008–2012 versus national allocation plans II

ByKarsten Neuhoff, Federico Ferrano, Michael Grubb, Etienne Gabel, Kim Keats

chapter 4|12 pages

Implications of announced phase II national allocation plans for the EU ETS

ByKarsten Neuhoff, Markus Åhman, Regina Betz, Johanna Cludius, Federico Ferrano, Kristina Holmgren, Gabriella Pal, Michael Grubb, Felix Matthes, Karoline Rogge, Misato Sato, Joachim Schleich, Jos Sijm, Andreas Tuerk, Claudia Kettner, Neil Walker

chapter 5|18 pages

New entrant allocation in the Nordic energy sectors: incentives and options in the EU ETS

ByMarkus Åhman, Kristina Holmgren

chapter 6|15 pages

The environmental and economic effects of European emissions trading

ByClaudia Kemfert, Michael Kohlhaas, Truong Truong, Artem Protsenko

chapter 7|19 pages

Harmonization versus decentralization in the EU ETS: an economic analysis

ByPablo del Río González

chapter 8|17 pages

Simple rules for targeting CO2 allowance allocations to compensate firms

ByKaren Palmer, Dallas Burtraw, Danny Kahn

chapter 9|7 pages

False confidences: forecasting errors and emission caps in CO2 trading systems

ByMichael Grubb, Federico Ferrano