ABSTRACT

Carbon markets are developing and expanding around the world, but how and to what extent is their design shaped by learning and interaction between them? How do these markets function and what is the role of design?

Carrying out a ground-breaking analysis of their design and diffusion, this book covers all the major carbon market systems and processes around the world: the EU, RGGI, California, Tokyo, New Zealand, Australia, China, South Korea and Kazakhstan. It offers a systematic, in-depth discussion and comparison of the key design features in these systems with expert contributors exploring how, and to what extent, these features have been shaped by central policy diffusion mechanisms and domestic politics.

By focussing on the specific design features of the instruments used, this volume makes important contributions to diffusion theory, highlighting how ETS diffusion processes more often have resulted in design divergence than convergence, and discussing the implications of this finding for the vision of linked systems in the post-Paris era. It will be of significant interest to a broad audience interested in the emergence, evolution, functioning and interaction of carbon markets.

chapter 1|12 pages

Introduction

chapter 3|23 pages

EU emissions trading

Frontrunner – and ‘black sheep’?

chapter 4|14 pages

The Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative

US pioneer seeking to avoid EU mistakes?

chapter 5|21 pages

California’s cap-and-trade programme

The role of diffusion

chapter 6|17 pages

Tokyo’s emissions trading system

Japan’s first mandatory cap-and-trade scheme

chapter 8|21 pages

Australia

Domestic politics, diffusion and emissions trading design as a technical and political project

chapter 9|21 pages

South Korea

East Asian pioneer learning from the EU

chapter 10|14 pages

Emissions trading in Kazakhstan

Complicated application of the ‘EU model’

chapter 11|28 pages

China’s carbon market

In it to learn it