The effect of near-term policy choices on long-term greenhouse gas transformation pathways
Authored by Steven C Isley, Robert J Lempert, Steven W Popper, Raffaele Vardavas
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2015.06.008
Sponsors:
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
MASON
Model Documentation:
ODD
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
To successfully limit climate change, today's greenhouse gas mitigation
policies should encourage reductions that will continue for decades.
History suggests, however, that some policy reforms lead to societal
changes that persist over the long-term while others fade without
long-term effect. Current climate policy literature provides little
guidance on how today's policy choices can successfully shape long-term
emission reduction paths. To address such questions, this paper
introduces a new agent-based, game theoretic model designed to compare
how near-term choices regarding alternative policy architectures
influence long-term emission reduction trajectories. Drawing on
political science literature that identifies the characteristics of
policies that persist over time, this simulation for the first time
integrates the co-evolution of an industry sector, its technology base, and the shifting political coalitions that influence the future
stringency of the government's emission reduction policies all as
influenced by the initial choice of policy architecture. An exploratory
modeling analysis that represents deeply uncertain phenomena such as the
future potential for innovation and the behavior of future governments
draws policy-relevant conclusions from this model. The analysis finds
that near-term choices regarding the architecture of a carbon pricing
policy may affect long-term decarbonization rates significantly. In
particular, such rates are higher if program revenues are returned to
firms in proportion to their market share, thus, creating a political
constituency for continuing the carbon pricing policy. More generally, the analysis provides a framework for considering how near-term policy
choices can affect long-term emission transformation pathways within
integrated assessment models. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights
reserved.
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Transition
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