Side-payments: an effective instrument for building climate clubs?
Authored by Hakon Saelen
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1007/s10784-015-9311-8
Sponsors:
Norwegian Research Council (NRF)
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Pseudocode
Model Code URLs:
http://modelingcommons.org/browse/one_model/4458#model_tabs_browse_info
Abstract
Climate clubs have been suggested as a gateway to substantial reductions
in global emissions. The club approach begins with a small number of
enthusiastic countries. This paper asks under what conditions such clubs
are likely to evolve into effective cooperation through side-payments to
new members. The question is addressed through a range of formal thought
experiments using numerical simulations. The model is calibrated using
empirical data on countries' emissions, GDP, populations, and
vulnerabilities. It is simple and stylized, but allows for complex and
dynamic interactions between actors. Basic equity considerations can be
accommodated. The results indicate that side-payments' theoretical
potential for facilitating effective clubs is large. One or two large
emitters can initiate a club that grows to cover a substantial share of
global emissions if the global benefit-cost ratio for mitigation is
around 3 or larger. The size of stable clubs is larger if new members
contribute to making side-payments, and somewhat lower if equity
considerations constrain the set of possible transfers. Side-payments'
effect is enabled by the large asymmetries between countries. Total
side-payment flows range from tens to hundreds of billions of US dollars
annually.
Tags
Cooperation
governance
Policy
Model
stability
Trade
International environmental agreements
Negotiations