2017
DOI: 10.18235/0000714
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Climate Policies and Nationally Determined Contributions: Reconciling the Needed Ambition with the Political Economy

Abstract: Countries have pledged to stabilize global warming at a 1.5 to 2°C increase. Either target requires reaching net zero emissions before the end of the century, which implies a major transformation of the economic system. This paper reviews the literature on how policymakers can design climate policies and their Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) to reach zero-net emissions before the end of the century in a socially and politically-acceptable manner. To get the ambition right, policymakers can use secto… Show more

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Cited by 26 publications
(31 citation statements)
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“…The target most closely related to human welfare is maximum global warming, as in UN (, ); but many models focus on targets closer to climate policies, notably CO 2 ‐equivalent concentration (Clarke et al, ), zero net emissions (Fay et al, ; Matthews, Zickfeld, Knutti, & Allen, ; UN, ), and cumulative emissions (Matthews et al, ). Also, some pathway models compute cost‐effective (least‐abatement‐cost) pathways, by assuming either globally uniform marginal abatement costs or more realistic, nonidealized scenarios; while other models focus more on technical and political feasibility than cost minimization (hence the inclusion of “low‐cost” above); see for example, discussions in Clarke et al (, p. 421) and Vogt‐Schilb and Hallegatte ().…”
Section: Alternatives To Scc Modeling For Estimating Carbon Pricesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The target most closely related to human welfare is maximum global warming, as in UN (, ); but many models focus on targets closer to climate policies, notably CO 2 ‐equivalent concentration (Clarke et al, ), zero net emissions (Fay et al, ; Matthews, Zickfeld, Knutti, & Allen, ; UN, ), and cumulative emissions (Matthews et al, ). Also, some pathway models compute cost‐effective (least‐abatement‐cost) pathways, by assuming either globally uniform marginal abatement costs or more realistic, nonidealized scenarios; while other models focus more on technical and political feasibility than cost minimization (hence the inclusion of “low‐cost” above); see for example, discussions in Clarke et al (, p. 421) and Vogt‐Schilb and Hallegatte ().…”
Section: Alternatives To Scc Modeling For Estimating Carbon Pricesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, Baranzini et al () argued strongly for uniform global carbon pricing, and noted that pricing proposals can highlight departures from cost‐effectiveness caused by political lobbying; and complementary policies can undermine cost‐effectiveness when applied under a carbon‐trading cap (Lofgren, Burtraw, Wrake, & Malinovskaya, ). Other authors stress how market and government failures mean that for both economic efficiency and political acceptability, complementary policies are essential, and carbon prices should vary across countries and sectors (CPLC, , Vogt‐Schilb & Hallegatte, ), especially for long‐lived infrastructure (Vogt‐Schilb, Meunier, & Hallegatte, ).…”
Section: Alternatives To Scc Modeling For Estimating Carbon Pricesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In the case of large oil and gas producers in LAC and globally, subsidies were often adopted as a mechanism for distributing natural-resource wealth to the population . More generally, however, from a political economy point of view, one reason subsidies exist is that they are a visible mechanism for governments to provide benefits to poor and middle-class voters and sometimes to industrial interests in exchange for political support (Victor, 2009;Vogt-Schilb and Hallagatte, 2017) . During our sample period, the rise in energy subsidies in Latin America and the Caribbean followed an unprecedented spike in oil prices that had far-reaching effects on energy prices that proved politically difficult to fully pass through to final consumers .…”
Section: Distributive Impact Of Energy Subsidies and Reformmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…With increasing shares of variable renewable electricity in the power system, new challenges are encountered due to the increasing mismatch between supply and demand. As noted by several articles published in Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews Energy and Environment in 2017, this will require not only paying more attention to energy system integration issues, and developing new approaches and technologies for overcoming current barriers such as greater system flexibility (Flynn et al, ; Milligan et al, ), affordable energy storage (Lee, Kim, Yeom, & Kim, ), strategies to promote intersectoral coupling (Lah, ) and so on, but also putting new economic models and policies (Byrne, Taminiau, Kim, Lee, & Seo, ; Lah, ; Vogt‐Schilb & Hallegatte, ) into place, which will widen market development for rapid decarbonization.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%