回收立法:对再制造和环境的后果

Take‐Back Legislation: Consequences for Remanufacturing and Environment

DECISION SCIENCES · 2015
被引 173 · 同刊同年前 5%
人大 AABS 3

中文导读

研究了不同强度的回收立法(无立法、有收集目标、有收集和再利用目标)如何影响制造商的再制造决策,并分析了这些立法对总环境影响的可能负面作用。

Abstract

ABSTRACT In the last two decades, many countries have enacted product take‐back legislation that holds manufacturers responsible for the collection and environmentally sound treatment of end‐of‐use products. In an industry regulated by such legislation, we consider a manufacturer that also sells remanufactured products under its brand name. Using a stylized model, we consider three levels of legislation: no take‐back legislation, legislation with collection targets, and legislation with collection and reuse targets. We characterize the optimal solution for the manufacturer and analyze how various levels of legislation affect manufacturing, remanufacturing, and collection decisions. First, we explore whether legislation with only collection targets causes an increase in remanufacturing levels, which is argued to be an environmentally friendlier option for end‐of‐use treatment than other options such as recycling. While increased remanufacturing alone is usually perceived as a favorable environmental outcome, if one considers the overall environmental impact of new and remanufactured products, this might not be the case. To study this issue, we model the environmental impact of the product following a life cycle analysis–based approach. We characterize the conditions under which increased remanufacturing due to take‐back legislation causes an increase in total environmental impact. Finally, we model the impact of legislation on consumer surplus and manufacturer profits and identify when total welfare goes down because of legislation.

环境经济学产业组织再制造回收立法环境政策