碳的社会成本及其政策含义

The Social Cost of Carbon and its Policy Implications

Oxford Review of Economic Policy · 2003
被引 416 · 同刊同年前 6%
人大 A-ABS 2

中文导读

回顾了英国政府对碳社会成本的评估,指出其因误读综合评估模型而设定过高,并对能源政策和造林政策产生重大影响。

Abstract

The shadow price, or 'social cost', of carbon is an important indicator of the global incremental damage done by emitting greenhouse gases today. Cost--benefit analysis would set the optimal amount of greenhouse-gas-emission reduction at the point where this social cost just equals the incremental cost of controlling emissions. The higher the value for the social cost of carbon, the more control is warranted. This comparison assumes that cost--benefit analysis is the correct way of determining climate-change policy, and many believe this is not the case because of the very long-term, irreversible, and potentially catastrophic nature of global warming. But, in the short run at least, a comparison of cost and benefits is required, and, in any event, all decisions imply costs and benefits. But what is the 'right' figure for the social cost of carbon? This paper reviews the UK government's assessment of the cost and concludes that it has been set far too high because of a misreading of the integrated assessment models used to balance costs and benefits. Moreover, adoption of the UK government's shadow price would have formidable implications for energy policy in the UK, and for policies on afforestation. Copyright 2003, Oxford University Press.

碳社会成本影子价格成本效益分析温室气体减排能源政策