Economic Analysis of Projects in a Greenhouse World

Recent carbon market prices are substantially lower than mean or median estimates of the social cost of carbon in the literature. Intuition would therefore suggest that 'investment errors' are being made, in the sense that markets favor higher carbon-emitting projects, while global welfare would be larger with lower carbon-emitting projects. This intuition is correct in specific circumstances, but not others. For any comparison of two alternative projects, there is a carbon switching price that equalizes their net social benefits. From the perspective of maximizing global welfare, investment errors only occur when this switching price lies between the carbon market price and the social cost of carbon. Data on the costs of high-carbon and low-carbon electric generation projects suggest that there is no financing gap using mean or median published figures, but for precautionary (95th percentile) choices of the social cost of carbon, there is a financing gap between carbon market prices and the switching price that would trigger investment in the global welfare-maximizing low-carbon project. A global carbon fund to finance this gap could be conceived, but stricter emission caps and reforms of carbon markets are likely to be a more efficient solution to the problem.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hamilton, Kirk, Stover, Jana
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2012-07
Subjects:AIR, AIR POLLUTANTS, AIR POLLUTION, ATMOSPHERIC CONCENTRATIONS, AUCTION, BIOMASS, CALCULATION, CAPITAL COSTS, CAPITAL MARKETS, CAPS, CARBON, CARBON EMISSION, CARBON EMISSIONS, CARBON EMISSIONS FROM FOSSIL, CARBON ESTIMATES, CARBON FLOWS, CARBON FUND, CARBON MARKET, CARBON MARKET TRANSACTIONS, CARBON MARKETS, CARBON OFFSET, CARBON OFFSETS, CARBON PRICE, CARBON PRICES, CARBON PRICING, CARBON PROJECT, CARBON PROJECTS, CARBON TECHNOLOGIES, CERTIFIED EMISSION REDUCTION, CLEAN DEVELOPMENT, CLEAN DEVELOPMENT MECHANISM, CLIMATE, CLIMATE CHANGE, CLIMATE SENSITIVITY, CO, CO2, COAL, COAL TECHNOLOGIES, COMBUSTION, COST ESTIMATES, COST OF ELECTRICITY, DAMAGES, DISCOUNT RATE, DISCOUNT RATES, DIVERGENCE, ECONOMIC ANALYSIS, ECONOMIC EFFECTS, ECONOMIC GROWTH, ECONOMICS OF CLIMATE CHANGE, ELECTRIC GENERATION, ELECTRIC POWER, ELECTRIC POWER GENERATION, ELECTRICITY, ELECTRICITY GENERATION, ELECTRICITY PRICE, ELECTRICITY PRICES, EMISSION, EMISSION CAP, EMISSION FACTOR, EMISSION FACTORS, EMISSION PERMIT MARKET, EMISSION PERMITS, EMISSION REDUCTION, EMISSION REDUCTIONS, EMISSION TRADING, EMISSIONS, ENERGY PRICES, ENERGY SOURCES, ENERGY SYSTEMS, ENVIRONMENTAL ECONOMICS, ENVIRONMENTAL REGULATION, EQUIVALENT EMISSIONS, FINANCIAL CRISIS, FOSSIL FUEL, FOSSIL FUEL USE, FOSSIL FUELS, FRAMEWORK CONVENTION ON CLIMATE CHANGE, FUEL COSTS, GAS, GASIFICATION, GLOBAL CARBON EMISSIONS, GLOBAL WARMING, GLOBAL WARMING POTENTIAL, GREENHOUSE, GREENHOUSE GAS, GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS, GREENHOUSE GASES, GRID ELECTRIFICATION, INCOME, INPUT PRICES, INVESTMENT DECISIONS, KILOWATT-HOUR, LOW-CARBON, MARKET FOR EMISSION ALLOWANCES, MARKET PRICE, MARKET PRICES, MARKET VALUE, NATIONAL EMISSIONS, NOX, NUCLEAR ENERGY, OFFSHORE WIND, ONSHORE WIND, PEAK LOAD, PERMIT TRADING, PM10, POLICY IMPLICATIONS, POLICY MAKERS, POWER GENERATION, PRESENT VALUE, REGULATORY IMPACT ANALYSIS, RELATIVE PRICES, RENEWABLE TECHNOLOGIES, SALE, SALES, SCENARIOS, SOCIAL COST OF CARBON, SOLAR THERMAL, SOX, SPOT PRICES, VOLATILITY, WIND,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2012/07/16459800/economic-analysis-projects-greenhouse-world
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/11939
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!