Emissions Trading in Practice : A Handbook on Design and Implementation

Note: this version of the Handbook has been superseded. The updated Second Edition of the Handbook can be downloaded at the link below ("Associated URLs"). As the world moves on from the climate agreement negotiated in Paris, attention is turning from the identification of emissions reduction trajectories—in the form of Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs)—to crucial questions about how these emissions reductions are to be delivered and reported within the future international accounting framework. The experience to date shows that, if well designed, emissions trading systems (ETS) can be an effective, credible, and transparent tool for helping to achieve low-cost emissions reductions in ways that mobilize private sector actors, attract investment, and encourage international cooperation. However, to maximize effectiveness, any ETS needs to be designed in a way that is appropriate to its context. This Handbook is intended to help decision makers, policy practitioners, and stakeholders achieve this goal. It explains the rationale for an ETS, and sets out a 10-step process for designing an ETS – each step involves a series of decisions or actions that will shape major features of the policy. In doing so, it draws both on conceptual analysis and on some of the most important practical lessons learned to date from implementing ETSs around the world, including from the European Union, several provinces and cities in China, California and Québec, the Northeastern United States, Alberta, New Zealand, Kazakhstan, the Republic of Korea, Tokyo, and Saitama.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Partnership for Market Readiness, International Carbon Action Partnership
Format: Technical Paper biblioteca
Language:en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2016-03-07
Subjects:carbon trading, climate change, carbon emissions, carbon tax, Emissions Trading System, ETS,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10986/23874
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spelling dig-okr-10986238742022-11-22T20:02:25Z Emissions Trading in Practice : A Handbook on Design and Implementation Partnership for Market Readiness International Carbon Action Partnership carbon trading climate change carbon emissions carbon tax Emissions Trading System ETS Note: this version of the Handbook has been superseded. The updated Second Edition of the Handbook can be downloaded at the link below ("Associated URLs"). As the world moves on from the climate agreement negotiated in Paris, attention is turning from the identification of emissions reduction trajectories—in the form of Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs)—to crucial questions about how these emissions reductions are to be delivered and reported within the future international accounting framework. The experience to date shows that, if well designed, emissions trading systems (ETS) can be an effective, credible, and transparent tool for helping to achieve low-cost emissions reductions in ways that mobilize private sector actors, attract investment, and encourage international cooperation. However, to maximize effectiveness, any ETS needs to be designed in a way that is appropriate to its context. This Handbook is intended to help decision makers, policy practitioners, and stakeholders achieve this goal. It explains the rationale for an ETS, and sets out a 10-step process for designing an ETS – each step involves a series of decisions or actions that will shape major features of the policy. In doing so, it draws both on conceptual analysis and on some of the most important practical lessons learned to date from implementing ETSs around the world, including from the European Union, several provinces and cities in China, California and Québec, the Northeastern United States, Alberta, New Zealand, Kazakhstan, the Republic of Korea, Tokyo, and Saitama. 2016-03-07T18:21:18Z 2016-03-07T18:21:18Z 2016-03-07 Technical Paper http://hdl.handle.net/10986/23874 en_US Download the Second Edition of the Handbook on this link https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/35413 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Working Paper Publications & Research
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
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tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language en_US
topic carbon trading
climate change
carbon emissions
carbon tax
Emissions Trading System
ETS
carbon trading
climate change
carbon emissions
carbon tax
Emissions Trading System
ETS
spellingShingle carbon trading
climate change
carbon emissions
carbon tax
Emissions Trading System
ETS
carbon trading
climate change
carbon emissions
carbon tax
Emissions Trading System
ETS
Partnership for Market Readiness
International Carbon Action Partnership
Emissions Trading in Practice : A Handbook on Design and Implementation
description Note: this version of the Handbook has been superseded. The updated Second Edition of the Handbook can be downloaded at the link below ("Associated URLs"). As the world moves on from the climate agreement negotiated in Paris, attention is turning from the identification of emissions reduction trajectories—in the form of Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs)—to crucial questions about how these emissions reductions are to be delivered and reported within the future international accounting framework. The experience to date shows that, if well designed, emissions trading systems (ETS) can be an effective, credible, and transparent tool for helping to achieve low-cost emissions reductions in ways that mobilize private sector actors, attract investment, and encourage international cooperation. However, to maximize effectiveness, any ETS needs to be designed in a way that is appropriate to its context. This Handbook is intended to help decision makers, policy practitioners, and stakeholders achieve this goal. It explains the rationale for an ETS, and sets out a 10-step process for designing an ETS – each step involves a series of decisions or actions that will shape major features of the policy. In doing so, it draws both on conceptual analysis and on some of the most important practical lessons learned to date from implementing ETSs around the world, including from the European Union, several provinces and cities in China, California and Québec, the Northeastern United States, Alberta, New Zealand, Kazakhstan, the Republic of Korea, Tokyo, and Saitama.
format Technical Paper
topic_facet carbon trading
climate change
carbon emissions
carbon tax
Emissions Trading System
ETS
author Partnership for Market Readiness
International Carbon Action Partnership
author_facet Partnership for Market Readiness
International Carbon Action Partnership
author_sort Partnership for Market Readiness
title Emissions Trading in Practice : A Handbook on Design and Implementation
title_short Emissions Trading in Practice : A Handbook on Design and Implementation
title_full Emissions Trading in Practice : A Handbook on Design and Implementation
title_fullStr Emissions Trading in Practice : A Handbook on Design and Implementation
title_full_unstemmed Emissions Trading in Practice : A Handbook on Design and Implementation
title_sort emissions trading in practice : a handbook on design and implementation
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2016-03-07
url http://hdl.handle.net/10986/23874
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