A Global Incentive Scheme to Reduce Carbon Emissions

This paper proposes an objective way of estimating and allocating “differentiated” responsibilities for carbon emissions across countries. These responsibilities translate into specific obligations and incentives for future emission reductions and support for adaptation, mitigation, and development. The proposals in this paper should be seen as a starting point for an informed and productive debate. Under the Global Carbon Reduction Incentive, every country that emits more than the per capita global average pays into a global incentive fund. This annual payment will be calculated based on the “excess” emissions per capita, the country’s population, and a dollar amount called the Global Carbon Incentive. Countries below the global per capita average would receive a payout commensurate with their “under-emission.” The United States and China are the two biggest emitters and, assuming a Global Carbon Incentive of $10, they jointly would contribute more than $70 billion to the fund, from which nations such as India, Nigeria, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Indonesia would be the major recipients. An important adjustment to the Global Carbon Reduction Incentive is to focus on consumption rather than production—a country should not avoid responsibility for the carbon it consumes by outsourcing production to another country. The proposal considers that countries that have used more of the collective carbon budget have benefited from the associated development and should pay for it. The proposal also considers methane emissions as well as crediting countries for their efforts toward preventing deforestation.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lall, Somik V., Rajan, Raghuram, Schoder, Christian
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington, DC: World Bank 2024-04-25
Subjects:AFFORDABLE AND CLEAN ENERGY, SDG 7, LIFE ON LAND, SDG 15, GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS, GLOBAL WARMING, INTERNATIONAL FINANCE INSTITUTIONS, CARBON EMISSIONS, GLOBAL CARBON REDUCTION INCENTIVE, GLOBAL CARBON INCENTIVE, RESPONSIBLE CONSUMPTION AND PRODUCTION, SDG 12,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099441104252417894/IDU10dc0cd371c9301457f1bdd0103f4facbffc6
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/41469
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spelling dig-okr-10986414692024-05-13T14:51:38Z A Global Incentive Scheme to Reduce Carbon Emissions Lall, Somik V. Rajan, Raghuram Schoder, Christian AFFORDABLE AND CLEAN ENERGY SDG 7 LIFE ON LAND SDG 15 GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS GLOBAL WARMING INTERNATIONAL FINANCE INSTITUTIONS CARBON EMISSIONS GLOBAL CARBON REDUCTION INCENTIVE GLOBAL CARBON INCENTIVE RESPONSIBLE CONSUMPTION AND PRODUCTION SDG 12 This paper proposes an objective way of estimating and allocating “differentiated” responsibilities for carbon emissions across countries. These responsibilities translate into specific obligations and incentives for future emission reductions and support for adaptation, mitigation, and development. The proposals in this paper should be seen as a starting point for an informed and productive debate. Under the Global Carbon Reduction Incentive, every country that emits more than the per capita global average pays into a global incentive fund. This annual payment will be calculated based on the “excess” emissions per capita, the country’s population, and a dollar amount called the Global Carbon Incentive. Countries below the global per capita average would receive a payout commensurate with their “under-emission.” The United States and China are the two biggest emitters and, assuming a Global Carbon Incentive of $10, they jointly would contribute more than $70 billion to the fund, from which nations such as India, Nigeria, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Indonesia would be the major recipients. An important adjustment to the Global Carbon Reduction Incentive is to focus on consumption rather than production—a country should not avoid responsibility for the carbon it consumes by outsourcing production to another country. The proposal considers that countries that have used more of the collective carbon budget have benefited from the associated development and should pay for it. The proposal also considers methane emissions as well as crediting countries for their efforts toward preventing deforestation. 2024-04-25T17:52:57Z 2024-04-25T17:52:57Z 2024-04-25 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099441104252417894/IDU10dc0cd371c9301457f1bdd0103f4facbffc6 https://hdl.handle.net/10986/41469 English en_US Policy Research Working Paper; 10759 CC BY 3.0 IGO https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank application/pdf text/plain Washington, DC: World Bank
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 English
en_US
topic AFFORDABLE AND CLEAN ENERGY
SDG 7
LIFE ON LAND
SDG 15
GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS
GLOBAL WARMING
INTERNATIONAL FINANCE INSTITUTIONS
CARBON EMISSIONS
GLOBAL CARBON REDUCTION INCENTIVE
GLOBAL CARBON INCENTIVE
RESPONSIBLE CONSUMPTION AND PRODUCTION
SDG 12
AFFORDABLE AND CLEAN ENERGY
SDG 7
LIFE ON LAND
SDG 15
GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS
GLOBAL WARMING
INTERNATIONAL FINANCE INSTITUTIONS
CARBON EMISSIONS
GLOBAL CARBON REDUCTION INCENTIVE
GLOBAL CARBON INCENTIVE
RESPONSIBLE CONSUMPTION AND PRODUCTION
SDG 12
spellingShingle AFFORDABLE AND CLEAN ENERGY
SDG 7
LIFE ON LAND
SDG 15
GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS
GLOBAL WARMING
INTERNATIONAL FINANCE INSTITUTIONS
CARBON EMISSIONS
GLOBAL CARBON REDUCTION INCENTIVE
GLOBAL CARBON INCENTIVE
RESPONSIBLE CONSUMPTION AND PRODUCTION
SDG 12
AFFORDABLE AND CLEAN ENERGY
SDG 7
LIFE ON LAND
SDG 15
GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS
GLOBAL WARMING
INTERNATIONAL FINANCE INSTITUTIONS
CARBON EMISSIONS
GLOBAL CARBON REDUCTION INCENTIVE
GLOBAL CARBON INCENTIVE
RESPONSIBLE CONSUMPTION AND PRODUCTION
SDG 12
Lall, Somik V.
Rajan, Raghuram
Schoder, Christian
A Global Incentive Scheme to Reduce Carbon Emissions
description This paper proposes an objective way of estimating and allocating “differentiated” responsibilities for carbon emissions across countries. These responsibilities translate into specific obligations and incentives for future emission reductions and support for adaptation, mitigation, and development. The proposals in this paper should be seen as a starting point for an informed and productive debate. Under the Global Carbon Reduction Incentive, every country that emits more than the per capita global average pays into a global incentive fund. This annual payment will be calculated based on the “excess” emissions per capita, the country’s population, and a dollar amount called the Global Carbon Incentive. Countries below the global per capita average would receive a payout commensurate with their “under-emission.” The United States and China are the two biggest emitters and, assuming a Global Carbon Incentive of $10, they jointly would contribute more than $70 billion to the fund, from which nations such as India, Nigeria, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Indonesia would be the major recipients. An important adjustment to the Global Carbon Reduction Incentive is to focus on consumption rather than production—a country should not avoid responsibility for the carbon it consumes by outsourcing production to another country. The proposal considers that countries that have used more of the collective carbon budget have benefited from the associated development and should pay for it. The proposal also considers methane emissions as well as crediting countries for their efforts toward preventing deforestation.
format Working Paper
topic_facet AFFORDABLE AND CLEAN ENERGY
SDG 7
LIFE ON LAND
SDG 15
GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS
GLOBAL WARMING
INTERNATIONAL FINANCE INSTITUTIONS
CARBON EMISSIONS
GLOBAL CARBON REDUCTION INCENTIVE
GLOBAL CARBON INCENTIVE
RESPONSIBLE CONSUMPTION AND PRODUCTION
SDG 12
author Lall, Somik V.
Rajan, Raghuram
Schoder, Christian
author_facet Lall, Somik V.
Rajan, Raghuram
Schoder, Christian
author_sort Lall, Somik V.
title A Global Incentive Scheme to Reduce Carbon Emissions
title_short A Global Incentive Scheme to Reduce Carbon Emissions
title_full A Global Incentive Scheme to Reduce Carbon Emissions
title_fullStr A Global Incentive Scheme to Reduce Carbon Emissions
title_full_unstemmed A Global Incentive Scheme to Reduce Carbon Emissions
title_sort global incentive scheme to reduce carbon emissions
publisher Washington, DC: World Bank
publishDate 2024-04-25
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099441104252417894/IDU10dc0cd371c9301457f1bdd0103f4facbffc6
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/41469
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