Publication | Open Access
The Durability of Carbon Cap‐and‐Trade Policy
74
Citations
7
References
2015
Year
EngineeringRegional DevelopmentClimate PolicyEnvironmental EconomicsCarbon Neutrality PolicyPolicy AnalysisEnvironmental PolicyPolitical ResilienceCarbon Cap‐and‐trade PolicyCarbon Emission TradingClimate ChangeEconomicsCarbon MarketsPublic PolicyPolicy CommitmentsRegional EconomicsRegional PolicyPolicy StudiesEconomic PolicyCarbon PricingEnergy PolicyBusinessClimate GovernancePolitical Science
The surge of A merican states' adoption of policies to mitigate climate change in the late 1990s and 2000s appeared to constitute a first wave of expanding use of market‐based policy tools such as carbon cap‐and‐trade in the absence of binding federal constraints. Instead, a substantial number of states have rescinded earlier policy commitments, as have C anadian provincial partners, while others have remained engaged or even expanded their policies. This article examines the durability of the three regional cap‐and‐trade zones that were established with comparable structure and intent but met very different fates. The analysis of these regional entities places particular emphasis on their political resilience across election cycles, their ability to be flexible and adapt administratively through mid‐course adjustments, and their capacity to build constituency support through benefit‐allocation to offset opposition linked to cost imposition.
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