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Allocating provincial <scp>CO</scp><sub>2</sub> quotas for the Chinese national carbon program
49
Citations
39
References
2018
Year
EngineeringEnvironmental Impact AssessmentCarbon AccountingClimate PolicyEnvironmental EconomicsCarbon Neutrality PolicyCarbon Emission TradingCarbon CreditClimate ChangeEconomicsPublic PolicyCarbon MarketsCarbon SequestrationGreenhouse Gas Emission ReductionCo 2Climate EconomicsNational Co 2Energy Sector EmissionsEmission ReductionNational EconomiesCarbon PricingEnergy PolicyCarbon EmissionsBusinessEnergy Economics
In order to improve the efficiency of climate change initiatives China launched its national carbon market in December 2017. Initial CO2 quota allocations are a matter of significant concern. How should we allocate CO 2 emissions reduction responsibilities among Chinese provinces, assuming that provinces will not or cannot trade these responsibilities among themselves? In this paper, we allocate CO 2 quota from the perspective of cost minimisation. First, we estimate the national CO 2 marginal abatement cost ( MAC ) function and deduce the interprovincial MAC functions. Second, we build an allocation model with nonlinear programming for cost minimisation. Finally, we obtain the allocation results under the emissions reduction target by 2030. The results are as follows. (i) The national MAC was 134.3 Yuan/t (at the constant price of 1978) in 2011, with an overall upward trend from 1990 to 2011. (ii) The interprovincial MAC s differ significantly and decline gradually from east to west. Hebei has the largest emissions reduction quota, and Shandong has the largest emissions quota by 2030. (iii) Compared with other criteria of per capita, gross domestic product ( GDP ), grandfathering and carbon intensity, the proposed approach is the most cost‐effective in achieving the reduction target, with cost savings of 37.7, 34.5, 47.9 and 33.87 per cent, respectively.
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