Topic Climate Policy

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  • Refereed essays Web of Science

    Commitments through Financial Options: An Alternative for Delivering Climate Change Obligations

    Governments willing to commit themselves to maintain carbon prices at or above a certain level face the challenge that their commitments need to be credible both for investors in low-carbon technology and for foreign governments. This article argues that governments can make such commitments by issuing long-term put option contracts on the price of CO2 allowances. This mechanism gives investors the ...

    In: Climate Policy 9 (2009), 1, S. 9-21 | Roland Ismer, Karsten Neuhoff
  • Weekly Report 32 / 2009

    Methane: A Neglected Greenhouse Gas

    Methane is a greenhouse gas that gets far less public attention than carbon dioxide. This is entirely unwarranted. Being 25 times more potent than carbon dioxide in trapping heat in the atmosphere, methane accounts for about one-sixth of all anthropogenic (i.e. human-induced) greenhouse gas emissions. Methane is also overlooked when it comes to taking concrete measures for climate protection, despite ...

    2009| Claudia Kemfert, Wolf-Peter Schill
  • Diskussionspapiere 951 / 2009

    Refunding ETS-Proceeds to Spur the Diffusion of Renewable Energies: An Analysis Based on the Dynamic Oligopolistic Electricity Market Model EMELIE

    We use a quantitative electricity market model to analyze the welfare effects of refunding a share of the emission trading proceeds to support renewable energy technologies that are subject to experience effects. We compare effects of supporting renewable energies under both perfect and oligopolistic competition with competitive fringe firms and emission trading regimes that achieve 70 and 80 percent ...

    2009| Thure Traber, Claudia Kemfert
  • Externe Monographien

    Innovation for Sustainable Electricity Systems: Exploring the Dynamics of Energy Transitions

    Heidelberg [u.a.]: Physica-Verl., 2009, 245 S.
    (Sustainability and Innovation)
    | Barbara Praetorius, Dierk Bauknecht, Martin Cames, Corinna Fischer, Martin Pehnt, Katja Schumacher, Jan-Peter Voß
  • Diskussionspapiere 857 / 2009

    The Cost of Climate Change to the German Fruit Vegetation Sector

    This paper applies the concept of damage coefficients introduced in Houba and Kremers (2008) to provide an estimate of the cost of climate change - in particular the cost of changes in mean regional temperature and precipitation - to the fruit vegetation sector. We concentrate on the production of apples in the German 'Alte Land' region. The estimated cost of climate change on apple-growing in the ...

    2009| Claudia Kemfert, Hans Kremers
  • Nicht-referierte Aufsätze

    Wrecking Bonus

    In: European Energy Review 2 (2009), 3, S. 51 | Claudia Kemfert
  • Externe Monographien

    Methodological Design and Institutional Arrangements for Auctions in the EU Emission Trading System (EU-ETS): Environmental Research of the German Federal Ministry of the Environment, Nature Conservation and Nuclear Safety ; Project-No. (FKZ) 3707 41 501 ; Report-No. (UBA-FB) 001272E

    In Germany, emission allowances (European Union Allowances, EUAs) for the first trading period (2005-2007) were allocated completely free of charge. In the second trading period (2008-2012) annual volumes of 40 million EUAs will be sold (Article 19 ZuG (Zuteilungsgesetz – The German Allocation Act) 2012). After an initial phase during which EUAs have been sold by the state-owned bank KfW Bankengruppe ...

    Dessau-Roßlau: Umweltbundesamt, 2009, 62 S.
    (Climate Change ; 06/2009)
    | Joachim Schleich, Barbara Breitschopf, Jochen Diekmann
  • SOEPpapers 218 / 2009

    Weather and Financial Risk-Taking: Is Happiness the Channel?

    Weather variables, and sunshine in particular, are found to be strongly correlated with financial variables. I consider self-reported happiness as a channel through which sunshine affects financial variables. I examine the influence of happiness on risk-taking behavior by instrumenting individual happiness with regional sunshine, and I find that happy people appear to be more risk-averse in financial ...

    2009| Cahit Guven
  • SOEPpapers 219 / 2009

    Reversing the Question: Does Happiness Affect Consumption and Savings Behavior?

    I examine the impact of happiness on consumption and savings behavior using data from the DNB Household Survey from the Netherlands and the German Socio-Economic Panel. Instrumenting individual happiness with regional sunshine, the results suggest that happier people save more, spend less, and have a lower marginal propensity to consume. Happier people take more time for making decisions and have more ...

    2009| Cahit Guven
  • Weitere externe Aufsätze

    Climate Protection Requirements: The Economic Impact of Climate Change

    In: Andreas Bausch, Burkhard Schwenker (Eds.) , Handbook Utility Management
    Berlin [u.a.] : Springer
    S. 725-739
    | Claudia Kemfert
682 results, from 571
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