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Pricing Carbon Emissions - Economic Reality and Utopia (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R3,985
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Pricing Carbon Emissions - Economic Reality and Utopia (Hardcover)
Series: Routledge Explorations in Environmental Economics
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Pricing Carbon Emissions provides an economic critique on the
utopian idea of a uniform carbon price for addressing rising carbon
emissions, exposing the flaws in the economic propositions with a
key focus on the EU's Emissions Trading System (ETS). After an
Executive Summary of the contents, the chapters build up
understanding of orthodox economics' role in protecting the
neoliberal paradigm. A salient case, the ETS is successful in
shielding the Business-as-Usual activities of the EU's industry,
however this book argues that the system fails in creating
innovation for decarbonizing production technologies. A subsequent
political economy analysis by the author points to the discursive
power of giant fossil fuel and electricity companies keeping up a
facade of Cap-and-Trade utopia and hiding the reality of free
permit donations and administrative price control, concealing
financial bills mostly paid by household electricity customers. The
twilights between reality and utopia in the EU's ETS are exposed,
concluding an immediate end of the system is necessary for
effective and just climate policy. The work argues that the
proposition of shifting to a global uniform carbon tax is equally
utopian. In practice, a uniform price applied on heterogeneous
cases is not a source of benefits but one of ad-hoc adjustments,
exceptions, and exemptions. Carbon pricing does not induce
innovation, however assumed by the economic models used by IPCC for
advising global climate policy. Thus, it is persuasively
demonstrated by the author that these schemes are doomed to failure
and room and resources need to be created for more effective and
just climate politics. The book's conclusion is based on economic
arguments, complementing the critique of political scientists. This
book is written for a broad audience interested in climate policy
eager to understand why decarbonizing progress is slow as it is. It
marks a significant addition to the literature on climate politics,
carbon pricing and the political economy of the environment more
broadly. The Open Access version of this book, available at
www.taylorfrancis.com, has been made available under a Creative
Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 4.0 license.
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