Economic implications of EU mitigation policies: domestic and international effects

"The EU has a consolidated climate and energy regulation: it played a pioneering role by adopting a wide range of climate change policies and establishing the first regional Emission Trading Scheme (EU ETS). These policies, however, raise several concerns regarding both their environmental effe...

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Main Authors: Bosello, Francesco, Davide, Marinella
Institution:ETUI-European Trade Union Institute
Format: TEXT
Language:English
Published: Milan 2016
FEEM
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.labourline.org/KENTIKA-19103152124919213349-economic-implications-of-eu-mi.htm
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author Bosello, Francesco
Davide, Marinella
author_facet Bosello, Francesco
Davide, Marinella
collection Library items
description "The EU has a consolidated climate and energy regulation: it played a pioneering role by adopting a wide range of climate change policies and establishing the first regional Emission Trading Scheme (EU ETS). These policies, however, raise several concerns regarding both their environmental effectiveness and their potentially negative effect on the economy, especially in terms of growth and competitiveness. The paper reviews the European experience in order to understand if these concerns are supported by quantitative evidence. It thus focuses on key economic indicators, such as costs, competitiveness and carbon leakage as assessed by quantitative ex-ante and ex-post analyses. A dedicated section, extends the investigation to the potential extra-EU spillover of the EU mitigation policy with a particular attention to developing countries. The objective of the paper is to highlight both the limits and the opportunities of the EU regulatory framework in order to offer policy insights to emerging and developing countries that are on the way to implement climate change measures. Overall, the European experience shows that the worries about the costs and competitiveness losses induced by climate regulation are usually overestimated, especially in the long term. In addition, a tightening climate policy regime in the EU might in fact negatively impact developing countries via deteriorated trade relations. Nonetheless it tends to facilitate a resource relocation that if well governed could be beneficial to those countries where the poor are mainly involved in rural activities."
format TEXT
geographic EU countries
id 19103152124919213349_fe69ac30f7454e0f85cefeffa5a57163
institution ETUI-European Trade Union Institute
is_hierarchy_id 19103152124919213349_fe69ac30f7454e0f85cefeffa5a57163
is_hierarchy_title Economic implications of EU mitigation policies: domestic and international effects
language English
physical 27 p.
Digital
publishDate 2016
publisher Milan
FEEM
spellingShingle Bosello, Francesco
Davide, Marinella
climate change
competitiveness
economic growth
economic implication
environmental policy
EU policy
gas emission
regulation
Economic implications of EU mitigation policies: domestic and international effects
thumbnail https://www.labourline.org/Image_prev.jpg?Archive=106469192464
title Economic implications of EU mitigation policies: domestic and international effects
topic climate change
competitiveness
economic growth
economic implication
environmental policy
EU policy
gas emission
regulation
url https://www.labourline.org/KENTIKA-19103152124919213349-economic-implications-of-eu-mi.htm