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...
Main Authors: | , |
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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 |