Applied Economics Seminar Series. "Imperfect (Re)allocation in Imperfect Markets: Evidence from China’s Pilot Carbon ETS"

Published: 28 March 2024

24 April 2024. Professor Jo Van Biesebroeck, KU Leuven

Professor Jo Van Biesebroeck, KU Leuven

"Imperfect (Re)allocation in Imperfect Markets: Evidence from China’s Pilot Carbon ETS"
Wednesday, 24 April 2024. 15:00-16:30
Room 141, Adam Smith Business School & PGT Hub

Abstract

We evaluate the effectiveness of both absolute and intensity emission regulations in the Chinese carbon emission trading scheme (ETS) pilots that were established in 2013. The coexistence of two types of regulation within a single energy market provides a unique opportunity to study their differential effects on the magnitude and nature of emission reductions. We employ a difference-in-differences estimation strategy to examine the behavior of various market participants on all potential margins of adjustment, including energy consumption, industrial output, electricity trade, and substitution between power sources. We find that both types of regulation induce carbon mitigation, but that they come with distinct tradeoffs. Our results indicate that an aggregate annual reduction equivalent to an energy consumption of 7.5 and 8.7 million tons of standard coal can be attributed to the absolute and intensity-type emission regulations, respectively. This amounts to 9% and 23% of yearly energy consumption covered by the schemes.

Bio

Jo Van Biesebroeck is Professor of Economics at KU Leuven (Belgium) and a research affiliate at the CEPR. He teaches classes on Global Value Chains and The Development of the Chinese Economy and conducts research in the areas of industrial organization, international trade and development economics. His current research focuses on firm dynamics, productivity, and the organization of global value chains, with applications to the automotive industry and the development of the Chinese and African economies.


For further information, please contact business-school-research@glasgow.ac.uk

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First published: 28 March 2024