Essays on climate policy, trade and competitiveness : three essays in applied environmental economics
Thesis: This thesis focuses on the nexus between climate change policy, international trade and competitiveness for energy-intensive trade-exposed industries (EITEs). In particular, it explores the question: Can climate policy be designed such that policy makers can do away with the concern that any serious attempt to decarbonise EITE sectors will lead to perverse results of offshoring of EITE production and emissions – a phenomenon known as “carbon leakage”? The thesis approaches this question by drawingin particular on the 10 years of experience of the EU with carbon pricing as the dominant tool for decarbonising EITE sectors. This is done in two steps. Firstly, by empirically evaluating existing EU policy solutions and asking whether the policies ultimately meet basic criteria for environmental effectiveness, economic efficiency, and policy coherence with respect to the long-term goals of EU climate mitigation. A number of important policy gaps and incoherencies are identified in this way that are of themselves interesting and of relevant to current policy settings. Secondly, this thesis takes a step back and questions and ultimately challenges the idea that the overarching policy framework of the EU– in particular the dominant role of the EU ETS carbon market – is sufficient for decarbonising these sectors in the longer term.
Keywords
- Climate change
- Emissions trading
- Manufacturing industry
- Free allocation
- Carbon pricing
- Carbon leakage
- Competitivity
- EU ETS
Issuing body(s)
- Université Panthéon-Sorbonne – Paris I
Date of defense
- 24/11/2017
Thesis director(s)
- Mouez Fodha
URL of the HAL notice
Version
- 1