Macroeconomic Impacts of the Clean Development Mechanism: The Role of Investment Barriers and Regulations

ZEW Discussion Paper No. 07-026 // 2007
ZEW Discussion Paper No. 07-026 // 2007

Macroeconomic Impacts of the Clean Development Mechanism: The Role of Investment Barriers and Regulations

This paper quantifies the macroeconomic impacts of the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) under the Kyoto Protocol based on a computable general equilibrium (CGE) model of international trade and energy use. Employing project-based CDM supply data we assess the relative importance of transaction costs and investment risks as well as CDM regulations through supplementarity and additionality criteria. Our numerical results show that the macroeconomic impacts of transaction costs and investment risks are negligible: Given the large supply of cheap project-based emissions credits in developing countries, compliance to the Kyoto Protocol can be achieved at a very low cost. However, regulatory restrictions such as a supplementarity criterion can substantially curtail the potential efficiency gains from where-flexibility in climate policy.

Anger, Niels, Christoph Böhringer and Ulf Moslener (2007), Macroeconomic Impacts of the Clean Development Mechanism: The Role of Investment Barriers and Regulations, ZEW Discussion Paper No. 07-026, Mannheim.