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An Introduction to the Green Paradox


An Introduction to the Green Paradox

If a future tightening of climate policy threatens to decrease future scarcity rents, then to maximize profits, fossil fuel owners will decide to extract less ...

(PDF) An Introduction to the Green Paradox - ResearchGate

We present a simple model explaining how announcing a future climate policy may increase carbon emissions today – the Green Paradox effect.

EconPapers: An Introduction to the Green Paradox

We present a simple model explaining how announcing a future climate policy may increase carbon emissions today – the Green Paradox effect.

An Introduction to the Green Paradox: The Unintended Consequ

First, we present a simple model explaining how announcing a future climate policy may increase carbon emissions today – the Green Paradox effect. This effect ...

The Unintended Consequences of Climate Policies | Semantic Scholar

An Introduction to the Green Paradox: The Unintended Consequences of Climate Policies · Svenn Jensen, Kristina Mohlin, +1 author. T. Sterner · Published in Review ...

The Unintended Consequences of Climate Policies - GUP

First, we present a simple model explaining how announcing a future climate policy may increase carbon emissions today – the Green Paradox effect. This effect ...

The Green Paradox - MIT Press

This is the “Green Paradox”: expected future reduction in carbon consumption has the effect of accelerating climate change. Sinn suggests a supply-side solution ...

The Green Paradox - Wikipedia

The Green Paradox · Main line of reasoning · Practicable solutions · Works on the subject · See also · Notes and references · External links. edit.

The Unintended Consequences of Climate Policies - Scite.ai

Mentioning: 50 - An Introduction to the Green Paradox: The Unintended Consequences of Climate Policies - Jensen, Svenn, Mohlin, Kristina, Pittel, Karen, ...

Green Paradox | Hans-Werner Sinn

The Green Paradox is a term that refers to an undesirable effect of environmental measures. Politicians believe that environmentally-friendly legislation that ...

The Green Paradox: A Supply-Side Approach to Global Warming

This is the “Green Paradox”: expected future reduction in carbon consumption has the effect of accelerating climate change. Sinn suggests a supply-side solution ...

The green paradox and learning-by-doing in the renewable energy ...

The green paradox conveys the idea that climate policies may have unintended side effects when taking into account the reaction of fossil fuel suppliers.

The Green Paradox: A Mirage? | MIT Press Scholarship Online

Most prevailing studies on the green paradox assume that energy from fossil fuels and renewables are perfect substitutes (an exception is Michielsen, 2011). Due ...

Green Paradox Definition & Examples - Quickonomics

Examples include increased coal production in anticipation of stricter future environmental regulations or the accelerated development of oil ...

CLIMATE CHANGE AND GREEN PARADOXES

These Green Paradox effects thus add to carbon leakage. As far as financial markets are concerned, there is a risk of stranded financial assets associated with ...

Empirical Tests of the Green Paradox for Climate Legislation

1 The literature on the “Green Paradox” highlights that climate legislation, which limit future fossil fuel use, give resource owners an incentive to extract ...

Should we be worried about the Green Paradox? Announcement ...

We use the introduction of the. Acid Rain Program in the U.S. as a case study. The theory predicts that owners of coal deposits, expecting future sales to ...

The green paradox of the economics of exhaustible resources

The green paradox states that an increasing tax on emissions of carbon dioxide, consonant with the expected increase in their marginal damages, may induce oil ...

(PDF) The Green Paradox: A Supply-Side View of the Climate Problem

Correspondingly, it protects against the risk of creating an incentive to postpone investment, as would be the case if the carbon value increased faster than ...

GLOBAL WARMING AND THE GREEN PARADOX*

If an invention increases the substitutability between oil and renewable energy, the initial oil supply and carbon emissions are reduced so that there is no ...