Description: This report assesses the role of emissions trading systems (ETS) in electricity sector decarbonization through analyses of carbon market designs and interactions with electricity market regulations, market structures and additional policies. It provides a synthesis of five case studies in EU, California, South Korea, China and Mexico. The authors investigate four carbon price quality criteria (volatility, reflection of marginal abatement cost, predictability, and environmental effectiveness) and three abatement channels (clean dispatch, low-carbon investment, and demand-side response). They find that ETSs are especially effective in capitalizing on short-term abatement opportunities when embedded within liberalized electricity markets (e.g. change of merit order or fuel switching). But careful design may enhance effectiveness in hybrid electricity markets where carbon cost pass through might initially be absent. Carbon markets may also send long-term signals on fuel choices and investment decisions; however, the strength of these signals will depend on ETS design and companion policies. Veröffentlicht in Climate Change | 38/2021.
Types:
Text { text_type: Publication, }
Origin: /Bund/UBA/Webseite
Tags: Brennstoff ? Gerinne ? Wasserstraße ? Kalifornien ? Elektrizität ? Kohlenstoff ? China ? Korea ? Elektrizitätswirtschaft ? Emissionshandel ? Strommarkt ? Dekarbonisierung ? Fallstudie ? Gütekriterien ? Volatilität ? Kohlenstoffmarkt ? CO2-Bepreisung ? Investition ? Klimawandel ?
License: other-closed
Language: Englisch/English
Issued: 2021-05-01
Time ranges: 2021-05-01 - 2021-05-01
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