Abstract
We present a model of endogenous growth in which the use of a non-renewable resource in production yields CO2 emissions whose accumulated stock negatively affects welfare. A CCS technology enables, via some effort, a partial reduction of these emissions. We characterize the social optimum and how the availability of CCS technology affects it, and study the trajectories of the decentralized economy. We then analyze economic policies. We first derive the expression of the Pigovian carbon tax and we give a full interpretation of its level, which is unique. We then study the impacts of three different second-best policies: a carbon tax, a subsidy to sequestered carbon, and a subsidy to labor in CCS. While all three tools foster CCS activity they generally have contrasting effects on resource extraction, carbon emissions, output and consumption. The carbon tax postpones resource extraction whereas the two subsidies accelerate it. Although the tax decreases short-term carbon emissions, the two subsidies can increase them, thus yielding a green paradox. The tax has a negative impact on the levels of output and consumption in the short-term, unlike the subsidies. The tax generally fosters growth whereas the subsidies reduce it; however, when the weight of the CCS sector in the economy is high, these impacts can be reversed
Keywords
Carbon capture and storage (CCS); Endogenous growth; Polluting non-renewable resources; Carbon tax; Subsidy to CCS;
JEL codes
- O3: Technological Change • Research and Development • Intellectual Property Rights
- Q3: Nonrenewable Resources and Conservation
Replaces
André Grimaud, and Luc Rougé, “Carbon Sequestration, Economic Policies and Growth”, TSE Working Paper, n. 12-349, October 28, 2012, revised August 2013.
Reference
André Grimaud, and Luc Rougé, “Carbon Sequestration, Economic Policies and Growth”, Resource and Energy Economics, vol. 36, n. 2, May 2014, pp. 307–331.
See also
Published in
Resource and Energy Economics, vol. 36, n. 2, May 2014, pp. 307–331