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Clear Skies: Multi-Pollutant Climate Policy in the Presence of Global Dimming

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  • Matthew McGinty
  • Frans P. de Vries

Abstract

222222Multi-pollutant interactions can have crucial implications for the design and performance of environmental policy targeting single pollutants. This paper presents a two-region model where a global pollutant (CO) and local pollutant (SO) are produced jointly. The interaction between SO and CO gives rise to the global dimming effect, which relates SO emissions to the environmental damage caused by CO emissions. We analyze climate policy by comparing abatement of these pollutants in the presence and absence of the dimming effect. We then draw implications for the design of international climate agreements, which should reflect the interactive nature between pollutants. The paper also illustrates how a market-based policy in the form of emissions taxes can be embedded into climate agreements to facilitate an efficient coordination of multi-pollutant abatement across regions. Our model predicts that this involves a uniform tax on the global pollutant but differentiated (region-specific) taxes on the local pollutant.

Suggested Citation

  • Matthew McGinty & Frans P. de Vries, 2024. "Clear Skies: Multi-Pollutant Climate Policy in the Presence of Global Dimming," Strategic Behavior and the Environment, now publishers, vol. 10(1-2), pages 39-78, November.
  • Handle: RePEc:now:jnlsbe:102.00000107
    DOI: 10.1561/102.00000107
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