Cap-and-Trade Systems for Pollution Control
As an alternative to rigid, per-firm regulation, governments can implement market-based systems using tradable permits. In this approach, authorities set a total cap on a pollutant and issue permits that grant the owner the right to discharge a certain amount. These permits can then be freely traded among firms, creating a market for pollution rights and incentivizing cost-effective reduction.
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Introduction to Microeconomics Course
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Two factories, 'Apex Manufacturing' and 'Bedrock Industries', are located on the same lake. The local environmental authority wants to reduce the total amount of a specific pollutant entering the lake by 40 units per day. Due to different technologies, it costs Apex $20 to reduce its pollution by one unit, while it costs Bedrock $80 per unit. The authority mandates that each factory must reduce its pollution by 20 units. From an economic efficiency perspective, what is the primary flaw in this regulatory approach?
Evaluating a 'One-Size-Fits-All' Environmental Regulation
Analyzing a Uniform Pollution Reduction Mandate
A government agency wants to reduce total pollution in a lake by 100 tons. It mandates that each of the 10 industrial firms located on the lake must reduce its pollution by exactly 10 tons. The firms all use different production processes, meaning the cost to reduce pollution varies significantly from one firm to another. What is the most likely economic outcome of this specific regulatory approach?
Critiquing a 'One-Size-Fits-All' Environmental Regulation
True or False: When the environmental quality of a shared resource like a lake depends on the total amount of pollution from all sources combined, a regulation that forces every source to reduce its pollution by the same fixed amount (e.g., 10 tons each) is guaranteed to be the most economically efficient way to achieve the desired environmental improvement.
Evaluating a 'Fairness' Argument for Uniform Regulation
Imagine an environmental agency is trying to reduce total pollution in a river shared by several factories. The agency is considering two general approaches. Match each characteristic or outcome below with the regulatory approach it best describes: 'Uniform Per-Firm Regulation' (which mandates the same reduction from every factory) or 'Economically Efficient Regulation' (which aims for the lowest total cost to society).
Effectiveness of Per-Firm Regulation Under Economic Growth
A regulation requiring every factory in a region to reduce its emission of a specific pollutant by 10 tons per month is often criticized as being economically inefficient. This is because the environment is affected by the total amount of pollution, not the amount from any single factory. However, under which of the following specific circumstances would this uniform, per-firm regulatory approach be most likely to achieve the desired overall pollution reduction at the lowest possible total cost?
Cap-and-Trade Systems for Pollution Control
Learn After
Price Condition for Effective Tradable Permits
Tradable Permits in New South Wales for River Salinity
A government aims to limit total industrial emissions of a pollutant to 100 units. Two firms, Firm A and Firm B, are the only polluters, each currently emitting 70 units. The government issues each firm 50 tradable permits, with each permit allowing one unit of emission. The cost to reduce one unit of emission is $20 for Firm A and $40 for Firm B. Assuming the firms seek to minimize their costs, what is the most likely outcome in the market for these permits?
Efficiency of Tradable Pollution Permits
Firm Decision-Making in a Pollution Permit Market
Evaluating Pollution Control Policies
Match each component or actor in a cap-and-trade system with the description of its role or likely behavior.
In a cap-and-trade system for pollution control, every participating firm is required to reduce its individual level of emissions below its initial level.
In a market for tradable pollution permits, a company will choose to sell its permits to another firm if its own cost of reducing pollution is ____ the market price of a permit.
Arrange the following actions in the logical order a government and participating firms would follow to implement and operate a cap-and-trade system for pollution control.
Analyzing Efficiency in a Tradable Permit Market
Diagnosing a Failing Pollution Control Program
Evaluating Pollution Control Policies