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Practical Challenges of Emissions Trading
A government is considering a cap-and-trade system to reduce carbon emissions from its industrial sector. A policy advisor argues that simply setting a national emissions limit and distributing the corresponding number of permits is insufficient for the system to be effective. Beyond the initial determination of the total pollution limit, identify one other critical, practical challenge the government must address to ensure firms comply with the system, and briefly explain why this is essential for the policy's success.
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A country implements a cap-and-trade system to reduce sulfur dioxide emissions. A robust market for emission permits quickly develops, with many firms actively buying and selling permits. However, after several years, national environmental audits reveal that the total volume of sulfur dioxide released into the atmosphere has not decreased. Based on this outcome, which of the following represents the most significant and direct challenge the regulators likely failed to overcome when implementing the system?
A country implements a cap-and-trade system to reduce sulfur dioxide emissions. A robust market for emission permits quickly develops, with many firms actively buying and selling permits. However, after several years, national environmental audits reveal that the total volume of sulfur dioxide released into the atmosphere has not decreased. Based on this outcome, which of the following represents the most significant and direct challenge the regulators likely failed to overcome when implementing the system?
A government successfully establishes a cap-and-trade system where pollution permits are actively and efficiently traded among firms. This successful market activity alone is sufficient to ensure a reduction in the country's total pollution output.
Practical Challenges of Emissions Trading
A government is planning to introduce a market-based permit system to limit a specific type of pollution. It is considering two industries for the initial rollout. Industry A consists of 20 large, stationary factories. Industry B consists of 50,000 small, geographically dispersed farms. From a purely administrative and regulatory standpoint, which of the following best explains why one industry would be significantly more challenging to include in this system than the other?
A government agency proposes a new cap-and-trade system to curb industrial air pollution. The plan includes setting an overall pollution limit, distributing a corresponding number of permits to firms, and establishing a market for these permits to be traded. To ensure compliance, each firm will be required to submit a self-generated, unaudited report of its annual emissions. A critic of the plan argues that one of these components makes the entire system fundamentally unworkable. Which component is the most likely source of this critical flaw?
A government is tasked with designing a cap-and-trade system to reduce emissions from its manufacturing sector. Environmental scientists provide a target for the maximum allowable pollution to prevent ecological damage. However, industry leaders warn that meeting this target will be extremely costly and may lead to factory closures. This scenario highlights which fundamental implementation challenge of a cap-and-trade system?