Carbon Pricing
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Carbon Pricing

Early Experience and Future Prospects

9781782547730 Edward Elgar Publishing
Edited by John Quiggin, Professor of Economics, School of Economics, University of Queensland, David Adamson, The University of Adelaide, Australia and Daniel Quiggin, Georgia State University, US
Publication Date: 2014 ISBN: 978 1 78254 773 0 Extent: 208 pp
In 2012, Australia took the major step of introducing a carbon price, involving the creation of a system of emissions permits initially issued at a fixed price. Carbon Pricing brings together experts instrumental in the development, and operation, of Australia’s carbon policy who have played a significant role in the broader debate over climate change policy. Together they have achieved an in-depth analysis of Australia’s policy stance on pricing carbon and its implications for the wider economy.

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In 2012, Australia took the major step of introducing a carbon price, involving the creation of a system of emissions permits initially issued at a fixed price. Carbon Pricing brings together experts instrumental in the development, and operation, of Australia’s carbon policy who have played a significant role in the broader debate over climate change policy. Together they have achieved an in-depth analysis of Australia’s policy stance on pricing carbon and its implications for the wider economy.

While the future of carbon pricing is itself unclear in Australia, the experiences, insights and conclusions outlined herein will prove invaluable to a global audience. The assessment of the initial operation of the carbon price provides a wide range of insights into the problems of mitigating climate change, and the prospects for the future. The critical analysis will provide a valuable resource to inform wider international debates concerning alternative mechanisms for internalising the carbon externality, tax reform, climate scepticism and carbon farming initiatives.

With its interdisciplinary approach, Carbon Pricing, will appeal to scholars and researchers of economics in general and climate change, natural resources and energy policy in particular. Those organisations and policymakers involved in similar experiments and processes in other countries will find the experiences and analysis invaluable.
Contributors
Contributors: D. Adamson, M. Battaglia, W.P. Bell, D. Besley, J. Cook, C. Downie, J. Foster, J. Freebairn, R. Garnaut, S. Grant, M. Harris, S. Kennedy, M. Keogh, T. Mallawaarachchi, R. Nelson, D. Quiggin, J. Quiggin, P. Wild, S. Writer
Contents
Contents:

Foreword

Introduction

PART I UNDERSTANDING THE ECONOMICS OF CLIMATE CHANGE POLICY IMPLEMENTATION AND PUBLIC PERCEPTIONS
1. The Carbon Tax: Early Experience and Future Prospects
Ross Garnaut

2. Carbon Pricing in Australia: An Early View from the Inside
Daniel Besley, Christian Downie, Steven Kennedy and Simon Writer

3. How Has the Carbon Tax Affected the Public ‘Debate’ on Climate Change?
John Cook

PART II TAXING EXTERNALITIES
4. The Carbon Tax and Tax Reform Debate
John Freebairn

5. How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the RET
John Quiggin

PART III THREATS, OPPORTUNITIES AND INDUSTRY ADAPTATION AND ADJUSTMENT
6. The Impact of Carbon Prices on Australia’s National Energy Market
Phillip Wild, William Paul Bell and John Foster

7. Modeling the Impact of the Australian Greenhouse Emissions Trading Scheme on Farm and Fishery Businesses
Mick Keogh

8. Science, Transaction Costs and Carbon Markets
Michael Battaglia and Rohan Nelson

9. Agricultural Adaptation: Observations and Insights
Thilak Mallawaarachchi and Michael Harris

PART IV DEALING WITH THE UNCERTAIN FUTURE
10. Climate Change and the Precautionary Principle
Simon Grant and John Quiggin

Conclusion

Index
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