The clean development mechanism (CDM) [[electronic resource] ] : an early history of unanticipated outcomes / / Ariel Dinar, Donald F. Larson, Shaikh M. Rahman |
Autore | Dinar Ariel |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | [Hackensack] N.J., : World Scientific, c2013 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (321 p.) |
Disciplina | 338.927 |
Altri autori (Persone) |
LarsonDonald F
RahmanShaikh M |
Collana | World scientific series on the economics of climate change |
Soggetto topico |
Sustainable development
Climatic changes - Prevention |
Soggetto genere / forma | Electronic books. |
ISBN |
1-299-46231-6
981-4401-10-2 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
CONTENTS; Acknowledgments; About the Authors; Chapter 1. Clean Development Mechanism: Past, Present, and Future; ABOUT THIS BOOK; BOOK OUTLINE; BOOK CHAPTERS; An Updated Review of Carbon Markets, Institutions, Policies, and Research; The Activities Implemented Jointly Pilots: A Foundation for Clean Development Mechanism?; Cost of Mitigation under the Clean Development Mechanism; Diffusion of Kyoto's Clean Development Mechanism; Why Adoption of the Clean Development Mechanism Di.ers Across Countries?; Clean Development Mechanism as a Cooperation Mechanism
Why So Few Agricultural Projects in the Clean Development Mechanism?CONCLUSION AND POLICY IMPLICATIONS; EPILOGUE; REFERENCES; Chapter 2. An Updated Review of Carbon Markets, Institutions, Policies, and Research With Contributions by Philippe Ambrosi and Rebecca Entler; SCIENCE AND POLICY; FEATURES OF THE CLIMATE CHANGE FRAMEWORK; Obligations Under the Framework; Flexibility Mechanisms; Emission Allocations and the Choice of Policy Instruments; Permit systems versus carbon taxes; Current Instruments; Project Rules; The CDM Project Cycle; The JI Project Cycle; Land Management Projects Supplementarity, Additionality, Diversion, and Carry OverSupplementarity; Additionality and baselines; Managing tradable units inventories under Kyoto; Compatibility with the Trade Agreements40; EXPECTED OUTCOMES FROM THE CLIMATE CHANGE FRAMEWORK; Policy Evaluations and Predictions; Model Structures and Technology; Market Power; Leakages, Ancillary Bene.ts, and Crowding Out; Uncertainty, Discounting, and Intergenerational Tradeoffs; Technology Development and Transfer as a Policy Instrument; Technology transfer and project financing DOMESTIC POLICIES IN THE EUROPEAN UNION, THE US, AND AUSTRALIAEU Emissions Trading Scheme; Integration with the Climate Change Framework; Regional Initiatives and Voluntary Markets; Oregon; California62; Northeastern US; Chicago Climate Exchange; Australia; CARBON MARKETS64; Model Studies of Potential Size of the Market for the Flexibility Mechanisms; The Evolution of Carbon Project Financing; Evaluations of mitigation potential and project investment; The Geographic Distribution of Kyoto-Project Credits; Balance across asset classes; Who is buying project credits? Markets and the pricing of project creditsCONCLUSIONS AND AREAS FOR FUTURE STUDY; REFERENCES; ANNEX 2.1: Glossary of Acronyms.; Chapter 3. The Activities Implemented Jointly Pilots: A Foundation for Clean Development Mechanism? With Contributions by Gunnar Breustedt; ORIGINS OF THE AIJ PROGRAM; RELATED STUDIES; Numeric Studies; Investment and Agency Approval; Multilateral and Bilateral Transaction Costs; A MODEL OF PROJECT INVESTMENT; Conceptual Model; Applied Model; An Alternative Dichotomous Model; Internalized Agency Preferences and Transaction Costs; Additional Estimation Concerns DATA DESCRIPTION |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910452324803321 |
Dinar Ariel | ||
[Hackensack] N.J., : World Scientific, c2013 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
The clean development mechanism (CDM) : an early history of unanticipated outcomes / / Ariel Dinar, University of California, Riverside, USA, Donald F. Larson, World Bank, USA, Shaikh M. Rahman, Texas Tech University, USA |
Autore | Dinar Ariel |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | [Hackensack] N.J., : World Scientific, c2013 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (ix, 310 pages) : illustrations |
Disciplina | 338.927 |
Collana | World scientific series on the economics of climate change |
Soggetto topico |
Climate change mitigation - Economic aspects
Climate change mitigation - International cooperation Climatic changes - Economics aspects Environmental economics |
ISBN |
1-299-46231-6
981-4401-10-2 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
CONTENTS; Acknowledgments; About the Authors; Chapter 1. Clean Development Mechanism: Past, Present, and Future; ABOUT THIS BOOK; BOOK OUTLINE; BOOK CHAPTERS; An Updated Review of Carbon Markets, Institutions, Policies, and Research; The Activities Implemented Jointly Pilots: A Foundation for Clean Development Mechanism?; Cost of Mitigation under the Clean Development Mechanism; Diffusion of Kyoto's Clean Development Mechanism; Why Adoption of the Clean Development Mechanism Di.ers Across Countries?; Clean Development Mechanism as a Cooperation Mechanism
Why So Few Agricultural Projects in the Clean Development Mechanism?CONCLUSION AND POLICY IMPLICATIONS; EPILOGUE; REFERENCES; Chapter 2. An Updated Review of Carbon Markets, Institutions, Policies, and Research With Contributions by Philippe Ambrosi and Rebecca Entler; SCIENCE AND POLICY; FEATURES OF THE CLIMATE CHANGE FRAMEWORK; Obligations Under the Framework; Flexibility Mechanisms; Emission Allocations and the Choice of Policy Instruments; Permit systems versus carbon taxes; Current Instruments; Project Rules; The CDM Project Cycle; The JI Project Cycle; Land Management Projects Supplementarity, Additionality, Diversion, and Carry OverSupplementarity; Additionality and baselines; Managing tradable units inventories under Kyoto; Compatibility with the Trade Agreements40; EXPECTED OUTCOMES FROM THE CLIMATE CHANGE FRAMEWORK; Policy Evaluations and Predictions; Model Structures and Technology; Market Power; Leakages, Ancillary Bene.ts, and Crowding Out; Uncertainty, Discounting, and Intergenerational Tradeoffs; Technology Development and Transfer as a Policy Instrument; Technology transfer and project financing DOMESTIC POLICIES IN THE EUROPEAN UNION, THE US, AND AUSTRALIAEU Emissions Trading Scheme; Integration with the Climate Change Framework; Regional Initiatives and Voluntary Markets; Oregon; California62; Northeastern US; Chicago Climate Exchange; Australia; CARBON MARKETS64; Model Studies of Potential Size of the Market for the Flexibility Mechanisms; The Evolution of Carbon Project Financing; Evaluations of mitigation potential and project investment; The Geographic Distribution of Kyoto-Project Credits; Balance across asset classes; Who is buying project credits? Markets and the pricing of project creditsCONCLUSIONS AND AREAS FOR FUTURE STUDY; REFERENCES; ANNEX 2.1: Glossary of Acronyms.; Chapter 3. The Activities Implemented Jointly Pilots: A Foundation for Clean Development Mechanism? With Contributions by Gunnar Breustedt; ORIGINS OF THE AIJ PROGRAM; RELATED STUDIES; Numeric Studies; Investment and Agency Approval; Multilateral and Bilateral Transaction Costs; A MODEL OF PROJECT INVESTMENT; Conceptual Model; Applied Model; An Alternative Dichotomous Model; Internalized Agency Preferences and Transaction Costs; Additional Estimation Concerns DATA DESCRIPTION |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910779690103321 |
Dinar Ariel | ||
[Hackensack] N.J., : World Scientific, c2013 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
The clean development mechanism (CDM) : an early history of unanticipated outcomes / / Ariel Dinar, University of California, Riverside, USA, Donald F. Larson, World Bank, USA, Shaikh M. Rahman, Texas Tech University, USA |
Autore | Dinar Ariel |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | [Hackensack] N.J., : World Scientific, c2013 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (ix, 310 pages) : illustrations |
Disciplina | 338.927 |
Collana | World scientific series on the economics of climate change |
Soggetto topico |
Climate change mitigation - Economic aspects
Climate change mitigation - International cooperation Climatic changes - Economics aspects Environmental economics |
ISBN |
1-299-46231-6
981-4401-10-2 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
CONTENTS; Acknowledgments; About the Authors; Chapter 1. Clean Development Mechanism: Past, Present, and Future; ABOUT THIS BOOK; BOOK OUTLINE; BOOK CHAPTERS; An Updated Review of Carbon Markets, Institutions, Policies, and Research; The Activities Implemented Jointly Pilots: A Foundation for Clean Development Mechanism?; Cost of Mitigation under the Clean Development Mechanism; Diffusion of Kyoto's Clean Development Mechanism; Why Adoption of the Clean Development Mechanism Di.ers Across Countries?; Clean Development Mechanism as a Cooperation Mechanism
Why So Few Agricultural Projects in the Clean Development Mechanism?CONCLUSION AND POLICY IMPLICATIONS; EPILOGUE; REFERENCES; Chapter 2. An Updated Review of Carbon Markets, Institutions, Policies, and Research With Contributions by Philippe Ambrosi and Rebecca Entler; SCIENCE AND POLICY; FEATURES OF THE CLIMATE CHANGE FRAMEWORK; Obligations Under the Framework; Flexibility Mechanisms; Emission Allocations and the Choice of Policy Instruments; Permit systems versus carbon taxes; Current Instruments; Project Rules; The CDM Project Cycle; The JI Project Cycle; Land Management Projects Supplementarity, Additionality, Diversion, and Carry OverSupplementarity; Additionality and baselines; Managing tradable units inventories under Kyoto; Compatibility with the Trade Agreements40; EXPECTED OUTCOMES FROM THE CLIMATE CHANGE FRAMEWORK; Policy Evaluations and Predictions; Model Structures and Technology; Market Power; Leakages, Ancillary Bene.ts, and Crowding Out; Uncertainty, Discounting, and Intergenerational Tradeoffs; Technology Development and Transfer as a Policy Instrument; Technology transfer and project financing DOMESTIC POLICIES IN THE EUROPEAN UNION, THE US, AND AUSTRALIAEU Emissions Trading Scheme; Integration with the Climate Change Framework; Regional Initiatives and Voluntary Markets; Oregon; California62; Northeastern US; Chicago Climate Exchange; Australia; CARBON MARKETS64; Model Studies of Potential Size of the Market for the Flexibility Mechanisms; The Evolution of Carbon Project Financing; Evaluations of mitigation potential and project investment; The Geographic Distribution of Kyoto-Project Credits; Balance across asset classes; Who is buying project credits? Markets and the pricing of project creditsCONCLUSIONS AND AREAS FOR FUTURE STUDY; REFERENCES; ANNEX 2.1: Glossary of Acronyms.; Chapter 3. The Activities Implemented Jointly Pilots: A Foundation for Clean Development Mechanism? With Contributions by Gunnar Breustedt; ORIGINS OF THE AIJ PROGRAM; RELATED STUDIES; Numeric Studies; Investment and Agency Approval; Multilateral and Bilateral Transaction Costs; A MODEL OF PROJECT INVESTMENT; Conceptual Model; Applied Model; An Alternative Dichotomous Model; Internalized Agency Preferences and Transaction Costs; Additional Estimation Concerns DATA DESCRIPTION |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910808579903321 |
Dinar Ariel | ||
[Hackensack] N.J., : World Scientific, c2013 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|