• Title of article

    How carbon credits could drive the emergence of renewable energies

  • Author/Authors

    John A. Mathews، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
  • Pages
    7
  • From page
    3633
  • To page
    3639
  • Abstract
    The shift to renewable energy options and low-carbon technologies, in response to the concerns over energy security and climate change, is proceeding more slowly than many would like. The usual argument against rapid deployment of new technologies is the costs imposed on the economy, commonly interpreted in terms of upfront costs to be borne or involving large cash transfers to fund, for example, efforts to preserve rainforests. In this contribution I argue that such a perspective provides a continuing barrier to taking effective action, whereas a perspective based on creation and use of carbon credits provides a means of avoiding the shock of abrupt industrial change. Carbon credits granted for bona fide carbon load reductions could be created through private initiative, for example by merchant banks, to constitute a market that will complement regulatory-based initiatives such as national emissions trading systems. This is not a novel idea; indeed it is the way that capitalism has funded every major change, including the Industrial Revolution, through the creation of credit. The emergence of a global carbon credit economy is likely to precede a global regulatory system governing climate change and will doubtless help to stimulate the emergence of such a global system.
  • Keywords
    Carbon credits , Renewable energies , Low-carbon economy
  • Journal title
    Energy Policy
  • Serial Year
    2008
  • Journal title
    Energy Policy
  • Record number

    972305