Economic Model of Carbon Trading
The Australian Government released Australia's Low Pollution Future: The Economics of Climate Change Mitigation on the 30 October 2008. This reports economic modelling of the proposed cap-and-trade "Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme". It finds a modest cost for the scheme. The report is deficient in not considering the impact of new technologies on climate changes. There is only one reference to the Internet: "Who at that time could have predicted developments such as the internet, containerised shipping or modern air freight?" (page 18). There are ten references to air transportation, but none to the web, ICT computers or telecommunications. This is despite research showing ICT more to greenhouse gasses than airlines.
Available:
Unfortunately the poor formatting of the document will contribute to greenhouse gas emissions. An example, 80% of the "preliminaries" section of the document is taken up with high quality facsimile autographs of the Treasurer, Wayne Swan, and the Minister for Climate Change and Water, Penny Wong. As well as providing a way to fake government documents, these "signatures" waste space and add nothing of value to the report.
Available:
- Summary Report
- Chart Spreadsheet Data
- Table Spreadsheet Data
- Major Report
- Fact Sheets Discussing Key Issues of Australia's Low Pollution Future
- Consultants Reports – Modelling Australia's Low Pollution Future
Unfortunately the poor formatting of the document will contribute to greenhouse gas emissions. An example, 80% of the "preliminaries" section of the document is taken up with high quality facsimile autographs of the Treasurer, Wayne Swan, and the Minister for Climate Change and Water, Penny Wong. As well as providing a way to fake government documents, these "signatures" waste space and add nothing of value to the report.
Zip RTF | ||
---|---|---|
Australia's Low Pollution Future: The Economics of Climate Change Mitigation – Report | 2.2MB | 2.4MB |
Preliminaries | 188KB | 1MB |
Chapter 1: Context for reducing emissions | 98KB | 143KB |
Chapter 2: Framework for analysis | 207KB | 435KB |
Chapter 3: The reference scenario – Assumptions and projections | 468KB | 4.7MB |
Chapter 4: Description of policy scenarios | 169KB | 586KB |
Chapter 5: Mitigation scenarios – International results | 433KB | 1.7MB |
Chapter 6: Mitigation scenarios – Australian results | 489KB | 6.4MB |
Chapter 7: Key findings and future analysis | 98KB | 133KB |
Annex A: Modelling framework | 197KB | 415KB |
Annex B: Treasury climate change mitigation policy modelling assumptions | 412KB | 2.7MB |
Glossary | 60KB | 172KB |
List of Boxes, Charts and Tables | 70KB | 132KB |
The Treasury's modelling demonstrates that early global action is less expensive than later action; that a market-based approach allows robust economic growth into the future even as emissions fall; and that many of Australia's industries will maintain or improve their competitiveness under an international agreement to combat climate change.
The modelling shows that Australia and the world continue to prosper while making the emission cuts required to reduce the risks of dangerous climate change. ...
From: Australia's Low Pollution Future: The Economics of Climate Change Mitigation, 30 October 2008
Labels: Australian Government, Carbon Trading, Greenhouse Effect
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