| Literature DB >> 32561759 |
Erol Akçay1, Ulf Dieckmann2,3, Simon A Levin2,4,5,6, Elena A Rovenskaya2,7, Chai Molina8,9,10.
Abstract
Countries generally agree that global greenhouse gas emissions are too high, but prefer other countries reduce emissions rather than reducing their own. The Paris Agreement is intended to solve this collective action problem, but is likely insufficient. One proposed solution is a matching-commitment agreement, through which countries can change each other's incentives by committing to conditional emissions reductions, before countries decide on their unconditional reductions. Here, we study matching-commitment agreements between two heterogeneous countries. We find that such agreements (1) incentivize both countries to make matching commitments that in turn incentivize efficient emissions reductions, (2) reduce emissions from those expected without an agreement, and (3) increase both countries' welfare. Matching-commitment agreements are attractive because they do not require a central enforcing authority and only require countries to fulfil their promises; countries are left to choose their conditional and unconditional emissions reductions according to their own interests.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32561759 PMCID: PMC7305217 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-63446-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Graphical representation of the matching climate game (MCG). In stage I, countries decide on their matching factors. In stage II, countries choose their unconditional abatements, taking into consideration the matching factors chosen in stage I. These decisions then determine the conditional abatements countries perform over and above their unconditional abatements: each country’s conditional emissions reduction is the product of its own matching factor, and the other country’s unconditional abatement.
Figure 2Graphical representation of how two countries’ decisions on their matching factors m and unconditional abatements a determine their total abatements A in the matching climate game (MCG). The two countries’ decisions are shown as thick continuous lines, while the consequences of these decisions are shown as thick dotted lines, with thin continuous lines serving as visual aids. Each country’s total abatement, indicated for countries 1 and 2 by the lengths of the thick horizontal and vertical lines, respectively, is partitioned into two components: an unconditional abatement and a conditional abatement. In stage I, each country chooses its matching factor, indicated by the slopes of the two diagonal lines: the ratio of country i’s conditional abatement and country j’s (j ≠ i) unconditional abatement is country i’s matching factor m, so the slopes of the top-left and bottom-right diagonal lines are m2 and 1/m1, respectively. In stage II, each country chooses its unconditional abatement (a), indicated by the lengths of the horizontal and vertical segments of the thick continuous lines. These decisions then determine each country’s conditional abatement, indicated by the lengths of the dotted lines. The lines with graduated colours represent how one country’s unconditional abatement is matched by the other country.
Figure 3(a) Schematic overview of outcomes in stage II of the matching climate game (MCG) for pairs of matching factors chosen in stage I; different colours correspond to qualitatively different stage-II Nash equilibria. The coloured areas are separated by the stage-II delimiter curves (ϕ1 and ϕ2, shown as the concave and convex black curves, respectively), and the filled circle marks the pair of matching factors yielding equilibria. (b) Each panel shows a qualitatively different configuration of the best-response functions for pairs of matching factors in the correspondingly coloured area in panel (a), with asterisks indicating stage-II Nash equilibria. When the subgame-perfect matching factors are played in stage I, the stage-II best-response functions overlap for positive unconditional abatements. Note that, in general, the best-response functions need not be piecewise linear.