| Literature DB >> 33265524 |
Jiuli Yin1, Cui Su1, Yongfen Zhang2, Xinghua Fan1.
Abstract
Carbon markets provide a market-based way to reduce climate pollution. Subject to general market regulations, the major existing emission trading markets present complex characteristics. This paper analyzes the complexity of carbon market by using the multi-scale entropy. Pilot carbon markets in China are taken as the example. Moving average is adopted to extract the scales due to the short length of the data set. Results show a low-level complexity inferring that China's pilot carbon markets are quite immature in lack of market efficiency. However, the complexity varies in different time scales. China's carbon markets (except for the Chongqing pilot) are more complex in the short period than in the long term. Furthermore, complexity level in most pilot markets increases as the markets developed, showing an improvement in market efficiency. All these results demonstrate that an effective carbon market is required for the full function of emission trading.Entities:
Keywords: carbon market; complexity; entropy; multi-scale entropy
Year: 2018 PMID: 33265524 PMCID: PMC7512953 DOI: 10.3390/e20060434
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Entropy (Basel) ISSN: 1099-4300 Impact factor: 2.524
Figure 1The daily carbon price in seven pilot markets
Figure 2Sample entropy for whole data dynamics.
Figure 3The behavior of multi-scale entropy.
Figure 4Time dependency of the return series (upper panel) and the dependency of the sample entropy to the time and scale (lower panel). (a) Beijing; (b) Chongqing; (c) Guangdong; (d) Hubei; (e) Shanghai; (f) Shenzhen; (g) Tianjin.