| Literature DB >> 35363807 |
Wenqing Miao1, Guohua Zhu2, Bingliang Shen3, Demin Kong4.
Abstract
This paper explored how the government provides low-carbon subsidies for the manufacturers, retailers, and consumers in a secondary supply chain under cap-and-trade scheme. We calculated the best prices, emissions reductions, and the demands for common and low-carbon products when subsidizing each of the abovementioned market players. In particular, a comparative analysis of their equilibrium outcomes was made thereafter. The MATLAB simulation found that the optimal emissions reductions under the three subsidy modes were even and positively correlated to low-carbon subsidies, which, however, negatively correlated to the prices of both product types. Higher subsidies drove up demand for low-carbon products and dragged down that for common goods. But the prices of these products maintained the highest levels when consumers were subsidized; demand for common products was greater when subsidies went to retailers than to manufacturers or consumers, consequently generating the largest emissions and highest profits. When the subsidies were greater than [Formula: see text], all three subsidy modes saw a drop in total carbon emissions. That being so, the government should offer proper subsidies before seeing energy-saving progress.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35363807 PMCID: PMC8975140 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0266413
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
List of symbols and descriptions in the model.
| Symbols | Descriptions | Symbols | Descriptions |
|---|---|---|---|
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| Government subsidies per unit of low-carbon product |
| Common product wholesale price |
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| Government carbon allowances for manufacturers |
| Low-carbon product wholesale price |
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| Total carbon emissions of manufacturers |
| Common product retail price |
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| Carbon emissions per unit of common product |
| Low-carbon product retail price |
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| Carbon emissions per unit of low-carbon product ( |
| Market demand for common products (0≤ |
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| Carbon emissions reductions per unit of low-carbon product (0< |
| Market demand for low-carbon products (0≤ |
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| Coefficient of investment costs |
| Carbon trading price |
Equilibrium outcomes.
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Fig 1Functions of total carbon emissions under the three modes.
Fig 2Relationship between the optimal emissions reductions and low-carbon subsidies.
Fig 3Relationships between the retail price and low-carbon subsidies.
Fig 4Relationships between the wholesale price and low-carbon subsidies.
Fig 5Relationships between product demand and low-carbon subsidies.
Fig 6Relationships between retailers’ profits and low-carbon subsidies.
Fig 7Relationships between manufacturers’ profits and low-carbon subsidies.
Fig 8Relationships between total carbon emissions and low-carbon subsidies.