Flexible Global Climate Change Policy ESD.71 Application Portfolio: December 2009 Nidhi R. Santen Ph.D. Student, 2 nd Year Engineering Systems Division.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Implementing information on the costs and benefits of adaptation in a portfolio –based decision framework Alistair Hunt Department of Economics, University.
Advertisements

Real Options & Business Decision Making John Curtis.
Economy-Energy-Environment (E3)Model: Energy Technology and Climate Change Youngho Chang Division of Economics and Nanyang Technological University.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2007 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 5 Capacity Planning For Products and Services.
Power Plant Development Options in Abu Dhabi Application Portfolio ESD.71 Engineering Systems Analysis for Design Kyle Frazier December 2007.
Reflections on Key Messages in Recent Reports
1 The Economics of Climate Change: Costs and Benefits of Reducing GHG Emissions Maureen Cropper University of Maryland and Resources for the Future August.
1 Economics 331b Spring 2009 Integrated Assessment Models of Economics of Climate Change.
Engineering Systems Analysis Richard de Neufville © Massachusetts Institute of Technology Economic Evaluation Slide 1 of 22 Economic Evaluation l Objective.
Environmental Sustainability in the Extractive Industry: The Case for Climate Change Mitigation Dr Uwem E. Ite.
Comments on the Stern Review David Maddison University of Birmingham.
Economic Modelling of Climate-Change Impacts Kollegger – Sommer – Wallner Economics of Climate Change Chapter 6.
Pasadena Water & Power 2009 Integrated Resource Plan Public Meeting #3 December 17, 2008.
Impact of uncertainty in economic projections for stabilization scenarios Nir Krakauer
Mitigation and Adaptation Under Uncertainty NCAR ASP Uncertainty Colloquium Mort Webster (Penn State) 28 July 2014.
1 Optimal Technology R&D in the Face of Climate Uncertainty Erin Baker University of Massachusetts, Amherst Presented at Umass INFORMS October 2004.
1 Real Options Analysis Office Tower Building Portfolio Presentation Fall 2008 ESD.71 Professor: Richard de Neufville Presented by: Charbel Rizk.
Temporal Investment of Adaptation and Mitigation Presenter: Bruce A. McCarl Weiwei Wang Department of Agricultural Economics Texas A&M University April.
1 Ocean Iron Fertilization: Economics, Carbon Policy, and Value of Information Hauke Kite-Powell Marine Policy Center Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution.
Final Application Portfolio Community Level Solar Energy System Daniel Marticello ESD.71 Fall
Nov 2014: China-US agreement on carbon emissions -President Obama pledges to reduce GHG emissions by -26 to 28% of 2005 levels by president Xi Jinping.
Engineering Systems Analysis for Design Richard de Neufville  Massachusetts Institute of Technology Use of Simulation Slide 1 of 19 Use of Simulation.
Green Economy Initiative Derek Eaton UNEP UNCEEA, June 2010.
Global Climate Change and its Distributional Impacts Maurizio Bussolo, Rafael de Hoyos, Denis Medvedev and Dominique van der Mensbrugghe The World Bank.
1 On the Effect of Greenhouse Gas Abatement in Japanese Economy: an Overlapping Generations Approach Shimasawa Manabu Akita University March 2006.
Integration and Decision-Making Frameworks for Climate Change Policy MS&E 290 Public Policy Analysis February 27, 2003.
The Impact of Climate Change and Climate Policy on the Canadian Economy Jim Davies Jim MacGee Jacob Wibe.
U.S. Electric Power Generation Planning under Endogenous Learning-by-Searching Technology Change Tuesday, October 11, 2011 Session 31: Electricity Demand.
Portfolio selection for energy projects under the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) Olena Pechak, PhD candidate George Mavrotas, Asst. Professor School.
December 9, 2008 ESD.71 Engineering Systems Analysis for Design Term Project-- Real Option Analysis of Cape Wind Project in Massachusetts Prof. Richard.
World Bank Energy Sector Lending: Encouraging the World’s Addiction to Fossil Fuels Heike Mainhardt-Gibbs Bank Information Center – March 2009.
1 Methodologies, Technical Resources and Guidelines for Mitigation Festus LUBOYERA and Dominique REVET Programme Officers UNFCCC secretariat
Page 1 Tanvir Madan M.S. Technology and Policy Program, December 9 th, ESD. 71 Application Portfolio Evaluating flexibility – Grid Scale Solar PV.
Vulnerability of the Socio-economic Worlds of the IPCC Scenarios to Sea Level Rise & Water Stress  Saskia Werners Alterra, Wageningen University & Research.
1 EPA’s Climate Change Strategy Robert J. Meyers Principal Deputy Assistant Administrator U.S. EPA, Office of Air and Radiation December 3, 2007.
Greenhouse gas taxation in Estonia: optimal environmental tax reform Silja Lüpsik ESTONIA.
Role of Integrated Assessment Modelling (IAM) in climate change policy analysis The Global Integrated Assessment Model (GIAM) An ABARE-CSIRO joint initiative.
The economic and competitiveness dimensions of the draft Chilean INDC Andrea Rudnick Our Common Future Conference. Paris. July 8 th, 2015.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2007 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 5 Capacity Planning For Products and Services.
Application Portfolio for ESD.71 Kevin Ferrigno Professor: Richard de Neufville TA: Michel-Alexandre Cardin.
Integrating Ethics into Graduate Training in the Environment Sciences Series Unit 6: Ethical issues implicit in cost- benefit analyses of climate management.
Flexibility and Design Options Analysis of a Streetcar System in Madison, WI Paul Grogan ESD.71 Application Portfolio Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY AGENCE INTERNATIONALE DE L’ENERGIE Climate Mitigation: Integrating Approaches for Future International Co-operation Cédric.
On/Off Operation of Carbon Capture Systems in the Dynamic Electric Grid On/Off Operation of Carbon Capture Systems in the Dynamic Electric Grid Rochelle.
Findings from the Multi-Sector Working Group Future Greenhouse Gas Reduction Strategies in the Metropolitan Washington Region Presentation to the WRTC.
California Energy Commission Global Climate Change: Trends and Policy Issues Susan J. Brown California Energy Commission March 3, 2005.
The Economics of Climate Change Policy Prepared for: CEO Climate Change Task Force Meeting American Public Power Association Washington, D.C. December.
Heating System for a Group of Condominiums Rory Clune Dept. of Civil & Environmental Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology ESD.71 Application.
Elements for green fiscal policy in Latin America Julie Lennox Jimy Ferrer Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean United Nations Climate.
Strengthening Planning Capacity for Low Carbon Growth in Developing Asia: Regional Technical Assistance Project Overview David Raitzer, Economist Economic.
Optimal R&D Investments and the Cost of GHG Stabilization when Knowledge Spills across Sectors FEEM Venice, 21 May 2009 Carlo Carraro Emanuele Massetti.
Climate Change Technology R&D Portfolio Analysis under Uncertainty Erin Baker, UMass Amherst Presented at The International Energy Workshop Venice, Italy.
Diversification of Energy Power Plants in the North of Chile Matías Raby.
Understanding climate change science and policy: Policy Prof Douglas Crawford-Brown Director Cambridge Centre for Climate Change Mitigation Research.
Strategic Management/ Business Policy
Optimal climate policy
Power Point Set 9b: Competitive Dynamics: Real Options
Ioanna Mouratiadou, Gunnar Luderer, Elmar Kriegler
Power Point Set 9b: Competitive Dynamics: Real Options
Arthur Gueneau December 13, 2011
Capacity Planning For Products and Services
Capacity Planning For Products and Services
Application Portfolio: Fort Carson Solar Project
Power Point Set 9b: Competitive Dynamics: Real Options
Global CLEWS: objectives Identify and quantify the interlinkages among climate, land, energy and water at a global scale. Insights on sustainability.
Monte Carlo Simulation
Production and Operations Management
Inter-temporal Investment in Climate Change Adaptation and Mitigation
INVESTING IN HUMAN CAPITAL
Capacity Planning For Products and Services
Presentation transcript:

Flexible Global Climate Change Policy ESD.71 Application Portfolio: December 2009 Nidhi R. Santen Ph.D. Student, 2 nd Year Engineering Systems Division © 2009 Nidhi R. Santen

Presentation Outline  Problem Overview (1)  Application System (1)  Sources of Uncertainty (3)  Fixed and Flexible Designs (1)  Decision Tree Analysis (2)  Lattice Analysis (2)  Conclusions (2)  Questions? © 2009 Nidhi R. Santen

Problem Overview  Current climate change policy decisions are based on deterministic views of the future events, dominated by considerations of a single optimal carbon emissions path.  Many aspects of the future remain highly uncertain, creating the need for flexible climate policies.  Implementing an R&D-inducing carbon tax policy today provides a form of “insurance” against future carbon-emissions related climate damages, representing a important form of flexibility.  The following project examines the opportunities that flexible global climate change policy can have on the overall net present welfare of the global economy. © 2009 Nidhi R. Santen

Application System  Key Components of System Aggregated Global Economy, includes  Production = f(Capital, Labor, Fossil-Fuel Energy Sector)  Physical Environment  Population’s Utility Function (Preferences for Consumption v. Investment)  Dynamic Integrated model for Climate and the Economy (DICE-99) is used as the evaluation model for system performance  Timeframe is 2015 through 2335 © 2009 Nidhi R. Santen

Sources of Uncertainty (1 of 3) Total Factor Productivity Growth Rate: TPF is the contribution to economic output not accounted for by inputs such as labor and capital; level of technology in the economy © 2009 Nidhi R. Santen Data: MIT Joint Program

Sources of Uncertainty (2 of 3) Emissions Intensity Growth Rate: Emissions intensity is the trend in CO 2 -equivalent emissions per unit of output without a carbon-reducing policy in place © 2009 Nidhi R. Santen Data: MIT Joint Program

Sources of Uncertainty (3 of 3) Climate Feedback A cloud-related parameter that represents the sensitivity of the climate to GHGs © 2009 Nidhi R. Santen Data: MIT Joint Program

Fixed and Flexible Designs  Fixed Design In both studies: Business-as-usual case with no carbon-tax policy  Flexible Designs Investigation 1 (2 Period): High or low carbon tax policy implemented in Period 1 with an option to change tax level in Period 2. Investigation 2 (6 Period): Option to implement a medium carbon tax at any period. © 2009 Nidhi R. Santen

Decision Analysis (1 of 2) © 2009 Nidhi R. Santen DesignEmissions Reduction (µ t ) ($ Tax) Fixed “No” Policy (“Business-as-Usual”)No Control ($0 per ton) Both Decision Points Flexible Policies (Carbon Taxes)2015: High ($30) / 2065: High ($80) 2015: High ($30) / 2065: Low ($30) 2015: Low ($10) / 2065: High ($80) 2015: Low ($10) / 2065: Low ($30) Policy Design Alternatives and Uncertainties Decision Analysis Components Stages: 2 ( and ) Decision in Period 1: Tax High, Tax Low, or No Tax Uncertainties Considered: Emission Intensity Growth Rate and Climate Feedback Payoff Value: NPV Welfare Uncertain ParameterHighMediumLow Emission Intensity Growth Rate (σ t ) P(σ= ) = 0.185P(σ= ) = 0.63P(σ=-1.082) = Climate Feedback Parameter (λ t ) P(λ=4.682) = 0.185P(λ=2.908) = 0.63P(λ=1.134) = 0.185

Decision Analysis (2 of 2) © 2009 Nidhi R. Santen Decision Tree Analysis VARG Curve Decision Tree Solution Optimal Strategy: Tax Low in Period 1; Tax High in Period 2 Risk AssumptionPreferred Period 1 Design P10Tax Low P15Tax High P50No Tax (Inflexible Case) P75No Tax (Inflexible Case) P90No Tax (Inflexible Case)

Lattice Analysis (1 of 2)  Policy Design Alternatives BAU No-Tax Case Option to Begin Implementing a $45 per ton Carbon Tax in any Period (Modeled as a “Call Option”)  Uncertainty Considered: TPF Growth Rate  “How long should we wait to implement a carbon tax?” © 2009 Nidhi R. Santen

Lattice Analysis (2 of 2) Dynamic Programming Decision Analysis Optimal Strategy: Always Decide to Implement $45 per ton Carbon Tax © 2009 Nidhi R. Santen Periodt = 0t = 1t = 2t = 3t = 4t = 5t = 6 Exercise CALL OPTION? NOYES Risk AssumptionPreferred Period 1 Design P10Flexible Case P25Flexible Case P50Flexible Case P75Flexible Case P95Flexible Case

Conclusions  Investigation 1 (Decision Tree Analysis): The value of flexibility was $ trillion for the optimal strategy.  Investigation 2 (Lattice Analysis): the value of the call option to implement a carbon-tax when deemed appropriate was $0.51 trillion.  Flexible policy strategies are chosen over inflexible policy strategies in both investigations. © 2009 Nidhi R. Santen

Conclusions © 2009 Nidhi R. Santen

Conclusions © 2009 Nidhi R. Santen

Thank You! Questions? Acknowledgments Professor Richard de Neufville TA Michel-Alexandre Cardin © 2009 Nidhi R. Santen