Emissions standards and ambient environmental quality standards with stochastic environmental services |
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Authors: | Stephen F Hamilton Till Requate |
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Institution: | 1. California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo, CA, United States;2. University of Kiel, Department of Economics, Olshausenstraße 40, 24228 Kiel, Germany |
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Abstract: | Many important environmental policies involve some combination of emission controls and ambient environmental quality standards, for instance SO2 emissions are capped under Title IV of the U.S. Clean Air Act Amendments while ambient SO2 concentrations are limited under National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS). This paper examines the relative performance of emissions standards and ambient standards when the natural environment provides stochastic environmental services for assimilating pollution. For receiving media characterized by greater dispersion in the distribution of environmental services, the optimal emissions policy becomes more stringent, whereas the optimal ambient policy generally becomes more lax. In terms of economic performance, emissions policies are superior to ambient policies for relatively non-toxic pollutants, whereas ambient standards welfare dominate emissions standards for sufficiently toxic pollutants. In the case of combined policies that jointly implement emissions standards and ambient standards, we show that the optimal level of each standard relaxes relative to its counterpart in a unilateral policy, allowing for greater emissions levels and higher pollution concentrations in the environmental medium. |
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Keywords: | Environmental policy Ambient standards Emissions standards Stochastic environmental damages |
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