论文标题
一个以达到智利电视领域NDC目标的排放贸易系统
An Emissions Trading System to reach NDC targets in the Chilean electric sector
论文作者
论文摘要
在《巴黎协定》的背景下,智利已承诺将温室气体(GHG)的强度降低到2030年至少低于2007年水平,并在2040年将煤炭淘汰为能源,以及其他策略。为了实现这些目标,智利已经在拉丁美洲实施了每吨二氧化碳排放税5美元。但是,这种低价已被证明是不够的。在我们的工作中,我们研究了智利电部门封盖和定价碳排放的另一种方法。上限和贸易范式。我们将智利电力市场(发电机和排放拍卖师)建模为两级容量的扩展均衡问题,我们允许将来的投资和发电机代理之间的排放许可交易。该模型研究了两个需求制度:确定性和随机性的两个制度,研究了智利电力部门的发电和未来投资。我们表明,当前的智利温室气体(GHG)强度承诺不会导致未来智利电基质的重要转变。为了鼓励向更绿色的技术转移,必须考虑更严格的碳预算,从而导致碳价格比目前的碳价格高出约十倍。我们还表明,实现减排目标并不一定会导致碳生成的进一步减少,或者长期逐步淘汰煤炭。最后,我们证明,在技术变化下降成本下降,更高的需求方案将放宽对碳预算进行严格的可再生能源投资的需求,因此符合智利承诺。这些结果表明,智利承诺的某些方面需要进一步分析经济影响,特别是在最近宣布将碳中立性达到2050年的情况下。
In the context of the Paris Agreement, Chile has pledged to reduce Greenhouse Gases (GHG) intensity by at least 30% below 2007 levels by 2030, and to phase out coal as a energy source by 2040, among other strategies. In pursue of these goals, Chile has implemented a $5 per tonne of CO2 emission tax, first of its kind in Latin America. However, such a low price has proven to be insufficient. In our work, we study an alternative approach for capping and pricing carbon emissions in the Chilean electric sector; the cap and trade paradigm. We model the Chilean electric market (generators and emissions auctioneer) as a two stage capacity expansion equilibrium problem, where we allow future investment and trading of emission permits among generator agents. The model studies generation and future investments in the Chilean electric sector in two regimes of demand: deterministic and stochastic. We show that the current Chilean Greenhouse Gases (GHG) intensity pledge does not drive an important shift in the future Chilean electric matrix. To encourage a shift to greener technologies, a more stringent carbon budget must be considered, resulting in a carbon price approximately ten times higher than the present one. We also show that achieving the emissions reduction goal does not necessarily results in further reductions of carbon generation, or phasing out coal in the longer term. Finally, we demonstrate that under technology change costs reductions, higher demand scenarios will relax the need for stringent carbon budgets to achieve new renewable energy investments and hence meet the Chilean pledges. These results suggest that some aspects of the Chilean pledge require further analysis, of the economic impact, particularly with the recent announcement of achieving carbon neutrality towards 2050.