Which “second-best” climate policies are best? Simulating cost-effective policy mixes for passenger vehicles

Chandan Bhardwaj, Jonn Axsen, David McCollum

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

9 Scopus citations

Abstract

In the real-world of political opposition and complex market failures, carbon pricing alone will not achieve deep GHG mitigation targets. Hence, we search for the most cost-effective “second-best” policies. Focusing on the light-duty vehicle sector in the case of Canada, we compare several policies in terms of effectiveness (regarding 2030 GHG goals) and mitigation costs, namely: (i) a carbon tax; (ii) a vehicle emission standard (or VES); (iii) a zero emissions vehicle (ZEV) mandate, and (iv) combinations of all three at various stringencies. In this effort, we apply the AUtomaker-consumer Model (AUM), which endogenously simulates consumer and automaker decisions and technological change. Comparing individual policies, the regulations are about three times more expensive than the carbon tax. Among “second-best” policies, the VES is cheaper than a ZEV mandate at lower stringencies, but at higher stringencies the two are similarly efficient (both incentivize widespread ZEV deployment). In policy mixes, cost-effectiveness is improved by a carbon tax. Specifically, inclusion of a CDN$100–150/tonne tax can achieve targets while being 30–40% less costly than a regulation alone. We suggest that policymakers implement carbon pricing as stringently as politically feasible (for efficiency), complemented by regulations as needed (for efficacy) to meet GHG targets.

Original languageEnglish
Article number101319
JournalResource and Energy Economics
Volume70
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 2022
Externally publishedYes

Funding

Funding was provided by Simon Fraser University’s Community Trust Endowment Fund , the Pacific Institute for Climate Solutions (PICS), Navius Research , and Mitacs .

Keywords

  • Climate policy
  • Cost-effectiveness
  • Policy mixes
  • Technology adoption model
  • Transport decarbonization
  • ZEV mandate

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