Environmental Regulation and the Eco-Industry
Author(s) -
Bernard SinclairDésgagné,
Maïa David
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
ssrn electronic journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1556-5068
DOI - 10.2139/ssrn.705182
Subject(s) - pollution , environmental regulation , marginal abatement cost , price elasticity of demand , marginal cost , economics , market power , natural resource economics , business , electric power industry , externality , industrial organization , social cost , elasticity of substitution , environmental economics , public economics , microeconomics , production (economics) , engineering , greenhouse gas , electricity , ecology , monopoly , electrical engineering , biology
This paper re-examines environmental regulation, under the assumption that pollution abatement technologies and services are provided by an imperfectly competitive environment industry. It is shown that each regulatory instrument (emission taxes and quotas; design standards; and voluntary agreements) has a specific impact on the price-elasticity of the polluters' demand for abatement services, hence on the market power of the eco-industry and the resulting cost of abatement. This implies that the optimal pollution tax will be higher than the marginal social cost of pollution, while a voluntary approach to pollution abatement may fail unless the eco-industry itself is willing to participate.
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