1st Edition

Corporate Responses to EU Emissions Trading Resistance, Innovation or Responsibility?

    322 Pages
    by Routledge

    322 Pages
    by Routledge

    The European Union (EU) aims to put Europe on track toward a low-carbon economy. In this striking challenge, the EU Emissions Trading System (EU ETS) has been singled out as the Union’s key climate policy instrument, ultimately aimed as a model for a global carbon market. The learning effect of the EU ETS could thus be tremendous. This study explores how the EU ETS actually works on the ground, affecting corporate climate strategies. It covers general sector responses as well as systematic comparative studies of companies across the sectors. The latter enables improved understanding of causal effects and the role of interaction between different policy instruments and other factors that impact corporate climate strategies. The study explores a broad set of mechanisms at play potentially linking the EU ETS to company climate strategies. These include how corporate norms of responsibility are affected by the EU ETS and how economic incentives provide opportunities for innovation. The book’s main contribution lies in its systematic examination of corporate responses to the EU ETS from a broad empirical and analytical social science perspective covering companies in all main EU ETS sectors: electric power, oil, cement, steel and pulp and paper.

    1: Introduction; 2: Analytical Framework; 3: Electric Power Industry; 4: Oil Industry; 5: Pulp and Paper Industry; 6: Cement Industry; 7: Steel Industry 1; 8: Comparative Analysis; 9: Concluding Remarks and the Road Ahead

    Biography

    Jon Birger Skjærseth is a Research Professor at the Fridtjof Nansen Institute and Per Ove Eikeland is Senior Research Fellow at the Fridtjof Nansen Institute, Norway.

    ’With greenhouse gas emissions trading schemes emerging worldwide, this thorough and original analysis of the pioneering scheme of the European Union is certainly timely. By showing how the EU ETS affects the behaviour of the companies it targets, this volume provides useful lessons for climate policy design while adding valuable empirical insights to studies of corporate governance.’ Harro van Asselt, Stockholm Environment Institute, Sweden ’Getting serious about climate change requires engaging business. This new volume offers the best and most systematic look at how companies have responded to Europe's emission trading scheme - the world's largest and most promising effort to control the emissions that cause global warming. The authors examine all the most important industrial sectors with skill and insight.’ David G. Victor, Laboratory on International Law and Regulation, University of California at San Diego, USA