Trading Pollution: How Pollution Permits Paradoxically Reduce Emissions

Trading Pollution: How Pollution Permits Paradoxically Reduce Emissions

Understanding Acid Rain and Tradable Permits

The Formation of Acid Rain

  • When gases like sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxide are released into the atmosphere, they react with water and other chemicals to form sulfuric and nitric acid, leading to acid rain.
  • Acid rain has detrimental effects on the environment, including killing trees, plants, and fish, as well as eroding buildings and automobile paint.

Command and Control vs. Tradable Permits

  • The government can reduce pollution through a command-and-control method by mandating factories to install specific technologies like scrubbers.
  • However, this approach does not account for variations in costs among different plants; some may have cheaper methods for reducing pollution than others.

Harnessing Market Forces

  • To effectively reduce pollution while considering cost differences, the government can issue tradable pollution permits that allow firms to buy or sell their rights to emit pollutants.
  • Each permit allows the emission of one ton of pollutants; although it seems counterintuitive, limiting permits ensures total pollution reduction remains consistent with command-and-control methods.

Economic Incentives in Pollution Reduction

  • Power plant owners with lower costs for reducing emissions can profit by selling unused permits instead of using them themselves.
  • Conversely, those facing higher costs will seek to purchase permits since it's more economical than investing in costly pollution reduction technologies.

Achieving Cost-effective Pollution Reduction

  • This market-driven approach leads to an efficient allocation where pollution is reduced more significantly at lower-cost facilities while maintaining overall reduction targets.
Video description

In an effort to reduce pollution, the government tried two policy prescriptions under the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990. The first—command and control—mandated that each power plant lower its pollution by a determined amount. However, different firms face different cost curves and, because information is dispersed, policymakers don’t always know those costs. The second policy prescription—tradable pollution permits—empowered firms to use knowledge of their cost curves to buy or sell pollution permits as needed. Under this policy, the invisible hand of the market helped discover the lowest cost way of reducing pollution.  Microeconomics Course: http://bit.ly/20VablY Next video: http://bit.ly/1R24Bch Help us caption & translate this video! http://amara.org/v/GSnT/