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Christoph Böhringer
Researcher at University of Oldenburg
Publications - 281
Citations - 10209
Christoph Böhringer is an academic researcher from University of Oldenburg. The author has contributed to research in topics: Computable general equilibrium & Emissions trading. The author has an hindex of 51, co-authored 273 publications receiving 9234 citations. Previous affiliations of Christoph Böhringer include University of Stuttgart & Heidelberg University.
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Efficiency Gains from 'What' - Flexibility in Climate Policy - an Integrated Cge Assessment
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate the importance of what-flexibility on top of where-and-whenflexibility for alternative emission control schemes that prescribe long-term temperature targets and eventually impose additional constraints on the rate of temperature change.
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Burden sharing in a greenhouse: egalitarianism and sovereignty reconciled
Christoph Böhringer,Heinz Welsch +1 more
TL;DR: This article showed that gradual convergence from sovereignty towards egalitarianism could provide a pragmatic solution to the equity debate, when combined with international emissions trading, the convergence approach stands out for offering the developing countries substantial incentives for participation in the international greenhouse gas abatement effort without imposing excessive burdens on the industrialized countries.
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Transition towards a low carbon economy: A computable general equilibrium analysis for Poland
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that the economic adjustment cost for Poland hinge crucially on restrictions to where-flexibility of emission abatement, revenue recycling, and technological options in the power system.
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Economic Impacts of Renewable Energy Production in Germany
TL;DR: In this article, the authors combine computable general equilibrium and microsimulation analyses to investigate the economic impacts of Germany's renewable energy promotion, and find that the regressive effects of renewable energies promotion could be attenuated by alternative subsidy financing mechanisms.
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Sectoral and regional expansion of emissions trading
TL;DR: In this article, the authors consider an international emissions trading scheme with partial sectoral and regional coverage and show that expanding sectoral coverage makes most countries better off, but some countries may lose out due to loss of strategic advantages.