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CO2 cost pass-through and windfall profits in the power sector

TLDR
In this article, the authors analyzed the implications of the EU ETS for the power sector, notably the impact of free allocation of CO2 emission allowances on the price of electricity and the profitability of power generation.
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This article is published in Climate Policy.The article was published on 2006-01-01 and is currently open access. It has received 642 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Windfall gain & Marginal product.

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Multinational Corporations and Emissions Trading: Strategic Responses to New Institutional Constraints

TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose a framework that discerns four scenarios in which MNCs can find themselves: institutional conformist, institutional evader, institutional entrepreneur and institutional arbitrageur.
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Compensation Rules for Climate Policy in the Electricity Sector

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine a relatively modest proposal that would create a pool of tradable emissions allowances with a net present value that sums to $141 billion (1999$), and find that if regions/states are apportioned emissions allowances, they can achieve a compensation target using simple rules based on public information for typically half of the allowance value that such rules would require if implemented at the federal level.
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Risk-Neutral Models for Emission Allowance Prices and Option Valuation

TL;DR: A rigorous analysis of a simple risk-neutral reduced-form model for allowance futures prices is given, its calibration to historical data is demonstrated, and how to price European call options written on these contracts is shown.
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Assessing the impact of the EU ETS using firm level data

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the impact of the European Union's Emission Trading System (EU ETS) at a firm level using panel data on the emissions and performance of more than 2000 European firms from 2005 to 2008.
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EU-ETS and Nordic Electricity: A CVAR Analysis

TL;DR: In this paper, a cointegrated vector autoregressive (CVAR) model is used to determine the dynamic relationship between Nordic wholesale electricity prices and EU emissions trading scheme (EU-ETS) CO 2 allowance prices.
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Journal ArticleDOI

Allocation, incentives and distortions: the impact of EU ETS emissions allowance allocations to the electricity sector

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide a framework to assess the economic incentives and distortions that provisions in NAPs can have on market prices, operation and investment decisions, and use both analytic models to illustrate the effects of the incentives, and results from numerical simulation runs that estimate the magnitude of impacts from different allocation rules.

CO2 price dynamics. The implications of EU emissions trading for the price of electricity

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyzed the relationship between EU emissions trading and power prices, notably the implications of free allocation of emissions allowances for the price of electricity in countries of North-western Europe.
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The Effect on Asset Values of the Allocation of Carbon Dioxide Emission Allowances

TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that owners of existing generation assets may be better off paying for carbon dioxide emission allowances than having them distributed for free, and that it takes just 7.5% of the revenue raised under an auction to preserve the asset values of existing generators.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Effect on Asset Values of the Allocation of Carbon Dioxide Emission Allowances

TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that owners of existing generation assets may be better off by paying for carbon dioxide emission allowances rather than having them distributed for free, and that it takes just 7.5 percent of the revenue raised under an auction to preserve the asset values of existing generators.
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Frequently Asked Questions (9)
Q1. What have the authors contributed in "Cp_61_47_sijm.pmd" ?

This article analyses the implications of the EU ETS for the power sector, notably the impact of free allocation of CO 2 emission allowances on the price of electricity and the profitability of power generation. As well as some theoretical reflections, the article presents empirical and model estimates of CO 2 cost pass-through for Germany and The Netherlands, indicating that pass-through rates vary between 60 and 100 % of CO 2 costs, depending on the carbon intensity of the marginal production unit and various other marketor technology-specific factors. 

A main purpose of the free allocation of emissions allowances under the US capand-trade programmes for SO2 and NO x , as well as under the EU ETS for CO 2 , is to obtain thepolitical support of large emitters. 

if the infra-marginal unit is more carbon-intensive than the marginal unit, it suffers from a loss, as the increase in power price is lower than the increase in its carbon costs per MWh; notably if allowances have to be bought on the market. 

The extent to which carbon costs are passed through to power prices also depends on changes in the merit order of the supply curve due to emissions trading. 

CO2costs of gas-generated power have also increased over this period, but less dramatically, i.e. from d4 to d11/MWh (partly due to the relatively low – but constant – emission factor of gas-generated electricity). 

As coal generators benefit from this gas cost-induced increase in power prices, this leads to an overestimation of the pass-through rate of CO2 costs for coal-generated power. 

Earthscanshows the costs of CO 2 allowances required to cover the emissions per MWh generated by a coalfired power plant (with an emission factor of 0.85 tCO 2 /MWh). 

in the latter case, some grandfathering to this inframarginal unit may be justified to break even, depending on the relative carbon intensity of this unit. 

While all generators profit from the higher prices, the effect of a smaller market dominates this effect and therefore slightly reduces their revenues.