Cover des Berichts "Climate Protection Scenarios until 2050 Considering CO2 Price Differences and Carbon Leakage"
Climate | Energy, Economy | Consumption

Climate Protection Scenarios until 2050 Considering CO₂ Price Differences and Carbon Leakage - Central report


Two types of large-scale models with different modelling philosophies are used to quantify socioeconomic effects in scenarios in which the EU moves forward in climate policy and applies different design options under the EU emissions trading system (ETS) combined with a Carbon Border Adjustment (CBAM).

One model, GEM-E3, is a computable general equilibrium model that follows neoclassical theory, while the other model, GINFORS-E, is a macroeconometric model that follows a post-Keynesian approach. The results of both models suggest that an effective CBAM plays a significant role in reducing the risk of carbon leakage. The key results on trade, production and emission effects also show, by and large, little quantitative variation between the two models, in spite of their different philosophies.   

This Central Report covers the results of the key policy scenarios on the EU-ETS design regarding allocation and the CBAM. It also includes some key sensitivity analyses on trade assumptions, climate policy ambition in major trading partner countries, extension of the CBAM to indirect emissions thereby replacing national schemes for compensating electricity prices from ETS, and (for GEM-E3) on the use of government revenues.

Series
Climate Change | 74/2025
Number of pages
143
Year of publication
Author(s)
Christian Lutz, Maximilian Banning, Leonidas Paroussos, Dimitris Fragkiadakis, Zoi Vrontisi
Project No. (FKZ)
3718 42 001 0
Publisher
German Environment Agency
Additional information
PDF is accessible
File size
4413 KB
Price
0,00 €
Print version
not available
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Tags:
 EU emission trading  CBAM  Carbon Leakage