Economics of climate change : sensitivity analysis of social cost of carbon
Social cost of carbon (SCC) is the key concept in the economics of climate change. It
measures the economic cost of climate impacts. SCC has influence on how beneficial it is
to prevent climate change: if the value of SCC increases, investments to low-carbon technology
become more attractive and profitable.
This paper examines the sensitivity of two important assumptions that affect to SCC: the
choice of a discount rate and time horizon. Using the integrated assessment model, we
calculate SCC estimates with multiple discount rates and various time horizon lengths.
Our results show that discount rate and time horizon have great effect on SCC. For example,
the SCC estimates are drastically reduced under the use of a 10% discount rate versus
1% discount rate. Or, when dropping the end year of time horizon from 2300 to 2150, the
SCC values decrease by average 12.8% per year. We conclude that if choosing different
values of discount rate or time horizon, the outcome of the integrated assessment models
can vary greatly.
...
Keywords
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
- Kandidaatintutkielmat [5334]
Related items
Showing items with similar title or keywords.
-
A “self-inflicted major economic wound” or “the best chance we've had to save the one planet” : framing of the Paris climate accord by presidents Trump and Obama
Möttönen, Helmi (2018)Kieli on keskeinen osa ihmisten mielipiteiden ja maailmankuvien, sekä sosiaalisen ja materiaalisen todellisuuden rakentumisessa. Asioiden esitystavoilla ja rajauksilla sekä käytetyillä diskursseilla voidaan esittää haluttu ... -
Value-added bioproducts or renewable energy derived from lignin? : comparative regional economic and environmental impact assessment : case Metsä Group's bioproduct mill in Äänekoski
Rannisto, Anna (2016)Metsä Group’s next-generation bioproduct mill in Äänekoski will be operational within Q3/2017 and it will have significant regional economic impact on Central Finland. The mill will operate applying principles of circular ... -
Ecosocial Innovations and Their Capacity to Integrate Ecological, Economic and Social Sustainability Transition
Matthies, Aila-Leena; Stamm, Ingo; Hirvilammi, Tuuli; Närhi, Kati (MDPI AG, 2019)The article contributes to sustainability transition research by indicating the significance of transformative grassroots innovations in the context of social work research. We introduce the integrative concept of ecosocial ... -
A comparison of dyadic and social network assessments of peer influence
DeLay, Dawn; Laursen, Brett; Kiuru, Noona; Rogers, Adam; Kindermann,Thomas; Nurmi, Jari-Erik (SAGE Publications, 2021)The present study compares two methods for assessing peer influence: the longitudinal actor–partner interdependence model (L-APIM) and the longitudinal social network analysis (L-SNA) Model. The data were drawn from 1,995 ... -
Economic Aspects of Hybrid Cloud Infrastructure: User Organization Perspective
Mazhelis, Oleksiy; Tyrväinen, Pasi (Springer New York LLC, 2012)Adoption of cloud infrastructure promises enterprises numerous bene- ts, such as faster time-to-market and improved scalability enabled by on-demand provisioning of pooled and shared computing resources. In particular, ...