Climate Mitigation Policy in Türkiye
Ian Parry,
Danielle Minnett and
Karlygash Zhunussova
No 2023/108, IMF Working Papers from International Monetary Fund
Abstract:
This paper discusses potential elements of a comprehensive strategy for making headway on Türkiye’s net zero emissions pedge for 2053. These elements include: (i) aligning 2030 emissions commitments with long term neutrality; (ii) implementing a carbon price rising to an ilustrative $75 per tonne by 2030; (iii) enhancing acceptability through using carbon pricing revenues efficiently and equitably and including competitveness measures; (iv) introducing various feebate schemes (the fiscal analogue of regulations) to reinforce mitigation incentives in the power, industry, transport, building, forestry, and agricultural sectors. According to modelling results a phased revenue-neutral $75 carbon price reduces CO2 emisisons 21 percent below baseline levels in 2030, raises revenues of 1.7 percent of GDP, avoids 11,000 air pollution deaths over the decade, while imposing an average burden on households of 3 percent of their consumption (before revenue-recycling). With revenues used for targeted transfers and labor tax reductions the overall policy is pro-poor and pro-equity (average household is better off by 0.4 percent).
Keywords: Climate change; Türkiye climate mitigation; carbon pricing; carbon tax; emissions trading system; feebate; power; industry; buildings; transportation; agriculture; forestry.; mitigation policy; allowance price volatility; emission rate; emissions intensity; Greenhouse gas emissions; Non-renewable resources; Renewable energy; Global (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 48
Date: 2023-05-12
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-ene and nep-env
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