Climate Policy and Financial Markets
Abstract
Climate change represents a serious, as-yet-unresolved global commons problem. After decades of international climate negotiations, 195 nations adopted the Paris climate agreement in December 2015. The subsequent election of Donald Trump as US president in 2016 was seen as a setback for climate policy. However, evaluating the impacts of both events is difficult because their results in terms of mitigating or exacerbating climate change will not be observed until many decades from now.
This thesis examines the effects of these events on financial markets. The first two chapters analyze the reactions of stock and commodity markets in the energy sector to these two events. Chapter 3 studies the fairness in terms of burden sharing for two different ways of strengthening the Paris Agreement: either by carbon pricing or through proportional tightening of the nationally determined contributions, which outline national goals for greenhouse gas emissions reductions.
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborgs universitet. Handelshögskolan
Institution
Department of Economics ; Institutionen för nationalekonomi med statistik
Disputation
Tuesday January 28, 2020 at 10 AM, Lecture Hall B33, School of Business, Economics and Law, Vasagatan 1, Gothenburg
Date of defence
2020-01-28
samson.mukanjari@economics.gu.se
Date
2020-01-07Author
Mukanjari, Samson
Keywords
burden sharing
climate policy
commodity futures
distribution
environmental deregulation
Environmental Protection Agency
EPA
equity
event study
fairness
impulse-indicator saturation
international climate negotiations
Paris Agreement
Trump
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-88199-43-0 (printed)
978-91-88199-44-7 (pdf)
ISSN
1651-4297 (online)
1651-4289 (printed)
Series/Report no.
Economic Studies
242
Language
eng