从监管中获利:欧盟碳市场的事件研究

J. Bushnell, Howard Chong, E. Mansur
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引用次数: 15

摘要

最近,许多国家在气候变化政策方面实施了可交易许可证条例。首批强制性市场之一是欧盟排放交易体系(EU Emission Trading System),其第一阶段从2005年至2007年。与税收不同,许可证使企业面临监管成本的波动,但通常伴随着祖父许可形式的产权。在本文中,我们考察了这种类型的环境监管对利润的影响。特别是,许可价格的变化影响:(1)直接和间接投入成本,(2)产出收入,(3)碳许可资产价值。根据减排成本、产出价格敏感性和许可证分配的不同,这些影响可能在不同行业和公司之间有很大差异。我们对2006年4月25日的碳价暴跌进行了事件研究,考察了来自碳密集型行业的90只股票和欧洲斯托克指数中大约600只股票的日回报。一般来说,从事碳密集或电力密集但不涉及国际贸易的行业的公司受到许可证价格下降的伤害。在那些已知净缺乏许可的行业中,最清洁的公司的股价跌幅最大。众所周知,在许可证发放时间较长的行业,获得最多配额的公司受到的损害最大。
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Profiting from Regulation: An Event Study of the EU Carbon Market
Tradable permit regulations have recently been implemented for climate change policy in many countries. One of the first mandatory markets was the EU Emission Trading System, whose first phase ran from 2005-07. Unlike taxes, permits expose firms to volatility in regulatory costs, but are typically accompanied by property rights in the form of grandfathered permits. In this paper, we examine the effect of this type of environmental regulation on profits. In particular, changes in permit prices affect: (1) the direct and indirect input costs, (2) output revenue, and (3) the carbon permit asset value. Depending on abatement costs, output price sensitivity, and permit allocation, these effects may vary considerably across industries and firms. We run an event study of the carbon price crash on April 25, 2006 by examining the daily stock returns for 90 stocks from carbon intensive industries and approximately 600 stocks in the broad EUROSTOXX index. In general, firms in industries that tended to be either carbon intensive, or electricity intensive, but not involved in international trade, were hurt by the decline in permit prices. In industries that were known to be net short of permits, the cleanest firms saw the largest declines in share value. In industries known to be long in permits, firms granted the largest allocations were most harmed.
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