An oracle based method to compute a coupled equilibrium in a model of international climate policy |
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Authors: | Laurent Drouet Alain Haurie Francesco Moresino Jean-Philippe Vial Marc Vielle Laurent Viguier |
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Affiliation: | (1) ORDECSYS and REME-EPFL, Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland;(2) ORDECSYS and University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland;(3) CEA-LERNA, University of Social Sciences, Toulouse, France;(4) REME-EPFL, Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland;(5) MIT Joint Program on the Science and Policy of Global Change, Cambridge, MA, USA |
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Abstract: | This paper proposes a computational game-theoretic model for the international negotiations that should take place at the end of the period covered by the Kyoto protocol. These negotiations could lead to a self-enforcing agreement on a burden sharing scheme given the necessary global emissions limit that will be imposed when the real extent of climate change is known. The model assumes a non-cooperative behavior of the parties except for the fact that they will be collectively committed to reach a target on total cumulative emissions by the year 2050. The concept of normalized equilibrium, introduced by J.B. Rosen for concave games with coupled constraints, is used to characterize a family of dynamic equilibrium solutions in an m-player game where the agents are (groups of) countries and the payoffs are the welfare gains obtained from a Computable General Equilibrium (CGE) model. The model deals with the uncertainty about climate sensitivity by computing an S-adapted equilibrium. These equilibria are computed using an oracle-based method permitting an implicit definition of the payoffs to the different players, obtained through simulations performed with the global CGE model GEMINI-E3. Partly supported by GICC (French Ministry of Ecology), TOCSIN (EU-044287) and the Swiss-NSF NCCR-Climate program of the Swiss NSF. For helpful comments and discussions, we thank A. Bernard, P. Thalmann, and the anonymous referee. |
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Keywords: | Climate change negotiations Dynamic game model Coupled constraints Stochastic modal jumps |
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