Personal carbon trading

Carbon rationing, as a means of reducing CO2 emissions to contain climate change, could take any of several forms.[1] One of them, personal carbon trading, is the generic term for a number of proposed carbon emissions trading schemes under which emissions credits would be allocated to adult individuals on a (broadly) equal per capita basis, within national carbon budgets.[2] Individuals then surrender these credits when buying fuel or electricity. Individuals wanting or needing to emit at a level above that permitted by their initial allocation would be able to purchase additional credits in the personal carbon market from those using less, creating a profit for those individuals who emit at a level below that permitted by their initial allocation.[3]

Some forms of personal carbon trading (carbon rationing) could be an effective component of climate change mitigation, with the economic recovery of COVID-19 and new technical capacity having opened a favorable window of opportunity for initial test runs of such in appropriate regions, while many questions remain largely unaddressed.[4][5][6] However, carbon rationing could have a larger effect on poorer households as "people in the low-income groups may have an above-average energy use, because they live in inefficient homes".[7]

  1. ^ Cox, Stan (2013). "Any way you slice it: The past, present and future of rationing". New Press Books.
  2. ^ ""An introduction to personal carbon trading", Climate Policy journal, Volume 10, Number 4, Sept 2010, pp. 329-338". Archived from the original on 13 July 2011. Retrieved 23 January 2011.
  3. ^ How would TEQs work?, on www.teqs.net
  4. ^ "Analysis | We Need Cap-and-Trade For Individuals As Well As Companies". Washington Post. Retrieved 21 September 2021.
  5. ^ "Pandemic and digitalization set stage for revival of a cast-off idea: Personal carbon allowances". phys.org.
  6. ^ Fuso Nerini, Francesco; Fawcett, Tina; Parag, Yael; Ekins, Paul (16 August 2021). "Personal carbon allowances revisited". Nature Sustainability. 4 (12): 1025–1031. Bibcode:2021NatSu...4.1025F. doi:10.1038/s41893-021-00756-w. ISSN 2398-9629.
  7. ^ Swain, Frank. "Can rationing carbon help fight climate change?". BBC. Retrieved 2 December 2021.

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