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Climate Policy Uncertainty and Investment Risk
William Blyth
Ming Yang
Richard Bradley
International Energy Agency
出版
International Energy Agency
, 2007
主題
Business & Economics / Investments & Securities / General
Business & Economics / Industries / Energy
Political Science / Public Policy / Energy Policy
Science / Environmental Science
Science / Earth Sciences / Meteorology & Climatology
Science / Global Warming & Climate Change
Technology & Engineering / Power Resources / General
ISBN
926403014X
9789264030145
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=WEdRAAAAMAAJ&hl=&source=gbs_api
註釋
Our climate is changing. This is certain. Less certain, however, is the timing and magnitude of climate change, and the cost of transition to a low-carbon world. Therefore, many policies and programmes are still at a formative stage, and policy uncertainty is very high. This book identifies how climate change policy uncertainty may affect investment behaviour in the power sector. For power companies, where capital stock is intensive and long-lived, those risks rank among the biggest and can create an incentive to delay investment. Our analysis results show that the risk premiums of climate change uncertainty can add 40% of construction costs of the plant for power investors, and 10% of price surcharges for the electricity end-users. Climate Policy Uncertainty and Investment Risk tells what can be done in policy design to reduce these costs. Incorporating the results of quantitative analysis, this publication also shows the sensitivity of different power sector investment decisions to different risks. It compares the effects of climate policy uncertainty with energy market uncertainty, showing the relative importance of these sources of risk for different technologies in different market types. Drawing on extensive consultation with power companies and financial investors, it also assesses the implications for policy makers, allowing the key messages to be transferred into policy designs. This book is a useful tool for governments to improve climate policy mechanisms and create more certainty for power investors.