Gren, Ing-Marie
- Institutionen för ekonomi, Sveriges lantbruksuniversitet
Forskningsartikel2017Vetenskapligt granskad
Gren, Ing-Marie; Elofsson, Katarina
Heavy loads of the nutrients nitrogen and phosphorus cause severe damage in many waters in the world. Nutrient trading markets where capped firms can buy and sell nutrient load credits have been established in several countries in order to achieve certain nutrient reduction targets at minimum costs for society. The availability of multifunctional nutrient abatement measures that simultaneously reduce loads of both nutrients, such as wetland construction, raises the issue of credit stacking, i.e. whether a firm constructing the wetland should earn credits for both nutrients. This article examines theoretically and empirically the implications of establishing alternative nutrient trading market designs (markets with and without credit stacking, a market for a bundled payment of nutrients, and separate markets for either nutrient) for total costs and achievement of stipulated nutrient reduction targets for the Baltic Sea. The results show that the total abatement cost of achieving reduction targets of both nutrients is always lowest if a market design with credit stacking is established, that markets without credit stacking result in higher abatement cost and nutrient abatement in excess of the reduction targets, and that none of the single nutrient market systems is able to generate the required abatement of both nutrients. The application to the Baltic Sea shows that the total abatement cost can be 20% higher when credit stacking is not allowed than when it is allowed.
Nutrient trading; Credit stacking; Market designs; Costs; Eutrophication; Baltic Sea
Marine Policy
2017, Volym: 79, sidor: 1-7 Utgivare: ELSEVIER SCI LTD
SDG14 Hav och marina resurser
Ekonomisk geografi
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marpol.2017.01.026
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/82708