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Published March 1981 | public
Journal Article

Markets and environmental management with a storable pollutant

Abstract

Lee [J. Environ. Econ. Manag., in press] investigates possibilities where pollutants may be stored for a period of time and later released into the environment when adverse effects are minimal. The treatment and storage of pollutants before their release into the environment is a crucial part of many abatement programs. Surprisingly, emission charges will not induce optimal abatement when storage is possible. This occurs because the firms' response to the dynamic tax is indeterminant. We suggest alternative controls, whereby rights to emit pollutants are sold competitively and demonstrate that markets provide incentives for the optimal generation-storage-emission of pollution by firms. In deriving this result an important difference between markets and taxes is revealed. With markets there is still indeterminacy at the firm level, but the aggregate response of all firms is dictated by market forces that insure pollution is reduced by some desired amount.

Additional Information

© 1981 Academic Press, Inc. Received October 31, 1977; revised July 7, 1978. The author wishes to thank Stuart Burness and Toby Page for helpful comments. Research support from the Environmental Quality Lab at the California Institute of Technology is gratefully acknowledged. Formerly SSWP 189.

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 17, 2023