Environmental policy instruments, such as marketable permits, exist to help monitor and regulate environmental practices of organizations, i.e. companies and institutions (see [60], [77] and discussion in Chapter 2). Market-based instruments are already employed for the implementation of environmental policies on European scale (European Emission Trading Scheme - EU ETS) and on global scale (Kyoto protocol). In an effort to bridge the gap between the theoretical emission permit price and observed market-price behavior, we investigate the historical time series of the marketable permit price. More precisely, in Chapter 3 we advocate the use of a new GARCH-type structure for the analysis of inherent heteroskedastic dynamics in the returns of SO2 in the U.S. and of CO2 emission permits in the EU ETS. In Chapter 4 we show that the presence of asymmetric (or incomplete) information plays a central role. In other words, market-prices of permits are affected by the different information sets based on which market-players found their financial and investment strategies. A CO2-option pricing model comparison is developed in Chapter 4.7. The option pricing method can be used for hedging purposes and for pricing CO2-linked projects and investments.
Quantitative environmental economics : modeling marketable permits in discrete and continuous time
TASCHINI, Luca
2009
Abstract
Environmental policy instruments, such as marketable permits, exist to help monitor and regulate environmental practices of organizations, i.e. companies and institutions (see [60], [77] and discussion in Chapter 2). Market-based instruments are already employed for the implementation of environmental policies on European scale (European Emission Trading Scheme - EU ETS) and on global scale (Kyoto protocol). In an effort to bridge the gap between the theoretical emission permit price and observed market-price behavior, we investigate the historical time series of the marketable permit price. More precisely, in Chapter 3 we advocate the use of a new GARCH-type structure for the analysis of inherent heteroskedastic dynamics in the returns of SO2 in the U.S. and of CO2 emission permits in the EU ETS. In Chapter 4 we show that the presence of asymmetric (or incomplete) information plays a central role. In other words, market-prices of permits are affected by the different information sets based on which market-players found their financial and investment strategies. A CO2-option pricing model comparison is developed in Chapter 4.7. The option pricing method can be used for hedging purposes and for pricing CO2-linked projects and investments.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
---|---|---|---|
ThesisBG.pdf
accesso aperto
Dimensione
4.33 MB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
4.33 MB | Adobe PDF | Visualizza/Apri |
I documenti in UNITESI sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14242/166257
URN:NBN:IT:UNIBG-166257