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Virtual Special Issue on “Climate Change” – October 2021
The National Institute Economic Review is proud to present a Virtual Special Issue on “Climate Change” in occasion of the UN Climate Change Conference (COP26) - Glasgow, October 2021. The Covid-19 pandemic has sent shock waves through economies and societies. It has prompted governments all over the world to implement containment measures to prevent the virus from spreading uncontrollably and to reduce its strain on public health and socioeconomic systems. At the same time, the pandemic has highlighted several areas for rethinking growth more broadly, bringing to the front themes such as climate change, decarbonisation, biodiversity and conservation, renewable energy, and natural resources. Reading through these different contributions, one cannot help but notice how much priorities have changed: the oil shocks dominating the debate until the late 1980s. It is not until the early 1990s, when the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) is also signed in Rio de Janeiro, that the literature recognizes the importance of climate change. For this special issue we have looked at papers NIESR has published in the Review since 1960s and collected them into a virtual issue that will be free to read for the next three months.
In this issue, Ray and Blackaby analyse the longer-term impact of “over-production” in the coal industry. Morel makes the point that the incentive to use less fuel comes from increases in the ‘real’ prices faced by consumers; Atkinson et al. summarise the potential benefits to and costs of North Sea oil for the British economy. Kai and Silberston argue that economic evaluation and instruments have a major role to play in “correcting” for environmental problems; Dasgupta contends that immediate actions on climate must not be solely driven by intergenerational equity, but also by the climate facts witnessed at the time. Barrell et al. note that increases in oil prices have an impact on real wages and fossil fuels costs. Weale, as well as Kirby and Meaning discuss the effect of oil price shocks, the former noting how high consuming countries have not given proper attention to the oil's status as an exhaustible resource. Zenghelis discusses strategies for decarbonisation and the need to move towards clean production systems. Elkerbout examines how the role of carbon pricing in the EU’s climate policy mix has evolved since the Kyoto Protocol. Holland and Young consider some of the issues involved with cutting greenhouse emissions to limit global temperature increases. Li et al. explore the relationship between intellectual property protection and the adoption of renewable energy. Finally, the 2021 Dasgupta’s Review addresses the need for re-balancing our demands on Nature and its supply, and calls for a change in institutions and our measures of economic success.
The papers were selected by Jagjit S. Chadha (NIESR), Prasanna Gai (University of Auckland), Ana Galvao (University of Warwick), Sayantan Ghosal (University of Glasgow), Colin Jennings (King’s College), Miguel León-Ledesma (University of Kent), Paul Mortimer-Lee (NIESR), and Adrian Pabst (NIESR).
Dr Corrado Macchiarelli - Managing Editor, National Institute Economic Review