1 Introduction
1.1 The Scene of Climate and Energy Policy, Carbon Pricing and Emissions Trading
1.2 EU-ETS History in a nutshell
1.3 Some Economic Concepts behind Carbon Pricing
1.4 Equal impact of emitted CO2-eq. molecules is no argument for uniform pricing
1.5 Recommendation
2 Diversity disqualifies global uniform carbon pricing for effective climate policy
2.1 Introduction
2.2 The concept of diversity and its implications for policy
2.3 Amalgamation versus specificity
2.4 Global uniform carbon pricing: discourse and performance
2.5 In conclusion
3 Anatomy of Emissions Trading Systems: What is the EU ETS?
3.1 Introduction
3.2 Goals of EU policy (component [i])
3.3 Allocation of tradable emissions permits (component [iv])
3.4 Carbon emissions prices (component [iii])
3.5 Costs of abatement (component [ii])
3.6 Linking the four components of ETS
3.7 Wrap-up
4 What could the EU ETS founders learn from US SO2 emissions permit trade?
4.1 Introduction
4.2 Differences between US SO2 and EU CO2 emissions permit markets
4.3 Salient characteristics of the US acid rain programs
4.4 Choices made by the architects of the EU ETS
4.5 Concluding reflections
5 Early European experience with Tradable Green Certificates neglected by EU ETS architects
5.1 Introduction
5.2 Directive 2001/77/EC on the promotion of electricity produced from RE sources
5.3 Flanders market construct for Tradable Green Certificates
5.4 Flanders TGC experiment holds important lessons
5.5 The EC’s formal evaluation of RE support instruments (EC 2005)
5.6 Conclusions
6 Critique on Price Induced Technological Innovation and on Fringe Pricing
6.1 Introduction
6.2 Corporate strategy maximizes financial returns
6.3 Pricing carbon emissions and industrial firm’s likely reactions
6.4 The gap between ‘marginal cost pricing’ and ‘fringe pricing’
6.5 The impact of higher EU ETS permit prices
6.6 Concluding considerations
7 A political economy of the EU ETS
7.1 Introduction
7.2 Climate Policy in the 3rd Millennium
7.3 Actors on the EU ETS scene
7.4 The EU ETS Policy Arena
7.5 Permits trading in artificial markets
7.6 Economics critique on the EU ETS
7.7 Bewildering EU ETS discourse
8 From evaluation to a well thought-out ‘Act Now’
8.1 Issues on Carbon Pricing (CP)
8.2 Climate Policy and ‘Act Now’ transformations
Annex A Environmental policy-making and carbon pricing
Annex B Cost-Benefit Analysis in the context of Climate Change
Annex C Cost-effectiveness and diversity of emitting sources
Annex D The German Feed-in-Tariff (FIT): successful financial incentive
Annex E Ageing Electricity Economics: Marginal Cost pricing - Fringe pricing
Biography
Aviel Verbruggen is Emeritus Professor at University of Antwerp, Belgium. His experiences and knowledge focus primarily on the subjects of politics, engineering and economics.
"[A]n important and timely book...The strength of the book is in the criticism of arguments uncritically favoring the so-called market for buying and selling of permits to emit carbon dioxide as the solution to avoid climate change...Highly recommended."
Poul Thøis Madsen, International Journal of Sustainable Energy Planning and Management






