By Bhasker Tripathi

NEW DELHI, May 7 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) – Using a carbon market-like tool to control air pollution can help developing countries such as India where the standard approach of limiting the emissions with policy making is falling short, a new study has found.

Air pollution is one of the most pressing health issues in India, where the country’s 1.4 billion people breathe air exceeding the World Health Organization’s guidelines for particulate matter (PM).

Those are particles finer than human hair that can cause severe health issues such as respiratory infections and lung cancer.

This pollution costs the average Indian resident 3.5 years of life expectancy.

Industry is one of the major sources of air pollution in the country, and policymakers have struggled to deal with it by taking the standard approach of creating and enforcing laws around emission limits.

In fact, national PM 2.5 — particulate matter 30 times finer than human hair — concentrations in India increased by 11.6% over the last two decades.

To find an alternative, economists from the University of Chicago and Yale University in the United States and the University of Warwick in England collaborated with the Gujarat Pollution Control Board in West India to pilot a one-of-its-kind emission trading scheme (ETS) to control air pollution.

The pilot has run since 2019, and results published in the May issue of The Quarterly Journal of Economics show that the ETS reduced emissions by 20% to 30% in coal-burning plants that participated with nearly 100% legal compliance compared with those using a standard policy approach.

The ETS pilot delivered “a rare win-win-win” by reducing pollution, decreasing abatement costs and raising government’s success at enforcing the air pollution control law, said Michael Greenstone, Milton Friedman Distinguished Service Professor in Economics at the University of Chicago, one of the architects of the pilot.

“And it did all this in a setting where there was great scepticism that pollution markets could work,” he said.

Continue reading at Reuters…

Areas of Focus: Energy Markets
Definition
Energy Markets
Well-functioning markets are essential for providing access to reliable, affordable energy. EPIC research is uncovering the policies, prices and information needed to help energy markets work efficiently.
Fossil Fuels
Definition
Fossil Fuels
Under current policies, fossil fuels will play an important role in the energy system for the foreseeable future. EPIC research is exploring the costs and benefits of these fuels as...
Climate Change
Definition
Climate Change
Climate change is an urgent global challenge. EPIC research is helping to assess its impacts, quantify its costs, and identify an efficient set of policies to reduce emissions and adapt...
Climate Economics
Definition
Climate Economics
Climate change will affect every sector of the economy, both locally and globally. EPIC research is quantifying these effects to help guide policymakers, businesses, and individuals working to mitigate and...
Environment
Definition
Environment
Producing and using energy damages people’s health and the environment. EPIC research is quantifying the social costs of energy choices and uncovering policies that help protect health while facilitating growth.
Air Pollution
Definition
Air Pollution
Air pollution from fossil fuel combustion poses a grave threat to human health worldwide. EPIC research is using real-world data to calculate the effects of air pollution on human health...