TY - BOOK ID - 2817487 TI - International Emission Trading - From Concept to Reality : 2001 AU - International Energy Agency. AU - International Energy Agency AU - Organisation for Economic Co operation and Development AU - Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development PY - 2001 SN - 1280035692 9786610035694 9264194916 9264195165 PB - Paris : OECD Publishing, DB - UniCat KW - Air quality management -- Government policy. KW - Emissions trading. KW - Emissions trading KW - Air quality management KW - Business & Economics KW - Economic History KW - Government policy KW - Air KW - Air pollution control KW - Air quality KW - Control of air pollution KW - Emissions credit trading KW - Emissions rights trading KW - Marketable permits for carbon dioxide emissions KW - Tradeable emission permits KW - Trading emissions credits KW - Pollution KW - Control KW - Management KW - Environmental protection KW - Environmental policy KW - Carbon offsetting KW - Carbon taxes KW - Government policy. KW - Greenhouse gas mitigation KW - Echange de droits d'émission (Environnement) KW - Gaz à effet de serre KW - International cooperation KW - Economic aspects. KW - Coopération internationale KW - Réduction KW - Aspect économique UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:2817487 AB - International emission trading will be one of the most important tools in the effort to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in the atmosphere. The reason is clear: emission trading can bring impressive cost savings. While the private sector has embraced the concept and is well equipped to use it, implementation at the international level remains incomplete. This book offers a comprehensive review of international emission trading, from the “perfect” system envisaged in economic models to a more realistic view of how trading can actually work. It is based on market experiments and modelling undertaken by the International Energy Agency and other institutions. It takes an in-depth look at implications for the power-generation sector, and considers how developing countries could be included in a future trading regime. With this work, we move from the question of “whether” to trade to the more operational question: “how”. ER -