Pricing Industrial Discharge Quota (IDQ): A Model Reflecting Opportunity Cost of Performing Ecological Responsibility

The upper reaches of a river system are often trapped in the dilemma of choosing between industrial development and headwater protection. One of the solutions is eco-compensation, which, however, is a public-fiscal arrangement lacking inspiration and sustainability. Instead, industrial discharge quo...

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Main Authors: Tengda Lu, Xieer Dai, Jun Chen, Ming Dai
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-06-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/10/6/2032
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spelling doaj-a9ed583a6cfd4a29936a67622bdecca82020-11-24T23:37:09ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502018-06-01106203210.3390/su10062032su10062032Pricing Industrial Discharge Quota (IDQ): A Model Reflecting Opportunity Cost of Performing Ecological ResponsibilityTengda Lu0Xieer Dai1Jun Chen2Ming Dai3College of Economics, Jinan University, Guangzhou 510632, ChinaDepartment of Economics, Hebrew University, Jerusalem 97665, IsraelCollege of Economics, Jinan University, Guangzhou 510632, ChinaCollege of Economics, Jinan University, Guangzhou 510632, ChinaThe upper reaches of a river system are often trapped in the dilemma of choosing between industrial development and headwater protection. One of the solutions is eco-compensation, which, however, is a public-fiscal arrangement lacking inspiration and sustainability. Instead, industrial discharge quota (IDQ) was put forward as a marketized approach: the maximum industrial discharge a river can afford is allocated as quotas and quotas are allowed to be traded. However, what pricing principle in the primary market can IDQ price refer to? How can enough incentives be given to local governments when they are reluctant to implement emission reduction policy? Given that some previous studies have proven the influence of fiscal income and reputation on governments’ incentives, this paper introduces these into our model as main factors. Through analysis, two models—government model and enterprise model—are formulated based on opportunity cost theory to deal with this problem. The first sets basic prices and the latter notifies enterprises’ behaviors. Then, this paper applies our first model to a sample region, Fogang County in Pearl River Basin. The results demonstrate that the upstream can obtain adequate compensation for their opportunity loss and local governments can be with strong motivation by our method.http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/10/6/2032ecological responsibilitymarketized solutionindustrial discharge quota (IDQ)opportunity costwatershed area (river basin)governments’ motivation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tengda Lu
Xieer Dai
Jun Chen
Ming Dai
spellingShingle Tengda Lu
Xieer Dai
Jun Chen
Ming Dai
Pricing Industrial Discharge Quota (IDQ): A Model Reflecting Opportunity Cost of Performing Ecological Responsibility
Sustainability
ecological responsibility
marketized solution
industrial discharge quota (IDQ)
opportunity cost
watershed area (river basin)
governments’ motivation
author_facet Tengda Lu
Xieer Dai
Jun Chen
Ming Dai
author_sort Tengda Lu
title Pricing Industrial Discharge Quota (IDQ): A Model Reflecting Opportunity Cost of Performing Ecological Responsibility
title_short Pricing Industrial Discharge Quota (IDQ): A Model Reflecting Opportunity Cost of Performing Ecological Responsibility
title_full Pricing Industrial Discharge Quota (IDQ): A Model Reflecting Opportunity Cost of Performing Ecological Responsibility
title_fullStr Pricing Industrial Discharge Quota (IDQ): A Model Reflecting Opportunity Cost of Performing Ecological Responsibility
title_full_unstemmed Pricing Industrial Discharge Quota (IDQ): A Model Reflecting Opportunity Cost of Performing Ecological Responsibility
title_sort pricing industrial discharge quota (idq): a model reflecting opportunity cost of performing ecological responsibility
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2018-06-01
description The upper reaches of a river system are often trapped in the dilemma of choosing between industrial development and headwater protection. One of the solutions is eco-compensation, which, however, is a public-fiscal arrangement lacking inspiration and sustainability. Instead, industrial discharge quota (IDQ) was put forward as a marketized approach: the maximum industrial discharge a river can afford is allocated as quotas and quotas are allowed to be traded. However, what pricing principle in the primary market can IDQ price refer to? How can enough incentives be given to local governments when they are reluctant to implement emission reduction policy? Given that some previous studies have proven the influence of fiscal income and reputation on governments’ incentives, this paper introduces these into our model as main factors. Through analysis, two models—government model and enterprise model—are formulated based on opportunity cost theory to deal with this problem. The first sets basic prices and the latter notifies enterprises’ behaviors. Then, this paper applies our first model to a sample region, Fogang County in Pearl River Basin. The results demonstrate that the upstream can obtain adequate compensation for their opportunity loss and local governments can be with strong motivation by our method.
topic ecological responsibility
marketized solution
industrial discharge quota (IDQ)
opportunity cost
watershed area (river basin)
governments’ motivation
url http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/10/6/2032
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AT xieerdai pricingindustrialdischargequotaidqamodelreflectingopportunitycostofperformingecologicalresponsibility
AT junchen pricingindustrialdischargequotaidqamodelreflectingopportunitycostofperformingecologicalresponsibility
AT mingdai pricingindustrialdischargequotaidqamodelreflectingopportunitycostofperformingecologicalresponsibility
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