未来能源研究所-跨大西洋线索:美国和欧盟如何影响彼此的气候政策(英)
Transatlantic Cues: How the United States and European Union Influence Each Other’s Climate PoliciesATransatlantic Cues: How the United States and European Union Influence Each Other’s Climate PoliciesMilan Elkerbout, Dallas Burtraw, Åsa Löfgren, and Lars ZetterbergReport 24-19 September 2024Resources for the FutureiAbout the AuthorsMilan Elkerbout is a fellow at Resources for the Future (RFF) and the director of RFF’s International Climate Policy Initiative. He is particularly interested in the intersection of climate and trade policy, green industrial policy, and carbon pricing and markets around the world. Prior to joining RFF in 2023, he was a research fellow and head of climate policy at the Centre for European Policy Studies (CEPS), a Brussels think tank, working on EU climate policy, emissions trading, and industrial decarbonization. In 2019–2020, he spent a year as a Mistra Fellow at IVL Swedish Environmental Research Institute in Stockholm. His academic background is in European political economy.Dallas Burtraw is is the Darius Gaskins Senior Fellow at RFF. He has worked to promote efficient control of air pollution and written extensively on electricity industry regulation and environmental outcomes. Burtraw’s current research includes analysis of the distributional and regional consequences of climate policy, the evolution of electricity markets including renewable integration, and the interaction of climate policy with electricity markets. He has provided technical support in the design of carbon dioxide emissions trading programs in the Northeast states, California, and the European Union. He also has studied regulation of nitrogen oxides and sulfur dioxide under the Clean Air Act and conducted integrated assessment of costs, and modeled health and ecosystem effects and valuation, including ecosystem improvement in the Adirondack Park and the southern Appalachian region. Burtraw currently serves as Chair of California’s Independent Emissions Market Advisory Committee. Burtraw holds a PhD in economics and a master’s degree in public policy from the University of Michigan and a bachelor’s degree from the University of California, Davis.Åsa Löfgren is an RFF University Fellow and an Associate Professor at the Department of Economics, University of Gothenburg. Löfgren is an expert in the area of climate economics; in particular she has focused on climate change and behavioral economics. She is particularly interested in the effect and design of policy instruments, fairness, and industrial investment behavior, such as firms’ carbon-reduction investment behavior in response to climate strategies. Löfgren has published numerous articles in international peer-reviewed journals, as well as book chapters, policy papers and reports.Lars Zetterberg is a senior specialist and project leader at Mistra Carbon Exit at IVL Swedish Environmental Research Institute.Transatlantic Cues: How the United States and European Union Influence Each Other’s Clim
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