Show Summary Details
- Title Pages
- Series Foreword
-
1 The Green Paradox: A Mirage? -
2 Supply-Side Climate Policy and the Green Paradox -
3 The Green Paradox as a Supply Phenomenon -
4 The Green Paradox Under Imperfect Substitutability between Clean and Dirty Fuels -
5 Fossil Fuels, Backstop Technologies, and Imperfect Substitution -
6 Innovation and the Green Paradox -
7 Resource Extraction and Backstop Technologies in General Equilibrium -
8 Does a Future Rise in Carbon Taxes Harm the Climate? -
9 The Impacts of Announcing and Delaying Green Policies -
10 Going Full Circle: Demandside Constraints to the Green Paradox -
11 Quantifying Intertemporal Emissions Leakage - Contributors
- Index
Title Pages
Title Pages
- Source:
- Climate Policy and Nonrenewable Resources
- Publisher:
- The MIT Press
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- Title Pages
- Series Foreword
-
1 The Green Paradox: A Mirage? -
2 Supply-Side Climate Policy and the Green Paradox -
3 The Green Paradox as a Supply Phenomenon -
4 The Green Paradox Under Imperfect Substitutability between Clean and Dirty Fuels -
5 Fossil Fuels, Backstop Technologies, and Imperfect Substitution -
6 Innovation and the Green Paradox -
7 Resource Extraction and Backstop Technologies in General Equilibrium -
8 Does a Future Rise in Carbon Taxes Harm the Climate? -
9 The Impacts of Announcing and Delaying Green Policies -
10 Going Full Circle: Demandside Constraints to the Green Paradox -
11 Quantifying Intertemporal Emissions Leakage - Contributors
- Index