Strategic reasoning and bargaining in catastrophic climate change games

被引:0
|
作者
Verendel V. [1 ]
Johansson D.J.A. [1 ]
Lindgren K. [1 ]
机构
[1] Division of Physical Resource Theory, Department of Energy and Environment, Chalmers University of Technology, Gothenburg
基金
欧盟第七框架计划;
关键词
D O I
10.1038/nclimate2849
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Two decades of international negotiations show that agreeing on emission levels for climate change mitigation is a hard challenge. However, if early warning signals were to show an upcoming tipping point with catastrophic damage, theory and experiments suggest this could simplify collective action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. At the actual threshold, no country would have a free-ride incentive to increase emissions over the tipping point, but it remains for countries to negotiate their emission levels to reach these agreements. We model agents bargaining for emission levels using strategic reasoning to predict emission bids by others and ask how this affects the possibility of reaching agreements that avoid catastrophic damage. It is known that policy elites often use a higher degree of strategic reasoning, and in our model this increases the risk for climate catastrophe. Moreover, some forms of higher strategic reasoning make agreements to reduce greenhouse gases unstable. We use empirically informed levels of strategic reasoning when simulating the model. © 2016 Macmillan Publishers Limited.
引用
收藏
页码:265 / 268
页数:3
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Incorporating 'catastrophic' climate change into policy analysis
    Kopits, Elizabeth
    Marten, Alex
    Wolverton, Ann
    CLIMATE POLICY, 2014, 14 (05) : 637 - 664
  • [32] Averting catastrophic climate change: confronting wealth
    Hurth, Victoria
    Wells, Peter
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INNOVATION AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT, 2007, 2 (01) : 63 - 78
  • [33] Strategic foundations of general equilibrium: Dynamic matching and bargaining games.
    McLennan, A
    JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC LITERATURE, 2002, 40 (01) : 163 - 165
  • [34] Catastrophic climate change and the collapse of human societies
    Josep Pe?uelas
    Sandra Nogué
    National Science Review, 2023, 10 (06) : 52 - 54
  • [35] ON MODELING AND INTERPRETING THE ECONOMICS OF CATASTROPHIC CLIMATE CHANGE
    Weitzman, Martin L.
    REVIEW OF ECONOMICS AND STATISTICS, 2009, 91 (01) : 1 - 19
  • [36] Climate change, uncertainty, and global catastrophic risk
    Baum, Seth D.
    FUTURES, 2024, 162
  • [37] Strategic foundations of general equilibrium: Dynamic matching and bargaining games.
    Thomas, JP
    ECONOMIC JOURNAL, 2002, 112 (480): : F371 - F373
  • [38] Possibilistic Boolean Games: Strategic Reasoning under Incomplete Information
    De Clercq, Sofie
    Schockaert, Steven
    De Cock, Martine
    Nowe, Ann
    LOGICS IN ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE, JELIA 2014, 2014, 8761 : 196 - 209
  • [39] Possibilistic boolean games: Strategic reasoning under incomplete information
    De Clercq, Sofie
    Schockaert, Steven
    De Cock, Martine
    Nowé, Ann
    Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics), 2014, 8761 : 196 - 209
  • [40] Determinants of bargaining success in the climate change negotiations
    Weiler, Florian
    CLIMATE POLICY, 2012, 12 (05) : 552 - 574