The allocation of regulatory competence in the EU emissions trading scheme

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Where to find it

Law Library — 1st Floor Collection (1st floor)

Call Number
KJE6249 .Z43 2014
Status
Available

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Summary

The European Union's Emissions Trading System (EU ETS) is the world's largest carbon trading market. This book offers a new perspective on the EU ETS as a multi-level governance regime, in which the regulatory process is composed of three distinct 'competences' - norm setting, implementation, and enforcement. Are these competences best combined in a single regulator at one level of government or would they be better allocated among a variety of regulators at different levels of government? The combined legal, economic, and political analysis in this book reveals that the actual allocation of competences within the EU ETS diverges from a hypothetical ideal allocation in important ways, and provides a political economy explanation for the existing allocation of norm setting, implementation and enforcement competences among various levels of European government.

Contents

  • Introduction: a changing (regulatory) climate
  • 1 From competing jurisdictions to competing competences: the allocation of regulatory competences
  • 2 Optimal competence allocation for the European Union Emissions Trading Scheme
  • 3 Regulatory competence allocation in the EU ETS (2005-2012)
  • 4 Regulatory competence allocation in the EU ETS (2013 onwards)
  • 5 A political economy explanation for competence allocation in the EU ETS
  • Epilogue

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