Analyzing the Transportation and Climate Initiative Program Using an Integrated Assessment Model
Abstract
The Transportation & Climate Initiative (TCI) is a cap-and-invest program that is
designed to help the thirteen participating states reduce CO2 emissions; however,
the anticipated electrification of the transportation sector can potentially interact
with the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI) market, a cap-and-trade system
for CO2 emissions from electricity generation. Potential impacts include an increase
in electricity prices and leakage of CO2 emissions to other sectors and states. This
study utilized a human-earth systems model to investigate TCI’s regional emissions
reduction potential and to quantify the impacts of the program under alternative assumptions.
The results show that TCI would lower regional net CO2 emissions and increase market
penetration of both heavy- and light-duty electric vehicles through 2050. The emissions
reduction and changes in transportation fuel mix would be accompanied by an increase
in the RGGI CO2 allowance price, as well as increases in the costs of electricity
and on-road travel. In the freight sector, this resulted in a demand shift from trucks
to trains and marine vessels. A portion of the CO2 reduction from on-road transportation
was offset by the increases in emissions from non-road transportation and electricity
generation. Pennsylvania, the only TCI state that does not currently belong to RGGI,
experienced the highest increase in CO2 from the electric sector as well as the lowest
percentage reduction of NOx emissions, reflecting its own additional electricity demands
and higher electricity exports to RGGI states. Extending the declining RGGI and TCI
cap trends through 2050 leads to higher CO2 and other air pollutant emissions reductions.
In addition, it further facilitates the energy transition from carbon-based fuels
to electricity in the on-road transportation sector. These results suggest that while
TCI is effective at reducing regional CO2 emissions, additional measures may be needed
to avoid regressively burdening low-income households with the added costs. This is
one of the goals of the TCI reinvestments, an aspect of the policy that was not modelled
here.
Type
Master's projectSubject
Transportation and Climate InitiativeIntegrated Assessment Modeling
Cap-and-trade
Carbon Pricing Policy
Permalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/22705Citation
Li, Zhuoran (2021). Analyzing the Transportation and Climate Initiative Program Using an Integrated Assessment
Model. Master's project, Duke University. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/22705.Collections
More Info
Show full item record
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.
Rights for Collection: Nicholas School of the Environment
Works are deposited here by their authors, and represent their research and opinions, not that of Duke University. Some materials and descriptions may include offensive content. More info