A review of low carbon fuel policies: Principles, program status and future directions
Review article, 2016

A low carbon fuel standard (LCFS) is a market-based policy that specifies declining standards for the average lifecycle fuel carbon intensity (AFCI) of transportation fuels sold in a region. This paper: (i) compares transportation fuel carbon policies in terms of their economic efficiency, fuel price impacts, greenhouse gas emission reductions, and incentives for innovation; (ii) discusses key regulatory design features of LCFS policies; and (iii) provides an update on the implementation status of LCFS policies in California, the European Union, British Columbia, and Oregon. The economics literature finds that an intensity standard implicitly taxes emissions and subsidizes output. The output subsidy results in an intensity standard being inferior to a carbon tax in a first-best world, although the inefficiency can be corrected with a properly designed consumption tax (or mitigated by a properly designed carbon tax or cap-and-trade program). In California, from 2011 to 2015 the share of alternative fuels in the regulated transportation fuels pool increased by 30%, and the reported AFCI of all alternative fuels declined 21%. LCFS credit prices have varied considerably, rising to above $100/credit in the first half of 2016. LCFS programs in other jurisdictions share many features with California's, but have distinct provisions as well. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

uncertainty

Performance standard

climate-change mitigation

biofuel policies

Carbon policy

impacts

Alternative fuels

Lifecycle emissions

life-cycle assessment

Biofuels

standard

market-mediated emissions

land-use change

Fuel policy

greenhouse-gas emissions

technology

Author

Sonia Yeh

Chalmers, Energy and Environment, Physical Resource Theory

University of California

J. Witcover

University of California

G. E. Lade

Iowa State University

D. Sperling

University of California

Energy Policy

0301-4215 (ISSN)

Vol. 97 220-234

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Areas of Advance

Energy

Subject Categories

Environmental Sciences

DOI

10.1016/j.enpol.2016.07.029

More information

Latest update

3/25/2021