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Article
Permanent Discounting for Land-Based Carbon Sequestration
Ecological Economics (2008)
  • Man-Keun Kim, Utah State University
  • Bruce A. McCarl, Texas A&M University
  • Brian C. Murray, Duke University
Abstract
One major concern regarding land-based carbon sequestration involves the issue of permanence. Sequestration may not last forever and may either be released in the future or require expenditures to maintain the practices that keep it sequestered. In this paper, we investigate the differential value of offsets in the face of impermanent characteristics by forming a price discount that equalizes the effective price per ton between a “perfect offset” and one possessing some with impermanent characteristics. We find this discount to be a function of the future needs to replace offsets (in the face of lease expiration quantity or volatilization upon activities such as timber harvest) and the magnitude of any needed maintenance costs. We investigate the magnitude of the discounts under alternative agricultural tillage and forest management cases. In those studies, we find that permanence discounts in the range of 50% are not uncommon. This means that in the market place an impermanent sequestration offset may only receive payments amounting to 50% of the market carbon price. Furthermore, we find that in the face of escalating carbon prices that offsets may prove to be worth less.
Keywords
  • Discounting,
  • Land-Based,
  • Carbon,
  • Sequestration
Publication Date
January 1, 2008
Citation Information
Kim, M-K., B.A. McCarl, and B.C. Murray (2008) “Permanent Discounting for Land-based Carbon Sequestration” Ecological Economics 64(4):763-769