Leakage in the fuel market differs, depending on whether ethanol production is determined by a tax credit or consumption mandate. Two components of market leakage are distinguished: domestic and international. Leakage with both a tax credit and a consumption mandate depends on market elasticities and consumption/production shares, with the former having a bigger impact. Leakage is also more sensitive to changes in market supply and demand elasticities in the country not introducing biofuels. Although positive with a tax credit, market leakage can be negative with a consumption mandate, meaning that one gallon of ethanol can replace more than a gallon of gasoline. We also show that being a small country biofuels producer does not necessarily...
Indirect land use change, an agricultural market leakage, has been a major controversy over the Envi...
This paper derives a method to quantify the short- to medium-run impact of biofuel on fuel markets, ...
We examined four evolution paths of the biofuel sector using a partial equilibrium world agricultura...
We show how leakage differs, depending on the biofuel policy and market conditions. Carbon leakage i...
We show how leakage differs, depending on the biofuel policy and market conditions. Carbon leakage i...
Carbon leakage in the fuel market due to alternative biofuel policies is shown to have two component...
This paper applies the insights of the carbon leakage literature to study the emissions consequences...
The promotion of biofuel use in preference to traditional petroleum-based transportation fuel has li...
Rapidly declining gasoline prices from their record high during the summer of 2008, while ethanol pr...
With a mandate, U.S. policy of ethanol tax credits designed to reduce oil consumption does the exact...
Recently, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) proposed biofuel requirements for 2014 that sugg...
The ethanol tariff is one of the instruments used by the government to encourage domestic ethanol pr...
US biofuel policy includes greenhouse gas reduction targets. Regulators do not address the potential...
Indirect land use change, an agricultural market leakage, has been a major controversy over the Envi...
This paper derives a method to quantify the short- to medium-run impact of biofuel on fuel markets, ...
We examined four evolution paths of the biofuel sector using a partial equilibrium world agricultura...
We show how leakage differs, depending on the biofuel policy and market conditions. Carbon leakage i...
We show how leakage differs, depending on the biofuel policy and market conditions. Carbon leakage i...
Carbon leakage in the fuel market due to alternative biofuel policies is shown to have two component...
This paper applies the insights of the carbon leakage literature to study the emissions consequences...
The promotion of biofuel use in preference to traditional petroleum-based transportation fuel has li...
Rapidly declining gasoline prices from their record high during the summer of 2008, while ethanol pr...
With a mandate, U.S. policy of ethanol tax credits designed to reduce oil consumption does the exact...
Recently, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) proposed biofuel requirements for 2014 that sugg...
The ethanol tariff is one of the instruments used by the government to encourage domestic ethanol pr...
US biofuel policy includes greenhouse gas reduction targets. Regulators do not address the potential...
Indirect land use change, an agricultural market leakage, has been a major controversy over the Envi...
This paper derives a method to quantify the short- to medium-run impact of biofuel on fuel markets, ...
We examined four evolution paths of the biofuel sector using a partial equilibrium world agricultura...