The Fossile Episode

Working Paper: CEPR ID: DP9256

Authors: John Hassler; Hans-Werner Sinn

Abstract: We build a two-sector dynamic general equilibrium model with one-sided substitutability between fossil carbon and biocarbon. One shock only, the discovery of the technology to use fossil fuels, leads to a transition from an inital pre-industrial phase to three following phases: a pure fossil carbon phase, a mixed fossil and biocarbon phase and an absorbing biocarbon phase. The increased competition for biocarbon during phase 3 and 4 leads to increasing food prices. We provide closed form expressions for this price increase. Our calibration leads to a price increase of 40% if capital and labor are allowed to move to the biocarbon sector. Otherwise, the price increase is much higher. We also use the model to analyze the consequences of restrictions on using biocarbon as fuel. We show that such restrictions can lead to a substantially slower global warming due to an endogenous slowdown of fossil fuel extraction.

Keywords: biocarbon; climate change; fossil fuel

JEL Codes: O41; Q32; Q54


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
food prices (Q11)fossil fuel prices (Q31)
fossil fuel prices (Q31)food prices (Q11)
capital and labor fixed (E22)food prices (Q11)
capital and labor mobility to biocarbon sector (F20)food prices (Q11)
restrictions on biocarbon usage (Q42)food prices (Q11)
restrictions on biocarbon usage (Q42)global warming (Q54)

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