On a Strategic Model of Pollution Control
Giorgio Ferrari, Torben Koch

TL;DR
This paper models the strategic interaction between a firm and government in pollution control as a stochastic impulse game, deriving equilibrium policies and analyzing their dependence on model parameters.
Contribution
It introduces a novel stochastic impulse game framework for pollution regulation, providing equilibrium solutions and insights into strategic behaviors.
Findings
Derived equilibrium policies for pollution control game
Identified parameter conditions affecting strategic behaviors
Numerical analysis illustrating model dynamics
Abstract
This paper proposes a strategic model of pollution control. A firm, representative of the productive sector of a country, aims at maximizing its profits by expanding its production. Assuming that the output of production is proportional to the level of pollutants' emissions, the firm increases the level of pollution. The government of the country aims at minimizing the social costs due to the pollution, and introduces regulatory constraints on the emissions' level, which then effectively cap the output of production. Supposing that the firm and the government face both proportional and fixed costs in order to adopt their policies, we model the previous problem as a stochastic impulse two-person nonzero-sum game. The state variable of the game is the level of the output of production which evolves as a general linearly controlled one-dimensional Ito-diffusion. Following an educated…
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Taxonomy
TopicsClimate Change Policy and Economics · Energy, Environment, and Transportation Policies · Transportation Planning and Optimization
