Evidence-based Policies for Effective Action

U.S. Energy & Climate Roadmap

Policy Insights

Energy & Climate Roadmap

Assessing the Costs and Benefits of Clean Electricity Tax Credits

Michael Greenstone, Bogdan Mukhametkaliev, Jared Stolove University of Chicago John Larsen, Ben King, Hannah Kolus, Whitney Herndon Rhodium Group Building on previous modeling conducted by the Rhodium Group, we analyze the costs and benefits of tax provisions similar to those...
U.S. Energy & Climate Roadmap: Policy Insight

Climate Change and the U.S. Economic Future

The effects of climate change will be different across the country, with some of the worst impacts falling on already-disadvantaged regions.
U.S. Energy & Climate Roadmap: Policy Insight

Updating the United States Government’s Social Cost of Carbon

As the Biden administration updates the social cost of carbon, their thorough review should include using the latest climate modeling, applying new climate damage estimates, employing lower discount rates, and incorporating global, rather than only domestic, damage estimates of additional...
U.S. Energy & Climate Roadmap: Policy Insight

Put a Price on It: The How and Why of Pricing Carbon

Enacting a national, market-based framework to put a price on carbon can achieve ambitious climate change goals while minimizing the cost to the American economy. The most effective climate policy will be one that establishes a national carbon price that...
Energy & Climate Roadmap

A Solution to the Leakage Problem

The Challenge If the United States or a subset of countries restrict emissions of carbon dioxide but other countries do not, energy-intensive industries may simply relocate offshore to countries with fewer restrictions on emissions. Relocated industries would continue to pollute,...
U.S. Energy & Climate Roadmap: Policy Insight

Decarbonizing the U.S. Economy with a National Grid

To facilitate building a nationwide high voltage direct current grid, the federal government could simultaneously assert FERC’s primary role in transmission permitting and encourage the upgrading and re-use of existing rights of way.
U.S. Energy & Climate Roadmap: Policy Insight

Fueling Technology Deployment with a Clean Electricity Standard

A national Clean Electricity Standard that is flexible, technology neutral, and linked to carbon reduction policies in other sectors could go a long way in decarbonizing the power sector. Policymakers could maximize the benefit of this approach by making the...
U.S. Energy & Climate Roadmap: Policy Insight

Restoring the Future of Nuclear Energy

Nuclear power could be important to decarbonizing the power sector, but first nuclear plant design, manufacturing and construction processes should be improved and efforts should be made to confront market failures and public trust.
U.S. Energy & Climate Roadmap: Policy Insight

Making Energy Efficiency Work

Funding should be allocated to the energy efficiency programs that are most cost-effective based on independent and rigorous real-world evaluations.
U.S. Energy & Climate Roadmap: Policy Insight

Four Proposals to Improve Fuel Economy Standards

To make fuel economy standards more efficient and effective, policymakers could eliminate both size and type distinctions, establish a transparent trading market, and bring emissions testing under the direct supervision of regulators.
U.S. Energy & Climate Roadmap: Policy Insight

Accelerating and Smoothing the Transition Away from Coal

Regulators should consider coal’s full social costs when deciding whether to approve new mines and power plant emissions limits and address legacy environmental issues at sites while giving coal workers the opportunity to help clean up closed mines and plants.
U.S. Energy & Climate Roadmap: Policy Insight

Ensuring Americans Receive Fair Value for U.S. Oil and Gas Resources

Federal mineral leasing could deliver higher returns for taxpayers and better protect the environment if policymakers increased royalty rates and minimum bids, eliminated deductions, shortened primary terms, and strengthen bonding requirements.

Authors & Editors

EPIC Scholar

Fiona Burlig

Assistant Professor, Harris School of Public Policy

Tamma Carleton

Assistant Professor of Economics, Bren School of Environmental Science &Management, University of California, Santa Barbara
Visiting & Non-Resident Scholars

Steve Cicala

Associate Professor of Economics, Tufts University; Non-Resident Scholar, EPIC

Thomas Covert

Scientific Director, University of Chicago Energy and Environment Lab
Scholar

Michael Greenstone

Founding Director, Institute for Climate and Sustainable Growth; Director, EPIC
EPIC Scholar

Koichiro Ito

Professor, Harris School of Public Policy
EPIC Scholar

Amir Jina

Assistant Professor, Harris School of Public Policy
Scholar

Ryan Kellogg

Ralph and Mary Otis Isham Professor and Deputy Dean for Academic Programs, Harris School of Public Policy; Executive Committee, Climate Systems Engineering initiative

Ishan Nath

Postdoctoral Fellow, Princeton University International Economics Section
EPIC Scholar

Robert Rosner

William E. Wrather Distinguished Service Professor in the departments of Astronomy & Astrophysics and Physics; Founding Co-Director, EPIC
EPIC Scholar

Mark Templeton

Clinical Professor of Law, University of Chicago Law School; Director, Abrams Environmental Law Clinic
EPIC Scholar

David Weisbach

Director, Chicago Curriculum on Climate and Sustainable Growth; Walter J. Blum Professor of Law, University of Chicago Law School

Lindsay Iversen

Former Deputy Director, EPIC; Editorial Director, U.S. Energy & Climate Roadmap

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