This paper analyzes the impact of declining extraction costs of shale oil
producers on the choice of the policy instrument of a climate coalition in the
presence of a monopolistic oil supplier such as OPEC. Shale oil producers'
extraction costs represent an upper bound for the oil price OPEC can charge.
Declining extraction costs ultimately limit OPEC's price setting behavior and
thus impacts the optimal climate policy of the climate coalition. A pure cap-
and-trade system is weakly welfare-inferior relative to a carbon tax for the
climate coalition. While high extraction costs allow OPEC to appropriate the
whole climate rent in case of quantity regulation, declining extraction costs
imply OPEC to capture only a part of the climate rent. A carbon tax always
generates positive revenue and thus is welfare-superior in general. However,
low extraction costs prevent OPEC from exerting its market power, leading the
climate coalition to implement the Pigouvian tax in the first place. Both
market-based instruments are equivalent in this case. Complementing a quota
with a base tax cannot outperform a pure carbon tax
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