Economics of decarbonisation / The unusable wealth of nations: Petrostates and macroeconomic transition risks in the Persian Gulf region

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Title
Economics of decarbonisation / The unusable wealth of nations: Petrostates and macroeconomic transition risks in the Persian Gulf region

CoPED ID
c33369f8-b6b7-4e64-bce8-57108bebc290

Status
Active

Funder

Value
No funds listed.

Start Date
Sept. 25, 2022

End Date
Sept. 29, 2025

Description

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To achieve the Paris Agreement, the world must reduce fossil fuel consumption dramatically over the next few decades. However, the reduced global demand for fossil fuels will likely result in "unanticipated or premature write-downs, devaluations, or conversion to liabilities" - otherwise known as stranded assets. This could have serious implications for petrostates, many of which suffer from significant macroeconomic challenges, low human development levels and are heavily dependent on fossil fuel rents for economic development (i.e., transition risk).

Given the myriad of existing political economy challenges that are often present within petrostates (i.e., low human development, weak institutions, macroeconomic instability, etc), a revenue shock in the form stranded assets could generate serious implications for these countries and their societies. Therefore, from a domestic economic and human welfare standpoint, this topic is extremely important. Moreover, given the sheer size of these states' fossil fuel endowments and their relatively significant geopolitical influence, their actions are also likely to have significant implications for the rest of the world. Therefore, at a systematic level, the extent to which these states are exposed to transition risk and how they will manage their remaining fossil fuel assets will likely have serious consequences for the net-zero transition. This poses the question: What set of economic policies and mechanisms can reduce the transition risk in petrostates, while also ensuring compliance with their international obligations under the Paris Climate Agreement?

To answer this question, the thesis will develop new analytical frameworks and methods to measure, compare, and model transition risk in petrostates. A subset of these countries will also be selected as case-studies and their economic responses to transition risk will be carefully analysed, modelled, and evaluated. The goal is to identify the policy packages and roadmaps which could enable states to pursue risk mitigation and decarbonisation strategies simultaneously and efficiently.

Siamak Loni STUDENT_PER

Subjects by relevance
  1. Economic policy
  2. Risks
  3. Developing countries
  4. Climate policy
  5. Economic development
  6. Climate changes
  7. Fossil fuels
  8. Paris agreement on climate change
  9. Energy policy
  10. International economics
  11. Liability
  12. Economic effects
  13. Economy

Extracted key phrases
  1. Macroeconomic transition risk
  2. Model transition risk
  3. Economic development
  4. Economic policy
  5. Domestic economic
  6. Economic response
  7. Fossil fuel asset
  8. Fossil fuel consumption
  9. Fossil fuel rent
  10. Fossil fuel endowment
  11. Low human development level
  12. Risk mitigation
  13. Significant macroeconomic challenge
  14. Unusable wealth
  15. Significant implication

Related Pages

UKRI project entry

UK Project Locations