Cost-Sharing Mechanisms for A Wood Forest Product Supply Chain under Carbon Cap-and-Trade
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- In the wood forest product supply chain, will factors such as carbon quota and carbon sink cost affect the forest scale of the forestry company? And will factors such as consumers’ low-carbon preference, the price of carbon sinks, and product demand affect the emission reduction level of the manufacturer?
- Can traditional coordination mechanisms (such as cost-sharing mechanism) coordinate the wood forest product supply chain with the carbon quota?
- Which type of cost-sharing mechanism is more suitable for coordinating the emission reduction behavior of the wood forest product supply chain? What impact does the cost-sharing mechanism have on the profit of the supply chain, the total carbon emissions, and the scale of the forest?
- We consider a wood forest product supply chain consisting of a forestry company and a forest products manufacturer. The two companies are oligopolistic, so the amount of forestry carbon sink produced by the forestry company has great influences on the price of carbon emission rights. Compared with the general supply chain, the forest product supply chain has the following characteristics: The forestry company can provide the raw material (timber) as well as forestry carbon sinks for the manufacturer. The forestry carbon sinks are able to offset the carbon emissions of the manufacturer, which establishes the basis for cooperation between the members of the supply chain.
- We focus on the impact of the cap-and-trade mechanism on the wood forest product supply chain and work out the optimal strategy for the forestry company and the manufacturer, so as to guide the members of the wood forest product supply chain to make the right decisions.
- For the purpose of promoting cooperation between the forestry company and the manufacturer, this paper designs and compares two coordination contracts: carbon emission reduction cost-sharing (ERCS) contract and a carbon sink cost-sharing (SCS) contract. It not only explores the possibility of a joint emission reduction between the manufacturer and the forestry company but also provides some new ideas for the low carbon development of the wood forest product supply chain.
2. Literature Review and Motivations
2.1. Operation Decisions for LOW-carbon Supply Chain
2.2. Collaboration and Coordination Contracts for a Low-carbon Supply Chain
2.3. Forestry Carbon Sinks
3. Basic Assumptions and Symbolic Description
3.1. Symbol Description
3.2. Main Assumption Analysis
4. Non-Cooperative Mechanism
5. Cost-Sharing Contracts
5.1. Carbon Sink Cost-Sharing (SCS) Contract
5.2. Carbon Emission Reduction Cost-Sharing (ERCS) Contract
6. Discussions and Numerical Results
6.1. Impact of a Low-Carbon Sensitivity Coefficient
- (1)
- , , ;
- (2)
- , , .
6.2. Impact of Emission Reduction Cost
- (1)
- , , ;
- (2)
- , , .
6.3. Impact of a Cost-Sharing Mechanism on the Supply Chain Profit
6.4. Impact of a Cost-Sharing Mechanism on the Carbon Emission Reduction Level
6.5. Impact of the Cost-Sharing Mechanism on the Forest Scale
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Proof of Proposition 1
Appendix B. Proof of Proposition 2
Appendix C. Proof of Proposition 5
Appendix D. Proof of Proposition 6
Appendix E. Proof of Proposition 7
References
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Notation | Meaning |
---|---|
the marginal contribution rate of carbon quota to the market price of carbon emission rights | |
the effect of unit carbon sink amount on the market price of carbon emission rights | |
the initial market price of carbon emission rights | |
superscript, represents the carbon sink cost-sharing mechanism | |
current year’s management cost of timber forests, | |
current year’s management cost of carbon sink forests, | |
basic market demand for finished products | |
the actual market demand for finished products | |
the initial carbon emission of unit product produced by manufacturer | |
the manufacturer’s unit amount of emission reduction | |
the threshold of the manufacturer’s unit amount of emission reduction determined by negotiation between the two parties under the technical emission reduction cost sharing mechanism | |
the carbon quota allocated to the manufacturer initially | |
the amount of timber required for unit finished product, and the timber order quantity of manufacturer can be expressed as follows: | |
superscript, represents the non-cost-sharing mechanism | |
unit price for the product, we assume that the finished products produced by the manufacturer meet the requirements of the consumer, and the price is determined by the market | |
unit price for the timber | |
unit price for the forestry carbon sink (that is the market price of the carbon emission rights as well) | |
the amount of timber forests of the forestry company, | |
total carbon emissions of the manufacturer, which meets the formula | |
the total forest scale of the forestry company, which is a decision variable of the forestry company | |
the amount of carbon sink forests of the forestry company, | |
the threshold of the forestry company’s scale of carbon sink forests determined by negotiation between the two parties under the carbon sink cost sharing mechanism | |
superscript, represents the carbon emission reduction cost-sharing mechanism | |
demand sensitivity coefficient to the emission reduction level, and the market demand for finished products can be expressed by the following formula:[4] | |
carbon sequestration rate of unit carbon sink, which is calculated by the carbon conversion coefficient and the proportion of carbon fixed in wood products for a long time [20] | |
the technical emission reduction cost coefficient of the manufacturer | |
profit of the manufacturer | |
profit of the forestry company |
Parameters | ||||||||
Values | 0.02 | 0.005 | 25 | 0.8 | 5000 | 3 | 600 | [1000,3600] |
Parameters | ||||||||
Values | 60 | [100,200] | 500 | 120 | 40 | 5 | [0,1] | 1 |
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Sun, M.; Peng, H.; Wang, S. Cost-Sharing Mechanisms for A Wood Forest Product Supply Chain under Carbon Cap-and-Trade. Sustainability 2018, 10, 4345. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10124345
Sun M, Peng H, Wang S. Cost-Sharing Mechanisms for A Wood Forest Product Supply Chain under Carbon Cap-and-Trade. Sustainability. 2018; 10(12):4345. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10124345
Chicago/Turabian StyleSun, Mingjun, Hongjun Peng, and Shuai Wang. 2018. "Cost-Sharing Mechanisms for A Wood Forest Product Supply Chain under Carbon Cap-and-Trade" Sustainability 10, no. 12: 4345. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10124345
APA StyleSun, M., Peng, H., & Wang, S. (2018). Cost-Sharing Mechanisms for A Wood Forest Product Supply Chain under Carbon Cap-and-Trade. Sustainability, 10(12), 4345. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10124345