Production of a renewable substitute to fossil fuels is modeled as causing the cost of this backstop technology to fall over time in proportion to the scale of the substitute production and how long it has been in use. The unit cost of resource extraction is assumed to rise as the stock is depleted, so learning by doing will increase the reserves permanently left in the ground. The green paradox can nevertheless be present, in the sense that the resource extraction path can initially lie above what it would be in the absence of a parallel production of renewable energy. In a monopolistic market, the resource monopolist's optimal price path is twophased, even with inelastic demand. In the limit-pricing phase, the price is falling, due to the progressive learning by doing effect, and the extraction path is rising.
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18 November 2024
Research Article|
November 18 2024
The Green Paradox and Learning by Doing Available to Purchase
Rögnvaldur Hannesson
Rögnvaldur Hannesson
Norwegian School of Economics
, Helleveien 30, N-5045 Bergen, Norway
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Online ISSN: 1944-0138
Print ISSN: 1944-012X
© 2024 R. Hannesson
2024
R. Hannesson
Licensed re-use rights only
Strategic Behavior and the Environment (2024) 10 (1-2): 1–14.
Citation
Hannesson R (2024), "The Green Paradox and Learning by Doing". Strategic Behavior and the Environment, Vol. 10 No. 1-2 pp. 1–14, doi: https://doi.org/10.1561/102.00000105
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