Cooperative Inventory Games in Multi-Echelon Supply Chains under Carbon Tax Policy: Vertical or Horizontal?

Author(s):  
Kourosh Halat ◽  
Ashkan Hafezalkotob ◽  
Mohammad Kazem Sayadi
2020 ◽  
Vol 1575 ◽  
pp. 012188
Author(s):  
Chong Xiang ◽  
Xiaoshen Li ◽  
Guanglei Sun

2013 ◽  
Vol 869-870 ◽  
pp. 840-843
Author(s):  
Xin Janet Ge

The Australian carbon pricing scheme (carbon tax) was introduced and became effective on 01 July 2012. The introduction of the carbon tax immediately increases the cost of electricity to a number of industries such as manufacturing and construction. Households were also affected as a result of these costs been passed through the supply chain of the affected industries. The carbon tax policy was introduced to addresses greenhouse emissions and energy consumption in Australia. However, the carbon tax policy may have introduced a number of economic risk factors to the Australian housing market, in particular the impact of housing affordability.


2014 ◽  
Vol 1065-1069 ◽  
pp. 2393-2396
Author(s):  
Lu Ming

Carbon tax policy is considered to be one of the effective measures to mitigate global warming. The construction industry, as a main source of carbon dioxide emissions, in the context of carbon tax policy, will face the fact that there is a sharp increase in the total construction costs. In order to reduce effectively carbon emissions in the construction project, and maximize the construction enterprises’ profit, this study aims to apply life cycle assessment in order to assess CO2emission costs and adopt a mathematical programming approach to allocate limited resources. A case study demonstrates the validity of the proposed methodology.


Transport ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 33 (3) ◽  
pp. 707-717
Author(s):  
Mo Zhu ◽  
Michael Chen ◽  
Murat Kristal

The maritime transport industry continues to draw international attention on significant Greenhouse Gas emissions. The introduction of emissions taxes aims to control and reduce emissions. The uncertainty of carbon tax policy affects shipping companies’ fleet planning and increases costs. We formulate the fleet planning problem under carbon tax policy uncertainty a multi-stage stochastic integer-programming model for the liner shipping companies. We develop a scenario tree to represent the structure of the carbon tax stochastic dynamics, and seek the optimal planning, which is adaptive to the policy uncertainty. Non-anticipativity constraint is applied to ensure the feasibility of the decisions in the dynamic environment. For the sake of comparison, the Perfect Information (PI) model is introduced as well. Based on a liner shipping application of our model, we find that under the policy uncertainty, companies charter more ships when exposed to high carbon tax risk, and spend more on fleet operation; meanwhile the CO2 emission volume will be reduced.


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