TY - JOUR
T1 - Incorporating political-feasibility concerns into the assessment of India's clean-air policies
AU - Peng, Wei
AU - Kim, Sung Eun
AU - Purohit, Pallav
AU - Urpelainen, Johannes
AU - Wagner, Fabian
N1 - Funding Information:
W.P. was partly supported by the summer research stipend from the Penn State School of International Affairs. S.E.K. was partly supported by Korea University grant K2009071 . The work of P.P. and F.W. was in part supported by the financial contributions of the National Member Organizations to IIASA. We thank Xinyuan Huang, Hui Yang, Wei-Ting Yang, and Anjali Sharma for important feedback about the PACE-India policy tool.
Funding Information:
W.P. was partly supported by the summer research stipend from the Penn State School of International Affairs. S.E.K. was partly supported by Korea University grant K2009071. The work of P.P. and F.W. was in part supported by the financial contributions of the National Member Organizations to IIASA. We thank Xinyuan Huang, Hui Yang, Wei-Ting Yang, and Anjali Sharma for important feedback about the PACE-India policy tool. W.P, S.E.K. J.U. and F.W. conceived and designed the analysis. W.P. and S.E.K. performed the analysis. F.W. and P.P. provided important data for this analysis. W.P. led the writing of the manuscript with input from all authors. All authors provided critical feedback and helped shape the research, analysis, and manuscript. The authors declare no competing interests.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 The Authors
PY - 2021/8/20
Y1 - 2021/8/20
N2 - Political-feasibility concerns are at the center of real-world air-pollution policymaking. Yet, these concerns are often not represented in leading decision-support tools that have been used for assessing policies' environmental impacts. Focusing on a wide range of clean-air policies in India, we assess their political-feasibility scores on the basis of public opinion, market, and institutional considerations and then incorporate these scores into the evaluation of environmental impacts by using an integrated assessment model (GAINS-South Asia). We demonstrate that although some policies with substantial potential to mitigate air pollution are also highly politically feasible (e.g., replacing solid fuels with cleaner fuels in households), others can be less politically feasible (e.g., banning agricultural waste burning). Because some clean-air policies co-reduce CO2 emissions and aerosols, considering varying degrees of political feasibility is particularly important in achieving air-pollution and climate objectives simultaneously because of its implications on the implementation scale and policy sequence.
AB - Political-feasibility concerns are at the center of real-world air-pollution policymaking. Yet, these concerns are often not represented in leading decision-support tools that have been used for assessing policies' environmental impacts. Focusing on a wide range of clean-air policies in India, we assess their political-feasibility scores on the basis of public opinion, market, and institutional considerations and then incorporate these scores into the evaluation of environmental impacts by using an integrated assessment model (GAINS-South Asia). We demonstrate that although some policies with substantial potential to mitigate air pollution are also highly politically feasible (e.g., replacing solid fuels with cleaner fuels in households), others can be less politically feasible (e.g., banning agricultural waste burning). Because some clean-air policies co-reduce CO2 emissions and aerosols, considering varying degrees of political feasibility is particularly important in achieving air-pollution and climate objectives simultaneously because of its implications on the implementation scale and policy sequence.
KW - air pollution
KW - climate change
KW - India
KW - integrated assessment modeling
KW - policy implementation
KW - policy sequence
KW - political feasibility
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85121150757&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.oneear.2021.07.004
DO - 10.1016/j.oneear.2021.07.004
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85121150757
SN - 2590-3330
VL - 4
SP - 1163
EP - 1174
JO - One Earth
JF - One Earth
IS - 8
ER -