Evolutionary Games of Low-Carbon Behaviors of Construction Stakeholders under Carbon Taxes
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
2.1. Low Carbon Behaviors in the Construction Industry
2.2. The Effects of Carbon Tax Policy
2.3. The Application of the Evolutionary Game
3. The Evolutionary Game Model
3.1. Model Assumptions
3.1.1. Players and Strategies
3.1.2. Payoffs
3.2. Static Model Description and Analysis
3.2.1. Basic Model
3.2.2. Model Analysis
3.3. Dynamic Model Description and Analysis
4. Numerical Simulation Analysis
4.1. Parameter Values
4.2. Simulation Results
4.2.1. The Strategies of Players under Static Carbon Tax
4.2.2. The Mixed Strategies of Players under Different Scenarios
4.2.3. The Behaviors of Players under Different Scenarios
4.2.4. The Evolutionary Path of the Behavior of Developers under Different Carbon Tax Rates (Ct)
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
Policy Implications
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Parameters | Descriptions |
---|---|
C1 | The cost of developers constructing LCB |
C0 | The cost of developers constructing CB |
∆C | Incremental cost (); The cost of implementing the low-carbon technologies |
P1 | The price of LCB |
P0 | The price of CB (without regard to a carbon tax) |
∆P | Incremental price () |
β | Consumers’ environmental awareness |
E | Friendly environmental and ecological value |
B | Developers’ pollution compensation for homebuyers |
S1 | Subsidy for developers who construct LCB |
S2 | Subsidy for homebuyers who buy LCB |
e0 | Carbon emissions at the acceptable level |
eLCB | Carbon emissions produced by building LCB |
eCB | Carbon emissions produced by building CB |
Ct | Carbon tax; the price of carbon emission per ton |
T | Carbon tax on developers who construct CB |
α | The proportion of the carbon tax taken by homebuyers |
Developers | Homebuyers | |
---|---|---|
Buy LCB (y) | Buy CB (1−y) | |
Construct LCB (x) | , | , |
Construct CB (1−x) | , | , |
Equilibrium Point | det(J) | tr(J) |
---|---|---|
(0, 0) | ||
(0, 1) | ||
(1, 0) | ||
(1, 1) | ||
(x0, y0) | 0 |
Equilibrium Point | Situation 1 | Situation 2 | Situation 3 | ||||||
det | tr | State | det | tr | State | det | tr | State | |
(0, 0) | − | N | Saddle point | + | + | Unstable point | − | N | Saddle point |
(0, 1) | − | N | Saddle point | − | N | Saddle point | + | − | ESS |
(1, 0) | + | + | Unstable point | − | N | Saddle point | + | + | Unstable point |
(1, 1) | + | − | ESS | + | − | ESS | − | N | Saddle point |
(x0, y0) | meaningless | ||||||||
Equilibrium Point | Situation 4 | Situation 5 | Situation 6 | ||||||
det | tr | State | det | tr | State | det | tr | State | |
(0, 0) | − | N | Saddle point | + | + | Unstable point | − | N | Saddle point |
(0, 1) | + | − | ESS | − | N | Saddle point | − | N | Saddle point |
(1, 0) | − | N | Saddle point | + | − | ESS | − | N | Saddle point |
(1, 1) | + | + | Unstable point | − | N | Saddle point | − | N | Saddle point |
(x0, y0) | meaningless | + | 0 | central point |
Equilibrium Point | Symbol of det(J) | Symbol of tr(J) | Results |
---|---|---|---|
(0, 0) | - | N | Saddle point |
(0, 1) | - | N | Saddle point |
(1, 0) | N | N | Uncertain point |
(1, 1) | N | N | Uncertain point |
(x1, y1) | N | - | Asymptotic stable point |
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
∆C = 1.3 × 102 CNY/m2 | According to the data in the 2015 National Green Building Evaluation Mark Statistical Report, the incremental cost of three-star green buildings averages 135.92 CNY/m2. |
S1 = 0.8 × 102 CNY/m2 | In 2012, the central government introduced an incentive scheme for the Chinese Green Building Label, which stipulated that the government would give a subsidy of 80 CNY /m2 to developers constructing three-star green buildings. |
eCB = 0.5 ton | An ordinary building releases approximately 0.5 ton CO2e/m2 throughout its life cycle [41]. |
e0 = 0.1 ton | Based on the Stern Review of Climate Change Economics, to avoid exceeding the natural ability of the Earth to remove greenhouse gas, emissions must be reduced by 80% from the current level. Hence, LCBs should reduce emissions by at least 80% compared to CBs. Therefore, acceptable carbon emissions are . |
Ct = 0.4 × 102 CNY/ton | According to the Framework Design of China’s Carbon Taxation, the carbon tax would be imposed starting in 2012, and the carbon tax rate may reach 40 CNY/ton in 2020. |
β = 1 | From the initial assumption and parameter setting, it can be observed that homebuyers’ environmental awareness β appears in the strategy of (Construct LCB, Buy LCB). The low-carbon behaviors of consumers are closely related to their low-carbon awareness, so the value of β is set to 1 when homebuyers buy LCBs. |
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Du, Q.; Yan, Y.; Huang, Y.; Hao, C.; Wu, J. Evolutionary Games of Low-Carbon Behaviors of Construction Stakeholders under Carbon Taxes. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 508. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18020508
Du Q, Yan Y, Huang Y, Hao C, Wu J. Evolutionary Games of Low-Carbon Behaviors of Construction Stakeholders under Carbon Taxes. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(2):508. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18020508
Chicago/Turabian StyleDu, Qiang, Yunqing Yan, Youdan Huang, Chanchan Hao, and Jiao Wu. 2021. "Evolutionary Games of Low-Carbon Behaviors of Construction Stakeholders under Carbon Taxes" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 2: 508. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18020508
APA StyleDu, Q., Yan, Y., Huang, Y., Hao, C., & Wu, J. (2021). Evolutionary Games of Low-Carbon Behaviors of Construction Stakeholders under Carbon Taxes. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(2), 508. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18020508