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On effects of present-bias on carbon emission patterns towards a net zero target

Published: October 31, 2025 | arXiv ID: 2510.27384v1

By: Hansjörg Albrecher, Jinxia Zhu

Potential Business Impact:

Helps companies make more money while polluting less.

Business Areas:
Impact Investing Financial Services, Lending and Investments

This paper explores the optimal policy for using an allocated carbon emission budget over time with the objective to maximize profit, by explicitly taking into account present-biased preferences of decision-makers, accounting for time-inconsistent preferences. The setup can be adapted to be applicable for either a (present-biased) individual or also for a company which seeks a balance between production and emission schedules. In particular, we use and extend stochastic control techniques developed for optimal dividend strategies in insurance risk theory for the present purpose. The approach enables a quantitative analysis to assess the effects of present-bias, of sustainability awareness, and the efficiency of a potential carbon tax in a simplified model. In some numerical implementations, we illustrate in what way a higher degree of present-bias leads to excess emission patterns, while placing greater emphasis on sustainability reduces carbon emissions. Furthermore, we show that for low levels of carbon tax, its increase has a positive effect on curbing emissions, while beyond a certain threshold that marginal impact gets considerably weaker.

Country of Origin
🇦🇺 🇨🇭 Australia, Switzerland

Page Count
42 pages

Category
Quantitative Finance:
Mathematical Finance