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Accelerating Climate Finance: Carbon Rewards

The Bard MBA is pleased to publish a new working paper on Carbon Rewards Policy: An Economic Framework for Responding to Climate Damages & Systematic Risks, by Delton Chen. Current climate policies are falling short of global targets. As global warming accelerates and systemic risks mount, innovative economic solutions are urgently needed. In particular, new mechanisms are needed to channel finance to climate mitigation work at the scale that science and justice demand.

Chen’s open-access working paper presents an expanded economic framework and a new market policy, called a ‘carbon reward,” that could reshape how we respond to climate change. The carbon reward policy is designed to incentivize rapid decarbonisation by offering financial rewards for carbon dioxide removal and conventional mitigation. The rewards are backstopped by Central Banks, thus creating a tradable asset with a real floor value.

This working paper has a fascinating history as Chen's original thinking was a partial inspiration for Kim Stanley Robinson’s best-selling 2020 novel, "The Ministry for the Future.” Set in the near future, the novel explores the efforts of an international organization established under the Paris Agreement to advocate for the rights of future generations in response to dangerous climate change, centering the Carbon Reward Policy

The expanded economic framework detailed in this paper is designed to address the emerging systemic risks to the global carbon balance, including political intransigence, finance gaps, and earth system instabilities and tipping points. These risks have garnered significant international attention in recent years, and the proposed framework offers a deeper diagnosis of these problems and a practical policy toolkit of ‘carrot and stick’ incentives for improved cooperation amongst diverse stakeholders.

If you’re a policymaker, economist, climate advocate, or simply someone searching for a bold but pragmatic path forward—this is essential reading. The Carbon Reward Policy doesn’t just propose a tweak to existing models, it redefines the rules of the game with tools designed for real-world impact. 

About the Author

Eban Goodstein

Eban Goodstein

Dr. Eban Goodstein is an economist and the Director of the MBA in Sustainability and the MS and MEd programs at the Center for Environmental Policy at Bard College. He is known for organizing national educational initiatives on climate change, which have engaged thousands of schools and universities, civic institutions, faith groups, and community organizations in solutions-driven dialogue. Goodstein is the author of three books and numerous journal articles focused on climate change, sustainability and green jobs.