Fossil Fuel Extraction and Investment in Backstop Technology: A Strategic Interaction

In the economy of renewable resources, oil-importing countries seek to explore and develop backstop technologies to moderate their reliance on oil suppliers. On the other hand, oil-exporting countries should integrate the possibility of backstop technology inventions in their decisions regarding oil...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hamideh Esfahani, Shiva Shahmiri
Format: Article
Language:fas
Published: Institute for Management and Planning Studies 2020-05-01
Series:برنامه‌ریزی و بودجه
Subjects:
Online Access:http://jpbud.ir/article-1-1930-en.html
Description
Summary:In the economy of renewable resources, oil-importing countries seek to explore and develop backstop technologies to moderate their reliance on oil suppliers. On the other hand, oil-exporting countries should integrate the possibility of backstop technology inventions in their decisions regarding oil supply. Therefore oil-exporting countries and oil-importing-countries essentially have a relationship in the form of strategic interdependence. The present study considers a dynamic game between a buyer and a seller, where the seller determines the supply quantity and the buyer can decide to invest in a substitute which is a renewable source that is more favorable for both the buyer and the environment. The results show that in this closed-loop equilibrium, due to the heterogeneity between the fuel supplied by the seller and the alternative fuel developed by the buyer, the time of investing depends on the investment cost and the positive impact of substitute fuel on the environment. Nevertheless, the time of investing is more likely to occur before the resource exhaustion.
ISSN:2251-9092
2251-9106