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The Real Hole In Global Carbon Trading

There is fuss and hullabaloo aplenty today over the collapse of the price of carbon permits in Europe. Industry bodies such as AiG, ACCI and BCA are gnashing their teeth over that fact that a tonne of continental carbon costs about $4, whereas a tonne of carbon australis costs $23. The power cost increases being experienced by the industry groups’ members are real, large, and largely driven by non-carbon-price factors. But the industry groups’ complaints are that Labor, at the Greens’ behest, locked the nation into a high carbon price for four years when a floating price would have been much easier to handle. The committee of Labor, Greens and independent MPs that designed the Clean Energy Future package shook hands in 2011 on a tax grab that did two things – tried to buy support for carbon pricing by creating ongoing tax cuts and pension increases for lower socio-economic groups (something that took half the revenue, but that hasn’t worked terribly well) and kick-start the renewable energy sector via a system of grants and co-investments. That last bit has Greens fingerprints all over it – they knew that if the renewable energy capacity wasn’t built quickly, we might never make the transition to low-carbon energy sources. So when a firm’s accountants calculate how much the carbon tax is costing (remembering that it is only a fraction of the surges in power bills seen over the past couple of years), they should know that half of the impost is flowing into the pockets of the poor, half is being poured into a ‘direct action’-style public/private renewables industry, and the entire amount is a pricing signal to incentivise the reduction of their own carbon footprint. Reports today suggest that $2 billion to $3 billion a year of revenue built into the forward estimates of the federal budget is about to evaporate once we shift from a fixed price ($23 at present headed for $29 per tonne in 2015) to a floating price. There almost seems to be a perverse longing for the price of carbon permit ‘assets’ to rise – like the gold price or the Australian dollar. No, no, no! When economies collapse – and Europe has plenty of those – the carbon price is supposed to collapse too. Long-term carbon budgeting means that over all the business cycles ahead, suitably strict emission targets are set around the world, and the trading of permits help shift the cost of emissions abatement to economies that can afford it. The booming economy buys more permits, so picks up more of the gross carbon bill – that’s the theory anyway. But back to Australia, where Labor’s carbon pricing experiment seems to be drawing to a close. Few commentators expect Labor’s plans to survive far into 2014, with Tony Abbott absolutely bound by a promise to junk carbon trading, and shift to a bureacratic system of ‘buying’ pollution reduction from major emitters, funded from consolidated revenue. So let’s compare and contrast. Labor’s scheme squeezes as much money as politically possible from emitters (passed through to all power-consuming firms, and from there to consumers) for four years, then, if international prices are still low, watches all that lovely revenue disappear – despite being locked into the ongoing ‘bribe’ of lower taxes and higher pensions. The Coalition’s policy is not to gather the additional tax revenue in the first place, but to cuts costs elsewhere in the budget to allow a couple of billion dollars a year to be taken from the federal coffers and handed to farmers to plough carbon back into the soil, and to power generators to shut their dirtiest power stations. Had Labor not linked carbon revenues to ongoing tax cuts, their plan would have been far superior. And if the international carbon price recovers to something like its former levels of, say, $20 per tonne, it will still be superior. But the current European situation reveals a weakness in linking to global markets. One of the crushing problems for economies such as Italy and Greece is that when their economies struggle, they have no control over monetary policy to kick-start a new round of investment, employment and growth. Likewise, a small satellite economy to Europe’s carbon trading scheme, Australia, needs its economy to function at roughly the same level as Europe’s, or better, to make use of carbon trading. Why? Because if, in an unimaginable future, Australia is falling behind economically, it will be buying permits at too high a price from abroad – the reverse of the current situation in which, if we had a floating price, we’d be buying European permits with abandon and burning everything we could get our hands on. Australia has no influence, or even a particularly cyclical dependence, on Europe’s economies. There is huge potential for Australia to exploit Europe’s misfortune after 2015 by scooping up cheap permits, and potentially to be in a reversed situation five or 10 years down the track – having to buy permits that have become inflated due to Europe’s success (not impossible!). The ETS schemes being trialled in China might seem to offer a better source of internationally traded permits, and one can only hope they spread to control the colossal emissions of the world’s most populous nation. But it must be remembered too, that if global carbon trading ultimately fails, that the domestic, autonomous plans – like the Coalition’s Direct Action policy – can only be co-ordinated globally via stronger treaties, including all the usual chicanery as signatories try to find ways around their treaty commitments to keep gorging on cheap power. Carbon trading isn’t dead, but it’s going to need some major revisions. The alternatives are far less attractive – treaty-based domestic schemes, with all the usual politiking and rorting, or the immoral decision to shift the huge social cost of carbon pollution onto our children’s shoulders. More from Rob Burgess Read more: http://www.businessspectator.com.au/article/2013/4/18/carbon-markets/real-hole-global-carbon-trading#ixzz2QofarN68 Continue reading

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USDA, FAA Extend Agreement To Develop Biobased Aviation Fuel

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Carbon Market Flaws Evident

TIM WILSON From: The Australian April 18, 2013 A European Commission plan to cut emissions permits for up to seven years and thus push up their price was rejected on Tuesday by the European parliament because it would pass on higher costs to struggling industries and consumers. Emissions trading is supposedly a market system based on supply and demand. But behind the jargon, trading schemes are just government-mandated markets influenced by political interests. When too few companies are required to buy emissions permits, or too many permits are allocated, or both, the price collapses. This reality is unfolding in Europe. A tonne of emissions is now $3.20, and is expected to fall to $1.20 compared with $7 earlier this year, a 2008 starting price of nearly $50 and Australia’s $23 carbon tax, which will increase to $24.15 on July 1. The European carbon price crash is not unprecedented. The voluntary Chicago climate exchange traded permits for about $7.50 in 2008, but bottomed out at 5c when the scheme closed in 2010. Political manipulation of carbon pricing for private interests was always likely. Even Ross Garnaut argued in his 2008 review, “If there is a chance that political pressure will reap rewards in the form of special treatment, then the system will promote a large diversion of management resources towards rent seeking from governments”. European politicians have recognised how little public appetite there is to increase their hip pocket costs to cut emissions and reward rent seekers. All this bodes poorly for Australia. Under the government’s plan the Climate Change Authority will recommend our emissions target with the assumption our elected officials would blindly adopt it. That assumption is now exposed for the hokum it always was. Politicians can always make political capital opposing tax increases. The only difference with Europe is Julia Gillard included an automatic target cut if the parliament can’t agree on an alternative. The capacity for political manipulation ensures carbon markets never deliver the certainty their supporters claim. That might not matter if they cut emissions, but they fail there too. A report by the UN’s climate change secretariat concluded Europe would largely meet its Kyoto targets because of economic decline. By comparison the US Energy Information Administration reported a rapid drop in US emissions last year, to their lowest level since 1992. This was achieved “during a year of positive growth in gross domestic product” from expansion in the use of cheap, fracked gas. Meanwhile the Treasury’s Strong Growth, Low Pollution modelling shows that despite having the world’s most broadly applied, highest cost carbon tax Australia’s emissions will continue to rise. It’s probably the only assumption Treasury got right. Comprehensive modelling would have assumed realistic scenarios about whether countries would impose their own equivalent schemes and sign up to a global carbon cutting agreement. Instead Treasury assumed an utterly unrealistic global carbon price of $29 in 2015, and that each country would have carbon taxes, or their equivalent. The scheme, linked to the lower European price, exposes a fiscal gap between the fixed “over-compensation” and the billions in expected government revenue. It is a mess. Technocrats advocate for trading schemes in theory because it is the most efficient way to price emissions, in practice they can be manipulated like any other regulation. The European parliament’s action this week to avoid increasing taxes on households has exposed the problems of emissions trading. Europe should abandon its structurally flawed scheme, and Australia should learn from their mistakes and follow. Tim Wilson is director of the IP and Free Trade Unit and Climate Change Policy at the Institute of Public Affairs. Continue reading

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