Tag Archives: carbon-markets

Energy Risk USA: Firms Optimistic About California Carbon Market

Author: Mark Pengelly Source: Energy Risk | 16 May 2013 California flies flag for emissions trading Energy market participants upbeat about development of California emissions market, despite legal threats A panel of energy market participants, including representatives of Texas-based power generator Calpine and California-based oil and gas firm Chevron, expressed confidence in the future of the Californian emissions market at the Energy Risk USA conference on May 15. Created under Assembly Bill 32 (AB 32), California’s carbon market was launched with an inaugural quarterly auction of California Carbon Allowances (CCAs) on November 14 last year. A second auction was held on February 19 and a third is scheduled to take place on May 16. Daniel Lieberman, senior advisor for environment and climate change at Chevron, said he expected prices for CCAs to reach $14–15 per tonne at the May 16 auction – well above a minimum $10/tonne floor set by the California Air Resources Board (Carb). As you wait for every milestone to be achieved, there are groups… with lawsuits tucked in their back-pockets The upbeat tone on California’s carbon market contrasts with deep pessimism about the future of the the European Union Emissions Trading System (EU ETS), which has been beset by a massive oversupply of emissions, leading to rock-bottom prices. Elsewhere, the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI) – a cap-and-trade scheme run by nine states in the US northeast and mid-Atlantic regions – has run into similar difficulties. Despite this, “AB 32 has not been that boring – in fact, it has been quite interesting to follow what has happened as the market takes shape”, said Lieberman. The potential of the Californian carbon market was “a stark difference” to the kind of malaise seen in the EU ETS and RGGI, he added. In part, the success of the Californian emissions market is due to the fact Carb sought to remedy some of the problems encountered by other schemes, say market participants. That included placing restrictions on the role of offsets in the scheme, setting a minimum and maximum price and attempting to stop carbon leakage – or the phenomenon whereby emitters simply move their emissions outside the state. Such measures were motivated by a mistrust of unregulated markets in the wake of California’s 2000–01 energy crisis, said Ethan Ravage, west coast lead at the Geneva-based International Emissions Trading Association (IETA). “In the case of California, everybody has long memories of what happened in 2000 and 2001. They remember what happened with [Houston-based] Enron and they don’t want price spikes in environmental markets that are going to affect consumers, so they’ve actually done a fair amount of work in setting reserve prices in the auctions so there’s a de facto floor and ceiling.” However, the way the scheme has been implemented has given rise to a range of legal challenges – and it is thought that more could follow. From the scheme’s inception, only electricity generators and other major static sources of emissions, such as refineries, are required to buy CCAs. The industries covered by the system would be expanded, Ravage noted, with transportation becoming included in 2015. “As you wait for every milestone to be achieved, there are groups in the background on the extreme left and extreme right with lawsuits tucked in their back pockets,” he said. “There are challenges around whether the state has the authority to hold auctions as opposed to having a tight allocation of allowances; whether it has the authority to regulate out-of-state power; and whether it has the authority to regulate something called resource shuffling, where you just change the way power is dispatched into the state.” But despite the existence of such threats – and the potential impact they might have on prices – panel participants agreed the best strategy energy firms could follow was to simply comply with the scheme. “We hear many stories about lawsuits that are written and ready, just waiting for somebody to file. But we don’t really have a choice – we have to live with the rule,” said Matthew Suhr, director of market analysis at Calpine. On April 19, Carb voted in favour of rules that will see California’s emissions market link up with that of Quebec from January 1, 2014. Continue reading

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Is This The End Of Carbon Trading, Or Just A Hiccup?

Ratcliffe-on-Soar power station: carbon markets are supposed to be effective, not just hot air. PA/David Davies Just as scientists almost universally agree greenhouse gases contribute to the planet’s changing climate, economists almost universally agree the problem is made worse because polluters don’t pay for the mess they make. A carbon tax is one way to force companies to pay for their pollution. A carbon market is another, established by a “cap and trade” system where a limited number of permits (or “allowances”) are sold or given away each year. Every company must surrender one permit for every tonne of carbon produced. The capped limit is lowered over time to reflect the aim of steadily lowering emissions. The resulting carbon price ensures total emissions do not exceed the limit. Market logic suggests that if permits become more scarce relative to demand, then the cost of the permits, the effective “carbon price”, will rise (and vice versa). Carbon markets have been set up around the world, in Australia and California, Kazakhstan and China. In the UK, companies are covered by the European Union Emissions Trading Scheme (EU ETS). Each system is designed slightly differently, and the resulting carbon prices vary widely. Some policy-makers hope that these systems will one day join to form a global carbon market , so that polluters everywhere pay the same price for their pollution and cannot simply move operations to somewhere cheaper to pollute. But despite a recent agreement on a link between the Australian and EU markets, a global market remains a distant prospect. A really distant prospect, perhaps, given recent headlines that pronounced the EU ETS dead in the water – carbon prices previously above €30 per tonne (which some economists considered too low) have tumbled to below €5 where they have languished for months. In April the European Parliament considered a plan to increase short-term carbon prices by delaying the issue of 900 million permits; MEPs rejected the move and the EU carbon price fell to €2.7 per tonne. Dead, or just sleeping? How has the carbon price fallen so low that it needs “rescuing”? A low carbon price would be a sign of the scheme’s success if it meant companies had developed clean technologies to reduce pollution cheaply over the long-term, lowering demand for permits whose price would fall. Instead, carbon prices are low because the recession has dented economic output, and consequently emissions are lower. Low carbon prices present no incentive for companies to make long-term investments in clean energy, arguably the aim of the EU ETS. When the carbon price rises or falls to extremes, politicians are tempted to interfere with the supply of permits. This means carbon prices can move significantly depending on political developments, as well as factors such as economic output and the weather (cold weather means more carbon is generated as the heating is turned up). This has led some economists to argue that carbon taxes are a more suitable tool for a problem like climate change. A stable carbon tax would give companies a predictable incentive to reduce emissions, year after year. It would avoid the wild price swings of a market. True, taxes don’t guarantee that a set limit on emissions will be achieved – carbon markets have been preferred because they provide this guarantee. But the EU ETS only limits emissions for the five to ten years; what really matters is that emissions fall considerably over the next few decades. A tax that was set to increase gradually over time, with the plan for review after ten years, could meet the overall objective of reducing emissions and send a much clearer message. But supporters argue that carbon markets work well if designed well ; they just need some additional features to keep a lid on wild price fluctuations. For instance, prices might be stabilised by transparent rules that define how many permits are released onto the market as carbon prices rise or fall. Fewer permits would be released onto the market when prices are low, and more when prices are high. The UK has unilaterally implemented something similar, introducing a domestic “ carbon price floor ” in April. This ensures that most UK companies (there are various exemptions) have to pay a carbon price of at least £16 per tonne this year, rising to £30 by 2020. In an EU-wide market, however, the effect is simply to shift emissions out of Britain and into Europe, possibly driving energy-intensive industries abroad in the process. An EU-wide price floor would sensibly prevent the risk of price crashes, leaving only the problem of price spikes to be addressed. In the short term, efforts to “save” the EU carbon market continue. German Chancellor Angela Merkel said recently that she favours systematic changes that would solve these problems once and for all, rather than a temporary fix of withholding permits. But her finance minister opposes intervention. The politics are messy, but the stakes are high. If carbon prices do not provide an incentive for companies to move to cleaner production now, the transition will be forced on them later, with greater urgency, and at much greater cost – to us and them. Continue reading

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UN Carbon Has Biggest Jump Since 2011 as EU Factories Tap Quota

By Mathew Carr & Alessandro Vitelli – May 9, 2013 United Nations Certified Emission Reduction credits had their biggest one-day gain since Dec. 20, 2011 amid speculation factories and utilities are using the carbon offsets to meet European Union pollution targets. CERs for December rose 18 percent to close at 40 euro cents ($0.52) a metric ton on the ICE Futures Europe exchange in London. The contract has jumped 33 percent since May 3 and is heading for its biggest-ever weekly increase. Factories, power stations and airlines in the EU carbon market use a limited portion of cheaper UN credits to comply with the bloc’s cap. Polluters can still claim about 300 million tons of CER offsets through the end of the decade, according to Trevor Sikorski , the head of natural gas, carbon and coal at Energy Aspects Ltd. in London. “At prices next to nothing, emitters should use up their allowance to use offsets,” Sikorski said today in a phone interview. “It feels like it’s bouncing around between nothing and nothing” and prices may stay at 25 cents to 50 cents “for a very long time.” Greenhouse-gas producers covered by the EU’s emissions trading system surrendered 501 million UN offsets to cover discharges in 2012, about 18 percent fewer than expected, according to the median of a poll of analysts on May 2. The EU has set a limit of about 1.7 billion tons of offsets that emitters can use in the 13 years through 2020, Bloomberg New Energy Finance Ltd. data show. Emission Reduction Units for December rose 1 cent to close at 11 euro cents on ICE. They’ve risen 10 percent this week. EU carbon for December jumped 8.6 percent to close at 3.79 euros a ton on ICE, the biggest gain since May 3. To contact the reporters on this story: Mathew Carr in London at m.carr@bloomberg.net ; Alessandro Vitelli in London at avitelli1@bloomberg.net To contact the editor responsible for this story: Lars Paulsson at lpaulsson@bloomberg.net Continue reading

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