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UPDATE 3-Carbon Wins Lifeline After Tight EU Parliament Vote

Wed Jul 3, 2013 * Carbon price jumps as much as 13 percent * Close 344-311 vote follows months of wrangling * Will need member state backing to become law * German economy ministry says still against the plan (Adds comment, updates prices) By Michael Szabo, Nina Chestney and Andrew Allan STRASBOURG/LONDON, July 3 (Reuters) – The European Parliament after months of bitter debate backed a plan on Wednesday to boost carbon prices, throwing a lifeline to the EU Emissions Trading System (ETS) and the bloc’s push for greener energy. EU politicians in Strasbourg voted 344-311 in favour of temporarily removing up to 900 million permits from trade , tackling oversupply that has sent carbon prices to record lows. The plan will now require backing from a majority of EU countries to become law. “A lot of member states are coming out in favour …We need to see what the formal vote is. Realistically, it will not be until after the German elections (in September),” EU climate chief Connie Hedegaard told Reuters. The ETS is a cornerstone of European Union climate policy, but a much higher carbon price is needed to achieve its goal of spurring industry to invest in low-carbon energy. EU politicians voted against a plan put forward last month but agreed to allow a one-off intervention in the market to temporarily withdraw up to 900 million permits. Companies and utilities buy these to cover their excessive carbon emissions output. “The ‘yes’ vote should provide a short-term boost to carbon prices and confirms the EU’s commitment to the success of the ETS and to implementing the long-term improvements that are still needed,” said Thomas Rassmuson, founding partner at CF Partners, an investment firm specialising in renewable energy. TEMPORARY BOOST? EU carbon prices were down ahead of the vote but traders took the outcome as a signal to buy, with prices jumping as much as 13 percent to 4.86 euros a tonne in afternoon trade. Shares in Germany utility E.ON briefly turned positive after the vote before falling back on a lower benchmark DAX index. RWE shares were down 0.9 percent. Analysts have estimated that EU carbon prices could average 8 to 9 euros over the next eight years, almost double current levels, if the plan to temporarily remove permits is implemented. Ultimately, they say carbon prices must reach levels of 40 to 50 euros to drive investment in lower carbon energy, something governments are keen to see happen to help them reach environmental targets. Poland opposes efforts to bolster carbon prices, however, as its economy still relies heavily on carbon-intensive coal . Germany has failed to take a formal position as the economy ministry opposes it on concerns it will hurt competitiveness, while the environment ministry supports the plan. “Today’s decision is regrettable. The economy ministry’s criticism remains unchanged,” a ministry spokesman said. Other opponents include energy-intensive industries loath to pay higher energy costs, free trade advocates against intervening in markets, and some who argue temporary removal of permits will not raise carbon prices to meaningful levels. Some energy companies have strongly supported the permit removal plan. Finnish utility Fortum said it marked a step toward needed, deeper reform. “A more profound renovation of emissions trading is necessary,” Fortum Chief Financial Officer Markus Rauramo said, noting the market would benefit from the setting of 2030 EU emissions reduction targets. (Additional reporting by Christoph Steitz, Barbara Lewis, Nerijus Adomaitis, Michel Rose, and Sarah Marsh; editing by Jason Neely) Continue reading

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After Failed Attempt in April, Europe Approves Emissions Trading System

Ina Fassbender/Reuters Wind turbines and a coal power plant in Germany. Europe approved a measure aimed at raising carbon permit prices. By STANLEY REED Published: July 3, 2013 LONDON — The European Parliament approved on Wednesday a measure intended to revive sagging prices and confidence in the European Union’s emissions trading system, the centerpiece of Europe’s effort to cut greenhouse gases and a model for similar systems around the world. The vote had taken on symbolic importance because Parliament had rejected a similar proposal in April. That vote threatened the carbon trading system, which has been emulated globally as a way of using markets to curb greenhouse gases. The measure passed on Wednesday in Strasbourg, France, by a vote of 344 to 311 after intense lobbying by the European Commission and some national governments, including those of France, Denmark and Finland. It also gained stronger backing from liberal and socialist groups. Among those opposed were the governments of Poland and the Czech Republic, which were wary of the plan’s impact on their energy-intensive industries. A large moderate group, the European People’s Party , was divided, leading many of its members to abstain. “This was to some extent a symbolic vote indicating support more broadly for Europe’s carbon policies,” said Stig Schjolset, an analyst at Reuters Point Carbon, a market research firm based in Oslo. A negative vote would have meant “that European policy makers did not want to fix the carbon market and use it as a key tool to combat climate change,” he said. Richard Seeber, an Austrian and spokesman on the environment for the European People’s Party, voted in favor of Wednesday’s legislation after voting ‘no’ in April. He said he was persuaded by an amendment ensuring that the intervention in the market was “a one-off” and by a requirement that an assessment be made about “carbon leakage,” the extent to which businesses would leave the European Union to avoid the higher permit price. “It is essential to keep the E.T.S. as the main market-based instrument to fight against climate change,” said Mr. Seeber, referring to the emissions trading system. The market for carbon credits reacted positively, rising to about 4.70 euros, or $6.13, per ton, a 9 percent increase for the day, on heavy volume. The approved proposal will try to shore up prices for permits to emit greenhouse gases by delaying the auctioning of some of these allowances in the coming years through what is called backloading. Carbon permits are licenses for companies to release greenhouse gases. The idea behind the European cap-and-trade system is to tighten the amount of permits available each year so as to make polluting more costly, forcing companies to switch to greener technologies. But Europe’s prolonged economic downturn and generous allocations of allowances have created a glut of permits that cut the price to as low as about 2.75 euros a ton after the negative April vote. In a sense, the system is working by providing relief at a time of economic stress. But analysts say that a price of 30 euros a ton or higher is needed to persuade companies to switch to cleaner fuels like natural gas, the main alternative to coal for generating electric power. Coal use in Europe boomed last year. Analysts caution that the number of allowances that will be held off the market, about 900 million, is estimated to be only about half of the surplus of permits that would otherwise have built up by 2020, so it will not by itself shift the carbon market from bear to bull mode. “I think the backloading itself will have limited impact on prices because the market remains significantly oversupplied,” said Roland Vetter, head of research at CF Partners, a carbon trading firm based in London. In addition, there are still negotiations with Europe’s national governments and other hurdles to clear before the changes are put into effect, perhaps in the early part of next year. “This is a marathon, not a sprint, so today is not the end of the story,” said Miles Austin, the executive director of the Climate Markets and Investment Association, an industry group based in London. Business groups, some of which had lobbied against the measure, were critical of what they described as interference in a market system. “Even a one-off intervention undermines the principles of the emissions trading system and will make it more difficult for businesses to produce cost-effectively in the E.U.,” Arnaldo Abruzzini, secretary general of Eurochambres, which represents European chambers of commerce, said in a statement. But the world’s pioneering carbon market has a pulse again. Among supporters of carbon trading there is now hope that Europe will in a couple of years adopt structural changes that would lead to permanently higher prices. Connie Hedegaard, the European Union’s commissioner for climate action, said the purpose of the backloading measure was to “stop the bleeding with the drop in the carbon price while we were discussing more challenging issues.” The simplest overall change that would raise the price would be to “reduce the cap,” or permanently reduce the number of allowances available, said Robert N. Stavins, director of the Harvard Environmental Economics Program. But such a move “is very difficult to do at a time like this,” he said. With Europe mired in recession, politicians do not want to saddle Europe-based companies with even higher costs, especially considering that their American competitors are benefiting from lower energy prices thanks to the discoveries of shale gas. Also, the United States seems to have more or less permanently rejected a cap-and-trade system after the House of Representatives passed one in 2009 that later failed in the Senate. For some businesses, that left the European system looking like yet another burdensome and costly regulatory initiative. “Europe thought it would take the lead and the U.S. would follow,” Mr. Stavins said. Instead, the United States rejected cap and trade and that is affecting the cost of carbon-intensive services in Europe, he said. Mr. Stavins said that countries like Australia, Japan and China were all experimenting to various degrees with systems like the one Europe adopted. A version of this article appeared in print on July 4, 2013, on page B3 of the New York edition with the headline: After Failed Attempt in April, Europe Approves Emissions Trading System. Continue reading

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China Has A Lot to Do to Realize Carbon Trading Nationwide

2013-07-01 14:29:48 CRIENGLISH.com   Web Editor: Xu Fei A high-level meeting on the 6th World Economic and Environmental Conference was held in Beijing on Sunday, June 30, 2013. The roundtable meeting discloses that the 6th World Economic and Environmental Conference will be held in the latter half of this year under the theme “on the way to green and low carbon to deepen industrial reform and seek harmonious development.” [Photo: CRIENGLISH.com] The city of Shenzhen, in south China’s Guangdong Province, has launched a carbon trading scheme, to become China’s first market for compulsory carbon trading. Energy consumption and environmental experts are praising the move as a positive sign that the government is changing its ways and reducing carbon dioxide emissions. However, they also point out that the government still has a lot to do to realize carbon trading nationwide. The Shenzhen pilot scheme involves 635 local companies which account for 26 percent of the city’s gross domestic product and 38 percent of its CO2 emissions, or about 30 million tonnes — a tiny amount compared to the 8 billion tonnes China emitted in 2012. Liu Yanhua, Counselor of the State Council and Former Chinese Vice Minister of Science and Technology, says production enterprises, a major contributor to such emissions, are expected to play an active role should China develop its low-carbon technology, by applying this carbon trading pilot scheme across the nation. “70 percent of China’s energy consumption derives from production enterprises, which is an important factor in world energy-related CO2 emissions. And the remaining 30 percent of energy use and emissions takes place in homes. Developing countries usually find the reverse situation. If China wants low-carbon development, the nation needs to transform its model of development. Enterprises would undoubtedly play a big role in the transformation as a result of 70 percent of emissions being caused by the production.” Carbon markets allow companies to buy permits to emit carbon dioxide from those that burn less fossil fuels. They thus help set a price on emissions, a mechanism that aims to encourage companies to reduce such pollution and invest in cleaner technologies. Shenzhen is one of the seven cities that were designated as a pilot area for carbon emission trading together with Tianjin, Shanghai, Chongqing and Beijing municipalities and the provinces of Guangdong and Hubei. Rights for 100 million tons of carbon emission have been allocated to 635 enterprises over the past three years, based on their previous emission and added industrial values. Zhou Jian, an expert with Tsinghua University’s Institute of Energy, Environment and Economy, believes that this pioneering pursuit of carbon trading development in Shenzhen indicates government progress in reducing emissions. “Shenzhen is the country’s first market for the compulsory carbon trading of seven pilot cities and provinces. This fact also demonstrates a change in the Chinese government’s attitude in energy conservation and emissions’ reduction, from the heavy reliance on compulsory and administrative means to adopt market mechanisms.” China’s carbon-trading plans are modeled on similar programs now underway in Europe, Australia, California, New England and other large economies. Zhou Jian believes that the advanced European and US markets would first make a law that stipulate the cap for carbon emissions and then allocate a quota of emissions to individual enterprises, however the Chinese government has failed to put such a law in place yet. Zhou also added another problem has to be addressed in realizing carbon trading nationwide. “One of the difficulties lies in the establishment of a control system to calculate, monitor and examine carbon emissions in China. If the quota of carbon emissions is allocated to each individual enterprise, the basic and micro-statistics regarding their respective consumption of carbon and related emissions are strictly necessary. But there is no such content in China’s current accounting system.” There are also concerns in China about what will happen to the price of credits when companies start to trade them. Some say that the price of these credits will rise as China looks to cut pollution levels, which may spark speculative trading. Continue reading

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