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EU Should Move Beyond Carbon Market to Shut Coal, IEA Says

By Mathew Carr & Sally Bakewell – Jun 10, 2013 The European Union needs to think of other ways to prevent new coal-fired power stations from being built because its carbon market won’t achieve that this decade, according to the International Energy Agency . Nations should consider measures including bans of new and inefficient plants known as “sub-critical,” unless they are fitted with carbon capture and storage technology, Maria Van der Hoeven, the executive director of the Paris-based agency that advises 28 developed nations, said today in a London interview. 3:41 June 10 (Bloomberg) — International Energy Agency Executive Director Maria van der Hoeven discusses the IEA’s view that the European Union needs to think of other ways to prevent new coal-fired power because its carbon market won’t achieve that target through 2020. She talks with Bloomberg’s Mathew Carr in London. (Source: Bloomberg) EU carbon permits, which have plunged 88 percent since 2008, would need to trade at 10 times their current value of about 4 euros ($5.28) a metric ton to prompt utilities to switch to cleaner natural gas from coal, according to a Bloomberg fuel switch calculator. The push in Europe to improve energy efficiency helped drive down permit prices, Van der Hoeven said. “What we want to see is that sub critical coal-fired power plants are less in use and are not going to be constructed any more,” Van der Hoeven said. “The most important thing is we look into the reasons beyond the collapse in the price of carbon” to explain why emissions are not falling faster. Lawmakers need to review energy policies to make sure they don’t contradict each other or overlap to cut emissions and protect the climate, Van der Hoeven said. Halting Plants “Governments have to look into the complementarity of what they are doing. If you only look at one technology and forget about the rest, that doesn’t help,” she said. While the IEA does not have the authority to stop nations using coal power, it’s urging them to halt construction of new units, Van Der Hoeven said. “We show them with our report what will happen if they don’t,” she said, referring to a report published today called “Redrawing the Energy-Climate Map.” The publication contains two different scenarios. Under a situation that limits an increase in global temperature to 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 Fahrenheit), the world will leave two thirds of its fossil fuel reserves untapped before 2050. Under that climate-saving scenario, revenues in the power industry through 2035 from 2012 are $1.3 trillion higher than in the agency’s central case, which includes fewer climate protection policies. “The higher gross revenues result from a combination of lower electricity demand and higher electricity prices, with the latter effect proving slightly larger,” according to the report. Technology, legislation, markets and industry can operate together to save the climate, Van der Hoeven said. “When the Stone Age came to and end, it wasn’t because there was no stones anymore, but because we had different technologies,” she said. “There’s no need to use coal for our energy supply if we have other options.” To contact the reporters on this story: Mathew Carr in London at m.carr@bloomberg.net ; Sally Bakewell in London at sbakewell1@bloomberg.net To contact the editor responsible for this story: Lars Paulsson at lpaulsson@bloomberg.net Continue reading

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Market For REDD+ Carbon Credits Declines 8% In 2012

mongabay.com May 30, 2013    The market for carbon credits generated from projects that reduce deforestation and forest degradation — a climate change mitigation approach known as REDD+ — dipped eight percent in 2012 according to an annual assessment of the global voluntary carbon market. The report, published by Ecosystem Marketplace and Bloomberg New Energy Finance and slated to be released next month, found that overall demand for voluntary carbon credits rose four percent in 2012, with buyers offsetting 101 million metric tons of greenhouse gas emissions. Buyers paid $523 million for those credits, or 11 percent less than they spent in 2011. The average price per ton of carbon dioxide emitted fell five percent from $6.20 to $5.90. Voluntary carbon credits are used by governments, companies, and individuals to offset their emissions as an act of goodwill or for marketing purposes. By definition, the credits don’t qualify FOR cap-and-trade systems or other regulatory frameworks for limiting carbon emissions. The voluntary market has held up better than Europe’s compliance market for carbon credits, which crashed in 2012 due to oversupply. REDD+ market While the market for REDD+ credits contracted in 2012, the report found that demand for credits certified under leading certification standards — specifically the the Verified Carbon Standard (VCS) and the Climate, Community and Biodiversity (CCB) Standards — expanded during the year. Overall, REDD+ and avoided conversion projects amounted to 9 percent of the total volume of voluntary carbon credits transacted during 2012. REDD+ aims to create financial incentives to keep forests standing as functional ecosystems rather than having them cleared for timber, fuel, or agriculture. While the concept seems simple, developing and implementing the mechanism has been fraught with difficulties, including lack of secure land rights in tropical countries; concerns over corruption, benefits distribution, and fraud; governance challenges; and worries about perverse social and environmental outcomes. Accordingly, REDD+ has been slow to move forward. Only a handful of projects have been validated and verified under the most stringent standards. CITATION: Ecosystem Marketplace and Bloomberg New Energy Finance. Maneuvering the Mosaic – State of the Voluntary Carbon Markets 2013 Read more at http://news.mongabay…BXY0DqDqfgDY.99 Continue reading

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India Shariah Market Tested With Property Funds

Taqwaa Advisory is setting up a Rs. 250 crore real estate fund to give Indian muslims a Shariah investment option Liau Y-Sing    Yudith Ho A file photo of BSE. India has two Shariah equity funds and BSE introduced a new Islamic share index on 2 May. Photo: Hemant Mishra/Mint Taqwaa Advisory and Shariah Investment Solutions Pvt. Ltd, a Mumbai-based consultancy, is setting up the Rs. 250 crore fund on behalf of a company backed by the Kerala government, director Shariq Nisar said in an interview on Wednesday. Secura Investment Management (India) Pvt. Ltd manages the country’s only other such real estate vehicle. India has two Shariah equity funds and BSE Ltd, the stock exchange operator, introduced a new Islamic share index on 2 May. “Islamic finance is in a nascent stage in India and definitely any new product will create more awareness and opportunity,” Taqwaa’s Nisar said. “There’s a lack of awareness and interest, which will take some time to be removed.” In 2008, a 13-member panel of experts led by Raghuram Rajan , a former chief economist at the International Monetary Fund and now the top adviser in India’s finance ministry, recommended that the country allow banking that complies with Islam’s ban on interest. The government did not take any action, and central bank governor D. Subbarao said this month that Shariah-compliant banking is inconsistent with the nation’s laws. Political barrier India’s 10-year sovereign bonds yield 7.15%, well ahead of 5.97% in Indonesia, the next highest in the region, data compiled by Bloomberg show. “The challenge is that every time India tries to offer Islamic banking, the tendency is to politicize this product,” Raj Mohamad, managing director at consulting company Five Pillars Pte, said in an interview from Singapore on Wednesday. “India should look at non-traditional Islamic finance markets and see how they have done it.” Stock funds Internationally, an increasing amount of Shariah-compliant financial assets has buoyed demand for sukuk, with worldwide sales reaching a record $46.5 billion last year. Issuance has risen 7% so far in 2013 to $18 billion, data compiled by Bloomberg show. The average yield on Islamic debt rose 10 basis points, or 0.1 percentage point, to 3.38% on Wednesday, the HSBC/Nasdaq Dubai US Dollar Sukuk Index shows. Borrowing costs have climbed 57 basis points this year, after reaching a record low of 2.67% in January. The yield premium over the London interbank offered rate, or Libor, widened five basis points to 181. Some 13% of India’s 1.2 billion people are Muslim, according to the CIA World Factbook, the third-biggest population behind Indonesia and Pakistan. Those two countries have 209.6 trillion rupiah and 837 billion Pakistani rupees of Islamic banking assets, the latest central bank data show. In Malaysia, a global pioneer in Shariah-compliant finance, holdings total 399 billion ringgit. Bloomberg Continue reading

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