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EU Carbon Price Edges Up On Falling Auction Volume
London (Platts)–1Aug2013/747 am EDT/1147 GMT The price of carbon dioxide allowances under the EU Emissions Trading System edged higher in late July, bouncing back from a dip earlier in the month, and taking modest support from expectations of a sharp drop in primary supply in August. The first half of the month saw prices drop sharply, after the market appeared to have been overbought ahead of the July 3 EU Parliament vote on market intervention. Despite the EP voting yes to the EC’s proposal to withhold up to 900 million EU Allowances from auctions, EUAs for December 2013 delivery eased to a low of Eur4.03/mt on July 10, down from an intra-month high of Eur4.69/mt on the day of the vote. Market participants generally agree that prices would have collapsed much further if the EP had rejected the proposal for a second time — an outcome which would have spelled the end for the EC’s proposals to use auction timings to shore up the price in the short-term. After testing apparent support at just above the Eur4.00/mt level a few times in mid-July, prices began to claw back some ground, rising to Eur4.33/mt by July 26. In general, the seasonal lull took hold in July, with traders drifting away from the markets for the summer break, which typically sees a drop-off in trading volume in July and August. A moderately bullish element emerged in the form of expectations of restricted primary supply in August. The volume of EUAs to be auctioned by governments in August will more than halve from July’s volume, according to exchange data compiled by Platts. The total volume of EUAs to be sold in auctions will drop to just 33.65 million mt in August, down from 76.9 million mt in July, and 65.9 million mt in June, according to data from Germany’s European Energy Exchange and the ICE Futures Europe exchange in London. And on a weekly basis, the volume in August will drop to just over 7 million mt, down from 14 million-15 million mt per week in 2013 to date, according to the exchanges’ scheduled auction calendars. While the drop in auctioning volumes in August reflects the summer lull in trading, the restricted volume may create short-term upside for EUA prices as the market factors in the tighter supply. However, market sources generally say the lower supply in August has already been factored into prices, given the advance notice given by the exchanges. September’s volume is set to bounce back to 69.3 million mt, the figures show. The EC in July carried out its planned suspension of the Union Registry — the EU’s central database which tracks ownership of carbon units. The temporary closure allowed a series of upgrades that allow the swapping of Phase II EUAs with those valid for Phase III — so-called “banking” — and to allow greater clarity on the eligibility of international offsets for EU ETS compliance. Following the upgrade, international credits held in the EU ETS and EU Kyoto Protocol accounts on the registry will be marked as either “eligible” or “pending/ineligible,” helping to facilitate appropriate use of credits under the EU ETS. Late July saw three days when no trading volume was recorded on CER futures contracts on London’s ICE Futures Europe exchange. Market sources said several factors could have led to the halt in liquidity. CER issuance has been falling in recent months as CDM investors hold back from requesting credits. In addition, some companies may have fully utilized their annual quota limits for offsets under the EU ETS, meaning they have no further need for CERs. Clearer EU eligibility rules on the use of offsets could also have boosted interest in cheaper Emission Reduction Units from the UN’s Joint Implementation program, denting demand for CERs, sources said. Elsewhere, the EC plans to make a decision on the level of free allocation of EUAs in September, it said July 30. The announcement ended months of speculation about the timing of free allocation this year, which normally occurs in February each year. The decision will set out the amount of allowances given out to European companies in the period to 2020, as well as the final overall carbon cap in the period. “The Commission is currently scrutinizing the NIMs,” the EC said, in reference to EU member states’ National Implementation Measures ? the government plans which set out the level of allowances to be allocated to each installation. “Thanks to the collaboration of Member States, this work is nearing completion,” the EC said in a statement on its website. “The date of the adoption and publication of the decision will be announced on this website at least 24 hours in advance,” it said. The decision means companies with operations regulated by the EU ETS will have greater clarity on the level of free allowances they receive in the period to 2020. “EU ETS rules foresee that a cross-sectoral correction factor should be applied if the preliminary allocation for industrial installations through NIMs exceeds the maximum amount of allowances available,” the EC said. “In this case, free allocation to all industrial installations across the EU would be reduced by the same proportion,” it said. Following adoption of the decision, EU member states’ registry authorities would be expected to distribute the free allowances to the operators of regulated installations. This will take around one to three months, depending on the procedures to be applied in each member state, and whether the EC decision requires changes to the preliminary allocations in the NIMs, it said. The decision on free allocation may also impact the overall number of allowances to be auctioned in the period, the EC said. “Once the decision is adopted, the Commission will examine whether this is the case,” it said. “If so, it will be assessed and decided, together with Member States and auction platforms as well as in line with relevant provisions in the Auctioning Regulation, whether any adjustment to the volume to be auctioned should be made to the 2013 auction calendars or taken into account in the 2014 auction calendars,” the EC said. –Frank Watson, frank.watson@platts.com Continue reading
Voluntary CO2 Trading Grew In 2012, Albeit At Lower Prices
Jul 26, 2013 By Wayne Barber, Chief News Analyst, GenerationHub A recent report from Forest Trends Ecosystem Marketplace and Bloomberg New Energy Finance (BNEF) finds that voluntary carbon markets worldwide grew in 2012, topping 100 million metric tons. In 2012, voluntary actors contracted 101 million tonnes (metric tons) of carbon offsets (MtCO 2 e) for immediate or future delivery. That’s 4% more than in 2011. Market value, however, decreased 11% to $523m as offset prices fell slightly for several popular project types. Suppliers predict the CO 2 market value could reach $1.6bn to $2.3bn in 2020, according to the report: “Maneuvering the Mosaic: State of the Voluntary Carbon Markets 2013.” The 126-page study was made public July 23 on the BNEF website. Molly Peters-Stanley and Daphne Yin are listed as the primary authors of the document. The study defines “voluntary” as all purchases of carbon offsets not driven by an existing regulatory compliance obligation. Transactions are deemed to occur at the point that offsets are contracted. The report also indicated 90% of the offset volume was contracted by the private sector. Also most forward contracts, spanning multiple years, were negotiated between project developers and offset end users. The report notes that voluntary offsets run the gamut from parties that distribute clean cook-stoves and water filtration devices to more traditional projects like wind energy and fuel switching. Demand surged for carbon offsets from certified forestry projects. In 2012, offsets from renewable energy projects were the most popular among voluntary offset buyers, as the source of 26 MtCO 2 e or 34% of transacted offsets that were associated with a project type. Wind energy was behind 15.3 MtCO 2 e of transacted offsets – 35% less than in 2011, as some buyers turned their attention to other inexpensive offsets sourced from large hydropower projects. Offset buyers in Europe and North America expanded their offset programs in order to “demonstrate climate leadership,” according to the report. Where governments have included offset provisions within their broader climate regulations, demand ranged from steady (in California) to growing (in Australia) as companies prepared for compliance, according to the report. “Because of the market’s lack of liquidity and predictability, historical trends presented in this report should be viewed only as a starting point for understanding demand in the current year – which continues to evolve as both offset buyers and suppliers innovate new ways to mitigate GHGs [greenhouse gases], influence policy, and communicate their purchases and successes,” according to the report. Read more environmental business news Continue reading
The Great Deceleration
The emerging-market slowdown is not the beginning of a bust. But it is a turning-point for the world economy Jul 27th 2013 WHEN a champion sprinter falls short of his best speeds, it takes a while to determine whether he is temporarily on poor form or has permanently lost his edge. The same is true with emerging markets, the world economy’s 21st-century sprinters. After a decade of surging growth, in which they led a global boom and then helped pull the world economy forwards in the face of the financial crisis, the emerging giants have slowed sharply. China will be lucky if it manages to hit its official target of 7.5% growth in 2013, a far cry from the double-digit rates that the country had come to expect in the 2000s. Growth in India (around 5%), Brazil and Russia (around 2.5%) is barely half what it was at the height of the boom. Collectively, emerging markets may (just) match last year’s pace of 5%. That sounds fast compared with the sluggish rich world, but it is the slowest emerging-economy expansion in a decade, barring 2009 when the rich world slumped. This marks the end of the dramatic first phase of the emerging-market era, which saw such economies jump from 38% of world output to 50% (measured at purchasing-power parity, or PPP) over the past decade. Over the next ten years emerging economies will still rise, but more gradually. The immediate effect of this deceleration should be manageable. But the longer-term impact on the world economy will be profound. Running out of puff In the past, periods of emerging-market boom have tended to be followed by busts (which helps explain why so few poor countries have become rich ones). A determined pessimist can find reasons to fret today, pointing in particular to the risks of an even more drastic deceleration in China or of a sudden global monetary tightening. But this time a broad emerging-market bust looks unlikely. China is in the midst of a precarious shift from investment-led growth to a more balanced, consumption-based model. Its investment surge has prompted plenty of bad debt. But the central government has the fiscal strength both to absorb losses and to stimulate the economy if necessary. That is a luxury few emerging economies have ever had. It makes disaster much less likely. And with rich-world economies still feeble, there is little chance that monetary conditions will suddenly tighten. Even if they did, most emerging economies have better defences than ever before, with flexible exchange rates, large stashes of foreign-exchange reserves and relatively less debt (much of it in domestic currency). That’s the good news. The bad news is that the days of record-breaking speed are over. China’s turbocharged investment and export model has run out of puff. Because its population is ageing fast, the country will have fewer workers, and because it is more prosperous, it has less room for catch-up growth. Ten years ago China’s per person GDP measured at PPP was 8% of America’s; now it is 18%. China will keep on catching up, but at a slower clip. That will hold back other emerging giants. Russia’s burst of speed was propelled by a surge in energy prices driven by Chinese growth. Brazil sprinted ahead with the help of a boom in commodities and domestic credit; its current combination of stubborn inflation and slow growth shows that its underlying economic speed limit is a lot lower than most people thought. The same is true of India, where near-double-digit annual rises in GDP led politicians, and many investors, to confuse the potential for rapid catch-up (a young, poor population) with its inevitability. India’s growth rate could be pushed up again, but not without radical reforms—and almost certainly not to the peak pace of the 2000s. Many laps ahead The Great Deceleration means that booming emerging economies will no longer make up for weakness in rich countries. Without a stronger recovery in America or Japan, or a revival in the euro area, the world economy is unlikely to grow much faster than today’s lacklustre pace of 3%. Things will feel rather sluggish. It will also become increasingly clear how unusual the past decade was (see article ). It was dominated by the scale of China’s boom, which was peculiarly disruptive not just as a result of the country’s immense size, but also because of its surge in exports, thirst for commodities and build-up of foreign-exchange reserves. In future, more balanced growth from a broader array of countries will cause smaller ripples around the world. After China and India, the ten next-biggest emerging economies, from Indonesia to Thailand, have a smaller combined population than China alone. Growth will be broader and less reliant on the BRICs (as Goldman Sachs dubbed Brazil, Russia, India and China). Corporate strategists who assumed that emerging economies were on a straight line of ultra-quick growth will need to revisit their spreadsheets; in some years a rejuvenated, shale-gas-fired America may be a sprightlier bet than some of the BRICs. But the biggest challenge will be for politicians in the emerging world, whose performance will propel—or retard—growth. So far China’s seem the most alert and committed to reform. Vladimir Putin’s Russia, by contrast, is a dozy resource-based kleptocracy whose customers are shifting to shale gas. India has demography on its side, but both it and Brazil need to recover their reformist zeal—or disappoint the rising middle classes who recently took to the streets in Delhi and São Paulo. There may also be a change in the economic mood music. In the 1990s “the Washington consensus” preached (sometimes arrogantly) economic liberalisation and democracy to the emerging world. For the past few years, with China surging, Wall Street crunched, Washington in gridlock and the euro zone committing suicide, the old liberal verities have been questioned: state capitalism and authoritarian modernisation have been in vogue. “The Beijing consensus” provided an excuse for both autocrats and democrats to abandon liberal reforms. The need for growth may revive interest in them, and the West may even recover a little of its self-confidence. From the print edition: Leaders Continue reading