European Union Emission Trading Scheme

European Union Emission Trading Scheme

The European Union Emissions Trading Scheme (EU ETS) also known as the European Union Emissions Trading System, was the first large emissions trading scheme in the world.[1] It was launched in 2005 to combat climate change and is a major pillar of EU climate policy.[2] The EU ETS currently covers more than 10,000 installations with a net heat excess of 20 MW in the energy and industrial sectors which are collectively responsible for close to half of the EU's emissions of CO2 and 40% of its total greenhouse gas emissions.[3][4]

Under the EU ETS, large emitters of carbon dioxide within the EU must monitor their CO2 emissions, and annually report them, as they are obliged every year to return an amount of emission allowances to the government that is equivalent to their CO2 emissions in that year. In order to neutralize annual irregularities in CO2-emission levels that may occur due to extreme weather events (such as harsh winters or very hot summers), emission credits for any plant operator subject to the EU ETS are given out for a sequence of several years at once. Each such sequence of years is called a Trading Period. The 1st EU ETS Trading Period expired in December 2007; it had covered all EU ETS emissions since January 2005. With its termination, the 1st phase EU allowances became invalid. Since January 2008, the 2nd Trading Period is under way which will last until December 2012. Currently, the installations get the trading credits from the NAPS (national allowance plans) which is part of each country's government. Besides receiving this initial allocation, an operator may purchase EU and international trading credits. If an installation has performed well at reducing its carbon emissions then it has the opportunity to sell its credits and make a profit. This allows the system to be more self contained and be part of the stock exchange without much government intervention.[citation needed]

In January 2008, the European Commission proposed a number of changes to the scheme, including centralized allocation (no more national allocation plans) by an EU authority, a turn to auctioning a greater share (60+ %) of permits rather than allocating freely, and inclusion of other greenhouse gases, such as nitrous oxide and perfluorocarbons.[4] These changes are still in a draft stage; the mentioned amendments are only likely to become effective from January 2013 onwards, i.e. in the 3rd Trading Period under the EU ETS. Also, the proposed caps for the 3rd Trading Period foresee an overall reduction of greenhouse gases for the sector of 21% in 2020 compared to 2005 emissions. The EU ETS has recently been extended to the airline industry as well, but these changes will not take place until 2012.[5][6]

Contents

Mechanisms

The first phase of the EU scheme was created to operate apart from international climate change treaties such as the pre-existing United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC, 1992) or the Kyoto Protocol that was subsequently (1997) established under it. When the Kyoto Protocol came into force on 16 February 2005, Phase I of the EU ETS had already become operational. The EU later agreed to incorporate Kyoto flexible mechanism certificates as compliance tools within the EU ETS. The "Linking Directive" allows operators to use a certain amount of Kyoto certificates from flexible mechanism projects in order to cover their emissions.

The Kyoto flexible mechanisms are:

  • Joint Implementation projects (JI) defined by Article 6 of the Kyoto Protocol, which produce Emission Reduction Units (ERUs). One ERU represents the successful emissions reduction equivalent to one tonne of carbon dioxide equivalent (tCO2e).
  • the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) defined by Article 12, which produces Certified Emission Reductions (CERs). One CER represents the successful emissions reduction equivalent to one tonne of carbon dioxide equivalent (tCO2e).
  • International Emissions Trading (IET) defined by Article 17.

IET is relevant as the reductions achieved through CDM projects are a compliance tool for EU ETS operators. These Certified Emission Reductions (CERs) can be obtained by implementing emission reduction projects in developing countries, outside the EU, that have ratified (or acceded to) the Kyoto Protocol. The implementation of Clean Development Projects is largely specified by the Marrakech Accords, a follow-on set of agreements by the Conference of the Parties to the Kyoto Protocol. The legislators of the EU ETS drew up the scheme independently but called on the experiences gained during the running of the voluntary UK Emissions Trading Scheme in the previous years,[7] and collaborated with other parties to ensure its units and mechanisms were compatible with the design agreed through the UNFCCC.

Under the EU ETS, the governments of the EU Member States agree on national emission caps which have to be approved by the EU commission. Those countries then allocate allowances to their industrial operators, and track and validate the actual emissions in accordance with the relevant assigned amount. They require the allowances to be retired after the end of each year.

The operators within the ETS may reassign or trade their allowances by several means:

  • privately, moving allowances between operators within a company and across national borders
  • over the counter, using a broker to privately match buyers and sellers
  • trading on the spot market of one of Europe's climate exchanges.

Like any other financial instrument, trading consists of matching buyers and sellers between members of the exchange and then settling by depositing a valid allowance in exchange for the agreed financial consideration. Much like a stock market, companies and private individuals can trade through brokers who are listed on the exchange, and need not be regulated operators.

When each change of ownership of an allowance is proposed, the national registry and the European Commission are informed in order for them to validate the transaction. During Phase II of the EU ETS the UNFCCC also validates the allowance and any change that alters the distribution within each national allocation plan.

Like the Kyoto trading scheme, the EU scheme allows a regulated operator to use carbon credits in the form of Emission Reduction Units (ERU) to comply with its obligations. A Kyoto Certified Emission Reduction unit (CER), produced by a carbon project that has been certified by the UNFCCC's Clean Development Mechanism Executive Board, or Emission Reduction Unit (ERU) certified by the Joint Implementation project's host country or by the Joint Implementation Supervisory Committee, are accepted by the EU as equivalent.

Thus one EU Allowance Unit of one tonne of CO2, or "EUA", was designed to be identical ("fungible") with the equivalent "Assigned Amount Unit" (AAU) of CO2 defined under Kyoto. Hence, because of the EU's decision to accept Kyoto-CERs as equivalent to EU-EUA's, it is possible to trade EUA's and UNFCCC-validated CERs on a one-to-one basis within the same system. (However, the EU was not able to link trades from all its countries until 2008-9 because of its technical problems connecting to the UN systems.[8])

During Phase II of the EU ETS, the operators within each Member State must surrender their allowances for inspection by the EU before they can be "retired" by the UNFCCC.

Allocation

In an ETS, the total number of permits issued (either auctioned or allocated) determines the price for carbon. The actual carbon price is determined by the market. Too many allowances will result in a low carbon price, and reduced emission abatement efforts (Newbery, 2009).[9] Too few allowances will result in too high a carbon price (Hepburn, 2006, p. 239).[10]

For each EU ETS Phase, the total quantity to be allocated by each Member State is defined in the Member State National Allocation Plan (NAP) (equivalent to its UNFCCC-defined carbon account.) The European Commission has oversight of the NAP process and decides if the NAP fulfills the 12 criteria set out in the Annex III of the Emission Trading Directive (EU Directive 2003/87/EC). The first and foremost criterion is that the proposed total quantity is in line with a Member State's Kyoto target.

Of course, the Member State's plan can, and should, also take account of emission levels in other sectors not covered by the EU ETS, and address these within its own domestic policies. For instance, transport is responsible for 21% of EU greenhouse gas emissions, households and small businesses for 17% and agriculture for 10%.[11]

During Phase I, most allowances in all countries were given freely (known as grandfathering). This approach has been criticized[12] as giving rise to windfall profits, being less efficient than auctioning, and providing too little incentive for innovative new competition to provide clean, renewable energy.[13][14] On the other hand, allocation rather than auctioning may be justified for a few sectors, e.g., aluminium and steel, that face international competition, and where the price of carbon is important (Neuhoff, 2009;[15] Newbery, 2009; Carbon Trust, 2009;[16] See also the section on competitiveness).

To address these problems,[citation needed] the European Commission proposed various changes in a January 2008 package, including the abolishment of NAPs from 2013 and auctioning a far greater share (ca. 60% in 2013, growing afterward) of emission permits.

From the start of Phase III (January 2013) there will be a centralised allocation of permits, not National Allocation Plans, with a greater share of auctioning of permits.[17]

Competitiveness

Allocation can act as a means of addressing concerns over loss of competitiveness, and possible "leakage" (carbon leakage) of emissions outside the EU. Leakage is the effect of emissions increasing in countries or sectors that have weaker regulation of emissions than the regulation in another country or sector (Barker et al., 2007).[18] Carbon Trust (2009) cited research that showed competitiveness concerns could affect the following sectors: cement, steel, aluminium, pulp and paper, basic inorganic chemicals and fertilisers/ammonia.[16] Leakage from these sectors was thought likely not to be more than 1% of total EU emissions.

According to the Carbon Trust (2009), correcting for leakage by allocating permits acts as a temporary subsidy for affected industries, but does not fix the underlying problem. Border adjustments would be the economically efficient choice, where imports are taxed according to their carbon content (Neuhoff, 2009;[15] Newbery, 2009).[9] A problem with border adjustments is that they might be used as a disguise for trade protectionism (Grubb et al., p. 5).[19] Some adjustments may also not prevent emissions leakage.

Banking and borrowing

Within a trading phase, banking and borrowing is allowed. For example, a 2006 EUA can be used in 2007 (Banking) or in 2005 (Borrowing). Interperiod borrowing is not allowed. Member states had the discretion to decide if banking EUA's from Phase I to Phase II was allowed or not.[20]

Phase I

In the first phase (2005–2007), the EU ETS included some 12,000 installations, representing approximately 40% of EU CO2 emissions,[21] covering energy activities (combustion installations with a rated thermal input exceeding 20 MW, mineral oil refineries, coke ovens), production and processing of ferrous metals, mineral industry (cement clinker, glass and ceramic bricks) and pulp, paper and board activities.

Launch and operation

The scheme, in which all 15 member states that were then members of the European Union participated, nominally commenced operation on 1 January 2005, although national registries were unable to settle transactions for the first few months. However, the prior existence of the UK Emissions Trading Scheme meant that market participants were already in place and ready. In its first year, 362 million tonnes of CO2 were traded on the market for a sum of €7.2 billion, and a large number of futures and options.[22] The price of allowances increased more or less steadily to a peak level in April 2006 of about €30 per tonne CO2,[23] but fell in May 2006 to under €10/ton on news that some countries were likely to give their industries such generous emission caps that there was no need for them to reduce emissions. Lack of scarcity under the first phase of the scheme continued through 2006 resulting in a trading price of €1.2 a tonne in March 2007, declining to €0.10 in September 2007.

Verified emissions have seen a net increase over the first phase of the scheme. For the countries for which data is available (all 27 member states minus Romania, Bulgaria and Malta), emissions increased by 1.9% between 2005 and 2007.

Country Verified emissions Change
2005 2006 2007 2005–2007
 Austria 33,372,826 32,382,804 31,751,165 -4.9%
 Belgium 55,363,223 54,775,314 52,795,318 -4.6%
 Cyprus 5,078,877 5,259,273 5,396,164 6.2%
 Czech Republic 82,454,618 83,624,953 87,834,758 6.5%
 Germany 474,990,760 478,016,581 487,004,055 2.5%
 Denmark 26,475,718 34,199,588 29,407,355 11.1%
 Estonia 12,621,817 12,109,278 15,329,931 21.5%
 Spain 183,626,981 179,711,225 186,495,894 1.6%
 Finland 33,099,625 44,621,411 42,541,327 28.5%
 France 131,263,787 126,979,048 126,634,806 -3.5%
 Greece 71,267,736 69,965,145 72,717,006 2.0%
 Hungary 26,161,627 25,845,891 26,835,478 2.6%
 Ireland 22,441,000 21,705,328 21,246,117 -5.3%
 Italy 225,989,357 227,439,408 226,368,773 0.2%
 Lithuania 6,603,869 6,516,911 5,998,744 -9.2%
 Luxembourg 2,603,349 2,712,972 2,567,231 -1.4%
 Latvia 2,854,481 2,940,680 2,849,203 -0.2%
 Netherlands 80,351,288 76,701,184 79,874,658 -0.6%
 Poland 203,149,562 209,616,285 209,601,993 3.2%
 Portugal 36,425,915 33,083,871 31,183,076 -14.4%
 Sweden 19,381,623 19,884,147 15,348,209 -20.8%
 Slovenia 8,720,548 8,842,181 9,048,633 3.8%
 Slovakia 25,231,767 25,543,239 24,516,830 -2.8%
 United Kingdom 242,513,099 251,159,840 256,581,160 5.8%
Total 2,012,043,453 2,033,636,557 2,049,927,884 1.9%
  • Figures are in tonnes of CO2
  • Source: European Commission Press Release 23 May 2008[24]

Consequently, observers and NGO's have accused national governments of abusing the system under industry pressure, and have urged for far stricter caps in the second phase (2008–2012).[25]

Phase II

Million Metric Tonnes of CO2 yearly allowances
Member State 1st period cap 2005 verified emissions 2008-2012 cap
State request Cap allowed
 Austria 33.0 33.4 32.8 30.7
 Belgium 62.08 55.58 † 63.33 58.5
 Bulgaria 42.3 40.6 67.6 42.3
 Cyprus 5.7 5.1 7.12 5.48
 Czech Republic 97.6 82.5 101.9 86.8
 Denmark 33.5 26.5 24.5 24.5
 Estonia 19 12.62 24.38 12.72
 Finland 45.5 33.1 39.6 37.6
 France 156.5 131.3 132.8 132.8
 Hungary 31.3 26.0 30.7 26.9
 Germany 499 474 482 453.1
 Greece 74.4 71.3 75.5 69.1
 Ireland 22.3 22.4 22.6 21.15
 Italy 223.1 222.5 209 195.8
 Latvia 4.6 2.9 7.7 3.3
 Lithuania 12.3 6.6 16.6 8.8
 Luxembourg 3.4 2.6 3.95 2.7
 Malta†††† 2.9 1.98 2.96 2.1
 Netherlands 95.3 80.35 †† 90.4 85.8
 Poland 239.1 203.1 284.6 208.5
 Portugal 38.9 36.4 35.9 34.8
 Romania 74.8 70.8 95.7 75.9
 Slovakia 30.5 25.2 41.3 30.9
 Slovenia 8.8 8.7 8.3 8.3
 Spain 174.4 182.9 152.7 152.3
 Sweden 22.9 19.3 25.2 22.8
 United Kingdom 245.3 242.4 ††† 246.2 246.2
Totals 2057.8 1910.66 2054.92 1859.27
Source: Last EU press release IP/07/1614: "Emissions trading: EU-wide cap for 2008-2012 set at 2.08 billion allowances after assessment of national plans for Bulgaria", 26 October 2007[26]. Access to the previous press releases (Nov 2006 - October 2007) in the linked page.


Additional installations and emissions included in the second trading period are not included in this table but are given in the sources.
*† Including installations opted out in 2005.
*†† Verified emissions for 2005 do not include installations opted out in 2005 which will be covered in 2008 and 2012 and are estimated to amount to some 6 Mt.
*††† UK's verified emissions for 2005 do not include installations opted out in 2005 which will be covered in 2008 and 2012 and are estimated to amount to some 30 Mt.
*††††Cyprus and Malta, as new EU accession states, but not Annex I countries, will have their own NAPs and participate in trading during Phase II.

The second phase (2008–12) expands the scope significantly:

  • CDM and JI credits are introduced in second phase through the EU's 'Linking Directive'. Although this was a theoretical possibility in phase I, the over-allocation of permits combined with the inability to bank them for use in the second phase meant it was not taken up.[27]
  • Aviation emissions are expected to be included from 2012.[28]
  • In 2007, it was announced that three non-EU members, Norway, Iceland, and Liechtenstein joined the scheme.[29]

The inclusion of aviation is a move considered important due to the large and rapidly growing emissions of the sector. The inclusion of aviation is estimated to lead to an increase in demand of allowances about 10-12 million tonnes of CO2 per year in phase two. This in turn is expected to lead to an increased use of JI credits from projects in Russia and Ukraine, which would offset the increase in prices and eventually result in no discernible impact on average annual CO2 prices.[30]

Ultimately, the Commission wishes the post-2012 ETS to include all greenhouse gases and all sectors, including aviation, maritime transport and forestry.[31] For the transport sector, the large number of individual users adds complexities, but might be implemented either as a cap-and-trade system for fuel suppliers or a baseline-and-credit system for car manufacturers.[32]

The National Allocation Plans for Phase II, the first of which were announced on 29 November 2006, result in an average cut of nearly 7% below the 2005 emission levels.[33] The use of offsets from JI and CDM projects was allowed, with the result that no reductions in the EU will be required to meet the Phase II cap (CCC, 2008, pp. 145, 149).[34] According to verified EU data from 2008, the ETS saw an emissions reduction of 3%, or 50 million tons. At least 80 million tons of "carbon offsets" which were bought as part of the scheme.[35]

The annual Member State CO2 yearly allowances in million tonnes are shown in the table:

In late 2006, European Commission started infringement proceedings against Austria, Czech Republic, Denmark, Hungary, Italy and Spain, for failure to submit their proposed National Allocation Plans on time.[36]

Carbon price

The carbon price within Phase II increased to over €20/tCO2 in the first half of 2008 (CCC, 2008, p. 149). The average price was €22/tCO2 in the second half of 2008, and €13/tCO2 in the first half of 2009. CCC (2009, p. 67) gave two reasons for this fall in prices:[37]

  • Reduced output in energy-intensive sectors as a result of the recession. This means that less abatement will be required to meet the cap, lowering the carbon price.
  • The market perception of future fossil fuel prices may have been revised downwards.

Projections indicate that like Phase I, Phase II will see a surplus in allowances. According to Grubb et al. (2009, p. 12), carbon prices are being sustained by the prospect of banking allowances to use them in the tougher third phase.[19]

Phase III

For Phase III (2013–20), the European Commission has proposed a number of changes, including (CCC, 2008, p. 149):[34]

  • the setting an overall EU cap, with allowances then allocated to EU members;
  • tighter limits on the use of offsets;
  • unlimiting banking of allowances between Phases II and III;
  • and a move from allowances to auctioning.

Projections to 2020

CCC (2008, p. 151) made projections of the expected cap for the EU ETS out to 2020. For a 20% cut in EU economy-wide emissions relative to 1990 levels, the reduction in total emissions was projected to be around 36 million tonnes per annum. CCC (2009, p. 68) projected a carbon price in 2020 of around 22 Euro/tCO2.[37] Most market commentators project a price around or below 30 Euro/tCO2. These carbon price projections are subject to great uncertainty, e.g., over future fossil fuel prices, and predicting business-as-usual emissions (p. 69).

Costs

According to Grubb et al. (2009, pp. 3–4), the EU ETS has been able to meet its environmental objectives at costs significantly lower than projected.[19] The estimated cost was a small fraction of 1% GDP. It was suggested that if permits were auctioned, and the revenues used effectively, e.g., to reduce distortionary taxes and fund low-carbon technologies, costs could be eliminated, or even create a positive economic impact.

Overall emission reductions

A number of design flaws have limited the effectiveness of the EU ETS (Jones et al., 2007, p. 64).[38] In the initial 2005-07 period, emission caps were not tight enough to drive a significant reduction in emissions (CCC, 2008, p. 140).[34] The total allocation of allowances turned out to exceed actual emissions. This was a factor in driving the carbon price down to zero in 2007, the other main factor being that allowances were not allowed to be 'banked' for use in Phase II, therefore had no monetary value outside of Phase I. This oversupply reflects the difficulty in predicting future emissions which is necessary in setting a cap (Carbon Trust, 2009).[16]

Phase I

In 2004, Ecofys analysed the then available preliminary NAPs of all EU countries.[39] The information suggested that the caps for Phase I were lenient; in most countries, the power sector would not need to reduce CO2 emissions as much as the country as a whole, in other words the other sectors must make more ambitious emission reductions than the power sector under the scheme. More strikingly, a few countries (such as the Netherlands) gave more allowances than Ecofys estimated to be needed under a business-as-usual scenario, implying that no 'real' efforts to reduce emissions would be required. In their analysis of the Phase I NAPs, the NGO Climate Action Network called the caps a 'major disappointment',[40] arguing that only two (UK and Germany) of the 25 EU states asked the participating industry sectors to reduce emissions compared to historic levels and found that in the 15 old EU member states as a whole, allocations were 4.3% higher than the base year. In May 2006, when several countries revealed registries indicating that their industries had been allocated more allowances than they could use, trading prices crashed from about €30/ton to €10/ton, and (after an initial slight recovery) declined further to €4 in January 2007[41] and below €1 in February 2007, reaching an all time low of €0.03 at the beginning of December 2007[42]

Ellerman and Buchner (2008) (referenced by Grubb et al., 2009, p. 11) suggested that during its first two years in operation, the EU ETS turned an expected increase in emissions of 1-2 percent per year into a small absolute decline.[19] Grubb et al. (2009, p. 11) suggested that a reasonable estimate for the emissions cut achieved during its first two years of operation was 50-100 MtCO2 per year, or 2.5-5%.

Phase II

In 2006, Ecofys performed an initial assessment of NAPs for phase II, using the proposed but not-yet-approved NAPs.[43] They found that most member states did not have sufficiently strict caps, and that they would be insufficient in assisting the members in meeting their Kyoto targets. They also compared caps with official business-as-usual (BAU) projections and with independent BAU projections to assess stringency of caps. They concluded that the caps were 7% under official BAU but (except for Portugal, Spain, and UK) the proposed cap was "higher" than the independently estimated BAU, suggesting overallocation.

Partly in response to this, the Commission cut eleven of the first twelve Phase II plans it reviewed (accepting only the U.K.'s plan without revision). The commission tightened the caps some 7%,[44] also corresponding with 7% below the 2005 emissions. For Phase II, the cap is expected to result in an emissions reduction in 2010 of about 2.4% compared to expected emissions without the cap (business-as-usual emissions) (Jones et al., 2007, p. 64).[38]


The inclusion of sinks

Currently, the EU does not allow CO2 credits under ETS to be obtained from sinks (e.g. reducing CO2 by planting trees). However, some governments and industry representatives lobby for their inclusion. The inclusion is currently opposed by NGOs as well as the EU commission itself, arguing that sinks are surrounded by too many scientific uncertainties over their permanence and that they have inferior long-term contribution to climate change compared to reducing emissions from industrial sources.[45]

28 Million Euro Cyberfraud

On January 19, 2011, the EU emissions spot market for pollution permits was closed after computer hackers stole 28 to 30 million euros ($41.12 million) worth of emissions allowances from the national registries of several European countries within a few day time period. The Czech Registry for Emissions Trading was especially hard hit with 7 million euros worth of allowances stolen by hackers from Austria, the Czech Republic, Greece, Estonia and Poland. A phishing scam is suspected to have enabled hackers to log into unsuspecting companies' carbon credit accounts and transfer the allowances to themselves, allowing them to then be sold.[46][47]

The European Commission said it would "proceed to determine together with national authorities what minimum security measures need to be put in place before the suspension of a registry can be lifted." Maria Kokkonen, E.C. spokeswoman for climate issues, said that national registries can be reopened once sufficient security measures have been enacted and member countries submit to the EC a report of their IT security protocol.

The Czech registry said there are still legal and administrative hurdles to be overcome and Jiri Stastny, chairman of OTE AS, the Czech registry operator, said that until there is recourse for victims of such theft, and a system is in place to return allowances to their rightful owners, the Czech registry will remain closed. Registry officials in Germany and Estonia have confirmed they have located 610,000 allowances stolen from the Czech registry, according to Mr. Stastny. Another 500,000 of the stolen Czech allowances are thought to be in accounts in the U.K., the OTE said.[48][49][47]

The security breaches raised fears among some traders that they might have unknowingly purchased stolen allowances which they might later have to forfeit. The ETS experienced a previous phishing scam in 2010 which caused 13 European markets to shut down, and criminals cleared 5 million euros in another cross-border fraud in 2008 and 2009.[47]

Views on the EU ETS

Different people and organizations have responded differently to the EU ETS. Mr Anne Theo Seinen, of the EC's Directorate-General for the Environment, described Phase I as a "learning phase," where, for example, the infrastructure and institutions for the ETS were set up (UK Parliament, 2009).[50] In his view, the carbon price in Phase I had resulted in some abatement. Seinen also commented that the EU ETS needed to be supported by other policies for technology and renewable energy. According to CCC (2008, p. 155), technology policy is necessary to overcome market failures associated with delivering low-carbon technologies, e.g., by supporting research and development.[34]

The World Wildlife Fund (2009) commented that there was no indication that the EU ETS had influenced longer-term investment decisions.[51] In their view, the Phase III scheme brought about significant improvements, but still suffered from major weaknesses. Jones et al. (2008, p. 24) suggested that the EU ETS needed further reform to achieve its potential.[52]

Criticisms

The EU ETS has been criticized[53] for several failings, including: over-allocation, windfall profits, price volatility, and in general for failing to meet its goals.[54] Proponents[who?] argue, however, that Phase I of the EU ETS (2005–2007) was a "learning phase" designed primarily to establish baselines and create the infrastructure for a carbon market, not to achieve significant reductions.[55][56][57]

In addition, the EU ETS has been criticized as having caused a disruptive spike in energy prices.[58] They say that it does not correlate with the price of permits, and in fact the largest price increase occurred at a time (Mar-Dec 2007) when the cost of permits was negligible.[57]

Over-allocation

There was an oversupply of emissions allowances for EU ETS Phase I. This drove the carbon price down to zero in 2007 (CCC, 2008, p. 140).[34] This oversupply reflects the difficulty in predicting future emissions which is necessary in setting a cap (Carbon Trust, 2009).[16] Given poor data about emissions baselines, inherent uncertainty of emissions forecasts, and the very modest reduction goals of the Phase I cap (1-2% across the EU), it was entirely expected that[according to whom?] the cap might be set too high.[57]

This problem naturally diminishes as the cap tightens. The EU's Phase II cap is more than 6% below 2005 levels, much stronger than Phase I, and readily distinguishable from business-as-usual emissions levels.[according to whom?][57]

Also, note that over-allocation does not imply that no abatement occurred. Even with over-allocation, there was a real price on carbon, and that price had an effect on emitters' behavior. Verified emissions in 2005 were 3-4% below projected emissions,[56] and analysis suggests that at least part of that reduction was due to the EU ETS.[59]

Windfall profits

According to Newbery (2009), the price of EUAs was passed fully in the final price of electricity.[9] The free allocation of permits was cashed in at the EUA price by fossil generators, resulting in a "massive windfall gain." Newbery (2009) wrote that "[there] is no case for repeating such a willful misuse of the value of a common property resource that should be owned by the country." In the view of 4CMR (2009), all permits in the EU ETS should be auctioned.[60] This would avoid possible windfall profits in all sectors.

Price volatility

The price of emissions permits tripled in the first six months of Phase I, collapsed by half in a one-week period in 2006, and declined to zero over the next twelve months. Such movements and the implied volatility raise questions about the viability of this trading system to provide stable incentives to emitters.[57]

This criticism has face validity. In future phases, measures such as banking of allowances and price floors may be used to mitigate volatility.[61] However, it's important to note that considerable volatility is expected of this type of market, and the volatility seen is quite in line with that of energy commodities generally. Nonetheless, producers and consumers in those markets respond rationally and effectively to price signals.[57]

Newbery (2009) commented that the EU ETS was not delivering the stable carbon price necessary for long-term, low-carbon investment decisions.[9] He suggested that efforts should be made to stabilize carbon price, e.g., by having a price-ceiling and a price-floor.

Crime

In 2009 Europol informed that 90% market volume of emissions traded in some countries could be result of tax fraud, more specifically missing trader fraud, costing governments more than 5 billion euro.[62] Cyber fraudsters have also attacked the EU ETS with a "phishing" scam which cost one company €1.5 million.[63] In response to this, the EU has revised the ETS rules to combat crime.[64]

Offsetting

The EU ETS allows the use of offset credits from JI and CDM projects. The main advantage of allowing free trading of credits is that it allows mitigation to be done at least-cost (CCC, 2008, p. 160).[34] This is because the marginal costs (that is to say, the incremental costs of preventing the emission of one extra ton of CO2e into the atmosphere) of abatement differs among countries. In terms of the UK's climate change policy, CCC (2008), noted three arguments against too great a reliance on credits:

  • Rich countries need to demonstrate that a low-carbon economy is possible and compatible with economic prosperity. This is in order to convince developing countries to lower their emissions. Additionally, domestic action by rich countries drives investment towards a low-carbon economy.
  • An ambitious long-term target to reduce emissions, e.g., an 80% cut in UK emissions by 2050, requires significant domestic progress by 2020 and 2030 to reduce emissions.
  • CDM credits are inherently less robust than a cap and trade system, where reductions are required in total emissions.

Due to the economic downturn, states have pushed successfully for a more generous approach towards the use of CDM/JI credits post-2012.[65][attribution needed] The 2009 EU ETS Amending Directive states that credits can be used for up to 50 % of the EU-wide reductions below the 2005 levels of existing sectors over the period 2008-2020.[66] Moreover, it has been argued that the volume of CDM/JI credits, if carried over from phase II (2008–2012 to phase III 2013-2020) in the EU ETS will undermine its environmental effectiveness, despite the requirement of supplementarity in the Kyoto Protocol.[67]

See also

References

  1. ^ Ellerman, A., Denny; Buchner, Barbara K. (January 2007). "The European Union Emissions Trading Scheme: Origins, Allocation, and Early Results". Review of Environmental Economics and Policy 1 (1): 66–87. doi:10.1093/reep/rem003. http://reep.oxfordjournals.org/content/1/1/66.abstract. 
  2. ^ European Commission Climate Action, Emissions Trading System.
  3. ^ Wagner, M.: Firms, the Framework Convention on Climate Change & the EU Emissions Trading System. Corporate Energy Management Strategies to Address Climate Change and GHG Emissions in the European Union. Lüneburg: Centre for Sustainability Management, 2004, p.12 CSM Lüneburg
  4. ^ a b Questions and Answers on the Commission's proposal to revise the EU Emissions Trading System, MEMO/08/35, Brussels, 23 January 2008
  5. ^ Europe Forcing Airlines to Buy Emissions Permits, The New York Times, October 24, 2008
  6. ^ Limiting global climate change to 2 degrees Celsius - The way ahead for 2020 and beyond, Communication from the Commission to the Council, the European Parliament, the European Economic and Social Committee and the Committee of the Regions, Brussels, 10 October 2007.
  7. ^ UK Emissions Trading Scheme DECC
  8. ^ ITL link, EU ETS review key for 2008 prices Carbon Finance 9 January 2008
  9. ^ a b c d Newbery, D. (26 February 2009). "Written evidence.". Memorandum submitted by David Newbery, Research Director, Electric Policy Research Group University of Cambridge.. The role of carbon markets in preventing dangerous climate change. The fourth report of the 2009-10 session. UK Parliament House of Commons Environmental Audit Select Committee. http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200910/cmselect/cmenvaud/290/290we33.htm. Retrieved 2010-04-30. 
  10. ^ Hepburn, C. (2006). "Regulating by prices, quantities or both: an update and an overview". Oxford Review of Economic Policy 22 (2): 226–247. doi:10.1093/oxrep/grj014. http://www.economics.ox.ac.uk/members/cameron.hepburn/Hepburn%20(2006,%20Oxrep)%20Regulation%20by%20P%20or%20Q.pdf. Retrieved August 30, 2009. 
  11. ^ Questions and Answers on Emissions Trading and National Allocation Plans for 2008 to 2012 EU November 2006
  12. ^ CARBON TRADING – HOW IT WORKS AND WHY IT FAILS Carbon Trade Watch Critical Currents no. 7 p37, November 2009
  13. ^ Öko-Institut report: "The environmental effectiveness and economic efficiency of the EU ETS WWF November 2005
  14. ^ NAPs 2005-7: Do they deliver? Climate Action Network Europe 2006
  15. ^ a b Neuhoff, K. (22 February 2009). Memorandum submitted by Karsten Neuhoff, Assistant Director, Electric Policy Research Group, University of Cambridge. The role of carbon markets in preventing dangerous climate change. The fourth report of the 2009-10 session. UK Parliament House of Commons Environmental Audit Select Committee. http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200910/cmselect/cmenvaud/290/290we22.htm. Retrieved 2010-05-01. 
  16. ^ a b c d Carbon Trust (March 2009). "Memorandum submitted by The Carbon Trust (ET19). In (section): Minutes of Evidence, Tuesday 21 April 2009. In (report): The role of carbon markets in preventing dangerous climate change. Produced by the UK Parliament House of Commons Environmental Audit Select Committee. The fourth report of the 2009-10 session". UK Parliament website. http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200910/cmselect/cmenvaud/290/9042105.htm. Retrieved 2010-04-30. 
  17. ^ Question and Answer on the revised EU ETS EUROPA, Brussels 2008
  18. ^ Barker, T. et al. (2007), 11.7.2 Carbon leakage., in B. Metz et al., "Mitigation from a cross-sectoral perspective.", Climate Change 2007: Mitigation. Contribution of Working Group III to the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (Print version: Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, U.K., and New York, N.Y., U.S.A.. This version: IPCC website), http://www.ipcc.ch/publications_and_data/ar4/wg3/en/ch11s11-7-2.html, retrieved 2010-04-05 
  19. ^ a b c d Grubb, M. et al. (3 August 2009). "Climate Policy and Industrial Competitiveness: Ten Insights from Europe on the EU Emissions Trading System". Climate Strategies. http://www.climatestrategies.org/component/reports/category/61/204.html. Retrieved 2010-06-28. 
  20. ^ Nancy Stauffer (2008-05-29). "Carbon emissions trading in Europe: Lessons to be learned". Massachusetts Institute of Technology Energy Initiative. http://mit.edu/mitei/research/spotlights/europe-carbon.html. Retrieved 2010-10-25. 
  21. ^ "Q&A: Europe's carbon trading scheme". BBC News. 2006-12-20. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/4114921.stm. 
  22. ^ "Carbon 2006 market survey". Point Carbon. 28 February 2006. http://www.pointcarbon.com/wimages/Carbon_2006_final_print.pdf. 
  23. ^ "Analyse van de CO2-markt (in Dutch)". Emissierechten. November 2007. http://www.emissierechten.nl/marktanalyse.htm. 
  24. ^ "Emissions trading: 2007 verified emissions from EU ETS businesses". IP/08/787. European Commission Press Release. 2006-05-23. http://europa.eu/rapid/pressReleasesAction.do?reference=IP/08/787&format=HTML&aged=0&language=EN&guiLanguage=en. Retrieved 2009-03-25. 
  25. ^ Emissierechten (in Dutch)
  26. ^ "Emissions trading: EU-wide cap for 2008-2012 set at 2.08 billion allowances after assessment of national plans for Bulgaria". Europa.eu. 2007-10-26. http://europa.eu/rapid/pressReleasesAction.do?reference=IP/07/1614&format=HTML&language=EN. Retrieved 2011-01-24. 
  27. ^ "Summary of the seminar on linking the Kyoto project-based mechanisms with the European Union Emissions Trading Scheme:". Linking in the EU ETS Bulletin. International Institute for Sustainable Development (IISD). 19 September 2005. http://www.iisd.ca/sd/euets/ymbvol115num1e.html. Retrieved 10 August 2011. 
  28. ^ Questions & Answers on Aviation & Climate Change EU Europa
  29. ^ AFP (2007-10-27). "Iceland, Norway, Liechtenstein to join EU emissions trading system". EUbusiness Ltd. http://www.eubusiness.com/topics/environ/1193418125.05. Retrieved 2010-10-28. 
  30. ^ Including Aviation into the EU ETS: Impact on EU allowance prices ICF Consulting for DEFRA February 2006
  31. ^ Stavros Dimas Speech House of Commons London, EU Europa 21 November 2005
  32. ^ DEAD LINK Naturvardsverket (in Swedish)
  33. ^ Emissions trading: Commission decides on first set of national allocation plans for the 2008-2012 trading period EU Europa November 2006
  34. ^ a b c d e f CCC (December 2008). "Chapter 4: Carbon markets and carbon prices". Building a low-carbon economy – The UK’s contribution to tackling climate change. The First Report of the Committee on Climate Change. Print version: The Stationary Office. This version: CCC website. http://www.theccc.org.uk/reports/building-a-low-carbon-economy. Retrieved 2010-04-26. 
  35. ^ Gilbertson, T.; Reyes, O. (2009). "Carbon trading: how it works and why it fails". Uppsala: Dag Hammerskjold Foundation.
  36. ^ Member States' compliance with the Emissions Trading Scheme EU Europa Environment Committee 27 November 2006
  37. ^ a b CCC (12 October 2009). Meeting Carbon Budgets – the need for a step change. Progress report to Parliament Committee on Climate Change. Presented to Parliament pursuant to section 36(1) of the Climate Change Act 2008. The Stationery Office (TSO). ISBN 9789999100076. http://www.official-documents.gov.uk/document/other/9789999100076/9789999100076.pdf. Retrieved 2010-05-01. 
  38. ^ a b Jones, B. et al. (October 2007). "Appendix 1.2 Climate Change: Economic Impact and Policy Responses. In (book): Chapter 1. Global Prospects and Policy Issues. In: World Economic and Financial Surveys, World Economic Outlook, Globalization and Inequality". IMF website. http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/weo/2007/02/. Retrieved 2010-04-26. 
  39. ^ Analysis of NAPs for the EU ETS Ecofys August 2004
  40. ^ NAPsReport_Summary Climate Action Network 2006
  41. ^ Market analysis Emissierechten (in Dutch)
  42. ^ Market information EEX
  43. ^ NAP Assessment summary Ecofys (registration required)
  44. ^ Emissions trading: Commission decides on first set of national allocation plans for the 2008-2012 trading period EU Europa
  45. ^ Kirsten Macey, No Sinks in the EU ETS, Hotspot newsletter 41, Climate Action Network, March 2006, retrieved 2009-10-04.
  46. ^ Carney, Sean (2011-01-28). "EU Carbon Market Suffers Further Setback". The Wall Street Journal. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703956604576109272255053468.html. 
  47. ^ a b c Lehane, Bill (2011-01-26). "Hackers steal carbon credits". The Prague Post. http://praguepost.com/business/7290-hackers-steal-carbon-credits.html. Retrieved 2011-04-16. 
  48. ^ "Greek police trace EU carbon rights thieves". Reuters. 2011-01-29. http://af.reuters.com/article/energyOilNews/idAFLDE70S0IY20110129. 
  49. ^ Carney, Sean (2011-01-28). "EU Carbon Market Suffers Further Setback". The Wall Street Journal. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703956604576109272255053468.html. 
  50. ^ UK Parliament (12 May 2009). "Examination of Witnesses, Mr Anne Theo Seinen (Questions 242-269). In (section): Oral and Written Evidence, Tuesday, 12 May 2009. In (report): The role of carbon markets in preventing dangerous climate change. Produced by the UK Parliament House of Commons Environmental Audit Select Committee. The fourth report of the 2009-10 session". UK Parliament website. http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200910/cmselect/cmenvaud/290/9051205.htm. Retrieved 2010-05-01. 
  51. ^ World Wildlife Fund (March 2009). "Memorandum submitted by the World Wildlife Fund. In (section): Oral and Written Evidence, Tuesday 31 March 2009. In (report): The role of carbon markets in preventing dangerous climate change. Produced by the UK Parliament House of Commons Environmental Audit Select Committee. The fourth report of the 2009-10 session". UK Parliament website. http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200910/cmselect/cmenvaud/290/9033103.htm. Retrieved 2010-05-01. 
  52. ^ Jones, B. et al. (April 2008). "Box 4.5. Recent Emission-Reduction Policy Initiatives. In: Chapter 4. Climate Change and the Global Economy (N. Tamirisa et al.). In: World Economic and Financial Surveys: World Economic Outlook: Housing and the Business Cycle". IMF website. http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/weo/2008/01/index.htm. Retrieved 2010-04-21. 
  53. ^ CARBON TRADING – HOW IT WORKS AND WHY IT FAILS Carbon Trade Watch Critical Currents no. 7, November 2009
  54. ^ EU Emissions Trading System: Failing at the third attempt, Corporate Europe Observatory/Carbon Trade Watch, April 2011
  55. ^ Carbon emissions trading in Europe: Lessons to be learned MIT Energy Initiative, 2008
  56. ^ a b Climate Change and the EU Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS): Kyoto and Beyond U.S. Congressional Research Service (2008)
  57. ^ a b c d e f The European Union's Emissions Trading System in Perspective MIT/Pew Center 2008
  58. ^ Europe’s Problems Color U.S. Plans to Curb Carbon Gases, Steven Mufson, The Washington Post, April 9, 2007
  59. ^ Over-Allocation or Abatement? A Preliminary Analysis of the Eu Ets Based on the 2005 Emissions Data Fondazione Eni Enrico Mattei Working Papers (2007)
  60. ^ Annela Anger, Dr Terry Barker, Dr Athanasios Dagoumas, Dr Lynn Dicks, Dr Yongfu Huang, Dr Serban Scrieciu and Stephen Stretton. (3 March 2009), Memorandum submitted by the Cambridge Centre for Climate Change Mitigation Research (4CMR), , The role of carbon markets in preventing dangerous climate change., The fourth report of the 2009-10 session (UK Parliament House of Commons Environmental Audit Select Committee.), http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200910/cmselect/cmenvaud/290/290we08.htm, retrieved 2010-05-01 
  61. ^ Emissions trading: lessons learnt from the 1st phase of the EU ETS and prospects for the 2nd phase Climate Policy (2006)
  62. ^ Leigh Phillips (2009-12-10). "EU emissions trading an 'open door' for crime, Europol says". EUobserver. http://euobserver.com/885/29132. Retrieved 2010-10-28. 
  63. ^ Cyber-scam artists disrupt emissions trading across EU EU Observer (2010)
  64. ^ EU approves revised ETS rules to combat cyber crime Euractive (2010)
  65. ^ Pohlmann, 'The European Union Emissions Trading Scheme' (p.362), in Legal Aspects of Carbon Trading, Ed. Freestone (2009)
  66. ^ EU ETS Amending Directive 2009 EUROPA, p.78 (2009)
  67. ^ The EU ETS, CDM and the Carbon Market Mission of Thailand to the EC (2009)

External links

Official pages

How ETS works

Key reports, and assessments


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Energy policy of the European Union — European Union This article is part of the series: Politics and government of the European Union …   Wikipedia

  • Climate change in the European Union — The mitigation of anthropogenic climate change in the European Union is being addressed through a number of measures. Contents 1 Greenhouse gases 1.1 Hydrofluorocarbons 1.2 Methane 2 …   Wikipedia

  • UK Emissions Trading Scheme — The UK Emissions Trading Scheme was a voluntary emissions trading system created as a pilot prior to the mandatory European Union Emissions Trading Scheme. It ran from 2002 and closed in 2006. At the time, the scheme was a novel economic approach …   Wikipedia

  • European Commissioner for the Environment — The Commissioner for the Environment is the member of the European Commission responsible for protection of the European Union s environment. The current Commissioner is Janez Potočnik. The European Union has made a number of environmental moves …   Wikipedia

  • European emission standards — Simplified chart showing the progression of European emission standards for Diesel cars …   Wikipedia

  • List of European Commission portfolios — European Union This article is part of the series: Politics and government of the European Union …   Wikipedia

  • European Climate Exchange — Marché climatique européen En 2005, Chicago Climate Exchange lance le European Climate Exchange (situé a Londres), acteur important dans les échanges à l intérieur du marché de l Union européenne (European Union Emissions Trading Scheme). Ces… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Emissions trading — (or emission trading) is an administrative approach used to control pollution by providing economic incentives for achieving reductions in the emissions of pollutants. It is sometimes called cap and trade.A central authority (usually a government …   Wikipedia

  • Marché des permis d'émission — Bourse du carbone Une bourse du carbone est un marché de négociation et d échange de droits d émission de gaz à effet de serre (CO2, méthane, protoxyde d azote, ...) , en nombre fixé par des quotas d émissions fixés par l autorité publique dans… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Certified Emission Reduction — Certified Emission Reductions (CERs) are a type of emissions unit (or carbon credits) issued by the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) Executive Board for emission reductions achieved by CDM projects and verified by a DOE under the rules of the… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”