Climate change solutions Global or local? Markets need •A product: what exactly is being sold here •A price: who decides the price of a tonne of carbon? •Scarcity: who decides how much carbon can be emitted? •Ownership rights: who has the right to produce and sell CO2? Nice and simple! •Estimate the cost of specific impacts of / adaptation to climate change over time •Aggregate across the world (weighting?) •Aggregate over the future (with some kind of discounting) What is a carbon tax? •For most sources of GHG emissions, it is applied as a fuel tax, based on amount of fuel sold e.g. gasoline: •We know GHG emissions per litre of gasoline so convert the price per tonne into a price per litre ($10/tonne CO2 = 2.3 cents/litre of gas) •Apply to fuel wholesalers •Do this for tonnes of coal and cubic feet of nat. gas Carbon Tax: Advantages and disadvantages •Advantages –Can be implemented quickly –Industry and other fuel users know exactly the costs they face now and in near future •Disadvantages –We are less sure of what emission reductions will result Rationale for carbon trading •In the past there has been no market to trade and enforce environmental property rights (missing markets) •Creating incentives to reduce pollution •A cap is set on the emissions allowed •The cap creates the scarcity required for the market •At the end of each year installations are required to ensure they have enough allowances to account for their installation’s emissions. •Can be flexible to achieve the cap • Critique •Internally inconsistent: market failure requires more markets •How can we be sure that the market analogy will extend to a virtual good like the global atmosphere? •‘the problem lies with the whole economic process of business enterprise not some simple bilateral pollution problem which is a minor aberration of an otherwise perfect market system. Every product in the market place has embodied energy, is related to GHG emissions, and therefore has the “wrong” price.’ • The European carbon trading market Rather than an ecologically driven limit, the quantity of permits was the result of industry lobbying. The market collapsed because there was no scarcity and hence no price. In phase two the price has settled at £15 per tonne, meaning that we could each offset our annual carbon emissions for around £45. •Who establishes the market—and sets the price? •Are we all equally powerful consumers? •How are we to establish the global limits? While negotiations stall emissions continue cc utopia.png EU-ETS: A Corporate Bonanza •Firms have charged consumers for emission rights they received for free •This has increased their profits. The WWF estimates that German utilities will make windfall profits of between €31-€64 billion to 2012 because of allowances. •It has also increased the cost of electricity to consumers and businesses •Bureaucratic expenses associated with National Allocation Plans, verification and compliance are being paid for by the public • • cas_2hands_90x132 Questions What Would an Effective Solution Include? •A firm and ‘scientifically based’ cap on emissions •A fair method for sharing the emissions – equality between and within countries? •Prevention of financial leaks by countries controlling reserve currencies •A soft landing for the inevitable end of a growth-driven global economy Contraction and Convergence http://www.gci.org.uk/contconv/cc.html ContractionAndConvergence Support for C&C •Group of African Nations •India and China •5 of 7 British political parties •Over half of the MPs in parliament •David Miliband, Minister for the environment •European Parliament •C&C meets every objection raised by the US to Kyoto Cap & Share •Issues entitlements for all the emissions allowed in a year under the EU’s Kyoto target or that set by its successor. •Gives equal entitlements to each EU resident •Recipients then sell their entitlements at the current market rate, via banks or post-offices •The entitlements are sold by the banks to companies producing or importing fossil fuels in the EU •Each importer or producer needs to buy enough permits to cover the eventual emissions from the fuels they sell. • • cas_2hands_90x132 • ShowLetter?box=Inbox&MsgId=2040_5548887_10170_3058_27995_0_12437_39111_3829326129&bodyPart=2 cas_2hands_90x132 Cap & Share • • • • cas_2hands_90x132 Cap & Share •C&S acknowledges the right to pollute the global commons is a human right and responsibility •It compensates people via their emission entitlements for higher energy prices •It emphasizes and promotes the idea the climate security is a societal issue, not merely a commercial or political one. Enlarge cas_2hands_90x132 Personal carbon trading •Total emissions in the US: 20 t CO2 per capita •Non-personal: services, goods and infrastructure--11 t CO2 per capita •Personal: home energy and transport-- 9 t CO2 per capita •An equitable share to stabilize at 450 ppm – Mayer Hillman ~1 t CO2 per capita Three key elements of personal carbon trading •􀂃 1- Setting the carbon budget •􀂃 2- Surrendering carbon units •􀂃 3- Allocating carbon units Setting a carbon budget Surrendering carbon units Allocating or acquiring carbon units •Individuals receive a free and equal per capita carbon allowance •Individuals exceeding their free allowance will have to buy additional carbon units from the market •Individuals having surplus carbon units will be able sell or save them Why TEQs? •Equity: Everyone given an equal carbon share •Effectiveness: Guarantees carbon emission cuts •Efficiency: Takes advantage of the market Making carbon a part of everyday life •􀂃 Smart bills •􀂃 Smart meters •􀂃 Smart receipts •􀂃 Enhanced petrol pumps •􀂃 Carbon-ometers •􀂃 Carbon responsibility in advertising •􀂃 Carbon labels •􀂃 Carbon promises •􀂃 Carbon-rated homes •􀂃 Carbon watchers Questions •Which scheme would you favour if you were one of the following: –CEO of an oil company –A retired pensioner living in Brno –A peasant in rural China –An employee in a UK-based manufacturing company