Power
chief: Carbon credits face a ‘junk bond’ future
Europe
is staring at a ‘lost decade’ that will make decarbonisation
impossible and reduce carbon credits to the value of ‘junk bonds’
unless politicians back a carbon market reform package, the head of
Europe’s electricity industry association has told EurActiv.
30
January, 2013
Last
week, MEP’s on the European parliament’s industry (ITRE)
committee rejected a proposal to firm up carbon prices by withholding
– or ‘backloading’ – 900 million EU allowances from the 2020
auctioning period.
Analysts
expect a narrow majority for action in key votes on the parliament’s
environment committee on 19 February and, crucially, in a plenary
later this Spring.
But
Hans ten Berge, secretary-general of Eurelectric, warned that “if
we choose the strategy of a lost decade then we are going for a
collapse of the carbon market and it will be impossible to achieve
the 2050 decarbonisation targets.”
Carbon
prices, which are supposed to entice low-carbon investments, plunged
to a record low of just €2.81 per tonne after the ITRE committee
vote, down from a peak of €32 in April 2006. But ten Berge said
that the price could yet fall further.
“Just
ask investors what the value is of a bond that you would not be able
to cash before 2025,” he said. “I think that would be called a
junk bond.”
The
EU has pledged a reduction of CO2 emissions to 80-95% of 1990 levels
by midway through the century, the minimum necessary to avoid global
warming above 2 degrees Celsius.
But
the EU’s Emissions Trading System (ETS) is the primary policy
driver for achieving this and, by most reckonings, it is currently
broken.
“The
market is clearly looking at the politicians’ positions and the
moment one parliamentary committee gives advice to another committee
that will advise the parliament, which is the basis for a decision by
the Commission in coordination with the member states, already this
advice is capable of bringing down the market price by more than
50%,” ten Berge said.
“We
have to ensure that we are not moving the CO2 price slowly in the
direction of zero,” he added.
Less
than zero
Energy-intensive
industries allied with coal-dependent states such as Poland have
persuaded many MEPs that there is no case for meddling with the
carbon price, even if it falls to zero itself, because Europe appears
on track to meet its modest 2020 climate targets.
Austerity
has improved the odds of a 20% cut in CO2 emissions by the decade’s
end, while government subsidies have made a 20% share of renewables
in the EU’s energy mix a realistic prospect.
But
preliminary analysis that Eurelectric is preparing indicates that
achieving the much more ambitious 2050 target will require superhuman
efforts, if the ETS does not lay the groundwork for it this decade.
“We’re
very frightened by what we see,” Jesse Scott, the head of
Eurelectric’s environment and sustainable development policy, told
EurActiv.
“If
you lose this next decade you have to do astonishingly fast roll-outs
of low-carbon technologies, which we know is going to be expensive
and which may not be technically feasible.”
Carbon
market debate
The
backloading debate has pitted the electricity sector and businesses
trying to move towards a low-carbon model, against energy-intensive
industries and the fossil fuel lobby.
Critics
say that the electricity sector favours a strong carbon price to help
a decarbonisation process that might otherwise cost them more.
But
low carbon advocates counter that energy-intensive industries claimed
windfall profits from the ETS’s free allowances for years, only to
cry foul once they actually had to cut their emissions.
Between
2008 and 2011, the iron and steel sector banked 201 million tonnes of
surplus allowances, while the cement sector banked accrued 207
million tonnes, according to analysis by the environmental group,
Sandbag.
Together,
the two sectors accounted for 69% of surplus carbon allowances with a
net value of €4.5 billion.
'Shocking'
BusinessEurope meeting
The
backloading issue turned toxic at a Climate Change Committee meeting
of the European employers federation, BusinessEurope, held on the
same day as the ITRE committee vote.
The
day before, BusinessEurope had sent MEPs on the committee a letter,
obtained by EurActiv, saying that its members were “strongly
opposed to the backloading proposal” and calling for its rejection.
But 16 companies – including Shell, Unilever, EDF, GDF Suez,
Statoil and Alstom – have spoken out equally strongly against this
position.
When
an announcement of the ITRE vote sparked a round of applause from
some at the BusinessEurope meeting, a blazing row broke out. “I
would never have imagined seeing scenes like that,” one attendee
said. “It was shocking.”
“We
were really surprised and disappointed that the wording of the
BusinessEurope letter went further than the established position we
had been working on over the last six months,” another industry
source said. “We hope that the subsequent letter will respect the
agreed position.”
The
UK’s Confederation of British Industry is also known to be unhappy
with BusinessEurope’s position.
The
stakes in Europe’s carbon market debate can be partly assessed by
the reactions to the ETS crisis of other states and regions that are
currently in the process of applying the EU’s carbon trading model.
Australia
is in talks about linking its carbon market with the EU’s, while
California and Quebec have launched similar schemes. South Korea is
due to begin emissions trading in 2015, and China is currently
piloting a similar mechanism.
“I’m
getting phone calls regularly from all those countries asking what is
happening in Europe,” Scott said. “They’re watching closely and
they’re expressing alarm.”
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