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Building a global carbon market

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Set energy efficiency standards, building codes, labelling schemes, 1-Watt-Initiative ... Carefully watch demand and supply! The role of the carbon market (III) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Building a global carbon market


1
Building a global carbon market
  • The European Unions vision
  • Artur Runge-Metzger
  • Head of International Climate Negotiations,
    European Commission
  • In-session workshop on means to reach emission
    reduction targets,
  • AWG 5.1, Bangkok, 1-3 April 2008

2
The EUs global vision 2 degrees objective
3
Mitigation by industrialised countries
  • Common but differentiated responsibility take
    the lead and make most of the effort
  • EU commitments
  • 20 unilaterally by 2020
  • 30 in context global deal
  • 60-80 by 2050
  • Carbon market as a key tool
  • Binding and effective rules for monitoring and
    enforcing commitments

4
Mitigation in developing countries
  • Reaching development objectives will be
    imperative mitigation and adaptation
  • Reduce growth of emissions asap, and absolute
    reductions after 2020
  • Toolbox
  • No commitments for least developed countries
  • Sustainable development policies
  • Enhanced CDM
  • Performance-based funding
  • Sectoral approaches
  • Quantified emission limits

5
Building a global carbon market
  • The carbon market cost-effective and flexible
    mitigation tool and source of finance for low-GHG
    technology development
  • EUs aim progressive development towards global
    carbon market
  • Countries take part according to different
    responsibilities and capabilities
  • Backed by ambitious mitigation commitments in
    line with 2 degree objective
  • Build on existing mechanisms, link schemes and
    develop new mechanisms

6
The role of the carbon market (I) 27 Gt CO2e
emission reduction potential below 40/ton CO2
7
The role of the carbon market (II) No. 1 6-7
Gt CO2e Harvest all low hanging fruits by 2020
  • Each Parties opportunity responsibility mainly
    in household, buildings, transport
  • Exchange good practice in policy design e.g.
  • Abandon energy subsidies (fossil fuels 130
    billion p.a.)
  • Domestic company-based emissions trading
  • Set energy efficiency standards, building codes,
    labelling schemes, 1-Watt-Initiative
  • Ban the bulb CFL, LED
  • Progressive taxation
  • Address potential cash flow issues, e.g. targeted
    loan schemes (e.g. refurbishment of existing
    power plants)

8
The role of the carbon market (III) No. 2 10
12 Gt CO2e carbon market will be the main
driver
  • Domestic emissions trading schemes to set carbon
    price for private sector.
  • Less developed countries strengthened CDM to
    drive technology transfer and economic
    transformation
  • Complementary approaches needed to address
    sectors not covered by the carbon market, other
    barriers and possibly to scale up finance
  • Advanced developing countries move beyond
    offsetting, new mechanisms to incentivise
    increased mitigation contributions
  • Carefully watch demand and supply!

9
The role of the carbon market (IV) No. 3 10
12 Gt CO2e promote high-end options
  • Promote co-operation for research and technology
    development (e.g. joint ventures, PPP)
  • Subsidies for demonstration, e.g. NZEC
  • Direct subsidies for deployment of clean
    technologies, e.g. GEEREF, export credits, PPP,
    concessional IFI loans
  • Reduce tariffs for advanced GHG-efficient
    products and services
  • Promote regulatory approaches gaining energy
    security/clean air benefits e.g. mandatory
    standards (cars, appliances), fuel taxes,
    portfolio standards (e.g. renewable energy, CCS)

10
Clean Development Mechanism (I)
  • CDM has delivered real and measurable benefits
    and generated a multi-billion dollar market (28
    billion in 2007)

11
Continuity for the CDM post-2012
  • EU Commission proposal would allow 2.63 Gt (1.4
    Gt in the EU ETS, 1.23 Gt MS use) of CERs to be
    used until 2020 independent of an international
    agreement
  • Includes ongoing projects registered before 2012
    and projects established post-2012 in LDCs
  • EU first to provide certainty for CER use
    post-2012 no one else does so far!
  • About one third of the necessary reduction effort
    towards 20 target from CDM/JI - other two thirds
    ensure real emission reductions in Europe
  • Unlimited access to CDM/JI under the 20 target
    would lead to drop in CER price to 4 and
    increase of EU domestic emissions to about 4
    above 1990 contradicts EU objectives of climate
    policy leadership and energy security.
  • Substantial increase as part of Copenhagen
    agreement EU Commission proposal would allow
    half of the additional effort (1.2 Gt extra
    totalling 70bn of transfers, i.e. 6bn
    annually) to be met by CDM/JI or new mechanisms.

12
Clean Development Mechanism (II)
  • Reform of CDM for post-2012 needs to address the
    following concerns
  • strengthen environmental integrity ensure real
    and additional emission reductions (key to
    offsetting mechanism)
  • address possible perverse incentives resulting
    from (low-cost) CDM
  • review current institutional set-up and
    procedures (Article 9)
  • Strengthen CDMs contribution to technology
    transfer and economic transformation in less
    developed regions
  • Need to move beyond offsetting for advanced
    developing countries will be key for post-2012
    explore new approaches, e.g. baseline/credit,
    sectoral approaches

13
CDM some proposals
  • More executive and supervisory role of EB,
    including delegation of decision-making and
    strengthened professional support staff
  • Revision of CDM decision-making procedures,
    including strengthening the basis and
    transparency of decision-making
  • Assessment of roles and responsibilities of DOEs
  • Increased use of technology benchmarks for
    baseline setting and additionality testing
  • Dialogue with host countries on how to strengthen
    contribution to SD and tech transfer
  • More differentiated approach to CDM will help
    improve regional distribution

14
Joint Implementation
  • JI has delivered benefits, but not yet realised
    its full potential
  • Role for JI post-2012 stimulating international
    collaboration and channeling investment and
    technology towards certain mitigation
    opportunities and sectors, which otherwise lack
    access to the global carbon market
  • JI allows for institutional learning about
    market-based approaches and a transitional step
    before wider application of cap-and-trade
  • Need to discuss JI post-2012 and explore new
    concepts
  • May need to continue with a two-track approach
    with internationally supervised procedure (track
    2) for countries that still lack institutional
    and legislative framework for JI track 1
  • Explore synergies and parallels with revision of
    CDM for track 2 procedure, e.g. on simplifying
    and streamlining institutional set-up and
    procedures and strengthening environmental
    integrity
  • Explore new concepts such as programmatic JI

15
Shared vision of a low-carbon future Annex I
Offsetting is not enough
IPCC 2007, WGIII, ch. 13
  • How can the carbon market build on measurable,
    reportable and verifiable mitigation action by
    developing countries?
  • What means of support are needed in addition to
    the carbon market?
  • In which way can the carbon market most
    effectively contribute to sustainable development
    and technology transfer? What is needed in which
    countries and which sectors?

16
Need to explore new mechanisms to incentivise
enhanced mitigation e.g. no-lose sectoral
crediting mechanism
Source Ecofys
17
Conclusions
  • Significant role of the carbon market already
    today should be strenghtened post-2012. An
    environmentally more effective CDM should
    continue to play a role
  • Offsetting is not enough carbon market offers
    promising potential if we succeed in developing
    new tools that build on differentiated
    contributions by developing countries
  • Carbon market is part of the solution but not a
    panacea needs to be combined with other tools
    to further technology cooperation, financial
    flows and investment

18
Thank you!
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