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Cap & Trade. Cap & Trade (Cap). A cap commits a region or country to limits on greenhouse gas emissions (GHG) and then reduces those limits over time. All proposals set an emissions target (cap) on sources covered by the program.
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Cap & Trade (Cap) • A cap commits a region or country to limits on greenhouse gas emissions (GHG) and then reduces those limits over time. • All proposals set an emissions target (cap) on sources covered by the program. • The cap is normally set in terms of a percentage reduction below a prior year’s emissions level. • For example: • 3 percent reduction below 2005 levels by 2012 • 20 percent reductions below 2005 levels by 2020
Cap & Trade(Covered Sources) • Covered sources are likely to include major emitting sectors: • Power plants and carbon-intensive industries, fuel producers/processors (coal mines or petroleum refineries), or some combination of both. • In almost every case, electric power producers are a covered sector. • Some sectors that emit greenhouse gases may not be covered, such as agriculture.
Cap & Trade (Allowances) • The emissions cap is partitioned into allowances. • Typically, one emission allowance equals the authority to emit one (metric) ton of carbon dioxide-equivalent. • A metric ton is equal to 2,200 pounds. • Why “equivalent”? Greenhouse gases other than carbon dioxide vary in their global warming potential. • Other GHG’s: methane, nitrous oxide, sulfur hexafluoride, hydrofluorocarbons, and perfluorocarbons. • Methane absorbs 21 times more radiant energy than carbon dioxide; nitrous oxide absorbs 310 times more radiant energy than carbon dioxide.
Cap & Trade (Trade) • Trade means entities may buy, sell or trade “allowances” between themselves or others. • This creates a market for “allowances.” • A trading system places a market price on allowances. • The market price should motivate industry, businesses and families to reduce GHG’s. • A well-designed trading system should encourage efficiency, innovation and lowest-cost solutions.
Cap & Trade (Offsets) • An offset is an activity, other than a direct emission reduction that can be done to lower GHG emissions. • An offset must be an approved, measurable activity reduction, avoidance, or sequestration of greenhouse-gas emissions from a source not covered by an emission reduction program. • Examples of offsets: • Planting trees • Paying dairy farmers for methane capture systems • Paying farmers for reduced or no-till activities • Use of offsets is normally limited (30%).
Cap & TradeHow does cap and trade work? • Tally greenhouse-gas emissions • Energy Information Administration (EIA) and Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) have the data. • Set a cap • 2005 has been selected as the base year; emission cap will begin in 2012 as a small percentage below 2005 levels. • Distribute allocations • Some percentage given out freely, and some will be required to be purchased or traded. • Enforce the cap • EPA will be given authority to regulate with severe penalties for non-compliance. • Step it down • Cap decreases every year to reach a 80-90 percent decrease from 2005 levels by 2050.
Cap and Trade Basics Baseline Tons Reductions Cap Years
? How can the electricity industry respond?
Climate Change • Basin Electric supports reasonable climate change legislation. • We want to be a part of the solution, not part of the problem. Leadership Approach
Developing New Technologies • Commercial-scale pilot carbon capture project at the Antelope Valley Station, Beulah, N.D. • Working with a technology provider • Anticipated start = 2013 • Goal = 90% CO2 removal
What does Cap & Trade mean to an average household? 1 metric ton carbon/month =
Annual Electricity Cost Increases to the Consumer$10 – $60/metric ton carbon cost $120 – $720 $240 – $1,440 $667,000 – $4 million
Power Supply Options Limited • Natural gas price is highly volatile • Nuclear option available but in the future • Renewables, conservation and efficiency can not yet meet full base-load need
7000 6000 5000 U.S. Economy CO2 Emissions (million metric tons) 4000 3000 2000 • Flat between 2010 - 2020 • 3%/yr. decline beginning in 2020 • Results in “prism”-like CO2 constraint on electric sector 1000 0 2000 2010 2020 2030 2040 2050
3500 3000 2500 2000 U.S. Electric Sector Emissions (million metric tons) Technology 1500 Efficiency Renewables Nuclear Generation 1000 Advanced Coal Generation 500 CCS PHEV 0 DER 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015 2020 2025 2030 Electric Sector CO2Reduction Potential * Achieving all targets is very aggressive, but potentially feasible. EIA Base Case 2007
Key Elements in Legislation • Incentives for technology development • Credit for early adopters • Time to develop the technology • Price ceiling for carbon (safety valve) • Free allocations vs. auction • Regulatory certainty • All sectors must be included • Worldwide effort
Waxman-Markey Bill • Cap and Trade • Includes RES • $1 billion/year in CCS grants • Allocations • Offsets Henry Waxman (CA) Ed Markey (MA)
American Clean Energy and Security Act(Waxman-Markey) 4 Titles • Clean Energy (RES and Transmission) • Energy Efficiency • Reducing Global Warming • Transition to a Clean Energy Economy • Bill has passed out of House Energy and Commerce Committee • Still needs to go through several other committees • Vote on entire House floor
Waxman-Markey Climate Provisions • Targets and timetables • 17% below 2005 greenhouse gas emissions in 2020 • 83% below 2005 GHG emissions by 2050 • Allowance allocation • 85% allowances will be freely given out at beginning – more allowances will be auctioned starting in 2026 • Offsets (agriculture and forestry) • Domestic and international offsets are limited to 1 billion metric tons each of carbon per year
Allocations • Allocations given to Local Distribution Companies (retail sales) • Based 50 percent on sales and 50 percent on carbon intensity of electricity purchases • Allocations given to merchant generators • 5 percent of electric generator’s total • Allocations to electric consumers phased out by 2030
Offsets • Eligible Projects • Determined by EPA • Project Requirements • Determined by EPA • Verification • Determined by EPA • Issuance of Credits • Audits • Offset Credits • 15 percent domestic and 15 percent international • Offsets Integrity Advisory Board • 9 members established by EPA • Offset Program • Regulations promulgated by EPA w/consultation with Federal Agencies and Advisory Board
Performance Standards New Coal • 2009 - 2020: 50% reduction in CO2 • After 2020: 65% reduction in CO2
Waxman-Markey Shortcomings • Allocation formula is skewed • Some receive more than 100 percent of their needs and double allocations are given to others • Allocation should be based entirely on emissions • Allowances are fazed out too quickly • Offset Program should be administered by the U.S. Department of Agriculture • Credit for current emissions reduction (Early Action) is missing • Timing of emission reduction does not match the development and commercialization of carbon capture technology
Waxman-Markey Shortcomings • Auction – no restriction on the types of entities or individuals who could purchase the allocations • Safety Valve – no safety valve price is included in the bill that could mitigate the harmful economic impact on the end consumers • Research, Development & Deployment funding - inadequate to fund the necessary advancement in carbon capture technologies
NRECA Negotiations • NRECA will not oppose the legislation, but will stand aside and work to improve the bill in the Senate in return for: • Pelosi will not object to Rural Utilities Service funding new nuclear generation • No utility shall receive allocations that exceed 100 % of their needed emissions. • Additional small utility allocations (less than 4 million MWh) for cooperatives.