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CO 2 emissions trading Progress EU ETS in 2007. European Chemical Regions Network (ECRN) “Competitive Chemical Regions in Europe” 5th Congress of the European Chemical Regions Network Ludwigshafen, BASF-Gesellschaftshaus, Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany 29-30 November 2007 . Vianney Schyns
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CO2 emissions trading Progress EU ETS in 2007 European Chemical Regions Network (ECRN) “Competitive Chemical Regions in Europe” 5th Congress of the European Chemical Regions Network Ludwigshafen, BASF-Gesellschaftshaus, Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany 29-30 November 2007 Vianney Schyns Manager Climate & Energy Efficiency Utility Support Group Utility provider for a.o. DSM and SABIC
Contents • ECRN’s vision on emissions trading • High Level Groups EU Commission • Present situation • Annex: Structural shortcoming present allocation rules • Annex: Structural solution benchmarks with ex-post adjustment to actual production
ECRN’s vision on the instrument Greenhouse Gas emissions trading Maastricht Declaration, 22 December 2005 Tarragona Declaration, 9 November 2006 “Major improvements still needed”
ECRN’s vision on GHG emissions trading • Present flaws • Historical grandfathering not effective • Electricity windfall profits, bound to increase from 1st period 2005-2007 € 15 billion/year to 2nd period 2008-2012 € 55 billion/year loss of competitiveness • No level playing field • Finite new entrant reserves insecurity new plant & debottlenecking investments • Frozen ex-ante allocation enhances frozen market shares • Lack of stable long-term recognition of CHP • Proposed solution, as alternative to auctioning • Benchmarks with ex-post adjustment to actual production • Guarantee of the total cap (novel method launched in Tarragona
High Level GroupsHLG Competitiveness, Energy and the EnvironmentHLG Chemical Industry Clear advice HLG CEE
HLG CEE and HLG Chemical industry • High Level Group CEE members • Commissioners Verheugen, Kroes, Piebalgs and Dimas + representatives industry, NGOs and others • The HLG CEE advice for EU ETS on 2 June 2006 • EU Commission & Member States to undertake (for implementation in 2nd period, but this failed) • Stronger signal towards low carbon technologies • Competitiveness, reduce impact windfall profits • Level playing field new investments across EU • How can rules, notably for new entrants and closure, be more harmonised, incl. the possibility of using a benchmarking approach • HLG CEE 30 October 2006 confirmed statements above • HLG Chemicals: Member Reiner Haseloff, president ECRN
Present situation Historical grandfathering historical mistake Lowering production, no benefit for environment Industry wants benchmarks no (partial) auctioning Auctioning seems ideal for electricity facts tell a different story Recent legal cases
Historical grandfathering historical mistake • Historical grandfathering was a historical mistake • Recognised by EU Commission, March 2007 • 3rd Trading period: perhaps auctioning for electricity & (partial?) auctioning and/or benchmarking for industry • EU Commission will come with a proposal for revised EU ETS Directive January 2008 – then co-decision EU Parliament & Council • Takes 1.5 – 2 years, is no decision for single Member State • Benchmarking for allocation to operators • Ex-ante: based on historical production second historical mistake? • Ex-post: based on actual production
Lowering production … • “Lowering Production is no Benefit for the Environment, says European Industry” Paper Alliance-Cefic-IFIEC, 21 May 2007, in line with ECRN • EU Commission declared end 2006 • Lowering production and selling freed allowances is equally legitimate than investing in emissions reductions and selling freed allowances • European Industry recalled founding father J.H. Dales (1968): • “Pollution in one region must never be reduced by increasing pollution in another” • Ex-ante allocation root cause of many distortions • Call for link to actual production • Italian representatives EU ETS review: “intra-period updates”
Benchmarks, no auctioning & solution “windfalls” • Industry is against auctioning • Auctioning electricity • Electricity prices remain high bad for competitiveness / leakage • Windfall profits 1st period € 15 billion/year to 2nd period € 55 billion/year at CO2-price 30/ton • Full auctioning 3rd period: windfalls still high (IFIEC paper 23 Nov 07) • Auctioning industry • Bad for competitiveness, “leakage” by production relocation • Call for benchmarks (ECRN, CEOs e.g. Jürgen Hambrecht BASF with Alain Perroy Cefic visit Verheugen 23 Nov 07) and solution windfall profits (letter European industry 16 Nov 07) • Auctioning with Border Adjustments at EU borders is not practical (huge bureaucracy), cannot be realised with few products only (it affects thousands of products)
Recent legal cases (1) • UK against EU Commission (judged 23 November 2005) • EU Commission can only assess NAP against art. 10 & Annex III • No objection within 3 months = approval (e.g. rules of Germany, France, Italy, Luxembourg, Poland about guarantee new entrants) • A NAP can be changed after Commission’s approval of an earlier notified NAP (no “provisional” notification needed) • Germany against EU Commission (judged 7 Nov 2007) • Germany contested the prohibition of the EU Commission to apply ex-post adjustments (also in 1st & 2nd guidance note) • Germany asserts that the whole Directive – also art. 10 and Annex III – does not forbid ex-post, provided total cap ensured • Court of First Instance fully confirmed German case • Germany may apply ex-post in 2nd period if case is won …
Historic production tells nothing about the future Quality of historic data for operators … with climate change instruments based on history? Variations in annual load factors over five years, found in UK by consultant NERA for UK government • Link to actual production: • Avoids distortions • Avoids windfall profits • Solves problems new entrants and closures, SEE ANNEX
Recent legal cases (2) • What means a historic cap: many new plants enter the market? • Many new power plants in Italy around 2009 .. Germany .. NL • What means a historic cap: import or export of product? • More electricity import NL from Germany – Is NL then doing well? • New CHP in Luxembourg – Is Luxembourg doing bad? • Eight new legal cases • What means a historic cap: economy is strongly recovering? • Forecast of growth in central Europe, 8 legal cases European Court of Justice against EU Commission: Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Poland, Slovakia, Lithuania and Malta • Rumania and Bulgaria to follow? • Influence Burden Sharing on allocation is perverse • Solution: benchmarks linked to actual production
AnnexStructural shortcomings of present allocation rules in the EU ETS Environmental effectiveness Level playing field Competitiveness & electricity windfall profits Insolvable problems new entrants & closures
Basics of shortcomings present allocation • Existing plants: ex-ante frozen cap based on historical emissions – rewarding pollution – same quantity allowances whether production increases or decreases • New plants and debottleneckings: also an ex-ante frozen cap, which is plan-economy • Systemic “disincentive for efficient growth”, “reward of shrinkage” • This allocation principle = root cause of all shortcomings, PLUS, mostly as a result of this: • Insecurity investments in new plants (finite reserves) • Highly distorting transfer rules • New plants few versus existing plants many allowances: LACK OF EFFECTIVENESS to invest to reduce emissions
Summary shortcomings allocation • Threat to reduce economic activities in Europe • Not producing & selling allowances can be more profitable • CARBON LEAKAGE without environmental justification • Rules differ across Europe • NO LEVEL PLAYING FIELD • No structural reward of early action, no equal standards, lower emissions can come into next historic reference • INNOVATION NOT STIMULATED, NO EFFECTIVENESS • New entrants: thresholds, finite reserves • INVESTMENT INSECURITY • Market share winners buy allowances, to losers sell • CARTEL, winners pay penalty to losers … no free market
Electricity windfall profits • State interference prevents competitive market • New entrants, vital for more competition, but ex-ante state decision of operating hours determine profitability – plan economy • Transfer rules protect incumbents: barrier to entry can be € 0.25billion for a 1000 MWe power plant (4 years, or trading period) • Even worse: incumbent does not apply for transfer rule and keeps old plant stand-by (imagine 1000 MWe plant, ~ € 0.2 billion/year) • Fight for allowances overrides fight for market share • Price of system: economic rents – windfall profits • Transfer of wealth 2nd period € 55 billion/year at € 30/ton CO2(EU-27) • Even with full auctioning 3rd trading period 2013-2020 still € 45 billion at € 35/ton CO2
24€ 46€ (2) (3) 60€ 67€ (3) 84€ (3) (3) 57€ (3) 60€ (3) 28€ 70€ (1) (3) 49€ (3) 24€ (1) 32€ (1) < 25€ (4) • Sources: • Presentation European Aluminium Association HLG-Ad hoc 1 (Long Term Contracts) -2005 • R.Tarjanne and K. Luostaninen, Lappeenranta University of technology (Long term contract) – 2003 • Platts Base load year 2007 (Platts 4 April 2006) • Jean Maillard World Map electricity prices (€/MWh) 20€ (1)
Present ETS rules: new entrants & closures • Unsolvable dilemmas new entrants (NE) & closures (C)(see e.g. also Grubb and Neuhoff, Stern, Egenhofer, Weishaar, Matthes, Schyns, Ecofys report for the EU Commission) • Theory: freeze allocation [all allowances after C & zero for NE] • Zero for NE actually hinders low carbon investments/competitiveness • Retaining allowances after C – how long? – is worse than transfer rules as it enhances market concentration • Withdrawal allowances after C: perverse incentive keeping inefficient plants in operation • Most authors elaborate these problems, but fail to conclude that within individual ex-ante frozen caps solutions are simply impossible search for squared circle
AnnexStructural solution: benchmarks with ex-post Which benchmarks and how Guarantee of total cap
Benchmarks with ex-post • Few benchmarks provide high coverage • E.g. electricity, cement, refineries, steamcrackers, etc. • Real benchmarking is easier that often assumed • Output related, same BM for incumbents & new entrants • Benchmarks with ex-post adjustments of production, solution for: • Leakage, level playing field, effectiveness, no insecurity for new entrants, no transfer rules, no windfall profits, free market without cartel problem • Works exactly as auctioning • Two new studies launched at ECRN Tarragona • How to ensure total cap with ex-post • How does it work in the electricity market