Home
»
News Articles
»
Emissions trading: Another financial bubble set to burst?
Emissions trading: Another financial bubble set to burst?
Posted : Wednesday, November 04, 2009
Media release issued: Monday, 10 August 2009
While the Australian Government has settled on a greenhouse gas
(GHG) emissions cap-and-trade scheme (the CPRS) as its primary
policy response to climate change, a new CEDA report asks whether
this is really the best and most durable approach.
The Australian community doesn't seem to be aware that it is not
GHG emissions that will be traded, but a form of carbon
derivatives.
A Taxing Debate - Climate policy beyond Copenhagen examines
whether cap-and-trade should really be the policy of choice in the
debate over how to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
Contributors to the report argue it should not supplant the
simpler idea of a carbon emissions tax.
CEDA's Chief Executive David Byers said authors in the report
argue cap-and-trade may be a more politically acceptable approach
than a carbon tax but only because it hides the true costs to
consumers and creates a false sense of financial and economic
security.
By contrast, a carbon tax would deliver more certainty of price
signal, stability and transparency. It would provide clearer
signals to investors; better enable firms to plan for investments
in capital equipment and new low-emissions technologies; and
introduce much needed simplicity and directness to climate
policy.
"Having suffered a global financial crisis - in large part
because of poorly managed, excessive credits and swaps originating
from excess housing finance - contributors to the report question
the integrity of carbon credits long-term", Mr Byers said.
"Will there be a carbon bubble of the wrong kind?" he asked.
The rhetoric on emissions trading includes references to the
need to 'price carbon' but lacks the substance, simplicity,
transparency and sense of an explicit price incentive.
CEDA's Director of Research and Policy, Dr Michael Porter, said
there was a very threatening prospect that emissions trading would
create a vast and uncertain set of derivatives trades based on
carbon debits and credits.
"A carbon finance bubble could eventually dwarf the recent GFC
problems," Dr Porter said.
"The trades will be vast because the big polluters won't be
trading GHG emissions but carbon emission derivatives under a
poorly understood and infant policy - the CPRS."
"If Wall Street's manipulation of debt and derivatives gave us
the global financial crisis, the emissions trading is certain to
give us far worse."
"Alternatively, a transparent tax system is not the deal-driven,
offset and carve-out model that is really just a new front door to
the return of protectionism, as an ETS is," Dr Porter
explained.
A consumption-based carbon tax would also fit within the GST and
WTO systems, as authors Geoff Carmody and former WTO Director Gary
Sampson demonstrate in their papers.
Geoff Carmody, in his paper on a consumption-based carbon tax,
argues that the CPRS is the "GST from hell" as it penalises the
very export industries and import competing firms at the core of
our export driven economy.
Dr Porter supports this view. "At a time when the country is
reeling from the imported GFC, it is unwise in the extreme for the
CPRS to invite backroom carve-outs and deals that exempt firms from
the ravages of the CPRS," he said.
"At its core, the scheme involves trades not in carbon emissions
but debits and credits and other derivatives that invite
corruption, fraud and auditing nightmares across much of the third
world of finance."
Dr Porter points to Professor Ross Garnaut's final report which
states: "A well-designed emissions trading scheme has important
advantages over other forms of policy intervention. However, a
carbon tax would be better than a heavily compromised emissions
trading scheme." (Emphasis added; Garnaut Climate Change Review
Final Report 2008, p. xxiv.)
Prominent Yale economist William Nordhaus and Dr Porter argue in
their papers that taxes are less vulnerable to manipulation,
evasion and corruption - a significant risk in any international
emissions trading scheme.
"My concern is phony carbon derivative trades will emerge, as
already experienced in Papua New Guinea where of the head of its
carbon trading office is suspected of being involved with trading
'mythical' carbon credits," said Dr Porter.
A tax in sync with consumers
Dr Porter, in his paper argues that a carbon tax creates the
incentive and ability for people to reduce their carbon footprint;
unlike an ETS which has no incentives for the community
directly.
Dr Porter said many people who want to reduce their carbon
footprint find they are excluded from the CPRS as it only focuses
on wholesale emitters, and some of these - such as agriculture -
have been currently exempted.
"People can monitor their energy consumption - and lower their
costs - with new smart devices (eg mobile phones) that report on
charges and consumption of utilities," he said.
The Copenhagen factor
The report also highlights perspectives from major countries -
the United States, China, India, Germany and Australia - on the
Copenhagen process and what, if anything, is likely to emerge from
it.
Will there be a successor treaty to the Kyoto Protocol, due to
expire in 2012? Or will it be impossible to overcome the doubts
that persist about the ability of the Kyoto style 'targets and
timetables' approach to deliver substantial quantitative greenhouse
gas emissions reductions? Would the introduction of a global
strategy with the flexibility necessary to adjust to national
circumstances (as suggested in Alan Oxley's paper), be more
effective than the current emphasis on negotiating binding
international or national emissions limits?
Graduated responses: A ramping-up of carbon tax
CEDA's Chief Executive, David Byers, said the papers point to a
"policy ramp" as a more effective approach to efficient emissions
reductions.
"A policy ramp involves modest rates of emissions reductions in
the near-term followed by sharper reductions in the medium and long
term as competitive low-emissions technologies are deployed," he
said.
This is because the time scales involved with climate change are
immense - actions taken today may not have noticeable effect for 50
years or more. Judgements about the level of discount rate used are
critical to the calculation of costs and benefits. For example,
Stern and Garnaut use a very low discount rate to derive their
conclusions on the costs of delay and the benefits of acting
early.
However, for Nordhaus and Porter an artificially low discount
rate distorts the nature of the tradeoff between future and present
generations.
A steady ramping up of policies provides a better response to
intertemporal and intergenerational equity considerations.
A viable "Plan B"
Mr Byers said he hoped the report would advance the development
of sensible and measured policy responses to the risk of climate
change.
"A carbon tax may not be the policy of choice now, but the ETS
bubble may burst and the world may - in the not too distant future
- be looking for a viable "Plan B" to replace the problematic
cap-and-trade system," he said.
CEDA members can click here to download the report.
Return to the news