07/11/2018

State Cap-And-Trade Systems Offer Evidence That Carbon Pricing Can Work

The Conversation

Valero’s Benicia Refinery, less than 40 miles from San Francisco. AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli
The latest UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report argues that carbon pollution must be cut to zero by 2050 to avoid devastating levels of climate change.
Achieving that goal will require swiftly transforming the energy, transportation, housing and food industries, and more. Although these tasks are daunting and the Trump administration is dismantling federal regulations aimed at reducing climate-changing emissions, cost-effective policy tools that could help do exist. And individual U.S. states and regions are using them to make significant progress to reduce emissions.
I led a Fletcher School Climate Policy Lab team that reviewed carbon pricing policies in 15 jurisdictions to see how they work in the real world, not just in theory. We found that in all cases carbon pricing seems to be a cost-effective method to cut carbon pollution.

Emissions trading
States including New York, Delaware and California are keeping up the experiments with carbon pricing they began as many as nine years ago.
Along with the results from similar efforts in Europe, Asia and Latin America in more than 40 countries, these policies have amassed ample evidence about what works in practice, what doesn’t and why.




As my team explained in Climate Policy, an academic journal, there are two basic flavors of carbon pricing: cap-and-trade – otherwise known as emissions trading systems – and carbon fees or taxes. Some jurisdictions also use hybrid blends of the two approaches.

U.S. carbon emissions trading until now has been limited to the Northeast, some mid-Atlantic states and California. But many countries, including Canada, Mexico, China and the entire European Union, are levying carbon taxes, running emissions trading systems or using a mix of the two. Washington State’s citizens will soon vote on a ballot initiative that would impose a carbon pollution fee on major emitters and collect revenue to be mostly spent on clean air and clean energy investments.




Emissions trading systems cap the total emissions allowed at a certain level. The government then allocates emissions permits to factories, utilities and other polluters either for free or through auctions.
Each permit usually covers 1 metric ton of carbon dioxide. Permit holders, typically, may buy and sell their permits as needed.
Companies capable of cutting their own emissions may choose to do so, and then sell their permits to other polluters to make money. Conversely, businesses can buy permits at the prevailing market price to avoid having to directly cut their own emissions in their business operations.
As you might expect in carbon markets that depend on willing buyers and sellers, the cheapest emissions reductions usually happen first.

The American track record
The results look promising so far.
In the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative, which includes nine Northeastern and Mid-Atlantic states like Delaware, Massachusetts and Maine, carbon emissions from electricity generation fell by 36 percent between 2005 and 2015, the most recent comprehensive data available.
More recent data shows that carbon emissions allowed under the cap imposed by regulators will have fallen from 188 million metric tons in 2009 to 60.3 million metric tons by the end of 2018, representing a 68 percent reduction in carbon dioxide emissions in the power sector in this region.
One reason for this progress may be that utilities operating in this region have found that pricing carbon has shifted what the industry calls the “power plant dispatch order.” That is, sources of power like wind and natural gas that emit less carbon than coal are tapped first.
And California’s carbon emissions are on track to fall to 1990 levels by 2020.
In no jurisdiction anywhere in the world that we studied did emissions increase as a result of carbon pricing.

Faster improvements
With subsidies, tax incentives, regulatory policies, fiscal incentives, innovation investments and other efforts to slow the pace of climate change being deployed at once, it is hard to know which of them is best at reducing emissions.
But it is possible to see that the two regions that have implemented carbon pricing have often reduced their emissions faster or in greater absolute terms than regions that have not. Massachusetts and New York, for example, reduced their emissions by more than 20 percent overall between 2000 and 2015, about twice the U.S. average of 10.3 percent.
Carbon pricing policies can help governments raise money. But revenue from carbon taxes or the proceeds from permit auctions can be returned to taxpayers as well.
All of the states and countries using carbon pricing policies also have additional policies working alongside the carbon taxes or cap-and-trade programs to reduce emissions, ranging from performance standards for energy efficiency to tax incentives. These policies can also work well, but they can be more expensive approaches to reduce emissions, and sometimes they even undermine the carbon pricing policy.
The federal tax credits for wind and solar energy, for example, cost taxpayers an estimated US$3.4 billion in 2016.

No toll on growth
What’s more, statewide economies do not appear to suffer from carbon pricing.
California’s economy expanded an average rate of 5.2 percent between 2012 and 2017, faster than the national annual 3.7 percent average. In July 2018, California’s emissions fell below 1990 levels for the first time, representing a 13 percent reduction from their 2004 peak even while the California economy grew 26 percent.
The Northeastern states averaged 3.2 percent annual growth between 2012 and 2017 – near the U.S. norm. But their Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative led to $1.4 billion of net positive economic activity because of the reinvestment of the auction proceeds in activities that generate economic benefits for the region between 2015 and 2017, a recent study found.
Critics of emissions trading policies have argued that the prices that have emerged in these systems are too low to spur emissions reductions. The evidence presented above shows that, in fact, they do cause pollution to decline. If advocates prefer steeper emissions reductions, then the emissions cap must be tightened.
Alternatively, governments can switch to carbon fees or taxes, which creates greater price certainty in the market – and which can also be ratcheted up as desired to achieve faster cuts in pollution. Either way, I believe that it is now clear that carbon taxes and emissions trading programs create a long-term signal for the marketplace that induces changes in consumer and firm behavior.
Given the strong real-world record on the effectiveness of carbon pricing policies and the fact that they don’t have to cost taxpayers or take a toll on the economy, I expect more states will adopt them in the coming years.
A federal approach would of course be much more efficient and effective. But it would require congressional action and a presidential signature, neither of which appear to be imminent especially when President Donald Trump says he is not even sure that climate change is man-made.

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Adani Water Project Bypasses Full Environmental Impact Assessment Against Advice

ABCPenny Timms | Michael Slezak



Key points:
  • Department of Agriculture and Water Resources told Environment Department Adani project could have "significant impact on water resources"
  • That description should trigger part of legislation relating to water management and require full environmental assessment
  • Environment Department maintains water project does not need that level of assessment

The Federal Environment Department ruled against the advice of the Government's own water experts when deciding Adani's North Galilee Water Scheme, in Central Queensland, did not require a full environmental assessment.
Documents obtained under Freedom of Information (FOI) and provided to the ABC by activist group Lock the Gate Alliance showed the Department of Agriculture and Water Resources wrote to the Environment Department suggesting the project could activate what is known as the "water trigger".
The "water trigger" was established in 2013, specifically to ensure gas and coal mining projects likely to have a significant impact on the country's water resources, underwent a full environmental assessment.
But in September, the Department of Environment ruled Adani's water project, which has plans to extract up to 12.5 billion litres of water a year from a river in Queensland to support the Carmichael coal mine, did not activate the trigger because it considered the water project separate to the mine.
The new documents show that conclusion was counter to the view of experts in the Department of Agriculture and Water Resources, which was expressed to the Department of Environment before it made its decision.
The Department of Environment initially refused access to the documents, only revealing them once Lock the Gate Alliance appealed against that decision.
The submission from the Department of Agriculture and Water Resources read:
"The department considers the proposed action could have significant impact(s) on a water resource, in relation to coal seam gas development and large coal mining development, protected under the EPBC Act."
According to the act, that description fits the requirement needed to activate the "water trigger".
Warwick Giblin is managing director of consultancy OzEnvironmental and has worked in environmental management for decades.
Mr Giblin told the ABC the FOI document was important.
"It's significant on a number of counts," he said.
"It said the project could have significant impacts on the water, not just any impacts but significant ones."
The North Galilee Water Project is still being assessed by the Federal Government, which involves a less rigorous review, via "preliminary documentation".
According to the Department of the Environment's assessment manual, that approach is used when the degree of public concern associated with a proposal is "low", when the degree of confidence of the impacts is "high", and when those impacts are "short-term or recoverable".
Mr Giblin said the FOI documents showed that form of assessment was probably inadequate.
"The Department of Agriculture and Water Resources says that to make a judgement you need robust baseline data on surface and groundwater," he said.
Mr Giblin said collecting that data could take three years and was not something that could be done without a full environmental assessment.
"You're kidding yourself really if you make a decision in the absence of that information," he said.

Action will 'clearly have an impact on water resources'
The principal solicitor at the Queensland Environmental Defenders Office, Sean Ryan, said the Environment Department should explain how it came to its decision to not require a full environmental assessment.
"It is concerning when these significant environmental laws are not applied to an action that clearly will have a significant impact on water resources," he said.
Carmel Flint from the Lock the Gate Alliance said she was astounded by the situation.
"We were really shocked to see that these documents had given some pretty clear advice to the department that there was a serious risk to water resources and that they ignored that and pushed thorough the Adani project without requiring an environmental impact assessment," she said.
"So it just raises real questions about what's going on inside government.
"We've got a department who has this key role of looking after water and agriculture basically raising this concern, saying they consider there would be a significant impact on water resources, and they've effectively been overruled.
"That's just not good enough."

Adani 'has been subject to more than 150 ... conditions'
In a written statement from both the Department of Environment and the Environment Minister, assurances were made that the advice of the Government's other departments was considered.
"The Adani project has been subject to more than 150 state and federal government conditions, so we are confident any potential impacts are being adequately assessed," the statement read.
Ms Flint is calling on Environment Minister Melissa Price to act.
"We're really calling for the Minister now to urgently step in and reverse the decision and require a proper environmental impact assessment and fully apply the water trigger," she said.
"We'd also really like to know how it was that this advice came to be ignored by the Department for Environment."
Adani successfully argued its water project was a standalone one, and not part of a coal-seam-gas or large-coal-mining development.
It is an argument the company stands by.
"The definition of 'large coal mining development' relates to impacts on water-resources activities that form part of the process to extract coal," an Adani spokesperson said in a statement.
"This assessment already occurred in 2015 through the Environmental Impact Statement process [for the Carmichael mine].
"The pipeline is considered associated infrastructure, which is not part of the coal-extraction process and therefore does not require assessment under the water trigger."
Mr Giblin said that argument made no sense.
"Unequivocally, there is no mine unless it has access to water and I think it's rather cute [to] suggest that somehow this project — which is only triggered because of this mine proposal — is a separate project," he said.
In a statement, the miner said the amount of water it would be looking to take equated "to 12.5GL of water or less than 1 per cent of the annual water flow available in the Belyando Suttor River catchment".
"This water can only be taken when the river system is in flood, after other users, like farmers, have taken their share, and only when the river is flowing at a rate of 2,592 megalitres per day," it said.


Ministerial and Department Statement
To be clear, the water trigger for the Carmichael Mine was applied during its assessment under national environmental law.
The Independent Expert Scientific Committee on Coal Seam Gas and Large Coal Mining Development provided advice on the project on 29 June, 2012 and 16 December, 2013.
The conditions of the mine's approval are in line with the advice received from the Independent Expert Scientific Committee on Coal Seam Gas and Large Coal Mining Development.
The recent reports relate to the construction of the North Galilee pipeline. It is a standalone project.
The Australian Government becomes involved in the assessment of proposed actions that are likely to have a significant impact on matters of national environmental significance protected by national environment law.
The Department of the Environment and Energy determined that the water trigger does not apply to the North Galilee pipeline.
However, as part of the process required under national environment law, the Department will be doing an assessment of the likely significant impacts of the proposed on nationally protected plants and animals.
The Adani project has been subject to more than 150 state and federal government conditions, so we are confident any potential impacts are being adequately assessed.


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'We Want To Do Everything We Can': NSW Readies For Renewables Surge

FairfaxPeter Hannam

New solar and wind farms being planned for NSW have twice the capacity of the state's coal-fired power stations, prompting the state government to set aside $55 million to help smooth their introduction.
As of October 29, NSW had 20,000 megawatts of generation capacity either approved or seeking planning approval, worth more than $27 billion in investment, according to government data.
Moree solar farm: a lot of these are in the NSW planning pipeline.
Proposed solar plants accounted for 11,200MW, dwarfing wind farms with 5100MW, and the Snowy 2.0 pumped hydro of about 2000MW. Just 100MW involved coal, with the planned upgrade of AGL's Bayswater power station.
Along with the new plants, some eight large-scale battery projects - all with solar farms - with more than 400MW-hours of capacity are also in the planning pipeline as the industry gears up for the bulge in variable energy sources.
The market, though, is going to need some near-term help to smooth the exit of most of the state's existing power plants - particularly the 10,160MW of coal-fired power stations, said Amy Kean, director of the Energy Infrastructure and Emerging Technologies unit at the Department of Planning.
To that end, the government last week revealed the first details of its $55 million Emerging Energy Program aimed at supporting a portfolio of nascent technologies that will be needed as 70 per cent of the state's generation fleet retires by 2035.
“We’re trying to drive these technologies down the cost curve so they can then complement variable wind and solar technologies,” Ms Kean said.
The surge in renewable energy comes as the federal government has largely vacated the energy policy space after the demise of the Turnbull government's National Energy Guarantee. The states are largely being left to press on with carbon reduction and other power sector goals.
“There is no doubt that our energy future lies in alternative technologies," Don Harwin, the NSW Energy Minister, said.
“We want to do everything we can to unlock the expertise of the private sector to accelerate projects that deliver clean, reliable and affordable energy."
Renewable energy could emerge as a key policy issue at next March's state election. Adam Searle, Labor's energy spokesman said his party planned to "have quite a lot more to say about it", and that the ALP "will do more on new energy than Coalition parties".

Solar catches up with wind
The rapid advance and competitive nature of solar photovoltaic panels, meanwhile, has caught many by surprise.
In September, solar farms and rooftop systems supplied 935.9 gigawatt-hours of electricity to the National Electricity Market, eclipsing wind power's 913.9 GW-h for the first time, said Dylan McConnell, an energy researcher at Melbourne University.


Source: Dylan McConnell


While wind energy dipped during a relatively calm month, the race remains "pretty much neck and neck", Mr McConnell said. "Wind is slowly ticking away while solar is advancing rapidly."
Proof of that advance has been on show lately in South Australia, the state where solar PV penetration is the highest with about 31 per cent of households having systems on their roof, according to SunWiz data.
On October 21, electricity demand from the grid sank to a record low of about 660MW during the middle of a sunny Sunday. In the past, minimum demand would have been more like 1000MW, Mr McConnell said.


Source Dylan McConnell


Govind Kant, a sales manager at Trina Solar one of the largest solar panel suppliers, said commercial customers had lately joined households and utilities as a major source of demand.
Businesses often have large roof space and demand that matched more neatly with supply than homes. Payback time for systems can be down to three years, giving them an annual return on investment of 33 per cent.
"It's not why would you go for commercial solar but when," Mr Kant said.

Farewell grid
For some, such as Andy Hill, the economics of dropping off the grid by adding batteries to the PV are also becoming attractive.
Faced with a $40,000 bill for connecting his new home near Scone in the upper Hunter region to a powerline 50 metres away, Mr Hill opted instead for a $57,500 system of 10kW of solar PV and 40kW-hours of storage.
Despite building a house within 50 metres of power line, the Hill family (Cash, Ryan, Leah and Andy, left to right) near Scone in NSW opted to go off the grid altogether. Credit: Andy Hill
"We always wanted to go off the grid - we're in Australia and there a lot of sun," said Mr Hill, who runs the Our Range Quarter Horse Stud.
He expects the system will pay off the difference in about four years, compared with connecting to the grid, and after that, "it'll be a bonus".
Still, until he sees how his system performs, Mr Hill plans to keep an emergency back-up "emergency" generator: "Just to be sure everything's spot on."

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Is Corporate Australia Facing A 'Tipping Point' On Climate Change?

FairfaxRuth Williams

In the parlance of climate science, a "tipping point" is a dire prospect – a critical threshold breach that triggers an abrupt and rapid change in climate.
But last week, Australia's second biggest asset manager used the phrase in a more optimistic sense – to describe a shift in how investors, regulators and companies are thinking about the varied risks that climate change poses, and what they should actually do about it.
Meeting the 1.5C climate change target will require significant ambition and innovation across sectors, says Colonial First State Global Asset Management. Credit: Nic Walker
A string of recent events - from financial regulators pushing companies on "material" climate risks, to the recently-surveyed views of directors ranking climate change as a top priority - amount to a "real tipping point" in how Australia is grappling with climate change, Pablo Berrutti, head of responsible investments for Asia Pacific at Colonial First State Global Asset Management, told Fairfax Media.
"Climate breakdown" has "diverse, urgent and complex" implications for companies and investors, Berrutti says. But he believes that – even amid climate policy uncertainty in Canberra – "you're seeing the greatest amount of momentum on this issue that we've ever had."
Last month, investors granted unprecedented levels of support to climate-focused shareholder campaigns at the Whitehaven Coal and Origin Energy AGMs, while Westpac narrowly avoided facing its own resolution at its upcoming AGM.
A mining industry conference in Melbourne last week was dominated by talk of sustainability and climate change.
The release last year of new climate reporting guidelines known as "TCFD", developed by a Michael Bloomberg-led G20 taskforce and framed around the Paris agreement targets, has also been significant, winning the backing of major investors, companies and regulators around the world.
And at the Responsible Investment Association of Australasia (RIAA) conference, also last week, its chief executive Simon O'Conner spoke of an "inflection point" – highlighting the recent milestone of more than half of Australia's managed investments – some $866 billion worth – now being managed as responsible investments, according to KPMG research.
You're seeing the greatest amount of momentum on this issue that we've ever had.
Pablo Berrutti
"Our hope is no longer in politics," O'Connor says. "It's in business and investment... that investors are stepping up right now and are looking to flex their ownership muscle is a really positive development."
The recent release of the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) – which states that halting global warming to 1.5 degrees would require "rapid and far-reaching transitions" in energy, land, urban, infrastructure and industrial systems – "should focus all of our minds," Berrutti says.
Big questions lie ahead. Among investors, action on climate has often involved pushing for information from companies about the climate change-related risks they face, including physical risks to company assets and infrastructure from impacts like increased droughts, floods or storms; and "transition risks" like future regulations and technology changes impacting demand for fossil fuels.
But as companies start providing this information, what comes next?

Full agenda
O'Connor says the "historic" votes at the Origin and Whitehaven AGMs reflect investor frustration on climate issues. Such shareholder campaigns have become more common in recent years, but have traditionally struggled to win more than modest levels of support.
This AGM season, that abruptly changed.
A resolution from NGO the Australasian Centre for Corporate Responsibility, pushing Origin Energy to disclose more about its membership of lobby groups – especially those involved in Australia's climate and energy policy debate – scored a 46 per cent vote in favour at its AGM late last month, a sharp rise on the votes garnered by similar resolutions at BHP last November (10 per cent) and Rio Tinto in May (18 per cent).
At Whitehaven Coal, a Market Forces resolution called on the company to boost its disclosure of climate-related financial risks - including through so-called "scenario analysis", where a company maps out the possible impact on its business of various climate change-induced scenarios in years ahead (a process encouraged by the TCFD).
That vote secured 40 per cent shareholder approval.
Both Origin and Whitehaven called on investors to oppose the resolutions. Whitehaven said the activists behind the motion were "flawed" in their thinking, saying the miner already considered climate change risks, and had agreed to report using the TCFD recommendations. "What we've got here is the notion as a coal company we don't think about these things," its chief executive, Paul Flynn, said on the day of the AGM.
"I think we've disclosed fairly well over time but I think it was a strong message from shareholders that they'd like to see further disclosure," said Origin's chief executive, Frank Calabria, following the protest vote at its AGM.
Investors are pressuring companies on climate because they need to consider and manage investment risk – and the myriad risks posed by climate change are complex.
Big long-term investors – so-called "universal owners" – have the most "closely aligned time horizons with the emerging impacts of climate change," RIAA's O'Connor says.
Pablo Berrutti from Colonial First State Global Asset Management.
Global funds giant Vanguard, for example, needs "consistent and comparable" information on climate risk to judge "leaders and laggards", says its head of investment stewardship, Glenn Booraem.
"It's critically important for us that market values reflect the material risks that companies are exposed to."
But there are other pressures at play. O'Connor says super funds are facing more scrutiny and pressure from members about the climate impact of their investments. And investors are themselves coming under regulator pressure to consider and disclose the climate risk embedded in their portfolios, and from a legal perspective, to be mindful of their fiduciary duties to members.

Risk waiting
But last month, the Australian Securities and Investments Commission lambasted the quality of reporting on climate change by Australian companies, noting that the information provided is often "fragmented" and of limited use to investors. It found that just 17 per cent of companies examined disclosed climate change as a "material risk".
This is stark, considering that governance research firm Regnan has concluded that 44 per cent of the ASX200 have "elevated near-term exposures" to one or more aspects of climate change risk.
Disclosure of physical risks from climate change is particularly lagging, both ASIC and Regnan have warned. "Eight out of nine of the most extremely exposed stocks that we look at, it's the physical climate impacts that are key," says Regnan's acting chief executive Alison George.
"Those exposures are near-term and should be being discussed in their disclosures now. It is a relatively small number who are fully addressing the information needs of investors at the moment."
Booraem says companies are generally becoming "more and more" responsive to investor requests for more information. "We have engaged with many more companies on climate risk than have gotten shareholder [resolutions] on climate risk," Booraem says.
But for a passive funds-heavy investor like Vanguard, a problem arises when companies won't respond to engagement like discussions and requests – which accounts for the fund manager's increased willingness to back shareholder resolutions.

Action station
One question is what actions will flow – from investors and companies – as the market absorbs an increasing volume of climate change-related disclosures.
Market Forces wants the conversation to shift beyond mere disclosure of climate-related risks. "It seems investors want companies to disclose climate risk, but not take obvious steps needed to manage that risk," says researcher Will van de Pol.
Last month, investors backed the call for Whitehaven Coal to step up its disclosure on climate risk. But they shunned another resolution pushing the company to explicitly align its strategy with the Paris agreement's goals.
When it comes to shareholder resolutions, investors are reluctant to veer too close to operational issues considered the domain of management.
But Regnan's Alison George argues that the work expected of companies through the TCFD will "inevitably" lead to changed business decisions, because it will push companies to consider the resilience of their businesses in coming years and decades.
Investors are not just talking about climate disclosure, she says. "They are also talking about action. When they have private conversations with companies, they are looking for emissions reductions, they are looking for energy efficiency responses, they are looking for companies to adopt resiliency measures to help them adapt to climate change."
Says O'Connor: "We need to start with the information on the table. Then we can have the conversation about whether we believe [companies'] assumptions, [and] whether we are comfortable with timing of the transition that's proposed."
Berrutti notes a tendency for the outcome of companies' scenario analysis to be that "the company strategy is fine, and they can continue on as they are.
"Which, if you look at the science around climate change, that's clearly not going to be the case at least for most companies. What we need to do is reduce emissions as quickly as possible... companies need to be thinking about transition planning, as opposed to just using [the scenario analysis] to reinforce existing strategy."
Some investors, including some Australian super funds, have opted for screening and divestment of fossil fuel-linked holdings. But most big investors argue against this course, and for the big passive managers like Blackrock and Vanguard, it's not an option.
"The investment community, for the most part, can't divest their way out of climate change," O'Connor says. "It's all pervading, across the economy".

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