1 / 12

Early Action Program

Early Action Program. A Proposal to Stimulate Voluntary Reductions of Greenhouse Gases J. Bennett Johnston Alvin L. Alm. Current Disincentives. No credit for past actions Higher cost options in the future as least cost options have already been used

wei
Download Presentation

Early Action Program

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Early Action Program A Proposal to Stimulate Voluntary Reductions of Greenhouse Gases J. Bennett Johnston Alvin L. Alm

  2. Current Disincentives • No credit for past actions • Higher cost options in the future as least cost options have already been used • Lower compliance requirements for competitors

  3. Criteria for Credit System • Simple • Easy to implement • Free from gaming opportunities • Avoids bureaucracy • Creates certainty • Fair • Promotes efficiency

  4. The Efficiency Ratio Approach • Ratio of emissions to production • kWh and useful steam for electricity production • steel, aluminum, paper, etc. for manufacturing industries • Early actions would improve ratio and hence automatically reduce future obligations if regulatory program were instituted

  5. Efficiency Ratio Attributes • No “bankable” credit that can be saved and then used in the future • Benefits flow automatically from either • emission reductions and/or • improvements in efficiency • Requires no baselines nor government approvals

  6. Legislation: Purpose and Principles • Encourage early action • Remove disincentives for companies taking early action • Encourage efficiency • Accommodate growth • Not tied to any treaty target or deadline

  7. Legislation: Efficiency Ratio • Future regulatory program would be developed as ratio of emissions to production • To implement this principle: • Standby regulations would be developed to establish categories and deal with other administrative issues • Rules would be commenced upon bill passage

  8. Legislation:International Joint Activities • Study feasibility of early actions for: • Sequestration • International clean energy projects • If feasible, these activities would require • Rulemaking • Approval of individual projects

  9. Questions • What needs to accomplished by this legislation? • Legislation establishes efficiency ratio as approach to subsequent regulatory program • Establishes process for establishing ratios for different industries • Establishes study and potential rulemaking process for off-site sequestration and clean energy reductions

  10. Questions • What needs to be decided in a future treaty and regulatory program? • Total percentage reduction from a base • Timing of reductions • Reductions by major sectors, e.g., electricity production, manufacturing, transportation and other

  11. Conclusion • Efficiency ratio approach is only viable approach to early action that: • promotes efficiency • accommodates growth • This approach can be coupled with international joint sequestration or clean energy projects • An overly complex proposal could slow down, rather than speed up voluntary actions

  12. Conclusion • Although concept is simple, achieving legislation will require concerted effort • If no effort is made, U.S. companies could be caught in future squeeze should our trading partners move ahead • An approach that promotes efficiency is good economic and energy policy

More Related