1 / 32

A Copenhagen Collar: Achieving Comparable Effort Through Carbon Price Agreements

A Copenhagen Collar: Achieving Comparable Effort Through Carbon Price Agreements. Warwick J. McKibbin Adele Morris Peter J. Wilcoxen. Prepared for Wednesday Lowy Lunch, 2 September 2009. Overview. Update on policy developments Implications of the GFC for climate negotiations

briar
Download Presentation

A Copenhagen Collar: Achieving Comparable Effort Through Carbon Price Agreements

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. A Copenhagen Collar: Achieving Comparable Effort Through Carbon Price Agreements Warwick J. McKibbin Adele Morris Peter J. Wilcoxen Prepared for Wednesday Lowy Lunch, 2 September 2009

  2. Overview • Update on policy developments • Implications of the GFC for climate negotiations • The need for a better basis for negotations • Ingredients for an agreement • A price collar • An illustrative price collar for the United States • Conclusion

  3. Policy debate - global • Copenhagen in December for country commitments for the 2012-2020 period. • G-20 has agreed to 80% reduction by 2050 but no base year agreed and no 2020 target • EU has called the US to cut 25% below 1990 by 2020 (35% below 2005) • Developing countries have called for the US to cut 40% by 2020

  4. Policy debate – United States • President Obama proposed cuts of 14% of 2005 by 2020 (83% by 2050) • US House has passed the Waxman Markey bill which has gone to the Senate – proposes 15% of 2005 by 2020

  5. Policy debate in most countries • Attempted compromise in a system of national targets and timetables causes • Not deep enough cuts so environmental lobby object • Not enough risk management on costs so industry object

  6. Implications of the GFC for Copenhagen • Anxieties about reducing emissions when unemployment is rising • Downturn has increased uncertainty about the costs of future sharp emissions reductions • Economic slowdown but hard to get capital to invest in emission reductions • Demonstrates how uncertain the future is

  7. The goal of a global climate agreement • Stabilize carbon concentrations in the atmosphere • Try to achieve this via “comparable effort” and acknowledging the difference between developed and developing countries

  8. What is comparable effort? • A similar reduction target from a baseyear is not comparable effort. • This reflects either a misunderstanding of the real world or a political deception

  9. A common target for emissions is not comparable effort • Emissions of a country over time depends on: • Endowments (particularly of energy) • Economic structure • Population growth • Productivity growth • Stage of development (consumption pattern) • Technology availability • Etc etc etc • Kyoto Protocol was a clear example of the problems – New Zealand, Japan, Europe

  10. Comparable effort • A good measure of effort is the price of carbon in the economy • Carbon prices and economic costs are highly related

  11. The need for a better basis for policy • Two parts • A pre commitment to cut global emissions towards a concentrations goal allocated across countries • A mechanism for ensuring equal efforts across countries (can be measured as the same carbon price)

  12. Lessons from Kyoto Experience • A system of rigid targets and timetables is difficult to negotiate because it is a zero sum game • It is difficult for countries to commit to a rigid target for emissions under uncertainty about costs – harder for rapidly growing economies • Even the most dedicated countries may be unable to meet their targets due to unforeseen events out of their control

  13. Why Copenhagen will not deliver • Copenhagen is heading into the same trap at the Kyoto Protocol • Targets and timetables without allowing for enormous uncertainty about the future

  14. A way forward • Emissions targets so politicians can feel good pledging x% by year 2020 and 2050 • Combined with a clear compliance mechanism for a country that exceeds an agreed target emission reductions.

  15. How to achieve this? • The same idea as a global McKibbin Wilcoxen Hybrid • Negotiate a target reduction path for each country • Negotiate a price collar for carbon prices

  16. What is a Price Collar? • Set an initial upper and lower price bound for national carbon prices - the same across all countries • Increase the upper and lower price band by 4% per year

  17. Compliance • A country must demonstrate that it has both reached its target and maintained carbon prices above the floor price through the budget period • A country that exceeds the emissions target must demonstrate that the national price of carbon was at the ceiling price during the period where the target was exceeded

  18. Implementation • Each country implements it’s carbon policy however it likes • Carbon tax • Emissions trading • Hybrid • Direct regulation • Wishful thinking

  19. What is needed? • A way to measure the carbon price across all systems that countries might use • Create a carbon price equivalence like a tariff equivalent measure for WTO compliance.

  20. Developed countries • Can propose deep cut targets and if it can’t be done then the costs will be limited by riding up the ceiling price • (same as the McKibbin Wilcoxen Hybrid)

  21. Developing Countries • Allow initially just to have a price floor without a target • But if possible - better to allow a generous target with a price collar

  22. What does this mean in practice?

  23. What matters • A policy that reduces uncertainties of extreme outcomes is more likely to be implemented and to stabilize concentrations than a policy that is precise but can’t be negotiated because no-one is willing to commit because of uncertainty. • How much is lost by reducing uncertainty on the cost side?

  24. McKibbin W.J. Morris A. , Wilcoxen P and Y. Cai (2009) “Consequences of Alternative US Cap and Trade Policies: Controlling Both Emissions and Costs”, The Brookings Institution, Washington DC

  25. US Carbon price

  26. US CO2 Emissions

  27. Cumulative US CO2 Emissions

  28. Conclusion • It is possible to deal with the politics within a country of • Deep cuts for the environmental lobby • Cost control for industry

  29. Conclusion • It is possible to deal with the politics of international negotiations of • The fixation with targets and timetables • The need to ensure comparable effort

  30. Conclusion • The reality of Copenhagen is that the United States will do what it will do domestically. • The domestic debate in the US is not about legislating the deep cuts being negotiated at Copenhagen. • The price collar is a way to square the apparent inconsistencies in the domestic versus international debate.

  31. Conclusion • In Australia a price collar around a deep cut path is a much better way forward than the CPRS for managing climate and political uncertainty

  32. www.sensiblepolicy.com

More Related