Title: Towards emissions trading: New Zealands experience
1Towards emissions trading New Zealands
experience
- Tim Denne
- Director
- Covec Ltd
- Auckland, NZ
2Kyoto Protocol I
- Starting position national assigned amounts
- They are not targets
- There is one overall cap
3Kyoto Protocol II
- Countries can exchange parts of assigned amount
and buy from countries outside the cap - Individual countriesare not capped
Developing Countries - Non Annex I
4Emission profiles
New Zealand
Australia
LULUCF is net negative
5NZs net emissions projections
6NZ has high costs of emission reduction because
of its profile
Some energy efficiency and fuel
switching/renewables measures in A B Transport
and agriculture emission reductions likely to be
largely in D Allowance purchases (area C) needed
to cover growth in transport and agriculture and
some energy
7NZ Emissions Trading System
- Objectives
- Some emission reductions in NZ (below business
as usual) - Compliance with Kyoto and later agreements
- Least cost in the long term
- In other words least cost compliance with Kyoto
8Least cost means ...
- All emission sources face the international price
they then have the incentive to reduce
emissions if they can for less than that price - A cap and trade scheme that mirrors the Kyoto
Protocolmarket is open (easy access to all Kyoto
units) liquid (its easy to buy sell) - Transaction costs are lowfor market participants
and government
9Key ETS design features I
- Those consistent with least cost
- All gases CO2, CH4, N2O etc
- All sectors industrial, transport, agriculture,
forestry, waste - Upstream liability (carbon introducers) and
therefore few participants (c200) - Few constraints as possible on international
purchases (but no nukes!)
10Key ETS design features II
- Other
- Phase in all sources in by 2013
- Unit of trade NZ Unit (NZU fully backed by
Kyoto units) - Some protection to industry, forestry via free
allocation - But NZ does not have enough units to put any
additional units on the market
11Timetable for introduction
12Forestry Kyoto treatment
- Pre-1990 forests
- Felling is treated as an immediate emission
- Full liability applies (c800 t CO2/ha) unless
land replanted - Cannot transfer between sites, eg cant fell one
site and plant another - Post-1989 forests
- Net change in carbon stocks measured to estimate
absorption/emissions - NZ government does not receive Removal Units
(RMUs) until some time after 2012
13Forestry under ETS
- Entry 1st Jan 2008
- Obligated participants landowners
- Liability for pre-1990 forests
- Can opt out if small
- Voluntary entry for post-1989 forests
14Post-1989 forests
- Post-1989 forests can join voluntarily (18 months
to decide). They can claim credits from
absorption but take on a liability for emissions - Will be awarded NZUs
15Forestry (Pre-1990)
- Liability for emissions must hold NZUs if
deforesting/changing land use - Can opt out if landholdings lt50ha
- Some free allocation of NZUs based on
historical rates of deforestation
16Liquid fuels
- Enter 1st Jan 2009
- Obligated parties are oil companies importers
of product removals from refinery - Some potential for opt-in for large users (Air
New Zealand) - No free allocation must purchase all they need
(government not making any available)
17Stationary Energy Industrial Processes
- Entry 1st Jan 2010
- Obligated parties introducers of carbon (fuel
importers, coal mines, gas producers, geothermal
users) - Some potential for opt-in (eg electricity)
- Some free allocation to firms that are trade
exposed (cannot pass on costs) - Industrial processes
- Energy downstream energy users
18Agriculture
- Entry delayed until 2013
- Point of obligation
- Sale of nitrogenous fertilisers and EITHER
- Processing of meat dairy products OR
- Farming activity
- Some free allocation, as for industry
- Waste also included in 2013
19Free Allocation
- Free allocation separate from points of
obligation - No free allocation to firms that could pass the
costs on, so no free allocation to - Liquid fuels (transport)
- Electricity
- Eligible firms
- Stationary energy and industrial process
emissions electricity use - Agriculture
- Forestry - deforestation
20Free allocation - reasons
- Long-term intent to move towards zero free
allocation on efficiency grounds - In transition, reasons for free allocation are
- Regrets the rules may change or others take on
price such that NZ would regret firm closure - Adjustment costs, particularly those from
concentrated job losses - Reputational issues around stranded assets
- Emissions leakage less of a concern
21Free Allocation - more
- Free allocation stops after firm closure this
is important in avoiding regrets - No assistance to new entrants
- Initial concept (but not firm on this approach)
is - maximum emissions of 2003-2005
- threshold of 50,000 tonnes
- trade-exposure test.
22Process
- Legislation introduced to Parliament in 2007
- Select Committee considering the Bill and has
invited submissions (closed 29th Feb) - Legislation in place by mid-2008
23- Tim Denne
- Covec Ltd
- tim_at_covec.co.nz
- www.covec.co.nz