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Pricing carbon: The role of the Energy Tax Directive

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Title: Pricing carbon: The role of the Energy Tax Directive


1
Pricing carbonThe role of the Energy Tax
Directive
By Paul Ekins Professor of Energy and
Environmental Policy UCL Energy Institute,
University College London Presentation to the
Stakeholder Meeting on the Revision of the
Energy Tax Directive Monday 28th September,
2009 Albert Borschette Conference Centre,
Brussels
2
Relevant projects on environmental taxation
  • COMETR Competitiveness effects of environmental
    tax reforms. http//www2.dmu.dk/cometr/
  • petrE Resource productivity, environmental tax
    reform (ETR) and sustainable growth in Europe.
    One of four final projects of the Anglo-German
    Foundation under the collective title Creating
    Sustainable Growth in Europe. Final report to be
    published October 29, Berlin. www.petre.org.uk
  • UK Green Fiscal Commission. Final report to be
    published October 26, London. www.greenfiscalcommi
    ssion.org.uk

3
The rationale (1)
  • For environmental taxation
  • Market failure leading to excessive pollution and
    environmental destruction
  • More efficient than regulation more effective
    than voluntary agreements and information
  • For energy taxation
  • Energy demand increases with income (income
    elasticity 0.5)
  • Energy demand decreases with price (industry
    elasticity -0.6)
  • Market failures for some energy efficiency
    technologies
  • Improvements in energy efficiency lead to a
    rebound effect, and therefore save less energy
    than anticipated (up to 70)
  • Humans are extremely ingenious at finding new
    ways to use energy (heating drives, gardens,
    making artificial snow etc.)

4
The rationale (2)
  • For carbon taxation
  • Rich countries must achieve a minimum of 80
    decarbonisation by 2050
  • Only carbon pricing (taxing or trading) will
    stimulate the uptake and development of existing
    low-carbon and efficiency technologies, and
    reduction in the demand for carbon-based fuels
  • Conclusions from the literature
  • Without environmental taxation, the
    (macro-economic) cost of environmental
    improvement will be higher than it needs to be
  • Without significant increases in energy prices,
    energy consumption will go on rising
  • Where the energy is carbon-based this will lead
    to increased carbon emissions and a failure to
    stabilise the climate

5
The challenge
6
COMETR objectives
  • To outline and clarify the competitiveness debate
  • To analyse world-market conditions for a set of
    energy-intensive sectors or subsectors, as a
    framework for considering competitiveness effects
  • To undertake bottom-up modelling and
    macro-economic analysis of the effects of
    implemented environmental tax reforms on
    sector-specific energy usage and carbon emissions
  • To provide ex-post figures for environmental
    decoupling and assess carbon leakage on basis of
    a comprehensive analysis, taking changes in
    import-export ratios into account
  • To review mitigation experiences and provide
    policy advice on possible strategies to improve
    efficient mitigation measures

7
Factors that reduce impacts on competitiveness
  • Not energy intensive
  • Ability of relatively untraded sectors to pass on
    price increases
  • Increased energy efficiency
  • Increased innovation Porter hypothesis
    low-carbon industrial transition
  • GFR and revenue-recycling

8
Price taker or price setter ?
9
ETR burden net of recycling and tax induced
energy savings
  • ETR costs are 1-2 per cent of gross operating
    surplus for some energy-intensive industries

10
  • net ETR burden up to 2 of gross surplus
  • value of spitzensteuer-ausgleich (peak tax
    adjustment) not included

11
  • higher burden up to 4 gross operating surplus
  • no SSC revenue recycling via reduced income
    taxes
  • cement and steel increase energy use per value
    added

12
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13
Mikael Skou Andersen and Paul Ekins,
eds.Carbon-energy taxation lessons from
Europe,Oxford University Press 2009 (in press)
14
Policy conclusions from PETRE case studies
  • Case studies construction, renewable energy,
    waste management, fuel-efficient cars
  • The German eco tax of 1999 seems to have played
    an important role in the reduction of
    traffic-related CO2 and the reduction of heat
    energy for households.
  • More generally, the change in relative prices
    whether through taxes, subsidies (feed-in
    tariffs) or market price movements seems to
    have been the dominant influence across the case
    studies
  • Subsidies (including FITs) have proven important
    as specific market support for certain
    technologies
  • ETR, complemented by regulation, seems the best
    general mechanism to stimulate a broader range of
    innovations

15
PETREScenario modelling with E3ME
  • Baseline with low energy prices (BL)
  • Baseline with high energy prices (BH)
  • S1L ETR with revenue recycling designed to meet
    unilateral EU 2020 20 GHG reduction target (low
    energy prices)
  • S1H ETR with revenue recycling designed to meet
    unilateral EU 2020 20 GHG reduction target (high
    energy prices)
  • S2H ETR with revenue recycling designed to meet
    unilateral EU 2020 20 GHG reduction target (high
    energy prices)
  • proportion of revenues spent on eco-innovation
    measures (efficient vehicles, buildings,
    renewable energy)
  • S3H ETR with revenue recycling designed to meet
    cooperation EU 2020 30 GHG reduction target
    (high energy prices)

16
Simulation results for central macroeconomic
variables of E3ME for EU27 in 2020 - percentage
deviations from the respective baselines (CO2
targets met by design)
17
Conclusions on an ETR for Europe
  • The price mechanism is a crucial instrument for
    reducing GHG emissions (Stern)
  • ETR is an effective and efficient policy means of
    using that instrument
  • It also seems that ETR, especially when
    complemented by other policy instruments, can
    stimulate eco-innovation
  • It is not clear that any other policy instrument
    to reduce GHGs has the same net benefits. However
  • It will be a political challenge to implement ETR
    at a European level
  • At national level ETR needs sensitive
    implementation to fit in the country policy
    context
  • Major issues that require consideration are
    competitiveness and household distribution

18
Mitigation of competitiveness effects on
vulnerable sectors
  • Insights from COMETR
  • Nordic model (SE FI) reduced income taxes
  • cap on tax liability (above 0,8 per cent of
    total)
  • cap exchanged by threshold because of minimum
    rates required by Energy Taxation Directive
  • Fiscal conventionalists (UK DK) reduced SSC
  • agreements as condition for reduced tax rates in
    energy-intensive industries
  • recycling of revenue for energy efficiency
    measures, e.g. Carbon Trust
  • Pragmatic model (DE NL) mix
  • DE spitzensteuer-ausgleich (peak tax adjustment)
    conditional on self-commitment
  • NL Long-Term Agreements and adjustments in
    corporate taxation

19
Mitigation of competitiveness effects on
vulnerable sectors (2)
  • Cement and steel are the key challenges to
    address under ETR other sectors not so
    important
  • Transparent ETR with revenue recycling and
    targeted subsidies for technology upgrade in
    cement and steel the recommended mitigation
    approach, cf. Danish experience
  • Voluntary agreements require substantial
    incentives to be successful reduction in tax
    rates can provide an incentive that is compatible
    with the polluter pays principle, and may not
    reduce environmental effectiveness (cf. UK
    experience with Climate Change Agreements)
  • For large scale ETR/carbon reduction, border tax
    adjustments or international sectoral agreements

20
Thank you for your attention!
  • UCL Energy Institute
  • University College London
  • www.ucl.ac.uk/energy
  • p.ekins_at_ucl.ac.uk
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