Title: Federal Climate Change Legislation : Key Issues for Commissions
1Federal Climate Change Legislation Key Issues
for Commissions
- Andy Keeler
- John Glenn School of Public Affairs
- The Ohio State University
2Outline
- Legislative specifics that matter
- Issues for Commission Decision-making
- Cap-and-trade in Perspective
3Legislative specifics that matter
- Allowance price
- Allowance allocation and use of resources
- Exemptions and special treatment
- Specifics on Interaction with State Programs
4Allowance Price Matters
- Directly determines the costs and incentives
- Tighter targets higher prices
- Lieberman-Warner / Boxer has tighter short-term
targets than Bingaman-Specter
5How big will price effects be?
- Predictions are highly imperfect
- Economic assumptions
- Technology assumptions
- Institutional assumptions offsets, state
programs, etc. - Predicted effects in 2020 are good research but
highly uncertain
6EIA Model Predictions for 2020
- Lieberman Warner (L-W)
- 0.17 / gallon gasoline
- .81 cents / kwh electricity (coal)
- Bingaman - Specter
- 0.12 / gallon gasoline
- .28 cents / kwh electricity (coal)
- Inherent uncertainty is huge - but much lower for
Bingaman than LW because of the safety valve
7Cost Containment (Price Risk) in Legislation
- What happens if reducing CO2 is more difficult
and expensive than predicted? - Tradeoff between environmental certainty and
economic certainty - Economic risk high prices, shortages, economic
dislocation (political backlash) - Environmental risk Busting the Cap not
meeting GHG reduction goals
8Emergency-Metaphor Policiessafety valves,
circuit breakers, and emergency off-ramps
- Reduce the price of allowances by making
additional allowances available - Crucial distinctions
- Relax the long-term cap, or all released
allowances made up in the future (borrowing) - Price certainty, trigger certainty, or additional
allowances released without certainty
9Emergency-Metaphor Policies
- Safety Valve unlimited allowances available at
a known price - Circuit Breaker annual cap is frozen (stops
declining) as long as prices are above a known
price - Emergency Off-Ramp a reserve of future-year
allowances is auctioned annually with a (known)
minimum price
10Cap Neutrality
- The safety valve is not cap-neutral additional
allowances sold at the safety valve price
represent additional emissions - The circuit breaker is not cap-neutral but
there are limits to the quantity of emissions
above the cap - The allowance reserve is cap-neutral (in
theory)
11Triggers
- A safety valve works off a known, pre-announced
price - Reserves, circuit breakers, and other borrowing
mechanisms can be designed to work off announced
triggers or at the discretion of regulators (e.g.
Carbon Market Efficiency Board)
12Carbon Market Efficiency Board
- The Carbon Fed would have discretion to change
- Offset quantities
- Borrowing restrictions
- ????
- There are positive and negative consequences of
building such discretion into a cap-and-trade
system
13Cost Containment in Legislative Proposals
- Emergency off-ramp (Boxer / L-W) price effects
are not certain, cap-neutral, has a pre-announced
minimum price (starts at 22-30 per ton CO2) - Safety valve (Bingaman-Specter) certain,
pre-announced (current version 12 per ton CO2),
excess emission above the cap
14Whats the price?
- Discussions about the safety valve in particular,
and about all of these mechanisms, should focus
more on the price at which they kick in - A 12 safety valve is very different than a 50
safety valve
15Cost containment short-term and long-term
- Well-managed borrowing mechanisms are likely to
be a good tool for short-term price volatility - Long-run price uncertainty would be better
managed by safety valve mechanisms (with
accompanying drawbacks)
16Long-term Targets and Prices
- Targets in most federal legislation are set
through 2050 - Common sense says that targets that far in the
future could be changed - Setting long-term targets does
- Create a status quo
- Concretize aspirational goals
- May have significance in IRP processes
17Allowance Allocation Who Gets the Money?
- 20 allowances for year 1 of Lieberman-Warner
115 billion in allowance value - Allowances can technically be allocated to just
about anyone. Who gets them is a lot of politics
with a little bit of equity and public policy
thrown in for good measure.
18Allocation to LDCs
- L-W gives about 10 of total allowances to LDCs
(Bingaman punts on this point) and 3 to gas
distributors - Use to keep prices low
- Use to reduce energy use
- Use for GHG-reducing generation and transmission
investments - The use of these allowances is under state
commission regulation but may also have
legislative direction
19Allocation to Generation Owners
- L-W gives generation owners 18 of allowance pool
to start, then shrinks that over time (Bingaman
roughly 25) - Wholesale competition generators receive windfall
- Embedded cost regulation generators face
commission regulation in using allowance value
(public uses vs. shareholder equity) - This potentially creates a significant equity
issue
20Individual Allocations to LDCs and generation
owners
- For LDCs, L-W allocates initially based on
electricity volume (favors areas with low-GHG
sources like hydro or nuclear) - For generation owners, L-W allocation is based on
emissions history (favors coal) - Future allocations could be based on these same
criteria, or be updated by output, alternative
energy progress, or some other criterion -
21Special Treatment and Exceptions
- Exemptions from the system
- Special treatment through bonus allowances
- Special treatment through other mechanisms
22Exemptions from the System
- There has been a move to exempt gas used directly
for home heating from a federal cap-and-trade
system - The argument goes that gas is more GHG-efficient,
and so should be encouraged - This is bad public policy all fossil energy
sources should be covered to avoid leakage and
create correct long-term incentives - Exemptions are the wrong tool to provide special
treatment
23Bonus Allowances
- Can be used to increase the returns to specific
technologies - Example carbon capture and storage in L-W gets
rewarded twice once through reducing allowance
needs, and again through bonus allowances with
cash value - Bonus allowances are really no different than
cash payments, but do not require a direct budget
allocation
24Additional Incentives for Alternative Energy
- Renewable portfolio standards
- Inslee feed-in tariff bill
- Production Tax credits, etc
25Federal Legislation and State Programs
- Model of CAA and tailpipe standards states can
be more stringent than federal regulation does
not apply well - A state with a more stringent cap will take on
more emissions reduction effort, but national
emissions will be unchanged - States can be rewarded for aggressive programs
through allowance allocation
26Commission Decisions
- Allowance prices and ratemaking
- End user prices vs. public investments in
conservation - Managing Conservation Programs
- Commissions and the public interest
27Allowance prices and ratemaking
- What is prudent behavior with respect to
allowance prices with respect to the decisions of
regulated generation? - Example if allowance prices turn out to be
higher than expected, was a coal plant a prudent
expenditure - This works both ways if allowance prices turn
out to be lower than expected, was a nuclear
plant a prudent expenditure?
28End user prices vs. public investments in
conservation
- Commissions will have to determine how to
allocate allowance value (that they control) to - Reduce revenue requirements and prices
- Target assistance to low-income consumers and
vulnerable industries - Fund conservation and other GHG reduction
activities
29Managing Conservation Programs
- L-W has significant funding through allowance
allocation for state-run conservation programs - Coordination and emphasis of commission programs
and other pubic programs - Potential dramatic expansion of programs presents
quality and accountability challenges
30The Public Interest
- How do commissions treat state and national goals
for GHG reduction relative to more traditional
elements of their view of the public interest - As a constraint
- As something to actively pursue beyond the letter
of climate legislation
31Is cap-and-trade the right policy?
- Would a tax be better?
- Does it really solve the climate change problem
or should we just be investing in technology?
32Tax vs. Cap-and-trade
- A tax is an excellent policy from a technical
standpoint - Transparent
- Avoids wrangling over allowances
- Taxes have political liabilities
- people hate taxes
- NGOs hate lack of quantitative certainty
- Industry hates the lack of free allowances
33Does cap-and-trade solve climate change
- NO - but nothing else does, either
- Massive investment in a portfolio of
technologies, worldwide action, behavioral
change, etc. are all required - Pricing GHG emissions is necessary (but not
sufficient)
34Does cap-and-trade solve climate change
- Will increase RD and innovation
- Will reward conservation investments and behavior
- All reductions in emissions lessen climate change
risks its not 0/1 and buy time for technology
and adaptation
35Does cap-and-trade solve climate change
- US action is a necessary step in international
progress - Pricing carbon does not preclude technology or
standards based policies and generally tends
to reinforce them -