Title: Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative
1Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative
- Presentation to the Air and Waste Management
Association - Sonia Hamel
- Office for Commonwealth Development in the
Commonwealth of MA - November 5, 2004
2Starting RGGI
- April 2003 - New York Governor Pataki asked the
11 governors from Maine to Maryland to work
together to develop a regional CO2 cap-and-trade
program - August 2003 - RGGI Staff Working Group formed
with staff representatives from nine
participating states' environmental and energy
agencies (2 states and ECP observing) - September 2003 - Action Plan was endorsed by
environmental and energy agency heads, laying out
18 month work plan.
3Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI)
- A cooperative effort that seeks to reduce carbon
dioxide emissions while maintaining affordability
and reliability of electricity - Initial focus is implementation of a multi-state
cap-and-trade program for emissions from power
generation - After initial phase is implemented, the states
will consider developing programs for other
sectors.
4Participation
- Participants ME, NH, VT, MA, RI, CT, NY, NJ, DE
District of Columbia - Observers MD, PA, New Brunswick, Quebec
Eastern Canadian Premiers - Stakeholder Group
- Resource Panel
5Why Take Action at a State Level?
- 3rd Largest World Economy
- 14 US GHG Emissions
- 3.2 of World GHG Emissions (? Germany)
- Greatest value in what the Northeast can do is in
being a path-breaker. - Sending a first market signal on carbon.
6Why Take Action at a State Level?
- Relative GHG Emissions
- NESCAUM States gt Canada, Korea, Italy, Mexico,
Australia, Brazil, France, or Spain - RGGI Region gt Germany
- New York gt Taiwan or Venezuela
- New England gt Netherlands or Argentina
- New Jersey gt Egypt or Belgium
- Massachusetts gt Greece, Austria, Kuwait, Sweden
or Israel - Connecticut gt Switzerland, Ireland or New Zealand
- Maine gt Croatia, Estonia, or Tunisia
- New Hampshire gt Lithuania or Jordan
- Rhode Island gt Jamaica or Kenya
- Vermont gt Paraguay or Tanzania
7Program Goal
- Develop a multi-state cap and trade program
covering greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. - The program initially be aimed at developing a
program to reduce carbon dioxide emissions from
power plants in the participating states, while
maintaining energy affordability and reliability
and accommodating, to the extent feasible, the
diversity in policies and programs in individual
states. - The goal is to have an agreement on program
design by April 2005 or sooner. - After the cap and trade program for power plants
is implemented, the states may consider expanding
the program to other kinds of sources.
8Program Goal
- Develop a multi-state cap and trade program
covering greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. - The program initially be aimed at developing a
program to reduce carbon dioxide emissions from
power plants in the participating states, while
maintaining energy affordability and reliability
and accommodating, to the extent feasible, the
diversity in policies and programs in individual
states. - The goal is to have an agreement on program
design by April 2005 or sooner. - After the cap and trade program for power plants
is implemented, the states may consider expanding
the program to other kinds of sources.
9Principles Guiding Design
- The program will emphasize uniformity to
facilitate interstate trading in GHG allowances
and will build on successful cap and trade
programs and mechanisms already in place. - The program will be expandable and flexible,
permitting other states to seamlessly join in the
initiative when they deem it appropriate.
10Principles Guiding Design
- The program shall start simply and develop over
time. - The initial phase of the cap and trade program
will entail the allocation and trading of carbon
dioxide allowances to and by sources in the power
sector. - States are working together to develop reliable
protocols for offsets (i.e., creditable
reductions outside the power sector) that may be
used to achieve compliance with the cap.
11Staff Working Group
The development of the program is being
accomplished through the cooperative efforts of
the participating states, acting principally
through their designated representatives. Each
state has designated representatives from
environmental and energy regulatory agencies.
Collectively, these designated representatives
make up the Staff Working Group.
12Stakeholder Group
13Stakeholder Process Overview
14Resource Panel
- ISOs New England, New York, PJM
- Research organizations WRI, Pew, RFF
- Emissions Traders Natsource
- Energy assistance Regulatory Assistance Project
- Environmental assistance NESCAUM
15Essential Components
- Adoption Not taken for granted
- Stringency better a modest successful program
than an ambitious failure - Simplicity of design Inspire others to follow
- Key to strict accountability and flexibility
- Enforcement
16The Pew Foundation Report Offers Lessons for RGGI
- Cap-and-trade is appropriate for this problem
- Environmental goals will not be compromised, and
perhaps even enhanced - Keeping it simple is important. Recognize that
allowances are limited property rights and avoid
complex review procedures - Allocations dont affect program performance,
however they play a vital role in adoption of the
program
17The Path-breaker Model
- Two requirements for success environmental
leadership - Path leads to environmental improvement
- Induces others to follow
- Setting an example and creating easy linkages
that allow others into the system
18Quantitative Impacts of a Regional Carbon Cap
- Carbon emissions
- Other emissions
- Electricity prices
- Total electricity system costs
- Fuel use and diversity
- Reliability
- Imports and exports of electricity
19Key Issues
- What factors to consider in setting cap levels to
model and, ultimately, to recommend? - How to minimize cost in implementing a workable
system? - What assumptions should be used to model
benchmark scenario and reference scenario? - Should reductions from sources not covered by the
cap qualify for credit? If so, what sources?
20Modeling Plan
- Model the impacts over a 12 state region with
individual inputs for 53 sectors in each state - Estimate contributions from energy efficiency and
renewable energy - Outputs will include predicted impacts on
personal income, gross state product, employment,
imports, industrial sector consumption/production - Estimate corollary benefits for public health
Benchmark and Reference Case Scenarios - CO2 Cap and Trade Level Scenarios
- Policy, Structure, and Flexibility Scenarios
- Model Rule Scenario
21Economic Model Selection
- Selected REMI Policy Insight as modeling tool
- REMI will prepare a 12-region/state 53-sector
model with I/O for each state and full region - sample outputs personal income, gross state
product, employment, imports, industry sector
consumption/production - REMI Modeling Plan integrated with IPM Modeling
- I/O data transformations
- Policy Simulations based on IPM scenarios
22Additional Analyses
- Air Quality/Public Health Modeling
Co-Benefits from Emission Reductions - Evaluation of Energy Efficiency and Renewable
Energy Industry Sectors - Impacts on product/service demand and industry
cluster growth
23Potential Applicability
- For initial phase, focus is on electricity
generating units larger than 25 MW - Over 95 of GHG emissions come from units larger
than 25MW - Units have better historical data than smaller
units - Second phase will consider
- Electric generators smaller than 25MW
- Municipal solid waste combustors
- Biomass-fired units
- Large industrial boilers
24Connecting Programs is one Goal
- Working on an Emissions Trading Registry to be
created along side of RGGI - All of New England NY, NJ, and DE
- Coordination with CA, EU and UK.
- Other states are watching to be included at some
point including OR, WA, NC, MD, PA, WI and others.