Title: European Commission
1 Europe Emission Trading Presentation to ICAO
Council, November 2006
2 Overview
- What emission trading is
- EUs EmissionTrading Scheme (EU ETS)
- How it works
- What it covers
- What it has achieved, etc
- Relation to the global carbon market
- Significance of aviation emissions
- Approach to including aviation in the EU ETS
- Legislative process in the EU
3 What is emission trading?
- A market-based policy instrument allowing
greenhouse gas producers to reduce their
emissions at minimum cost - ET schemes available only within a single sector
are closed those involving trade with other
sectors are open - The EU ETS is an open scheme the objective is to
make it global
4The EU Emission Trading Scheme (ETS)
- Trading began on 1 January 2005
- Currently covers CO2 emissions from the most
energy intensive sectors. Therefore covers almost
half of total EU CO2 emissions - Most of the rest is subject to control by either
regulation or taxation - The scheme may in the future be extended to other
GHG gases and other sectors. This is under
review. - Step on the way to a global carbon market it is
already linked to over 160 countries through
Kyoto project mechanisms
5 How does the EU ETS work? (1)
- It sets an overall limit on total emissions and
distributes to companies emission allowances
related to this limit allowances have to cover
real emissions - Allowances are handed out for free, but Member
States can auction up to 10 - Participants buy, sell or bank allowances
depending on how their costs of reducing
emissions compare with those of other
participants - Collectively, individual decisions to buy, sell
or bank lead to a market price for allowances
which signals the cost per tonne of emissions
reductions of achieving the limit
6How does the EU ETS work? (2)
- Participants will reduce emissions if the cost of
making a reduction is less than the market price.
Any spare allowances can be sold for a profit.
Ie. there is a financial incentive for companies
to reduce their emissions below the cap, which
does not exist in other mechanisms - Participants will prefer not to reduce emissions
if the cost of making a reduction is more than
the market price. Money is saved by purchasing
allowances instead of being required to make a
reduction. - This flexibility saves money. This is why an
emissions trading scheme is generally preferred
by stakeholders over other policies and measures.
7What is the schemes legal basis?
- An EU Directive was adopted in 2003 establishing
a scheme for greenhouse gas emission allowance
trading (2003/87/EC) - The legal base for the Directive is the Treaty of
the European Communities - The Directive is consistent with the UNFCCC and
the Kyoto Protocol to that Convention, and aims
to aid implementation of EC commitments under
these international agreements.
8 What does the current scheme cover ?
- Energy intensive industries
- More than 10,000 installations
- electricity generators
- heat steam production
- mineral oil refineries
- ferrous metals production processing
- cement, lime, glass, bricks and ceramics
- pulp paper sector
9 How are emissions monitored?
- Companies
- monitor and report following harmonised rules
- emissions reports are subject to independent
verification (by a third country) - Member States
- have established electronic registries for
tracking transfers of tradable allowances - European Commission
- has established an electronic log for maintaining
an overview of all electronic registries
10Can EU ETS be linked to others?
- Companies can also use Kyoto credits (CDM/JI)
to cover their actual emissions - A possibility to link the EU ETS with a third
country scheme - The Commission is holding informal discussions on
emissions trading with California, north-eastern
States of USA, States and Territories of
Australia, New Zealand, Switzerland, EEA
countries, Canada, Japan, Ukraine.
11 What has the EU ETS achieved?
- It has established a key step towards a global
carbon market - In its first year, 2005, it was already worth
7.2 billion. This was exceeded in just the 1st
half of 2006 alone. - In 2005, it was driving 1.9 billion being
invested in developing countries eg. through the
Clean Development Mechanism (CDM). This figure is
set to increase in 2006. - It has raised the interest of CEOs to reduce
emissions / new financial and employment
opportunities presented by the carbon market - Transfer of clean technology to developing
countries
12Global Carbon Market and the EU ETSVolumes and
Values
- Volumes Values 2005
- Total 799 Mt, 9.4 billion
- EU ETS 362 Mt, 7.2 billion
- CDM 397 Mt, 1.9 billion
- JI other 36 Mt, 147 million
- Source Point Carbon
- Volumes Values 1st half 06
- Total 684 Mt, 12 billion
- EU ETS 440 Mt, 9.9 billion
- CDM 193 Mt, 1.5 billion
- JI other 48 Mt, 304 million
- Source Point Carbon
13EU ETS Price Traded Volumes
EUA historical closing prices
EUA total volumes OTC and exchanges
Source Point Carbon
14EU aviation emissions growing rapidly
15But growth in aviation emissions is a global
phenomenon, not a European problem
- GHG emissions from international aviation
reported by Annex I Parties grew by 52 between
1990 and 2004 - Latest UNFCCC data do not include data for
non-Annex I countries, but emissions have
generally also grown significantly in these
countries - All forecasts indicate significant emissions
growth for decades to come unless action is taken
16How do aviation GHG emissions compare to emission
from other ETS sectors?
- Source Verified 2005 emissions for ETS
installations by category of installation (mio
tonnes of CO2).
17 Why emission trading for aviation?
- Europe decided this after
- considering results of ICAO/CAEP studies on
market-based options - sponsoring its own feasibility studies into three
such options (fuel taxation, emission charges and
emission trading) - a public and stakeholder consultation
- an impact assessment of a range of other policy
options as well as market-based options
18Why look at flights between EU and other
countries?
- They are the source of most aviation emissions
currently - They are forecast to be the source of most
emissions growth in future
19Consistency with ICAO policy
- The current ICAO Resolution A35-5
- Endorses the further development of an open
emissions trading scheme for international
aviation and - Requests the Council, in its further work on this
subject to focus on two approachesUnder the
other approach, ICAO would provide guidance for
use by Contracting States, as appropriate, to
incorporate emissions from international aviation
into Contracting States emissions trading
schemes consistent with the UNFCCC process. Under
both approaches, the Council should ensure the
guidelines address the structural and legal
basis for aviations participation in an open
emissions trading system, including key elements
such as monitoring, reporting and compliance.
20 The EUs legislative process
- Communication (2005) by the EU Commission,
reactions from EU Council (Dec. 05) and EU
Parliament (July 06) - The Commission aims to present a legislative
proposal to bring aviation into the scheme to the
European Parliament Council by end of 2006 - The legislative process is expected to take 1-3
years, and will determine the date of entry into
force - In parallel, Europe will continue to support ICAO
efforts to facilitate wider action, incl.
guidance on emission trading
21- For more information visit
- http//europa.eu.int/comm/environment/climat/
- aviation_en.htm