Title: Study for Nordic Council of Ministers
1Study for Nordic Council of Ministers
- Greenhouse gas emissions from international
aviation - - Nordic perspectives
- A study for the Working Group on Sustainable
Mobility under the Nordic Council of Ministers
2Objective
- Identify the availability and quality of data
reported to UNFCCC by the Nordic countries - Identify and assess different methods to allocate
emissions to countries, seen from a Nordic
perspective - Qualitative and quantitative assessments of
- data collection
- allocation
- regulation
3International context
- Two basic approaches to aviation emissions
- Allocation to countries and regulation under the
Kyoto Protocol - An industry-based system under ICAO
- EU..
- Several options that differ in terms of coverage
and approach - Different designs have different effects on the
countries and airlines concerned - in terms of the overall profitability of the
industry - in terms of the competitiveness of individual
airlines.
4Allocation methods assessed
- No allocation to Parties (and industry-based
emissions trading) - Allocation to the country where the fuel is sold
- Allocation to the nationality of airlines
- Allocation to the country of destination or
departure of aircraft - Allocation to Parties according to the country of
departure or destination of passengers or cargo.
5Criteria for assessing allocation options
- 1 Allocation should enable regulation of
emissions by responsible authorities - Three main categories of regulation available to
the Parties - Administrative regulation and incentives, e.g.
through emission standards operational
procedures ?support for technology development - Economic instruments, e.g. taxes, charges and
emissions trading. - Voluntary agreements between governments and the
aviation industry.
6Criteria for assessing allocation options
- 2 Allocation should be in accordance with the
"Polluter Pays Principle" - Airlines? (and thus the countries to which they
belong) operating the air-planes that actually
emit the greenhouse gases. - Individuals? (and thus the countries to which
they belong) flying as passengers - Economic entities?
- Countries?
7Criteria for assessing allocation options
- 3 Allocation should lead to minimum trade
distortion among companies - At company and country level
- Annex I countries with strong reduction
commitments - Annex I countries with less restrictive
commitments - Non-Annex I countries without quantitative
commitments - At flight level
8Criteria for assessing allocation options
- 4 Allocation should reflect that only Annex I
countries have Kyoto commitments - Equity
- Trade distortion
- Newly Industrialized Countries
9Criteria for assessing allocation options
- 5 Allocation should be comprehensive in terms
of relevant greenhouse gases and radiative
forcing - Non-CO2
- Cruising altitude
- Data requirements, scientific uncertainty
- Including non-Kyoto effects offers ways to
influence emissions and effects through
operational changes
10Criteria for assessing allocation options
- 6 Allocation should not encourage strategic
behaviour - Tankering
- Out-flagging
- Strategic route planning
11Criteria for assessing allocation options
- 7 Allocation should be administratively
feasible - Data requirements disqualify some allocation
methods - but not the key concern
12Major findings
- Allocation, commitments and regulation
- cannot be separated
13Major findings
- The allocation method has a strong bearing on the
options available to to regulate emissions and
meet commitments. - Commitments can only be evaluated when seen in
the context of allocation methods and the
regulatory options available to the Party. - National allocation difficult to match with
adequate regulatory measures - National regulation is likely to distort
competition and make airlines adopt strategic
behavior
14Emission trading - issues for consideration 1
- Overall Jurisdiction (ICAO, Kyoto Protocol, or a
separate EU-scheme) - Countries engaged (EU, Annex I countries, global)
- Geographic coverage of operations (Intra-EU (with
or without domestic flights), Annex I, global) - Legal issues in relation to UNFCCC/Kyoto and
Chicago Convention. - Potential and costs of emission reduction
measures - Economic consequences at macro, sector and
airline level - The inclusion of non-CO2 gases and effects (e.g.
effects of flight altitude) - Relationship to the EU Emissions Trading Scheme
15Emission trading - issues for consideration 2
- How is an emissions limitation to be defined?
Should it be "cap and trade" or relative to an
emissions baseline - To whom should allowances be allocated (fuel
companies, airlines, or states)? - How should allowances be distributed (through
auctions or grandfathering, or combinations)? - How should the system interact with the Kyoto
Protocol? Should it be separate from KP but open
to trading with credits? - What should be the coverage of the system?
Options considered include Annex I countries
Annex I countries excluding USA and Australia
Annex I countries a number of NICs.
16Drivers in considering European emissions trading
- European Commission
- EU Governments (e.g. UK)
- Aviation Industry (e.g. AEA, BAA, individual
airlines) - Access to allowances from the EU emission trading
scheme - Emissions trading an attractive alternative to
charges and taxes
17Asger Garnak agk_at_cowi.dk