Title: Green Taxes and Environmental Tax Reform
1Green Taxes and Environmental Tax Reform
- Presentation to the first international
- Cambridge Climate Summit
- Entrepreneurship for a Zero Carbon Society
- By
- Paul Ekins
- Professor of Energy and Environment Policy
- Kings College London
- Tuesday 23rd September, 2008
- Cambridge
2Dangerous anthropogenic climate change
- Pre-industrial CO2 concentrations 280 ppm
- Current CO2 concentrations 380 ppm
- Current GHG (CO2e) concentrations 430 ppm
- Rate of GHG concentration increase 2.5 ppm p.a.
- Current global average temperature increase since
1900 0.7oC - Target temperature increase for acceptable
climate change 2oC - Probability that this will be exceeded at 450ppm
80
3Emissions scenario to limit temperature change
Source Stern Review, Part III, Chapter 9
4The necessary improvements in energy productivity
- Energy productivity GDP/energy energy
intensity energy/GDP - Carbon productivity GDP/carbon carbon
intensity carbon/GDP - Carbon intensity of energy carbon/energy
- Carbon emissions Population GDP/capita
energy/GDP carbon/energy - Carbon emissions Population GDP/capita
carbon/GDP - To achieve 450ppmv atmospheric concentration of
CO2, assuming ongoing economic and population
growth (3.1 p.a. real), need to increase carbon
productivity by a factor of 10-15 by 2050, or
approx. 6 p.a. - Compare current increase in carbon productivity
of 0 p.a. over 2000-2006, i.e. global carbon
emissions rose at 3.1 p.a. also - Compare 10-fold improvement in labour
productivity in US over 1830-1955, must achieve
the same factor increase in carbon in 42 years
5UK emissions targets
Millions of tonnes of CO2 equivalent
Climate Change Bill Commitments
6An unprecedented policy challenge
- The Stern Review Policy Prescription
- Carbon pricing carbon taxes emission trading
- Technology policy low-carbon energy sources
high-efficiency end-use appliances/buildings - Remove other barriers and promote behaviour
change take-up of new technologies and
high-efficiency end-use options low-energy
(carbon) behaviours
7Carbon rationing
- Rationing is necessary because people have an
extraordinary innate ability to think up new ways
of using energy (patio heaters, plasma TVs, SUVs,
indoor ski slopes, outdoor skating rinks,
stand-by etc. etc.) - Either set the quantity of emission allowances
(reducing on an annual basis), allow trading, and
the carbon market sets the price of carbon (EU
Emission Trading Scheme Carbon Reduction
Commitment Personal Carbon Allowances - PCAs) - Or set the price of carbon through a carbon tax,
and the quantity will adjust (downwards if the
tax is increasing) - To get on the required carbon trajectory, either
allowances will have to be reduced quickly (high
allowance prices) or carbon taxes will have to
increase to a high level - Both approaches are problematic politically
- People are used to taxes and dislike them
intensely - People associate quantity rationing with war-time
austerity - How best to proceed?
8Carbon taxes
- Theory demand for goods is negatively related to
price increase the price, two things happen - People will consume less of the taxed good
(because it is more expensive) - People will substitute away from the taxed good
(e.g. sweaters, energy efficiency in the home,
low-carbon energy sources etc.) - Third thing happens unless consumption of good
falls to zero (which with energy it doesnt)
Government gets revenue. Very important what is
done with it recycling. - For the first two things to happen
- People must be aware of the price and the price
rise (for energy they are not need revolution in
metering etc.) - People must be aware of how much they consume
(for energy they are not need a revolution in
billing etc.) - People must be aware of the substitutes, and
these need to be affordable and socially
acceptable (for energy they are not need
high-profile EEACS, incentives to use them,
funding mechanisms energy efficiency is
cost-effective, but people dont do it) - These issues must be tackled for carbon taxes to
be effective. Good news is that they are being
tackled. Bad news is that it is happening much
too slowly. It will have to happen much more
quickly whatever rationing mechanism is being
employed.
9Carbon taxes and fuel poverty
- Proper metering, billing, advice, funding
mechanisms, and incentives provided by a carbon
tax escalator could resolve the problem for the
richest 80 of the population. - The poorest 20 would need special provisions.
Many of them are in fuel poverty (would need to
spend more than 10 of their income on energy
services to attain given level of warmth). Fuel
poverty is driven by - Incomes, energy prices, thermal efficiency of the
dwelling, energy behaviour, other factors, i.e.
It is a complex concept, and government has only
a tenuous influence over many of the key
variables. Is fuel poverty as a policy concept
past its sell-by date? - In the lowest income decile, households at the
80th percentile of energy use consume more than 6
times as much energy as at the 20th percentile.
Why? - Factors thermal efficiency of dwelling energy
behaviour large, under-occupied home old or ill
(need more warmth) in all day household size
etc. - Need to understand the relative importance of
these factors. - Carbon taxes have the potential to exacerbate
fuel poverty, but do not need to do so. Key
issues are use of tax revenues action on the
thermal efficiency of dwellings
10An equitable carbon tax
- Social guarantee those on low incomes would pay
no carbon tax until their dwelling satisfied good
energy efficiency standards (e.g. SAP 70-80) - Those paying no carbon tax would get priority for
comprehensive thermal efficiency measures (after
installation they would pay the carbon tax) - Tax increases by annual escalator (say start at
2p/kWh about 20 of current price) and increase
by 5-10 p.a. Would raise billions. - Increase tax thresholds reduce income tax
(reinstate 10p. rate?) reinforce tax credits
could also redistribute Winter Fuel Allowance to
target low-income households (carbon tax to be
revenue-neutral overall, need to balance tax
gains for low-income households and others, in
principle could be more redistributive than PCAs,
because paying for all emissions, and not just
for those traded). In reality would need to
strike a very sensitive political balance between
winners and losers. - Importance of presentation as Environmental Tax
Reform (ETR), not tax increase
11Environmental Tax Reform (ETR)/Green Tax and
Budget Reform
- EC 1993, Chapter 10 An insufficient use of
labour resources and an excessive use of
environmental resources, leading to the
conclusion If the twin challenge of
unemployment/environmental pollution is to be
addressed, a trade-off can be envisaged between
lower labour costs higher pollution charges. - Green taxes/charges are levied on resource use or
polluting environmental emissions - Revenues from green taxes (or from reducing
environmentally harmful subsidies) allow other
taxes to be reduced - Some portion of the revenues can be used for
essential environmental spending (e.g. on
infrastructure) that is otherwise difficult to
finance
12ETRs in Europe
- Denmark, Finland, Germany, Netherlands, Sweden
and UK all very small different tax base
(energy, CO2, sectors), tax rates, revenue
recycling, exemptions all have exemptions
because of competitiveness fears (COMETR) - Economic and environmental effects of ETR
- Green taxes reduce environmental resource use
- Green taxes achieve efficient resource use and
environmental improvement at least cost by
promoting - Static efficiency (equal abatement cost)
- Dynamic efficiency (incentives for innovation)
- Awareness of inefficient resource use
- Abatement technologies can lead to new industries
- Reduction of other distorting taxes reduces net
cost of abatement (revenue neutrality) - If innovation, awareness, industrial cost
reduction, reduced distortions are greater than
abatement costs, then environmental improvement
can be achieved at net gain to the economy
green economic growth (double dividend)
13ETR and competitiveness
- Ceteris paribus
- Rise in environmental tax(es) may be expected to
reduce competitiveness - Compensating reduction in other tax(es) may be
expected to increase competitiveness - Possible increase in employment/output if
reduced taxes are employment taxes, and there is
involuntary unemployment - Improvement in efficiency of resource use may be
expected to increase competitiveness (and
economic security) - Improvement in environmental quality may be
expected to increase competitiveness (if local) - Stimulation of environmental industries may lead
to new industries/exports (if other countries
also seek environmental improvement)
14Conclusions on macro-economic competitiveness
- Fuel use and greenhouse gas emissions (GHGs)
reductions in all six countries - Taxes and revenues tax shift relatively small
(1.25 GDP max.) - GDP and employment quite small increase in both
- Impacts on prices depends on method of revenue
recycling, but no need for an increase in the
price
15Conclusions on sectoral competitiveness
- Energy/electricity taxes determine relatively
small part of prices of energy - Country variations in ex-tax price of energy are
larger than difference in energy taxes these
have not led to discernible difference in
competitiveness - Industrial energy taxes are a small proportion of
nominal headline rates because of special
arrangements major source of economic
inefficiency - No country most energy efficient
- No evidence of even likely major impact on
competitiveness misplaced effort, complexity,
and efficiency in seeking to mitigate it
16Green Fiscal Commission
- Launch November 2007 experts from business,
leading academics, senior MPs from all three main
UK political parties, three members of the House
of Lords, and representatives from consumer and
environmental organisations - Supportive poll
- Background papers, modelling and engagement
strategy politics as important as evidence
17Issues for evidence and modelling
- ETR and public opinion polls
- Experience of fuel duty escalator/income tax
reduction - International comparisons on the effectiveness of
economic instruments - ETR and innovation
- ETR and competitiveness
- Border tax adjustments
- The role of a tax shift in broader environmental
policy - Distributional issues
- Report on deliberative days
- Principle of taxing resource rents
- Revenue stability
- Modelling a really large tax shift to 2020
approx. 20 revenues (up from about 7 now)
18Implications for business/entrepreneurs
- Attaining the 2oC target or anything near it will
require huge investments in low-carbon
technologies right along the innovation chain
(research, development, demonstration,
diffusion). - IEA ETP estimates of additional investment needs
in energy sector USD 45 trillion (1.1 global
GDP from now until 2050) - Buildings and appliances USD 7.4 trillion Power
sector USD 3.6 trillion - Transport sector USD 33 trillion Industry USD
2.5 trillion - Government funding of R,DD must increase
dramatically, but demonstration and diffusion can
only be driven at scale by markets - This will require high (now) and rising carbon
prices over the next half century, to choke off
investment in high-carbon technologies (e.g.
runways) and incentivise low-carbon investments - These high carbon prices will also greatly change
lifestyles and consumption patterns - A carbon-tax driven ETR would change patterns of
production/consumption, rather that reduce
GDP/incomes - Provided that the world goes cooperatively in
this direction, there are enormous profits to be
made from these carbon prices and changing
consumption patterns - Technological and policy uncertainty mean that
the risks are also high