Ronald Bailey | November 16, 2006
NAIROBI—The carbon traders, brokers, and consultants, the companies
seeking wealth transfers, the climate bureaucrats, and last,
but not least, environmental lobbyists are crawling all over the
UN's Gigiri complex on the outskirts of Nairobi. Several years ago,
Clemson University economist Bruce Yandle predicted that a classic
Baptist and
Bootlegger climate coalition would emerge in the wake of the
Kyoto Protocol. And so it has. The idea of a Baptist and Bootlegger
coalition is that both Baptists and Bootleggers support blue laws
forbidding the sale of liquor. The Baptists favor blue laws because
they are against sin and the Bootleggers because it creates a
profitable market for them.
The central focus of 12th Conference of the Parties of
the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change is carbon markets and
how to expand them. All of the sessions that I attended here
featured at least some talk about carbon markets by prominent
bureaucrats, industry lobbyists and the environmental lobbyists.
And according to them, carbon markets will whiten your teeth and
freshen your breath, put a sparkle in your eye, a spring in your
step, slim you down and vastly improve your sex life. Or at least
fatten their bottom lines by saving the planet.
One Green "Baptist,"
Matthias Duwe, from the Climate Action Network,
explained his group's support for carbon markets by saying,
"Environmental effectiveness is what counts. What we want is
absolute reductions in emissions. Sending signals to business is
secondary." In other words, they are against environmental sin and
they think that carbon markets will help stamp out the sin of
emitting noxious greenhouse gases. Right beside him on the panel
sat an earnest climate Bootlegger, Kate Hampton, a policy advisor
to a British merchant bank that has established the $1 billion
Climate Change Capital fund that invests in carbon markets. She
thinks there's plenty of money to be made if the politicians and
bureaucrats set stringent limits on how much carbon companies can
emit. Hampton aptly described the European Union's Emissions
Trading Scheme (EU ETS) as a "policy-driven market."
And that's a pretty good
description. After all, carbon trading came into existence solely
as a result of the Kyoto Protocol. Carbon markets are created by
imposing a cap on the emissions of greenhouse gases that are
believed to contribute to recent global warming then allocating
permits for the amount that can be emitted. A carbon market was
selected as a way to manage carbon emissions instead of carbon
taxes which Duwe pointed out the EU discussed for ten years and it
got nowhere with them.
Carbon markets allow
governments to set actual limits on emissions and then let the
private sector figure out the most cost-effective ways to reduce
emissions. This is done at the cost of some volatility—the price
for emissions permits can go up and down steeply and quite rapidly.
Carbon taxes, on the other hand, offer the possibility of a stable
price, but at the cost of flexibility in figuring out the cheapest
ways to cut emissions. Another downside for global warming
activists like Duwe is that taxes do not specify actual reductions.
Although a climate
Baptist, Duwe does appreciate that a carbon market sends the signal
to business that "every unit of carbon dioxide that goes out the
window is a unit that could be sold." In other words, if a company
can reduce its emissions below its allocation, it can make money by
selling its remaining allocation to another company. Of course, a
company can also make
windfall profits if the government allocates it more permits
for emissions than it actually needs.
So are carbon markets here
to stay? Here in Nairobi, climate Baptists and Bootleggers and
their bureaucratic facilitators constantly repeat the mantra that
no matter what, the European Union will have a carbon market after
the Kyoto Protocol comes to an end in 2012. Really and truly it
will, it will! To a cynic they begin to sound like they are
whistling past the graveyard. In fact, activists began distributing
a T-shirt today emblazoned with the slogan "Mind the Gap." The
"gap" they fear is the one that might open up between 2012 when the
Kyoto Protocol ends and whatever other climate treaty follows.
Carbon investors and traders could fall into the "gap" never to
emerge again, that is, they could lose faith that governments mean
seriously to impose carbon limits and stop putting up money to
abate carbon emissions. The "gap" is what carbon market advocates
call the continuity problem.
Hampton pointed out that
what happens after Kyoto matters because if emitters—especially big
power and industrial companies--don't believe that carbon will have
a price in the future, they will not invest in long term expensive
low carbon infrastructure. According to Hampton, Germany is slated
to replace 20 percent of its energy infrastructure by 2012. Power
generators will not choose more costly lower carbon technologies
unless they think that it will save them money in the long run.
Hampton says, "It really is policy and regulation that drive
investment. The lack of a long term carbon signal undermines
business's ability make rational decisions on investment."
All of the climate
coalition members were eager to explain the precipitous drop in
carbon prices in the ETS in May as growing pains. It turns out that
most European governments allocated more emission permits than
there were actual emissions. When the actual level of emissions was
verified in May and it turned out that companies emitted 66 million
tons of carbon less than allowed in 2005. This provoked, as they
say, a correction of about 50 percent. Of course, both the climate
Baptists and Bootleggers are keen to get climate bureaucrats to
more strongly restrict the number of permits that are issued in the
future. That would give the climate Baptists lower emissions they
want and the climate Bootleggers the higher prices they crave. A
win/win for everyone, except for perhaps the hapless consumers who
have to pay more for the energy and products they buy.
If Europe does go it alone
with its carbon market, Europe's manufacturers will argue that they
can't compete with foreign companies that don't have to pay for
their carbon. Already the European Commission has convened a High
Level Group to consider imposing border taxes to level the playing
field. Hampton warned, "What signal does this send--that carbon
markets are so onerous that you have to build a fortress around
yourself." Nevertheless, she did note that such
countervailing CO2 import tariffs could be compatible with World
Trade Organization rules. She pointed out that after the United
States banned ozone depleting chemicals in the 1970s, it began
imposing tariffs on such imports and no one objected that it
violated free trade rules.
All of the participants on
the UN conference side panels are impatient to get the United
States to join the carbon market. However, the World Resource
Institute's Jonathan Pershing said, "I don't think that there will
be a common integrated market in the next commitment period." The
next commitment period means between 2012 and 2020.
On the other hand, Hampton
declared, "This is the decade in which we will find out if the
world is capable of setting and reaching goals that will keep the
rise in average temperatures below 2 degrees
Celsius." And if that happens, the planet may
benefit, but the climate Baptists and Bootleggers certainly will.
Tomorrow—The
12th Conference of the Parties (COP-12) to the United
Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change and 2nd
Meeting of the Parties (MOP-2) to the Kyoto Protocol comes to an
end. I will report whatever decisions the diplomats make and
reactions by other participants to those decisions.
Disclosure: I gratefully
acknowledge that the International
Policy Network in Britain is paying my expenses to cover the
conference in Nairobi. Here’s what the folks at Exxonsecrets say
about IPN
and here’s what they say about me.
Ronald Bailey is Reason's science correspondent. His book Liberation Biology: The Scientific and Moral Case for the Biotech Revolution is now available from Prometheus Books.
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