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Europe’s carbon trading system can be saved, but must avoid past renewables mistakes

Guy Newey
Guy Newey is Head of Environment and Energy at Policy Exchange. @guynewey on Twitter
Wind turbines in front of a fossil fuel power station in the sunset
License: All rights reserved. Credit: Greenpeace

Guest posts and analysis posts reflect the views of the author only and do not represent the views of Greenpeace. 

The European Parliament’s decision to vote down a proposal to temporarily remove permits from the EU Emissions Trading System has sparked an outcry of doom-mongery that carbon trading is dead.

But the botched ‘backloading’ proposal must be recognised for what it was; a political fudge masquerading as an important intervention, to try and prop up the carbon price. It was inadequate to address the genuine problems with the Emissions Trading Scheme. What is now needed is proper reform of the ETS and Europe’s wider climate policy.

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To make sense of this mess, it is important to understand the EU’s recent climate policy history and see what lessons it has for future efforts to cut emissions.

At a European summit in March 2007, Tony Blair and other European leaders took one very sensible step and one foolish one. Blair, only a few months before he was nudged out of Downing Street, was a key force behind the EU’s 2020 climate package. The package had two binding targets. Firstly, the European Union would reduce its greenhouse gas emissions by 20% compared to 1990 levels. Secondly, and disastrously, 20% of all Europe’s energy would come from renewables by 2020.

The EU is now considering a similar package for 2030, with separate carbon reduction and renewables targets. The consultation, out only a few weeks ago, suggests a 40% carbon reduction target and a 30% renewable energy target. The UK Government currently holds the correct position of vigorous support for the former and opposition to the latter. It now needs to convince the rest of Europe and avoid repeating some of the mistakes that have led to Tuesday’s ‘no’ vote.

Firstly, there should be unequivocal backing for an ambitious, binding 2030 target to reduce the overall level of EU emissions. Some reporting of the Commission’s consultation suggests even this carbon target may be at risk. This, though unlikely, would be a huge mistake.

Cutting carbon emissions is imperative to avoid the serious threats created by a rapidly warming world. The precise future effects of higher global temperatures are unknown, but they certainly risk significant damage to the planet’s water and food and weather systems, potentially undermining our way of life. Moreover, climate change threatens our wildlife and important habitats. As Roger Scruton says, as stewards of the natural environment we must lose the “habit of treating the earth as a thing to be used but not revered”.

However, the clear need for action on carbon does not translate into automatic support for renewable energy – even with the ETS delivering such a low price. After the vote, the traded price fell below 2 Euros. Surely now Europe needs more intervention, not less?

There are two main reasons for the pitifully low price: the recession, which has devastated demand for activities that generate emissions, such as power and heavy industry; but also the Renewable Energy Target itself.

The RE Target depresses the ETS price by making us do some of the most expensive things first. In the UK’s case, this is the mass roll out of offshore wind. Our current approach is like being given £1,000 to feed as many people as possible and starting by ordering caviar. This, combined with the recession, means that the traded price is inevitably low as most of the heavy lifting has been done elsewhere. We have essentially already achieved our cap for 2020, seven years early. It is amazing the price was not already zero.

Of course, a low price is not in itself a bad thing (nor is achieving targets early). A trading system should deliver the most cost-effective ways to cut emissions. Many low carbon options, such as improved industrial efficiency, are pretty low or even negative cost. This will not incentivise many renewables, or nuclear or CCS, but that is not the point of the ETS. The point is to limit the pollutant, carbon, and then allow technologies to compete to deliver lower carbon energy. We do need additional mechanisms for reacting to major, unexpected changes in the macro-economic picture, but the backloading botch is not the right way to do so.

We also need large sums of public money to support new and developing technologies. But our focus must be research, development and deployment that helps bring costs down for globally important technologies, and away from pointless targets that push up bills unnecessarily.

Despite the cleverness of economic modellers, the only honest answer to the questions of what gas prices will be, how much nuclear power stations or wind turbines will cost and how much energy we will need in 20 years is ‘I don’t know’. The history of the energy industry is littered with predictions that turned out to be completely wrong. Fukushima, shale gas and solar power (as well as the recession) have in different ways demonstrated the folly of consensus energy predictions in recent years.

The market is the best system we have for coping with these huge uncertainties, which is why carbon pricing must continue to form the backbone of EU carbon policy. The alternative, planned approach with sub-targets for renewables at arbitrary dates being added because a model, in this case the EU’s 2050 roadmap, says so is ridiculous and potentially expensive.

Like all markets, a carbon market will lead to surprising and innovative choices, but it should find the cheapest way to a low carbon economy. As long as the outcome is, in this case reducing carbon achieved at the lowest possible cost, does it matter whether it is achieved by better insulated homes, new nuclear power stations or wind turbines?

If Europe shuns a market solution and instead clings to the deceptive comfort of subsidies driven by the Renewable Energy Target, it is not really serious about tackling climate change. Such a choice matters because Europe needs to both protect its economy and provide a compelling decarbonisation example for the rest of the world to follow.

 

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Guy

Very good summary of what has gone with EU policy. The issue around carbon markets/prices is too often put in left/right terms. Frankly I have always found this boring,and would rather focus on what works.

So, looking at renewable energy targets. If you wanted to get X% of electricity from renewables cost effectively you would do one thing, and one thing only: put the money into onshore wind. Instead, as you note the UK and others are putting stupid investments in offshore wind, or places like Germany, that are completely unsuited to it, are investing in solar. You can do the basic arithmetic. Every pound invested in offshore wind/solar cuts emissions by at most half of what onshore wind would.

So, there is a basic problem with government set targets: the cheapest forms of low carbon electricity, onshore wind and nuclear, are also the least politically correct. Governments are thus completely unable, or unwilling, to make unpopular decisions and will just hedge their bets by investing stupid money in less unpopular forms of electricity generation.

As you say here, and elsewhere, we simply have no idea what things will cost 2 decades from now. This should not be a particularly controversial thing to say but it appears to be. However anyone with a little knowledge of the history of price forecasts for oil/gas, energy consumption or mixes will know that these things have been useless, and basically not worth the paper they are written on. 

Another good reason to reject a renewables target for 2030 is that we probably face significant technical barriers to get there. By around 2020 there will be days when some EU countries will be producing more wind and solar electricity than their electricity demand. So, unless we get energy storage working increasing supply of wind and solar becomes a problem. We may find cheap energy storage by then, but I think it's foolish to put in place targets on that assumption.

Where I probably disagree with you is whether the ETS can really go on, or if a straight carbon tax should replace it. Certainly a carbon tax is more politically difficult, but it is hard to see it not being more effective if we got it in place. The big problem with a reformed ETS is that it's effectiveness will always be at the whim of other policies.

The environmental lobby, I fear, will continue to fight hard for renewables targets (largely out of opposition to nuclear,which I suspect is going nowhere). We will also have continued calls for the likes of a 2030 decarbonisation target of electricity in the UK, which again is hard to square with an ETS that is worth a damn. I also find it hard to believe investor confidence in a reformed ETS will be much above zero (unless there is a floor price). Investing in a nuclear power plant hoping the carbon price stays high is probably not something we will see much of.

So, overall I'm pretty pessimistic of reforms of the ETS being worthwhile. Making it work will require us to toss away a decade of bad ideas, and I don't think we will be willing to throw them all away.

"The RE Target depresses the ETS price by making us do some of the most expensive things first. In the UK’s case, this is the mass roll out of offshore wind. Our current approach is like being given £1,000 to feed as many people as possible and starting by ordering caviar."

Actually this is completely wrong. Offshore wind needs exactly the kind of support it is getting as the offshore wind resource is one of the few sources of renewable energy big enough to deliver on a the scale needed, sufficient to take a large share of total electricity generation. The investment that has taken place is driving down cost and increasing competition, while the experience gained off offshore wind in operation is bringing about much needed improvements in efficiency and reliability. 

There are indeed profound flaws in the EUETS whicha re not addressed by the proposed and now failed reforms. A good start would be to end all grandfathering, to apply a short "use by date" to the existing permits overhang, and to set a minimum carbon price.

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