Tag Archives: alternative
Europe’s Carbon Market Left In Disarray
http://www.ft.com/cm…l#ixzz2QjRydLI8 By Pilita Clark in London and Joshua Chaffin in Brussels The world’s largest carbon market was in disarray on Tuesday after the European Parliament voted against a plan to rescue the EU’s flagship climate change policy. The 334-315 vote sent carbon prices in the EU emissions trading system tumbling to a record low of €2.63 a tonne. Analysts described the vote as a “body blow” for carbon markets in Europe – traditionally a world leader in efforts to tackle global warming – that was likely to reverberate abroad. Carbon industry executives said the EU parliamentarians had sent a worrying political signal about the bloc’s support for what has long been a cornerstone of its environmental policies. MEPs voted down a measure that would have temporarily withdrawn some 900m allowances, each of which permits a polluter to emit one tonne of carbon dioxide, from the heavily oversupplied market. Prices have fallen from a high of more than €30 in 2008 to less than €3 this year as the glut in supply was exacerbated by the economic downturn. The EU’s climate commissioner, Connie Hedegaard, vowed to press on with other measures to prop up the flailing market and pointed to a statement from the Irish EU presidency issued immediately after the vote that said there was now a “clear priority” for the 27 EU member states to act on the carbon price. “This vote is a wake-up call. We’re talking about a €1bn market,” said Ms Hedegaard. “It doesn’t mean that now it’s all over for the emissions trading system.” Ms Hedegaard is working on a separate set of more long-term measures to shore up the market, including the permanent cancellation of allowances. But carbon analyst Stig Schjølset, of Thomson Reuters Point Carbon, said the plan was now “politically dead”. “We do not envisage prices rising much above the current €3 mark and they may well drop lower,” he added. “Certainly this vote makes the EU ETS irrelevant as an emissions reduction tool for many years to come.” Some business groups welcomed the vote, saying a move to raise carbon prices during a downturn was ill-timed. “There is no need to interfere with this system,” said Markus Beyrer, director-general of Business Europe, the continent’s largest employer group. “We think once the economy picks up, carbon prices will pick up.” Continue reading
Carbon Market Flaws Evident
TIM WILSON From: The Australian April 18, 2013 A European Commission plan to cut emissions permits for up to seven years and thus push up their price was rejected on Tuesday by the European parliament because it would pass on higher costs to struggling industries and consumers. Emissions trading is supposedly a market system based on supply and demand. But behind the jargon, trading schemes are just government-mandated markets influenced by political interests. When too few companies are required to buy emissions permits, or too many permits are allocated, or both, the price collapses. This reality is unfolding in Europe. A tonne of emissions is now $3.20, and is expected to fall to $1.20 compared with $7 earlier this year, a 2008 starting price of nearly $50 and Australia’s $23 carbon tax, which will increase to $24.15 on July 1. The European carbon price crash is not unprecedented. The voluntary Chicago climate exchange traded permits for about $7.50 in 2008, but bottomed out at 5c when the scheme closed in 2010. Political manipulation of carbon pricing for private interests was always likely. Even Ross Garnaut argued in his 2008 review, “If there is a chance that political pressure will reap rewards in the form of special treatment, then the system will promote a large diversion of management resources towards rent seeking from governments”. European politicians have recognised how little public appetite there is to increase their hip pocket costs to cut emissions and reward rent seekers. All this bodes poorly for Australia. Under the government’s plan the Climate Change Authority will recommend our emissions target with the assumption our elected officials would blindly adopt it. That assumption is now exposed for the hokum it always was. Politicians can always make political capital opposing tax increases. The only difference with Europe is Julia Gillard included an automatic target cut if the parliament can’t agree on an alternative. The capacity for political manipulation ensures carbon markets never deliver the certainty their supporters claim. That might not matter if they cut emissions, but they fail there too. A report by the UN’s climate change secretariat concluded Europe would largely meet its Kyoto targets because of economic decline. By comparison the US Energy Information Administration reported a rapid drop in US emissions last year, to their lowest level since 1992. This was achieved “during a year of positive growth in gross domestic product” from expansion in the use of cheap, fracked gas. Meanwhile the Treasury’s Strong Growth, Low Pollution modelling shows that despite having the world’s most broadly applied, highest cost carbon tax Australia’s emissions will continue to rise. It’s probably the only assumption Treasury got right. Comprehensive modelling would have assumed realistic scenarios about whether countries would impose their own equivalent schemes and sign up to a global carbon cutting agreement. Instead Treasury assumed an utterly unrealistic global carbon price of $29 in 2015, and that each country would have carbon taxes, or their equivalent. The scheme, linked to the lower European price, exposes a fiscal gap between the fixed “over-compensation” and the billions in expected government revenue. It is a mess. Technocrats advocate for trading schemes in theory because it is the most efficient way to price emissions, in practice they can be manipulated like any other regulation. The European parliament’s action this week to avoid increasing taxes on households has exposed the problems of emissions trading. Europe should abandon its structurally flawed scheme, and Australia should learn from their mistakes and follow. Tim Wilson is director of the IP and Free Trade Unit and Climate Change Policy at the Institute of Public Affairs. Continue reading
UAE Investors Prefer Property Over Gold
Real estate is currently the preferred asset class for investors in the UAE, finds new survey. By Aarti Nagraj Property is now the preferred asset class for investors in the UAE, even more so than gold, according to the latest Friends Provident International (FPI) Investor Attitudes report. However, investors in the country also showed improved sentiment for gold, equities and bonds, cash and money and currency markets, found the survey. Only collectibles fell in popularity since the last edition of the report, released in Q4 2012, said FPI. Matthew Waterfield, FPI’s general manager, Middle East and Africa said: “It is interesting – although not entirely surprising – to see the much improved preference for investing in property, which has been building over the last few editions of the report. Sentiment towards property investment is a fairly reliable barometer of the level of confidence in the local investment market.” Overall, the report found that UAE investors are now more confident in their local investment market than their counterparts in Hong Kong and Singapore. The Friends Investor Attitudes index for the UAE rose 11 points and now stands at 28, up from 17 points in the last edition, while the indices for Hong Kong and Singapore stand at 27 and 25 respectively. While 76 per cent of the UAE respondents believe the investment market has improved over the last six months, the same number believe that markets will continue to improve over the next six months. Property markets in the UAE, specifically in Dubai, have been dramatically recovering over the last few months. A recent study by consultancy Jones Lang LaSalle stated that residential sales prices in the city rose 18 per cent year-on-year in the first quarter of 2013. New real estate projects launched in the city are completely sold-out, with several local and international investors snapping up units, say developers. Continue reading




