Tag Archives: alternative

Australian Carbon Tax To Go – What Lessons Can Be Learned?

By Phil Covington | July 23rd, 2013 There are three things governments can do in order to address carbon emissions. Firstly, they can do nothing, which is the position the U.S. Federal government has taken, since the U.S. Congress has no appetite for pricing carbon. Secondly, governments can create a carbon marketplace, such as the European Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS), and California’s cap and trade program; providing an opportunity for businesses to make money from carbon allowances and for market forces to set the price. Or thirdly, they can impose a carbon tax; the choice the Australian government opted for, and which has been causing quite a bit of disquiet within the business community over there in recent months. Soon business leaders won’t have to worry. Australia’s new Prime Minister, Kevin Rudd, a former PM who returned to power in June by virtue of a leadership change within the incumbent Labor Party, has announced the government will end what has become the unpopular carbon tax and instead, bring forward an emissions trading scheme a year earlier than planned. There are of course many pros and cons in the debate as to whether a carbon tax or an emissions trading scheme is the better way to control CO2 – and while the point of this piece is not to go into these, there is perhaps a lesson here for any countries out there trying to decide between them. Here is a very simplified perspective that may be drawn from Australia’s experience. Australia’s carbon tax at 23.09 (AUD) per tonne, was introduced to curb emissions from a country that is one of the world’s worst per-capita greenhouse gas emitters . The tax makes the biggest polluters pay, but that cost is passed on to small businesses and consumers by way of higher energy prices. This is why it has become so unpopular. By comparison, businesses and consumers in Europe, while also having to pay more to accommodate the price of carbon under their cap and trade system are, however, less burdened than Australians. Given that Europe’s price on carbon floats subject to market forces, in April the price per tonne of carbon effectively collapsed down to just 2.75 Euros – the equivalent, at the time of writing – of less than 4.00 Australian dollars per tonne. While this was generally considered to be way too low, EU countries were not prepared to prop up the price , largely because under their ongoing economic doldrums, there wasn’t much will to raise costs. Europe’s free falling carbon price even prompted The Economist to wonder if it might even spell the end of the ETS altogether. Under such circumstances, however, with Europe’s carbon price so low, Australia’s flat tax very easily became a competitive disadvantage for its businesses operating within the global economy. The disparity in price between Australia and Europe – with Australia paying almost six times as much per tonne of carbon as Europeans – makes it easy to see why even if a sensible carbon tax rate were originally set, it can start to look unfair when carbon markets elsewhere in the world set the price much lower. Furthermore, despite being designed as a disincentive for carbon emissions, carbon taxes still don’t impose a carbon cap, so their ability to mitigate carbon is still not certain. Australia’s Rudd suggests that moving to an emissions trading scheme – which will be linked to the European carbon market – will save households 349 Australian dollars a year. So despite a carbon tax being a simple way to price carbon, and despite Europe’s ETS being far from perfect, the lesson from Australia is that their carbon tax has proved to be unpalatable, uncompetitive and ultimately abandoned. Image by Quinn Dombrowski Continue reading

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Confidence Growing in the UK Housing Market?

17th July 2013 Investor Today suggests that more confidence has returned to the housing market with the Halifax Housing Market Confidence tracker revealing that the headline House Price Outlook balance (i.e. the difference between the proportion of people across Britain that expect the average house price to rise rather than fall) stood at +40 in June. This was an increase of 7 percentage points compared with last quarter (+33) and was the highest score on this measure since the tracker began in April 2011. Martin Ellis, housing economist at Halifax, said: “Sentiment regarding the outlook for house prices has improved markedly over the past quarter, continuing the trend seen since late 2012. This increase in optimism is partly due to house prices being stronger than expected in the first half of the year. We continue to see a clear north / south divide with significantly higher proportions of people expecting prices to rise in the south than elsewhere in the UK. Nonetheless, the market still faces substantial headwinds with, for example, house prices remaining above the historical average in relation to earnings. Such factors are likely to prevent a sharp acceleration in house prices.” Meanwhile Stephanie Butcher, European Equities Fund Manager at Invesco Perpetual tells investors not to write off Europe as an option to put their money into stating “At current levels valuations are so cheap on a cyclically adjusted basis that I believe the environment simply needs to be ‘less bad’ for Europe to be an attractive case. We could point out that Europe is chock-full of world class companies, which have international exposure, and are (thankfully) run by first-class managers not politicians, but that has been the case for a while and it hasn’t persuaded investors thus far. As investors we have one role – that is, to find under-valued assets, whatever those assets might be. Most appear to be persuaded that bonds are intrinsically over-valued. Equally, many seem persuaded that equities are, at this point, a cheap asset class. What fewer seem to accept is the fact that Europe today is the global value play, and within Europe itself, there are areas of the market which sit at generationally low valuation levels.” Finally Knight Frank’s Prime Global Rental Index states that Prime rents in key cities worldwide rose by just 0.2% in the first quarter of 2013 – The Index’s lowest rate of quarterly growth since 2009. Knight Frank’s Kate Everett-Allen said: “Prime rents are rising strongly in many emerging markets, but this growth is being overshadowed by weakening rents in some of the world’s more established financial centres such as Hong Kong, New York and London. Luxury property for rent in Dubai, Nairobi and Beijing rose by 18.3%, 13.9% and 12.3% respectively in the year to March. By comparison, Hong Kong, New York and London saw prime rents fall by 2.3%, 2.6% and 3.1% over the same period. In this second group of cities, the rental markets have suffered as relocation budgets for executives have been trimmed during a period of weaker financial sector performance.” Continue reading

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Renewables Can Cut Power Plants’ Water Use 97% by 2050

click to enlarge Investing in renewables and energy efficiency could reduce power plants’ water withdrawals by 97 percent from current levels by 2050 and cut carbon emissions 90 percent from current levels, according to a study by the Union of Concerned Scientists-led Energy and Water in a Warming World Initiative (EW3). Most of the water savings would occur within the next 20 years while the CO2 reductions would happen mostly in the near term. The study says many near-term options exist to reduce power sector water and climate risks. Options include prioritizing low-carbon, water-smart energy choices, such as renewable energy and energy efficiency; upgrading power plant cooling systems with technologies that ease local water stress; and instituting integrated resource planning that connects energy and water decision making. The report warns that a “business-as-usual” approach would keep emissions within 5 percent of current levels and water withdrawals would not drop significantly until after 2030. And while utilities’ ongoing shift to natural gas would decrease water use in the coming decades, the study says its ongoing requirements could still harm water-strained areas. This shift to natural gas also would do little to lower the power sector’s carbon emissions. More than 40 percent of US freshwater withdrawals are used for power plant cooling, the report says. These plants also lose several billion gallons of freshwater every day through evaporation. Further, increasing demand and drought are putting a greater strain on water resources. Low water levels and high water temperatures can cause power plants to cut their electricity output in order to avoid overheating or harming local water bodies. Such energy and water collisions can leave customers with little or no electricity or with added costs because their electric supplier has to purchase power from elsewhere, as occurred during the past two summers. Water scarcity, extreme weather events and other climate-related changes in the environment will increasingly affect businesses and how they operate, according to a report released last month by the United Nations Environment Programme. Continue reading

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