Australia has hitched itself to Europe’s climate change wagon in a move that will have far-reaching — and uncertain — consequences for the domestic carbon scheme.
Yesterday’s decision to link Australia’s carbon scheme with Europe’s (and dump the floor price on permits) is a game-changer. Until then we were the southern hemisphere’s mouse that roared on climate change. Now we’ll effectively be part of a large, entrenched and relatively stable carbon price mechanism, which covers half a billion people.
The move probably means the cost for Australia to reduce emissions will come down — in the medium term at least (say 3-6 years). But actually, costs could go up. The move probably makes it harder for the Coalition to repeal the carbon tax if it wins the federal election.
The real significance of yesterday’s decision is that instead of Australia tackling climate change by taxing domestic polluters and spending the money on reducing emissions in China, we’ll tax domestic polluters and spend the money on reducing emissions in Europe. Either way, the international rules say we can count those emissions reductions ourselves, as if we’d shut down a Latrobe Valley smokestack. (Why can’t we just reduce our own emissions? Too expensive. So we’re paying our way out of the problem.)
So how does yesterday’s decision work?
The original plan was that once Australia’s $23-per-tonne carbon tax switched to an emissions trading scheme in 2015, businesses could meet their obligations in large part by buying up cheap international permits from countries such as China, Indonesia and PNG. These bargain-basement permits used to be a little dodgy. They’re better now, but plenty of people will tell you there’s still hot air in the system. At $4 or so a pop, they’re cheap as chips.
The government was worried the ETS would be flooded with these cheap permits, so set a (temporary) $15 floor price to start in 2015. But it was becoming increasingly hard to see how that would work; the floor price seemed arbitrary, and some businesses complained they’d pay more because of it.
So the government worked on Plan B; scrapping the floor price and linking the scheme to Europe’s ETS (which has been going for longer than ours). That means that in 2015 Australia’s floor price will effectively be Europe’s permit price — about €8, or A$9.50, at present. (There are concerns in Europe that the price is too low; it’s dropped a fair bit lately). So Australia has not really scrapped its floor price — it has just switched horses to a new floor price (and a floating one at that).
The take-home point here is that if the European ETS price is below $15 in 2015, then yesterday’s move makes it cheaper for Australian businesses to comply with our carbon scheme.
The kicker is that if the European price is above $15 by 2015 — and it has been volatile — then the costs here will go up. You can bet the big emitters are crunching the numbers on this right now. And if Australia’s new scheme keeps a long-term cap on the use of cheap permits from China, etc, then costs could be significantly higher by 2020.
“It could be cheaper, it could be more expensive; probably cheaper,” Tony Mohr from the Australian Conservation Foundation told Crikey of yesterday’s decision. Erwin Jackson, deputy CEO of The Climate Institute, estimated the EU carbon price would be $15-20 by 2015; that would make the new scheme more expensive than the original. Other analysts reckon the European price will be $12 in 2015. It depends which crystal ball you’re gazing into. The European permit price has been a wild ride since the scheme started; good luck tipping the price three years’ hence.
Hitching our ETS to Europe’s could throw out the federal budget — if permits do wind up cheaper, that means less revenue for the government, but it still has to pay compensation for the carbon price.
Politically, yesterday’s move probably makes it harder for Tony Abbott to repeal the carbon price if he wins the election. The decision is to “finalise technical details of the interim link” with Europe by mid-2013 — say, that’s before the federal election is due. The sleeper issue here is property rights. A permit to emit one tonne of greenhouse gas emissions is created as a property right. So if Abbott wants to scrap the tax, he is also scrapping a stack of permits (i.e. property rights). He may have to pay compensation under the constitution. And with more permits changing hands between Europe and Australia, that could get complicated as well as expensive.
Mohr says the more connected Australia’s carbon scheme is, the harder it becomes to unravel.
Another geeky point to make is that yesterday’s decision may herald changes to the design of Australia’s carbon scheme. For Australia to hitch its scheme to Europe’s, the two schemes have to be roughly aligned. That’s partly why the floor price has been scrapped; Europe didn’t like it.
More changes may be needed. Australia allows farmers to voluntarily cut emissions and sell those reductions into the carbon scheme under the Carbon Farming Initiative, but Europe doesn’t. So the CFI may have to be changed. And there may have to be changes to industry assistance (although Europe’s carbon price is arguably more generous to business than Australia’s at present).
And taking a macro look, yesterday’s decision may mean Australia enters into a “green” negotiating bloc with Europe — the region that’s doing the most on climate change. We might find ourselves forming a common front on issues such as targets to reduce emissions (a hot potato), and the future of the Kyoto Protocol. That would be a shift, because we have been at the centre of the not-terribly-green “Umbrella Group” — including countries such as the US and Japan — at international negotiations. Not any more, perhaps?
We could even consider a joint EU/Australian carbon tariff, to slap an effective carbon price on imports form countries doing little on climate change, such as the US. A carbon tariff would probably be allowed under international trade law, it would shield industries from first-mover disadvantage, and it would set the hares running among those not pulling their weight on reducing emissions.
So what’s the verdict on this new approach on Australia’s climate scheme? Mohr describes it as “good politics, it’s a smart move”, and says the domestic scheme would be rendered more stable as a result. “It’s a good thing that Australia has linked with the European ETS,” he told Crikey.
Jackson cautions against focusing solely on keeping short-term permit prices down, arguing this would do little to encourage green investment. He “cautiously welcomed” yesterday’s decision as it would “provide long-term stability”.
Uh, there will be no floor price on the ETS under the government I lead.
You’d never know from reading this confused apologia that the floor price was rock solid govt. policy only a few days ago.
From Alexander’s disingenuous prognostications you’d never know that the carbon tax is now superfluous. It was a unilateral tax eviscerated by a comical carousel of “compensations” and carte blanche for big “polluters” (94% of emissions gratis). At $23, it was big enough to cause modest economic damage but not big enough to have any significant effect on the current global fossil fuel bonanza- of which Australia is the chief beneficiary.
The $23 tax (later $25, $27) is now undisguised self-harm.
Given the decline in climate millenarianism, belated realisation that most ‘climate’ policies are ineffective and/or rorts, not to mention Europe’s parlous economic condition, you can be sure that the “carbon price” (in fact a misnomer as the “market” is artificial) will sink. At the current $7 to $9 range, it is meaningless anyway.
It’s fascinating to watch propagandists like Alexander and Jackson instantly find that Combet’s backflip is really good policy after all.
The gymnastics will continue tomorrow.
This is a great decision environmentally, economically and politically (exhibit A in that regard being the post above me). My daughter is in Germany for a year and amazed at the extent to which household solar is used compared to here. She tells me Germans keep talking to her about how solar must be so good in Australia; she changes the topic of the conversation.
Andybob: have you any idea how many scores of billions it cost to put PV panels on German roofs? And who paid this exorbitant amount? Who subsidised whom?
And for what? 3% of total power production.
It’s a moralistic gesture, signifying fossil fuel expansion.
This is a victory for common sense. Carbon floor was always bad economics and would have just created arbitrage opportunities for finance companies.
The Europeans, with their larger scheme will always be the price setter of carbon due to the increased liquidity in their market. It was pure arrogance from the greens and labor to believe that we could determine the lowest price for emitting carbon dioxide, which is effectively what the price floor did.
If we are going to have an emissions trading scheme, let’s have one that is the most efficient and provides the lowest costs for business.
However it is still naive to believe that Abbott couldn’t decommission the scheme. In fact, it will be easier now that it is linked to the European scheme…business will have a market to sell their prepaid emissions rights when abbot says that it will no longer be accepted in austalia. He won’t be guilty of taking property away if the Europeans can buy them.