Of Turnips and Tulips and Carbon
Everyone has heard of tulip-mania, when flower price speculation ran
rampant -- until the financial bubble burst: an historic dot.com experience
that, of course, we are immune to. . . The unspoken fear today (sometimes
dismissed as carping criticism) is that our scientifically plotted
market-based approach to reduction of greenhouse gases could fall prey to
this too-human tendency to push markets toward pure speculation -- whenever
they are not tethered to the ground by ineluctable or exceptionally rigorous
market design -- in short, unless they are more like markets for turnips
than tulips.
That’s the basis for this plainspun wisdom in considering whether the US is
ready to project-finance itself into carbon-neutral nirvana. In the United
States, in the current state of the law, you can project-finance turnips
only if you don’t make believe they are tulips.
Policymakers can change the market rules to make it otherwise; they can
stimulate great gobs of voluntary carbon credit offsets; but then the energy
economy (and perhaps the nation’s future) will be in Dutch. If you recognize
voluntary carbon credits as the modest garnish for renewables and efficiency
that they are today, it will at least help some additional flowers bloom.
There are three elements to this hypothesis: (1) the limits of project
finance, (2) the somewhat exotic form of the US voluntary carbon emission
reduction market (as distinguished from the Kyoto market), and (3) the
potential of the integrated multi-revenue-stream project finance model to
take advantage of the US carbon market.
1. The Limits of Project Finance
As every energy lawyer knows, there is nothing magic about project finance.
It is a limited-recourse type of financing which becomes available to those
project sponsors who have expended enough early stage risk capital to get a
proposed energy production asset to the point where one or more lenders and
speculative equity investors will finance its construction and then look to
its operation to produce firm revenues to pay them back. The sponsors and
equity investors in these situations receive a premium for the hard work of
sponsoring the project when it generates a larger revenue stream than the
cost of this borrowed money and ultimately commands a substantial sales
price, based on a market assessment of the future value of the market of the
revenue stream for the product produced (megawatts, mcf, environmental
emissions credits).
In our convoluted world, nominally averse to government interference with
markets, energy regulation has been pressed into service repeatedly, in
different ways, to assure that the turnips of megawatts have a sufficiently
firm and likely future robust market price, notably through establishing
quotas for output purchases, either at a price (old PURPA) or of quantities
(new RPS). In related developments, production tax credits, grants, and low
interest loans have been governmentally superimposed on projects’ economics
to offset technological economic non-competitiveness. When prospects then
look good for “PURPA-machines” or REC percolators, we have seen crazes over
the years -- “tulipmania” if you will -- for cogeneration plants, merchant
combined cycle plants, mega wind farms. The policy theory is that initially
infant industries will grow to a sustaining level in this way, so that the
incentives will not be required. Sometimes the theory is right.
Hence the impetus to apply the sparkle, which regulation can bring to
project finance, to the pressing concern with reduction of greenhouse gases,
or -- as it has been short-handed -- “carbon reduction.” Weren’t efficient
markets created for SO2 and NOX? Is not the carbon cap and trade model,
however nascently regional in America, the proven precursor of an efficient
system? Hasn’t Kyoto proved that this model can be applied in the more
environmentally civilized world outside of the USA? Hasn’t project finance
been applied to facilitate these markets through offset creation? Perhaps
so. But can’t we push further to the impatient belief that the same approach
can be followed in America with voluntary credits? Well, maybe.
2. Challenges to US Voluntary Carbon Reduction Project Finance
There is, however, reason to be skeptical, reason related to the limitations
of project finance absent major supportive regulatory infrastructure just
discussed and because of certain characteristics of the US Voluntary
Emission Reduction Credits (VERs) which distinguishes Certified Emissions
Reductions (“CERS”) in the legally structured “compliance” markets created
by Kyoto. VERs in the US can only be sturdy, project-financeable turnips
when they represent a commodity which, for example, utilities or other
emitters must buy if they are to comply with the applicable legal regime
(like “compliance” RECs based on purchase of specified renewable outputs,
whose value to utilities is defined in their own state jurisdictions).
Otherwise, VERs in effect, represent nothing more than a willingness to buy
documentary evidence of someone else’s prior good behavior as an “offset” --
moral or psychological in the eyes of purchasers -- whose acquisition and
retirement strikes a modest blow against atmospheric pollution. At most,
acquisition of the VERs represents a hedge by carbon polluters against the
coming of some future compliance regime.
This is very different under Kyoto, where such offsets, generated under
strictly defined and priced CDM/JI programs do produce such a legal right,
which may be applied to offset a legal obligation under applicable trading
schemes. The existence of a market for these legal rights is understandable
and the ability to monetize the credits through project finance is
presented. The intrinsic value of offset credits may be impaired by flaws in
the administration of the core trading program where purchasers make use of
the offsets, but at least the ground rules are clear. From a project
financing standpoint, the resulting Certified Emission Reduction Credits are
a stable turnip crop; their value may be speculated-on to a modest extent
like tulips, but if they are sold pursuant to a workable Emissions Reduction
Agreement with a solid counterparty, project finance deals can and have been
done. However, unlike electric power today, the forward price carbon curve
has not been predictable enough that future contract sales can be a
meaningful part of such transactions.
As crafted in the international setting, all projects must be real,
verifiable, permanent, “additional,” and unique. The specific carbon
reduction attributes of each project must be identified -- including notably
the monitoring protocols. In the US, however, there are several protocols
and verifiers in the field, and diversity reigns. While buyers, of course,
may want to minimize reputational, delivery, and financial risk, they may be
attracted to VERs because of their unique special marketing fits as offsets
for their product lines.
In short, in the US, there remains a need for both VER fungibility and
assurance of credit standing of the counterparties. There is currently a
joint ABA-ACORE Emissions Marketing Association effort, with which I am
involved, to develop a standardized contract in this area: a so-called VERPA
that might, in principle, be project financed. But given the diversity of
factors at play in the marketplace, it can’t get far beyond directing the
parties in an orderly way to identify the underlying factors which define
the contract. Instead of a “supermarket” with VER commodities, we still have
boutiques with idiosyncrasies.
Consequently, the best project finance counsel in the VERPA market can do is
remind clients to:
1. Demonstrate clear title over reductions they purport to offer.
2. Include the carbon finance component in the project financial
projections, not as an afterthought.
3. Use an established, reputable verifier and ideally follow one of the most
commercially desirable quality standards. With the lack of availability of
certain types of verifiers, planning ahead for their services is crucial.
Furthermore, with standards proliferating, clients will need to get
competent advice on which to select.
4. Focus on established project types, the ones accepted by any compliance
regime such as RGGI or CA AB 32, plus those most desirable to buyers in the
VER market.
5. Plan for quality monitoring and assurance.
6. Focus on new or relatively new projects.
Of course the US is now seeing the development of a series of regional
programs emerging, like RGGI for example, where types of offset mechanics
are being defined (with greater categorical flexibility than CDM). The
finance of projects certainly will be enhanced much further as liquidity in
the markets based on a functional and predictable market grows; that can be
the byproduct of initiatives like RGGI.
3. The Potential of Multi-revenue Stream Projects
But something can be done to foster GHG reduction finance in the near term
-- if project developers do not confine their vision to the finance of
carbon reduction credit machines. Many integrated biomass and biofuel
projects -- which gather feedstock, gasify it, make power, and possibly make
biofuels -- have the potential for multiple non-energy revenue streams which
can be monetized. These include not only SO2 offsets, RECs, tipping fees,
and energy sales, but also Voluntary Carbon Credits. One of the great
strengths of project finance is that it can blend such multiple sources of
revenue into a single creditworthy revenue-supported deal. It can do so even
better where carbon credits can be taken advantage of as an upside “kicker.”
That is the near term future of US carbon finance. Regulatory developments
might contribute to this possibility in ways such as the unbundling of the
environmental from the green energy characteristics of RECs, thereby
creating more potential revenue streams to support overall project finance.
Turnips finance; tulip bubbles burst. Regulatory lawyers and policy makers
should recognize this. Real progress in using project finance to facilitate
GHG reduction in the current US market will be made by adhering to this
perspective.
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