| Can U.S. Plan Entice Polluters into Early Reduction of
Greenhouse Gas Emissions?
Date: 03-Aug-09
Country: US
Author: Allison Shapiro - Allison Shapiro
The landmark American Clean Energy & Security Act (ACES, or "Waxman-Markey,"
as it's commonly called after its sponsors, Henry A. Waxman of the Energy
and Commerce Committee and Edward J. Markey of the Energy and Environment
Subcommittee) passed the U.S. House of Representatives late last month, and
its counterpart bill is set to go before the Senate in mid-September.
If the Senate bill comes out looking like the House version, it will reduce
greenhouse gas emissions and create an unprecedented demand for domestic and
international carbon offsets -- up to two billion tons annually.
Demand for offsets is a critical part of any cap-and-trade scheme because it
funnels money into low-carbon technologies that aren't yet market-viable and
reduces the costs of compliance by allowing companies to effectively
neutralize their own emissions by paying others to reduce emissions more
cheaply.
Many market participants, however, say the Act fails to create demand among
a critical sub-set of polluters: namely those who can reduce their emissions
now, and be recognized for their early action when the reductions become
mandatory.
ACES aims to stimulate that demand by giving credit to companies that reduce
emissions by engaging in activities sanctioned by just two of the world's 17
voluntary carbon reduction schemes -- a restriction that critics say fails
to promote the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions today and may even
provide an incentive to hold off on improvements until later, when
reductions become mandatory and offset project developers can sell their
credits directly as compliance credits for supposedly higher prices.
The Benefits of Early Action
"The issue of how to treat early actors who are clearly trying to do the
right thing for the environment has become an important part of the
conversation in the House and the Senate," says Alexia Kelly, a Senior
Associate at the World Resources Institute (WRI), a non-partisan
environmental think tank that has been informing policymakers on a variety
of offset-related topics.
"Figuring out an equitable way to increase their participation in the
system, whether through an allowance set-aside or early actor offsets is
integral to stimulating early emissions reductions," she says.
Voluntary Markets: The Carrot?
At the heart of ACES is a compliance-driven trading scheme which will likely
be the means by which the United States fits into whatever global greenhouse
gas reduction plan replaces the Kyoto Protocol at the end of 2012.
In its current form, however, the scheme would use voluntary carbon offsets
to promote early action by recognizing offsets from approved voluntary
programs either until the compliance program is developed or for three years
from the date of enactment of climate legislation, whichever comes first.
Then, once the compliance scheme begins, companies can swap approved
voluntary credits for compliance credits. Pre-compliance has been a
motivating force behind voluntary offset transactions for several years, but
to date it has remained secondary in transaction volume to "pure" voluntary
buys, which are driven largely by public relations and corporate and
personal ethics.
Recognized Voluntary Projects
Not all voluntary offsets are created equal, however. ACES only leaves the
early action door open to emission reductions occurring after 2009 from
projects begun between January 1, 2001 and January 1, 2009.
In addition, these early actor offsets would have to be generated under two
specific standards that are not followed widely outside the United States,
and from projects involved in programs meeting the following requirements:
· Legislated under state or tribal law
· Involve a public consultation or peer-review process of methodology
development
· Have publicly available project methodologies
· Require an accredited third-party or State or tribal verification of
emissions reductions
· Require issued credits to be listed and serialized in a public credit
registry
· Involve no member of the program administrator body as a project developer
or funder
"These requirements were carefully crafted to ensure not only the quality of
the offsets eligible for early actor crediting, but also the transparency of
the early actor offset system," says Kelly. "That the public and other
market participants have full access to and can fully understand what
constitutes an early actor offset is extremely important."
The Recognized Standards
While the goals may have been crafted for noble aims, the exclusivity of the
requirements leaves many credible voluntary programs out of the eligibility
ring to supply early actor offsets.
In fact, only two out of 17 existing voluntary standards or U.S. regional
trading schemes make the cut: the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI)
and the Climate Action Reserve (The Reserve).
Nod to the States RGGI is a regulated carbon trading scheme involving ten
northeastern US states that began in September 2008. The scheme has yet to
create a need for offsets, as the requisite allowance price point of $7.00
-- the lowest price to be met in order for offsets to be used in the scheme
-- has yet to be reached. So, no RGGI offsets even exist, currently, to be
turned into early actor offsets.
The Reserve is another state-sanctioned offsetting program. Formerly known
as the California Climate Action Registry, The Reserve is both a voluntary
carbon standard and a credit accounting registry that has been endorsed by
state legislation to supply offsets into California's regulated
cap-and-trade scheme, known in policy circles as AB 32.
Other Standards? While these two are the only programs that meet the
early-offset program rules as outlined in the final ACES Act, between the
release of the draft Waxman-Markey bill and the final bill passed on June
26, 2009, text was added that leaves the door open for other voluntary
programs that either began after January 1, 2009 or do not meet the state or
tribal-legislated criterion to be given the nod. These programs are able to
petition approval from the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to
source early actor offsets.
On to the Senate Across Capitol Hill, the present public discussion of
cap-and-trade in the Senate remains at a higher level, focusing on the
bigger picture questions of the value of offsets in a cap-and-trade scheme
and, even, the efficacy of a carbon market.
"Some people have assumed that offsets are being widely discussed today
across the Senate as an economic opportunity under cap-and-trade," says Phil
Ovitt, Senior Policy Analyst at carbon investment firm C-Quest Capital. "But
most of the debate they've had [in the Senate's Environment & Public Works
Committee] turns out to be more high-level: the merits and perceived
pitfalls of a cap-and-trade scheme on the economy."
Ovitt says that certain offices, such as that of Sen. Debbie Stabenow (D-MI)
and various Senate Committees are delving into the details of early actor
offsets and project type eligibility, but many of these conversations have
-- for the most part -- yet to reach the Committee level. Stabenow's office
is expected to release an amendment regarding domestic offsets prior to the
floor debate on a cap-and-trade bill.
Despite the still "big picture" nature of public Senate conversations to
date, representatives of voluntary standards and the sectors that stand to
gain from offset revenue have been actively meeting with Senators and their
committee staffs for months to gain endorsement in the Senate climate bill
that Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-CA) -- chair of the Environment and Public Works
Committee -- aims to have pieced together by September 8.
What this means is that any meatier public statements regarding project
types and early actor credits both in and outside the US market -- from the
voluntary market to the Kyoto Clean Development Mechanism -- and whether
they will be eligible to supply offsets into a US compliance market will
likely not happen until the end of the summer.
Early Action on the Hill Among the voluntary standards actively engaging
Senate staff for endorsement in the Senate's counterpart bill are the
Chicago Climate Exchange (CCX) and the Voluntary Carbon Standard (VCS).
The CCX was launched in 2003 as North America's first voluntary trading
scheme for carbon credits. To date, it has seen more trading volume than any
other voluntary scheme in the US, but the presently low financial value
assigned to CCX credits by the market for its Exchange-traded credits and
concern regarding the stringency of its offset additionality requirements
have hurt the CCX's reputation in recent years.
Globally, the VCS has been the front-runner for the last two years, taking a
larger voluntary market share of transacted credits than any other standard.
In 2007, 29 percent of all voluntary carbon credits sold were verified to
the VCS - more than to any other standard. In 2008, this percentage rose to
48 percent, once again eclipsing all other standards (See State of the
Voluntary Carbon Market 2009 for details.).
However, the bulk of VCS-verified offsets have been generated from non-US
projects, which Ovitt has said may be why the VCS was not specifically
mentioned in the early actor program list in the original Waxman-Markey
draft.
David Antonioli, CEO of the VCS Association, notes the importance that
expanding the list of eligible early action programs would play in both
meeting the cap-and-trade scheme's cost-containment goals, and helping the
Scheme's administrator learn how various sources of offsets can help inform
the development of a robust system in the long run.
"There's a real opportunity during the transition phase, between now and
when the scheme kicks off for parts of the voluntary market to deliver real,
additional and permanent credits to meet the cost-containment objectives of
the bill and to provide the agencies involved valuable first-hand expertise
on how to design a system that works effectively," he says.
As the ACES Act is written, however, "there's a risk that by restricting the
number of platforms eligible to source these early action credits, we'll
have some real problems reaching the cost-containment goals of the bill."
The trick, Antonioli points out, is to encourage as many early emission
reductions as possible while still only allowing high-quality offsets into
the system.
This is a question the Senate will be grappling with soon enough.
Cashing in Voluntary Credits: the Ratios
So how much compliance credit would future regulated buyers get for their
early offset purchases?
Under ACES, voluntary market actors would be able to trade their early
offsets for compliance offsets at a one-to-one ratio. In earlier versions of
the Waxman-Markey bill, all offsets would have been "discounted" 20 percent,
meaning that for every five offsets turned in, only four compliance offsets
would be awarded.
The current one-to-one ratio represents an appealing opportunity for
companies anticipating to be regulated (as well as credit brokers and
project developers targeting these companies) to consider voluntary offsets
as a means of more cost-effectively meeting their compliance requirements.
Whether a cap-and-trade bill will even make it through the Senate remains a
question, however, which will has encouraged some likely-to-be regulated
companies to wait until a scheme makes it through both houses of Congress
before investing in voluntary offsets.
Ovitt, whose firm engages in credit trading in addition to project
investment, explained that the overall trading volume of pre-compliance
voluntary credits will be relatively small compared with the trading of up
to 2 billion compliance-grade offsets.
Still, he remarks, "For the time being, in the U.S., the voluntary markets
and early action are all we've got."
Allison Shapiro is currently pursuing her MBA and MS degrees in sustainable
enterprise at the University of Michigan. She was formerly a carbon markets
program associate at Ecosystem Marketplace, where this article originally
appeared.
Image CC licensed by Flickr user Brettf.
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