Emissions Trading: Possible Impacts on Investment
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Transcript Emissions Trading: Possible Impacts on Investment
Energy, GHG and Climate
Change Scenarios:
IEA Insights
Cédric Philibert
Energy Efficiency and Environment
Division
European Environment Agency
AGENCE INTERNATIONALE DE L’ENERGIE
INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY
Workshop
Growing trend
Energy-Related CO2 Emissions, WEO, 2002
40,000
million tonnes of CO2
35,000
30,000
25,000
20,000
15,000
10,000
5,000
0
1970
World
1980
OECD
1990
2000
Transition economies
2010
2020
2030
Developing countries
World emissions increase by 1.8 % per year to 38 billion
tonnes in 2030 – 70% above 2000 levels
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CO2 Emissions per Capita
14
tonnes of CO2 per capita
12
10
8
6
4
2
0
1990
OECD
2000
2010
Transition economies
2020
2030
Developing countries
Source: WEO 2002
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Climate Stabilisation
Source: IPCC TAR
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Technology Innovation,
Development and Diffusion
All options needed
Timing and “lock-in” matter
Technology policies help provide for long
term non-carbon energy;
Comprehensive tools (caps, taxes) promote
short term results…
… and provide long-term price signals
International technology collaboration
helpful, but cannot substitute to
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comprehensive
agreements
Key energy technologies
End-use efficiency
Building
sector
Industry
Transport
Fuel switching
Conversion efficiency
‘Non carbon’ energies: nuclear, renewable,
CCS
Excluding any of these options is likely to
drive higher costs/higher concentrations
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Nuclear energy
Currently 7,3% of world TPES
Concerns: risks, waste, proliferation
Member countries have various policies
Costs: may not be an issue if carbon is priced
Various new designs may:
Reduce
size and costs
Minimise waste and expand the resource base
Alleviate proliferation concerns
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Carbon Capture and Storage
Pre-, post- and oxyfuel combustion
technologies
Pre-combustion
capture could be one way to
provide a versatile fuel: hydrogen
Plentiful geological storage capabilities
But
current experiments not numerous enough
Ocean storage would be temporary only
Achieving stabilisation may require storing
significant CO2 (100s of GT)
The
question of permanence
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Renewable
Biomass and waste about 11% TPES
Not always renewable, often unhealthy use
Hydro about 2.3% world TPES
But additional capabilities face social and environmental
concerns
Others: less than 1% world TPES
Rapid growth of wind energy
Issues of costs and intermittence
Space occupation may limit biomass
Potential: 9,000 times current TPES
GHG increase the efficiency of Earth & Atmosphere capturing
solar energy
If solar energy creates the problem it must be able to solve it
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An area issue?
Area needed to produce with solar power
the same yearly energy than the Assouan
Dam (global efficiency of 10%)
Source: Dennis Anderson, Imperial College, R.-U.
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Solar power plants exist!
354 MWe since 84-89
on Los Angeles grid
Contrating solar
power plants cheaper
than PV
Fossil fuel back-up
or heat storage
guarantees power
Projects in Spain,
Italy, Mexico, India,
Egypt, Morocco,
Algeria, Jordan,
Israel, the US
70 million+inhab
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GHG Emissions Impacts of Biofuels
Well-to-wheel CO2-equivalent GHG emissions from
biofuels, per km, relative to base fuel
0%
-20%
-40%
-60%
-80%
-100%
-120%
Ethanol
Ethanol
Ethanol
Ethanol
from grains, from sugar from sugar
from
NA/EU
beets in the
cane in
cellulosic
EU
Brazil
feedstocks,
US
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Biodiesel
from
rapeseed,
EU
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Ethanol Cost Comparison,
2002 and Post 2010
$ per gasoline-equiv litre
$0.00
$0.20
$0.40
$0.60
$0.80
Gasoline
2002
Ethanol from corn
Ethanol from cellulose (poplar)
Ethanol from Sugar Cane, Brazil
2002
Low
High
Gasoline
Ethanol from corn
Ethanol from cellulose (poplar)
Post
2010
Post
2010
Ethanol from Sugar Cane, Brazil
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Biofuels Potential In IEA
Countries
In most countries, conventional biofuels (ethanol/grains,
biodiesel/FAME) can probably provide 5% of motor
gasoline/diesel fuel without major disruptions to other crop
production, markets
5% in US, EU will require 15%-20% of cropland
Above 5% we could begin to see strong competition for
crop use in many countries
Biodiesel is much more land-intensive than ethanol
Going to cellulosic feedstocks could increase potential by
several-fold
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Global Technical Potential for Transport Energy
Requirements to be Provided by Biofuels, 2050
Hoogwijk et al , 2003
Lightfoot and Greene, 2002
Low
Estimate
Moreira, 2002
High
estimate
Yamamoto et al, 2001
Fischer and Schrattenholzer
(IIASA), 2001
IPCC Third Assessment Report:
Mitigation, 2001
0%
100%
200%
300%
400%
Percent of World Transport Fuel Demand, 2050
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Nearer Term: A look at Ethanol from
Sugar Cane in 2020
(Billion Litres)
Region
Africa
ASEAN
India
Other Asia
Brazil
Other SA
N&C America
Oceania
Europe (incl.
Russia)
WORLD
Demand
10% gasoline +
3% diesel
9
10
6
56
7
8
88
4
52
Supply
(E4 scenario)
Balance
22
29
49
23
62
17
31
7
0
13
19
43
-33
55
9
-57
3
-52
239
239
1
Source: Johnson, 2002
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Biofuels in sum
Biofuels: many types of impacts
Biofuels use growing rapidly
Conventional biofuels in IEA countries are
expensive, modest GHG reductions
Sugar cane ethanol is a bargain
Advanced biofuels processes look promising
Global potential appears substantial
Development of trade in biofuels would
benefit many countries
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Maria R. Virdis
9th Session of the Conference of the Parties.
1-12 December. Milan, Italy
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SD Vision: a normative scenario
with 3 targets to 2050
Energy security:
Our supply vulnerability concerns mostly oil. Transport is the most dependent
sector.
< 40% of energy demand for transport satisfied by oil by 2050.
Climate mitigation and environmental sustainability:
Target focuses on decarbonisation of energy supply and on transition to a nonfossil fuel energy base
60% of world TPES from zero-carbon sources by 2050
Access to energy:
Depends on economic growth and income gap reduction.
Access to electricity to > 95% of world population by 2050.
Purpose: to help identify a policy path and a technology
roadmap to get to the desirable future world.
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Quantitative framework for 2050
Needed to appreciate magnitude of the targets and scale of the
challenges. Existing scenarios considered:
WEO 2002 (but horizon limited to 2030)
IPCC SRES scenarios of the A1 family (A1B and A1T).
A1T scenario (simulated by IIASA with MESSAGE) chosen
as the initial basis for its characteristics.
That scenario was further modified to produce our SD Vision
scenario, whose characteristics are
policy driven
lower GDP (-5%with respect to A1T value in 2050)
lower energy demand (-15% w.r. to A1T value in 2050);
increased share of zero carbon technologies (renewables, nuclear) and
introduction of carbon storage.
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The SD Vision scenario: world
total primary energy
1200
1000
800
Other Renewables
EJ
Biomass
Nuclear
600
Gas
Oil
Coal
400
200
0
1990
2000
2010
2020
2030
2040
2050
Years
46% of TPES from renewables & nuclear by 2050
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Comparing carbon emissions
14,0
12,0
10,0
GtC
8,0
6,0
4,0
2,0
0,0
1990
2000
2010
2020
2030
2040
2050
Years
SD Vision
A1T
SD Vision w/o carbon storage
26% of CO2 emissions from fossil fuels is captured and stored by 2050
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Energy in 2050 (SD Vision)
Energy intensity would fall by 53% over the period.
Gas would become the dominant fuel: security of supply
risks may surface in long term. Pipeline construction
thrives.
Oil to satisfy about 38% of transport energy demand
Renewables: a bigger share than coal and oil (35% vs.
28).
46% of non-carbon based energy sources in TPES
implies:
a
a
a
3-fold increase for biomass;
13-fold increase for other renewables;
14-fold increase for nuclear.
Carbon capture & storage: up to 2.6 GtC in 2050.
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Share of Renewables in the Reference
and Alternative Policy Scenarios
30%
25%
20%
15%
10%
5%
0%
2000
2030 Reference
Non-Hydro
2030 Alternative
Hydro
Policies under consideration would increase the share of
renewables to 25% by 2030, compared to 17% in the RS
OECD CO2 Emissions in Alternative
and Reference Scenarios OECD
15,000
14,000
Mt of CO2
13,000
12,000
11,000
10,000
9,000
8,000
7,000
1970
1980
1990
Alternative Scenario
2000
2010
2020
2030
Reference Scenario
Emissions in the Alternative Scenario stabilise towards
the end of the projection period
OECD Investment in Alternative
and Reference Scenarios
4,000
3,500
billion dollars
3,000
2,500
2,000
1,500
1,000
500
0
Reference
Generation
Alternative
Transmission
Distribution
Transmission and distribution investments are much lower in
Alternative Scenario, but generation costs hardly fall
Investment to Ensure Universal
Electricity Access
2001-2030
2,000
Additional investment breakdown
Isolated
15%
billion dollars
1,500
Grid
extension
Mini-grid
49%
36%
1,000
500
0
China
South Asia
Africa
Reference Scenario
East Asia
Latin
America
Middle
East
Electrification Scenario
More than $660 billion is needed to supply basic electricity
services to the world’s very poor – mainly in Africa and South Asia
Universal Electricity Access:
CO2 Emissions Implications in 2030
5,000
Mt of CO
2
4,000
3,000
2,000
1,000
0
Africa
South
Asia
Reference Scenario
East
Asia
Latin
America
Middle
East
OECD
Europe
Universal Electricity Access Scenario
Assuming no change in the fuel mix, universal electricity access
would increase global CO2 emissions by 1.4% in 2030
Carbon Sequestration Scenario
2001-2030
2,500
Capacity with
CO2 capture
2,000
Additional for
CO2 capture
1,500
1,000
500
0
WEO RS capacity
(GW)
CO2 capture case
WEO RS
CO2 capture case
capacity (GW)
investment (billion investment (billion
dollars)
dollars)
Carbon-capture technologies can remove 3.4 GT of CO2 in the
OECD by 2030
BEYOND
KYOTO:
What we
have
learned
Cédric Philibert
INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY
AGENCE INTERNATIONALE DE L’ENERGIE
From theory and experience
Climate change is global, long-term and
surrounded by (cost and benefit)
uncertainties
Growing energy needs will not make it easy!
Price instruments would perform better
Benefits
relate to concentrations, costs to
emissions
But carbon taxes are unlikely to succeed
And fixed & binding targets hard to swallow
(by nature arbitrary)
Technology push useful, no silver bullet
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The ultimate objective dilemma
Costs and benefits uncertain – costs matter
“Dangerous” climate change hard to define
Inertia requires but constrains early action
Possible way out: Aim at low concentration
levels with achievement conditional on costs
From “Hard laws, weak targets” to “Soft
laws, strong targets” – but ensuring action
Ambition matters, not emission certainty
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Suggestion 1/3
Keep emissions trading
Cost-effective
Environmentally effective
Allows (some) free allocation
Helps
deal with vested interests
Allows the rich to pay for the poor
Mobilises private, not government funding
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Suggestion 2/3
Make it global
Large, sector-wide, unilaterally-funded
CDM
Non-binding targets for developing
countries
Set « targets » close to baseline emissions
No
threat for economic development
No need for tropical hot air up-front
Commitment period reserve and buy-back
option to prevent selling false carbon money
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Suggestion 3/3
Reduce cost uncertainty
Index targets on economic output…
Intensity
targets only a special case of indexation
Only reduce uncertainty from unabated emissions
trend
… and/or cap the costs (safety valve)
Sell
supplementary permits at a fixed price
At international or domestic levels
Set the price in the upper range of expectations
A price cap is not a tax!
Single price cap not that difficult… nor necessary
Use of the price cap money not a difficulty
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Don’t worry…
Most likely, a more stringent target is
achieved (thanks to lower expected
abatement costs)
Price cap ‘in use’ if higher-than-projected
costs
...a cost benefit analysis would have
suggested higher emissions and
concentration levels…
Price cap with more ambitious targets
performs ‘en route’ the
CBA impossible
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…be happy!
The EU (and other countries
/stakeholders) with ambitious targets
The US (and other countries
/stakeholders) with price caps
The developing countries with investment
and technology inflows from emissions
trading based on non-binding targets
All, with effective global climate change
mitigation and response to energy needs
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Thank you!
For more information:
www.iea.org
[email protected]
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