enerbal show - Energy Research Centre (UCT)
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Transcript enerbal show - Energy Research Centre (UCT)
Workshop at the 2009 Climate Change Summit
Wednesday 4 March 2009
Economics of climate change
Context and concepts related to mitigation
HARALD WINKLER
Energy Research Centre
University of Cape Town
ERC
Climate change – an integrated framework
Source: IPCC 2001
ERC
Climate change economics
Environmental issue,
rising emissions
Deeply economic issue
– at heart of energy
economy
“Climate change presents a
unique challenge for
economics: it is the
greatest and widest-ranging
market failure ever seen”
(Stern Review 2006)
ERC
History: minerals-energy complex
Complex comprising mining, minerals processing, the
energy sector, and associated industries
(Fine & Rustomjee 1996)
Coal
¾ of TPES
> 90% of electricity
‘cheap’ and inefficient
Particular challenge for mitgation …
… while increasing access to affordable eneryg
services
Short-term: energy efficiency
Medium-term: change fuel mix
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Future: low-carbon future
Redefine competitive advantage
from attracting energy-intensive sectors
to building a new advantage around climatefriendly technologies and systems
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Towards climate policy
LTMS strategic option of ‘Use the Market’
Polokwane resolution on climate change
Treasury work on environmental fiscal reform
Theme of ‘putting a price on carbon’
Question is ‘how?’
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Carbon and carbon markets
Markets are a means, not an end
May be efficient, but not good at equity
Carbon cycle is global – problem of common property
management
How to manage
Multi-laterally – UNFCCC, but also other scales
Price vs quantity
Pure regulation – standards
Pure price – tax
Combination – cap-and-trade
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Conceptual distinctions
Economic instruments
Direct
Indirect
Carbon tax
Cap and
trade
Fuel input tax
Green or
white
certificates
Regulatory instruments
GHG
emission
standards
Building
standards
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Some broad questions
1.
What would the distributional implications of different
economic instruments be?
2.
What are the implications, including costs and benefits, of
choosing to use an economic instrument for mitigation?
3.
How could different instruments be combined
4.
How responsive is the system (and its parts) to various
economic instruments for mitigation? (elasticity)
5.
What would a consistent and effective approach to energyintensive sectors, in order to increase efficiency, encourage
fuel switching and eventually diversify products
6.
What are the key design elements that need to be considered
to design the best instrument for mitigation in SA?
7.
What supportive measures might be needed to implement a
set of instruments? Implications of existing policy? What
legal and institutional arrangements could we build on?
ERC
Thank you
Energy Research Centre
University of Cape Town
Environmental Policy Research Unit, University of Cape Town
Genesis Analytics
www.erc.uct.ac.za
ERC