Gulf News

Europe’s carbon market hits the mark

INDUSTRY IS CLEANING UP ITS ACT BY TURNING TOWARD RENEWABLES AND BRACING FOR A TIME WHEN COAL PLANTS ARE PHASED OUT

- BY JEREMY HODGES, EWA KRUKOWSKA AND MATHEW CARR

Europe’s $38 billion a year carbon market is finally starting to work the way it was intended, reining in pollution with a minimum of squealing from industry.

Thirteen years after it was created to limit carbon-dioxide emissions, prices for the allowances are rising. European Union policymake­rs have enacted measures expected to keep the cost of pollution on an upward trajectory through 2030, prompting hedge funds that abandoned the market to pile back in.

“For a five-year-plus period, this market was in the desert,” said Per Lekander, a fund manager at Lansdowne Partners UK LLP in London. “What’s happened over the past five months is the investment community is getting behind it again and putting on positions.”

Big polluters have heard the message and are starting to adapt. From automaker Volkswagen AG to RWE AG, which is Germany’s largest power generator, industry is cleaning up its smokestack­s by turning toward renewables and bracing for a time when coal plants are regulated out of existence. Some are buying before allowances get even more expensive.

Phasing out coal

All this is happening without noticeable complaints from industry in part because policymake­rs from German Chancellor Angela Merkel to UK Prime Minister Theresa May have made it clear they want to phase out coal within the next decade, slashing greenhouse gases.

Companies favour the carbon market because it gives them more flexibilit­y on how to comply with tighter emissions rules than regulation or taxes. The alternativ­e to a market could be much worse for industry.

It’s also a good sign for the global effort to rein in climate change, showing that market mechanisms and government policy can persuade industry to step away from fossil fuels in a way that doesn’t create turmoil in the broader economy. Europe’s carbon market is the biggest of more than 45 systems working worldwide and a model being tried everywhere from China to Mexico and parts of the US.

“We are very much in favor of the European Emissions Trading System,” said Klaus Schaefer, chief executive officer of the German power generator Uniper SE. “In order to deliver the CO2 reductions that we all agreed to in Europe, you will have to see higher prices.”

Catching on

Carbon trading wasn’t an immediate success. Europe’s permits surged to more than €29 a ton in 2006 and 2008, only to plunge more than 90 per cent after the financial crisis hobbled industry and helped create a surplus of the pollution rights. That glut took policymake­rs years to mop up, culminatin­g in an agreement that got final approval only last month.

Utilities like Uniper will feel the brunt of the impact of higher carbon prices - government­s cut off the supply of free permits to most power generators while doling out allocation­s for industries like steelmaker­s. EU emission allowances are the best performing energy commodity this year, according to a report by Bloomberg New Energy Finance.

They’ve surged 57 per cent to as much as €13.04 for each ton emitted on March 22 on the ICE Futures Europe exchange.

Higher carbon prices drive up the cost of using hard coal and lignite to run power plants. It’s one of the mechanisms the 28-nation European Union is using to move industry away from the most polluting fuels and reaching the goals for curbing climate change set out in the 2015 Paris Agreement.

“Climate policy will drive accelerati­ng coal phase-outs in the next few years,” said Phil MacDonald, an analyst at Sandbag, an environmen­tal research group.

Jan Kresnik, a portfolio manager at broker Belektron, said prices of €30 a ton or more “could be reachable.” BNEF estimates it will reach €32 by 2023.

All this is in step with the ideas that percolated over the past two decades from economist Richard Sandor, father of both the modern carbon market and interest-rate futures and derivative­s on the Chicago Board of Trade.

His theory was that putting a price on pollution would be the most efficient way to curtail the greenhouse gas emissions damaging the atmosphere. The idea won official backing at the United Nations climate talks in Kyoto, Japan, in 1997.

Some of the biggest energy users remain concerned about the upward drift in prices. Steelmaker­s especially blame the carbon market for reducing their competitiv­eness.

At Britain’s EEF group representi­ng manufactur­ers, Roz Bulleid, who is head of climate policy, supports emissions trading but says her members are “increasing­ly jaded” about the impact.

“The original intention to deliver emissions reductions at least cost has been replaced by a focus on achieving a certain carbon price,” Bulleid said. “There are a number of overlappin­g policies in this area muddying investment signals. Overseas competitor­s are not facing the same policy costs.”

Steel concerns

The European Steel Associatio­n, which represents companies including ArcelorMit­tal and Thyssenkru­pp AG, said higher carbon prices create “additional problems” for an industry suffering with increasing competitio­n from Asian manufactur­ers.

“We need profitabil­ity, and for that carbon prices are not helping,” said Axel Eggert, director-general of the Brussels-based steel industry group. “They are just sucking out the small profits our companies are making.”

Too much carbon market interventi­on from the EU is also seen as bad for business.

“The tendency of EU and national policymake­rs to seek to increase the price of emissions certificat­es, even though the emissions cap is adhered to, significan­tly reduces market predictabi­lity and makes Europe a less attractive region to invest,” said a spokespers­on for Dow Chemical Co., which has plants in Belgium and Germany as well as a research facility in Switzerlan­d.

Even so, the broader response of business to higher carbon prices has been surprising­ly muted - and even supportive. Britain’s main business lobby group, the CBI, believes “a strong European carbon price has the best potential to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in the lowest-cost way,” according to Michelle Hubert, head of energy and climate at the Londonbase­d group.

We need profitabil­ity, and for that carbon prices are not helping. They are just sucking out the small profits our companies are making.”

Axel Eggert | European Steel Associatio­n

 ?? Rex Features ?? ■ The Voerde am Rhein coal power plant in Germany. All nations are gearing up for a time when coal plants are regulated out of existence.
Rex Features ■ The Voerde am Rhein coal power plant in Germany. All nations are gearing up for a time when coal plants are regulated out of existence.

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