Los Angeles Times

What Wall St. wants: A way to price carbon

Lack of a market solution creates uncertaint­y for business

- BY REED LANDBERG AND MATHEW CARR

Protesters and Greta Thunberg weren’t the only ones disappoint­ed by the outcome of the United Nations climate talks in Madrid this month.

Businesses including banks and major polluters see a missed opportunit­y and even some risks in the decision to shelve work on adding market mechanisms as a tool to rein in the greenhouse gases warming the planet.

Executives from JPMorgan Chase & Co., Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and more are noticing the rising alarm from scientists and environmen­t groups and want clarity from policymake­rs about how rules will change. To them, inaction means not business as usual but rather uncertaint­y about who will shape policies, including the cost of carbon emissions.

“If there’s going to be a higher price, then from a pure financial standpoint, what that means is that it will reduce future free cash flow of

your company, in addition to the risk of stranded assets,” said Jennifer Wu, global head of sustainabl­e investing at JP Morgan Asset Management. “Policymake­rs are under tremendous pressure to design and implement policies that will accelerate the pace of decarboniz­ation that will impact all sectors.”

For a second year in a row, the talks were aiming to flesh out Article 6 of the Paris agreement on climate change. That section of the landmark deal negotiated in 2015 allows mechanisms such as carbon trading to be used in meeting targets to rein in fossil fuel emissions.

The concept is simple: Nations that cut more than their targets or create projects that cut emissions can sell credits representi­ng the savings. Those can be bought by those who have fallen short. That would harness market forces in identifyin­g the cheapest way to cut pollution — and give industry an incentive to act.

“Carbon markets are absolutely essential in large, complex economies,” said Robert Stavins, a Harvard professor who has advised both Republican and Democratic presidents on environmen­tal policies. To Stavins, “it’s inconceiva­ble” that any set of government rules could deliver pollution cuts more efficientl­y than a market, given how many things emit carbon.

Carbon markets have sprouted up in more than 50 jurisdicti­ons. The biggest, in the European Union, has delivered a surge in carbon prices that is tilting the economics of the power-generation business away from the most polluting fuels.

Yet designing a global carbon market is easier said than done. Envoys drawn from energy and environmen­t ministries stumbled on writing a rulebook to set up the program. There were many issues: measuring and verifying the savings that projects claim to generate; establishi­ng a central registry to keep track of credits; figuring out how to ensure countries can’t double-count savings by both claiming an emissions cut and then selling a credit representi­ng that reduction.

An early version of a U.N. carbon market known as the Clean Developmen­t Mechanism ran into those problems. It lost credibilit­y, leading to a plunge in the value of its certificat­es.

Green groups and some nations remain opposed to the idea of trading pollution allowances, saying markets shift around the responsibi­lity for cleaning up the atmosphere and distract from the scale of the effort needed. They wanted envoys to focus on pledges to cut pollution much more deeply to keep Earth’s temperatur­e from rising further.

This month’s talks “should have answered people’s rallying cry for increased climate action,” said Ulriikka Aarnio, policy coordinato­r at the Climate Action Network in Europe. “Instead, the negotiatio­ns on carbon markets focused on creating loopholes and ways to slice out climate ambition in the current and already inadequate targets.”

Without more developed carbon markets, companies have the prospect for fewer visible price signals to show how quickly they will be forced to clamp down on pollution. In an op-ed in the Financial Times, Goldman Sachs Chief Executive David Solomon urged government­s to put a price on the cost of carbon through a cap and trade system, a carbon tax or other means.

“The markets can and will do much to address climate change, but given the magnitude and urgency of this challenge, that will not be enough,” Solomon wrote.

“In most places, there is no pricing mechanism to capture the cost of greenhouse gas emissions to society.”

That leaves executives with a quandary. Many of them have difficulty cutting emissions because what they do is inherently carbon intensive. Steel mills, cement kilns, oil refineries and glass makers all have two problems: They consume a great deal of heat, and they use chemical processes that release greenhouse gases. Even if all their heat came from renewable energy sources, their chemistry still puts out greenhouse gases.

That means it will be impossible for nations to zero out emissions without a major change in policy. The two main options are either carbon market mechanisms allowing polluters to offset emissions with credits or carbon capture and storage technology, which requires subsidies. In the jargon of the talks, that means either abatement in terms of reducing emissions or using offsets or allowances from some kind of market.

“We are having discussion­s with our clients, and the question is: Should we continue with voluntary markets or wait for what comes out of the Paris agreement?” said Mauricio Bermudez Neubauer, a principal director in Accenture’s strategy business. “At every company I talk to, the decarboniz­ation strategy has an abatement component and an offset strategy.”

“Our clients are more worried about what investors and their customers are demanding of them now in terms of climate action,” he said. “Carbon markets are part of that toolkit. The lack of clarity is a concern. It makes planning more difficult.”

The political spotlight now moves to Glasgow, where in a year the U.K. will host the next round of climate talks.

But industry and carbon trading advocates are likely to move ahead with their own efforts to deliver mechanisms that allow companies to offset their pollution. Regions including California, the U.S. Northeast, the European Union and China have their own standards in place, and those will inform how others act even in the absence of a central guiding force from the U.N.

“After negotiator­s failed a second year in a row to agree on guidance for markets, it’s time to move on,” said Nathaniel Keohane, who watches the talks for the Environmen­tal Defense Fund. “Countries that are serious about using carbon markets should move forward to set their own strong rules. Such a coalition of carbon markets could pave the way for faster, deeper cuts in greenhouse gas emissions.”

‘The markets can and will do much to address climate change, but given the magnitude and urgency of this challenge, that will not be enough.’

— David Solomon, Goldman Sachs CEO

 ?? FERNANDO VILLAR EPA/Shuttersto­ck ?? ENVIRONMEN­TAL activists march in Madrid this month. This year’s talks aimed to f lesh out Article 6 of the 2015 Paris agreement, which allows carbon trading to be used in meeting emissions targets.
FERNANDO VILLAR EPA/Shuttersto­ck ENVIRONMEN­TAL activists march in Madrid this month. This year’s talks aimed to f lesh out Article 6 of the 2015 Paris agreement, which allows carbon trading to be used in meeting emissions targets.
 ?? CRISTINA QUICLER AFP via Getty Images ?? SWEDISH CLIMATE activist Greta Thunberg in Madrid. Green groups and some nations still opppose trading pollution allowances.
CRISTINA QUICLER AFP via Getty Images SWEDISH CLIMATE activist Greta Thunberg in Madrid. Green groups and some nations still opppose trading pollution allowances.
 ?? MARKUS SCHREIBER Associated Press ?? SMOKE BILLOWS from a Berlin plant. Under European Union rules, the plant’s operator needs a permit for each ton of carbon dioxide it emits.
MARKUS SCHREIBER Associated Press SMOKE BILLOWS from a Berlin plant. Under European Union rules, the plant’s operator needs a permit for each ton of carbon dioxide it emits.

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