RSS Feed     Twitter     Facebook

Posts Tagged ‘climate summit’

Clean technology after Copenhagen: Waiting for a green light

Business comes to terms with a disappointing outcome

SO KEEN were many energy and clean-technology executives to see a robust agreement to cut emissions of greenhouse gases emerge from December’s climate summit that thousands of them trekked to Copenhagen to cheer policymakers on. It was to no avail: the participants failed to agree on a global mechanism to put a price on emissions, making it harder for energy firms to justify big investments in unproven green technologies, such as advanced biofuels or carbon capture and storage. “Almost all areas of clean technology will get a little less investor interest because there is no mandate,” predicts Vinod Khosla, a prominent venture capitalist.

Clean-tech executives were encouraged by commitments to improve energy efficiency made by India and China, as well as a promise by rich countries to funnel billions to poor ones to pay for green investments. Many shrug off events in Copenhagen on the grounds that national, regional and local regulations are the main drivers of clean-tech investment, not international deals. Paul Holland of Foundation Capital, a venture firm, points out that many municipalities in America have promised to reduce carbon emissions to 1990 levels. This is driving strong demand for smart grids, green building materials and the like. Many states have green initiatives too. …

Obama’s presence will help the Copenhagen climate deal

Copenhagen: In his second trip to Europe in two weeks, US President Barack Obama leaves Thursday for the Danish Capital. He is hopeful that by traveling to Copenhagen he can help push nations towards a breakthrough on a climate deal.

“The president is hopeful that his presence can help,” said spokesman Robert Gibbs.
Obama will be in [...]

968 arrests at Copenhagen mass climate rally

Police arrested almost 1,000 people among the violent fringes of a mass rally in Copenhagen intended to put pressure on the UN climate summit to take stronger action. Tens of thousands of people took part in the Saturday march to the heavily guarded conference centre where world powers are

Manmohan to join world leaders in Copenhagen

New Delhi: It emerges as a sign of pact regarding the issue of global warming when PM Manmohan Singh decides to join the leaders of around150 countries in the Copenhagen Summit.

However, the issue of emission cuts between developed and developing countries remain unsolved.
Despite of the reaffirmation of the Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh, in Parliament that [...]

EU soft on polluters, greens say

By Laurence Peter
BBC News

Arcelormittal blast furnaces at Fos-sur-Mer, southern France

The EU’s carbon trading system is too generous to industry, allowing windfall profits through the sale of emissions permits, a green campaign group says.

The UK-based Sandbag group says analysis of EU official data for 2008 shows industry could earn up to 5.4bn euros (£4.6bn) from selling permits.

Industry is accumulating surpluses of permits as the recession forces plants to reduce or halt production, it says.

But an EU official said it was too early to assess the system’s impact.

"Let’s not panic about it yet," said Barbara Helfferich, European Commission spokesperson for the environment.

She said the carbon price – about 14 euros per tonne of CO2 – had remained "relatively stable over the past few months".

"The best measure is the market – if there were an over-allocation of permits you would see the price radically drop," she told BBC News.

Accumulating permits

The second phase of the Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS) runs from 2008 to 2012 and covers about 50% of the EU’s CO2 emissions, generated by power plants and energy-intensive industries such as cement, steel and glass manufacturers.

The EU decided to give most of the CO2 permits to these industries for free in the first and second ETS phases.

It is widely acknowledged that industry made big profits from the sale of CO2 permits in the first phase, from 2005 to 2007.

The Sandbag report says industry is likely to have 700 million surplus permits in the 2008-2012 phase, which it will either be able to sell for windfall profits or bank for future use, "depressing the price of carbon in the next phase of trading".

The group argues that the availability of these permits is a disincentive for industry to reduce CO2 emissions, undermining the EU’s target of achieving a 20% cut in greenhouse gas emissions by 2020.

The group urges the EU to rescue the ETS by raising the target to 30% by 2020, or 40% if a deal is reached at the global climate summit in Copenhagen in December. A tougher target would mean making fewer CO2 permits available.

Planning for future

The BBC’s environment correspondent Roger Harrabin says the research shows that Europe’s power firms are still short of CO2 permits, so are buying up the surplus from cement and steel.

In effect, Europe’s power consumers are indirectly subsidising through their power bills those firms worst hit by the downturn, he says.

Citing data from the EU’s 2008 register of verified emissions and CO2 permits, Sandbag says just 10 European installations account for nearly 60% of the whole industrial surplus of CO2 permits.

Of these, three installations are run by the steel firm Arcelormittal, accounting for 15% of the surplus, it says.

A spokesman for Arcelormittal, Jean Lasar, said that in the first phase "we did make some profits – but we didn’t design the system".

In the economic downturn Arcelormittal has stopped production at various sites in Europe, meaning CO2 emissions have fallen.

But Mr Lasar said the firm was passing on some permits to its partner energy utilities, who make use of gas emitted during steel production.

"We haven’t sold any permits in this trading period… we are keeping them, we might need them at a later stage," he told BBC News.

"We can’t be expected to shape our carbon strategy on what is happening now in the market. The long-term strategy is to significantly reduce emissions," he said. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

EU soft on polluters, greens say

By Laurence Peter
BBC News

Arcelormittal blast furnaces at Fos-sur-Mer, southern France

The EU’s carbon trading system is too generous to industry, allowing windfall profits through the sale of emissions permits, a green campaign group says.

The UK-based Sandbag group says analysis of EU official data for 2008 shows industry could earn up to 5.4bn euros (£4.6bn) from selling permits.

Industry is accumulating surpluses of permits as the recession forces plants to reduce or halt production, it says.

But an EU official said it was too early to assess the system’s impact.

"Let’s not panic about it yet," said Barbara Helfferich, European Commission spokesperson for the environment.

She said the carbon price – about 14 euros per tonne of CO2 – had remained "relatively stable over the past few months".

"The best measure is the market – if there were an over-allocation of permits you would see the price radically drop," she told BBC News.

Accumulating permits

The second phase of the Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS) runs from 2008 to 2012 and covers about 50% of the EU’s CO2 emissions, generated by power plants and energy-intensive industries such as cement, steel and glass manufacturers.

The EU decided to give most of the CO2 permits to these industries for free in the first and second ETS phases.

It is widely acknowledged that industry made big profits from the sale of CO2 permits in the first phase, from 2005 to 2007.

The Sandbag report says industry is likely to have 700 million surplus permits in the 2008-2012 phase, which it will either be able to sell for windfall profits or bank for future use, "depressing the price of carbon in the next phase of trading".

The group argues that the availability of these permits is a disincentive for industry to reduce CO2 emissions, undermining the EU’s target of achieving a 20% cut in greenhouse gas emissions by 2020.

The group urges the EU to rescue the ETS by raising the target to 30% by 2020, or 40% if a deal is reached at the global climate summit in Copenhagen in December. A tougher target would mean making fewer CO2 permits available.

Planning for future

The BBC’s environment correspondent Roger Harrabin says the research shows that Europe’s power firms are still short of CO2 permits, so are buying up the surplus from cement and steel.

In effect, Europe’s power consumers are indirectly subsidising through their power bills those firms worst hit by the downturn, he says.

Citing data from the EU’s 2008 register of verified emissions and CO2 permits, Sandbag says just 10 European installations account for nearly 60% of the whole industrial surplus of CO2 permits.

Of these, three installations are run by the steel firm Arcelormittal, accounting for 15% of the surplus, it says.

A spokesman for Arcelormittal, Jean Lasar, said that in the first phase "we did make some profits – but we didn’t design the system".

In the economic downturn Arcelormittal has stopped production at various sites in Europe, meaning CO2 emissions have fallen.

But Mr Lasar said the firm was passing on some permits to its partner energy utilities, who make use of gas emitted during steel production.

"We haven’t sold any permits in this trading period… we are keeping them, we might need them at a later stage," he told BBC News.

"We can’t be expected to shape our carbon strategy on what is happening now in the market. The long-term strategy is to significantly reduce emissions," he said. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

To Copenhagen, via the Arctic

An expedition to gather global warming data ahead of the climate summit