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Carbon pricing and policy packages for energy transitions

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Presentation on theme: "Carbon pricing and policy packages for energy transitions"— Presentation transcript:

1 Carbon pricing and policy packages for energy transitions
Sara Moarif, Acting Head, Environment and Climate Change Unit, IEA Asia Pacific Climate Week, Singapore, 12 July 2018

2 1. Context: energy and climate policies

3 Global energy-related CO2 emissions
The scale of the energy transition challenge Global energy-related CO2 emissions Gt CO2 36 Central Scenario Efficiency Renewables Fuel-switching CCS Other Nuclear 44% 36% 2% 6% 9% 32 Sustainable Development Scenario 28 24 20 16 2010 2020 2030 2040 The Sustainable Development Scenario depicts a rapid, but achievable, transformation of the energy sector: the outcome for CO2 emissions is stark

4 Energy sector transitions
Energy transitions are driven by multiple objectives Energy sector transitions Drivers GHG reductions Lower energy costs Jobs and growth Energy security Air quality

5 Energy Sector Transitions
Climate and energy policy links occur within broader policy landscape Are critical for achieving Energy Sector Transitions GHG reduction Are not the only (or primary) driver of Interactions with various related policy objectives

6 Policy packages Power Generation 23%
Supporting markets and infrastructure Carbon Pricing Air quality regulations Power Generation 23% Fossil fuel phase-down Energy efficiency support Renewables support A broad basket of policies is relevant for energy transition: policy overlaps and interactions need to be taken into account for effective implementation

7 … but real-world policymaking is more challenging!
A broad basket of policies is relevant for energy transition: policy overlaps and interactions need to be taken into account for effective implementation

8 Policy packages, including carbon pricing, nevertheless remain key
Supporting markets and infrastructure Carbon Pricing Air quality regulations Power Generation 23% Energy efficiency support Fossil fuel phase-down Renewables support Different country contexts will lead to different policies playing different roles in line with policy priorities; their “size and shape” may vary and evolve over time

9 2. Role of carbon pricing in energy transitions

10 [And “Bridge” Scenario]
Policy packages with “moderate” carbon prices Region 2020 2030 2040 NPS [And “Bridge” Scenario] European Union 20 37 50 Chile 6 12 Republic of Korea China 10 23 35 South Africa 7 15 24 450 Scenario United States and Canada 100 140 22 Japan Australia and New Zealand China, Russia, Brazil and South Africa 75 125 Expected carbon prices are well below those needed to meet climate objectives

11 Comparing the role of carbon price and policies in IEA scenarios
Source: World Energy Outlook Special Report: Energy and Climate Change, 2015 Targeted policies can peak emissions, but high carbon prices and advance technologies give deeper reductions consistent with climate goals

12 Emissions from new investments in power generation
Source: World Energy Outlook Special Report: Energy and Climate Change, 2015 The targeted policies of the Bridge Scenario do a good job of aligning new power sector investment with a 2C Scenario .

13 What’s missing? Coal retirement and CCS retrofit
Source: World Energy Outlook Special Report: Energy and Climate Change, 2015 High carbon prices in the 450 Scenario are needed to drive early retirement of coal plant and retrofit for carbon capture and storage.

14 Transport sector: Comprehensive policy packages needed
Source: World Energy Outlook Special Report: Energy and Climate Change, 2015 Carbon pricing itself cannot unlock more substantial technology shifts such as electrification or advanced biofuels development.

15 Other policies can address…
Carbon pricing is key; but other policies are needed Other policies can address… 1. Insufficient carbon price levels 2. Other (non-GHG) objectives 3. Non-cost barriers 4. Long-term transformation

16 Real-world policy packages
Domains of policy packages Multiple objectives Real-world policy packages Domains Constraints Economic development Negative cost opportunities Optimisation based on pricing Short-term investment for long-term returns Economic competitiveness and distributional impacts Social and health benefits Historical economic structure & existing assets Energy security Attractiveness to investment Sustainable energy transition

17 Optimising for short- and long-term reductions ?
Source: Perrissin and Foussard., 2016 A policy package for long-term transition may contain different elements than one for a shorter timeframe

18 3. Examples: carbon pricing within policy packages

19 Interesting elements of Canada case study
National circumstances shape 1) Shared jurisdiction on energy and climate policy between federal and sub- national governments 2) Important global energy producer with strong climate and energy transition agenda the policy package Complex package of policies under the Pan-Canadian Framework on Clean Growth and Climate Change A carbon price has been established as a central component of Canada’s policy package. The policy is designed as a backstop price, meaning that sub-national jurisdictions that do not meet an established benchmark will have a federal backstop price implemented, which takes the form of a carbon levy or tax, and for large final emitters the application of an output-based intensity-based tradeable performance standard, largely to help facilitate the transition for these sectors.

20 Shared jurisdiction over low-carbon energy policy
Both benefits and costs to policy being driven at the sub-national level Canada’s approach to carbon pricing: balancing federal coordination with sub- national autonomy: Backstop carbon price only applies to jurisdictions that do not meet benchmark Revenues of federally-imposed carbon price are fully returned to jurisdictions Many policy design features are left to provinces/territories Silent on jurisdictions’ GHG targets and contributions to national target Credit: Environment and Climate Change Canada

21 Complementing a carbon price with other policies in Canada
Role Acting where carbon prices do not act effectively Lowering long-term costs Strengthening a “real world” carbon price Canadian policy examples National Model Building Code Appliance energy efficiency standards Financial and research support at all stages of innovation Coal phase-out Vehicle emissions standards Carbon pricing is critical to driving energy transition, but other policies are needed.

22 Different policies in the transport sector serve different objectives
Example: Policy packages in Canada’s transport sector Policy Primary objective(s) Vehicle emissions standards Improve vehicle fuel efficiency Renewable Fuels Regulation Drive switch to biofuels in transportation and supporting infrastructure Clean Fuel Standard (proposed) Drive switch to cleaner fuels in all sectors and supporting infrastructure Support for transit and active transportation; Urban planning Drive modal shift Reduce vehicle distance travelled Carbon price Lower demand (especially in the long term) Switch to cleaner fuels Different policies in the transport sector serve different objectives

23 Industrial re-structure
Overview of climate & energy policy package in China Electricity Sector Reform (NEA) Renewable curtailment (NEA) Green Certificates (NEA) Feed-in-tariffs (NEA) Top Companies Energy Conservation (NDRC, MIIT, MOHURD) Energy Consumption Quota Trading (NDRC) Energy Supply Energy Demand Industrial re-structure Climate change National ETS (MEE) Air Pollution GHG 2030 peaking target (MEE) Coal consumption cap War on Air Pollution (MEE) Provincial and local plans +

24 Carbon pricing in China
Origin: the 12 Five-Year Plan with 7 ETS pilots operational since 2013 Launch of the national ETS in December 2017 Began in 2018, moving to full compliance in 2020 Rate-based and bottom-up determined cap Covers power sector now and will expand to include a total of 8 industrial sectors Output-based allocation, based on proposed 11 benchmarks differentiated by fuel and plant size Ongoing power sector reform taking place in parallel

25 Key questions for China ETS
What will be the role and function of the ETS? Important to define initial design and how it will evolve over time How will it interact with other energy transitions policies in China? (e.g. energy conservation, air pollution, renewable energy, economic restructure) Understanding interactions Addressing them – using mechanisms that promote flexibility and predictability How will it interact with the nature of China’s power system? Power market liberalisation and ETS development have great potential for mutual support How will it manage industry concerns (in the near-term) and phase out transitional assistance over time? Convergence of allocation benchmarks; shift to auctioning

26 Concluding points Carbon pricing plays a critical role in the policy mix for energy sector decarbonisation… …. but understanding its role, and how it layers with other policies, can be complex. A high carbon price alone does not address all the aspects of energy transition... .... Comprehensive policy packages are needed which vary by energy sub-sector and over time. Upcoming IEA work in this area: Complete paper on international ETS experiences relevant to China’s national ETS Deepen analysis on key issues raised (power sector and ETS; policy interactions)

27 Thank you Sara Moarif sara.moarif@iea.org


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