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EU Biofuel Policy and Development Christopher Stevens Presentation to International Consulting Economists’ Association, 12 February 2008
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EU Biofuel Policy Development: ICEA, 12 February 2008 2 Clearing the decks (1) How are biofuels different from other: exports; import substitution goods? If demand increases sharply: resources will move out of other areas: either directly – maize to jatropha; or indirectly – ‘Dutch disease’. Possible key issues: demand is policy driven, so volatile; goods not necessarily sourced from lowest-’cost’ supplier; effect of resource competition very visible.
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EU Biofuel Policy Development: ICEA, 12 February 2008 3 Clearing the decks (2) Which countries do/will produce more: for import substitution: depends on relative oil/biofuel costs; for export: depends on biofuel/alternative export price; market access. Some examples: Brazil: yes for import substitution / ? for export; Mauritius: ? for import substitution / no for export; Mozambique: no for exports.
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EU Biofuel Policy Development: ICEA, 12 February 2008 4 EU biofuel policy objectives 1.Reduce greenhouse gas emissions. 2.Boost the decarbonisation of transport fuels. 3.Diversify fuel supply sources and develop long-term replacement fuels. 4.Offer new opportunities to diversify income and employment in rural areas. In reality, (3) and (4) take precedence.
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EU Biofuel Policy Development: ICEA, 12 February 2008 5 EU supports for biofuels EU subsidy to biofuels occurs via: direct subsidy for energy crops; some direct subsidies ‘at the petrol pump’; indirect support through protection from imports. Nos (1) and (3) are directed just to EU suppliers.
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EU Biofuel Policy Development: ICEA, 12 February 2008 6 EU trade policy No CN codes for ‘biofuels’. But we can see: countries with low/zero tariffs unlikely to supply (because they have free access for sugar); countries able to supply (e.g. Brazil, Pakistan) face high tariffs; and national standards vary.
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EU Biofuel Policy Development: ICEA, 12 February 2008 7 EU tariffs on major biofuels and foodstocks CodeDescriptionTariff payable under selected import regimes MFNGSPGSP+Cotonou Ethanol 22071000Undenatured ethyl alcohol of actual alcoholic strength of >= 80% 19.2€/hln/a00 22072000Denatured ethyl alcohol and other spirits of any strength 10.2€/hln/a00 Bioethanol constituents 10030090Barley (excluding seed) See note (a)n/a Within the limit of the quota [15,000 tons] reduction 50%. 10059000Maize (excluding seed)Reduction 1.81€/ton 12129920Sugar cane4.6€/100 kg netn/a 3.8€/100 kg net 17031000Cane molasses resulting from the extraction or refining of sugar See note (b)n/a Within the limit of the quota [600,000 tons] reduction 100%. Biodiesel constituents 1507Soya-bean oil 3.2-9.60-6.100 1508Groundnut oil 0-9.60-6.100 1511Palm oil 0-12.80-4.400 1513Coconut copra, palm kernel or babassu oil 2.5-12.80-8.900 1514Rape, colza or mustard oil 3.2-9.60-6.100
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EU Biofuel Policy Development: ICEA, 12 February 2008 8 The oil-food price link: two stylised scenarios Scenario 1: oil price rises leading to diversion of resources from food to biofuel production; food prices rise; all oil/food importing countries face adverse t-t shift; biofuel producing countries have partly offsetting gain. Scenario 2: oil price rises leading to new production of biofuels; food prices not affected; all oil importing countries face adverse t-t shift; biofuel producing countries have partly offsetting gain.
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EU Biofuel Policy Development: ICEA, 12 February 2008 9 The link with EU policy EU policy: makes scenario 1 more likely; makes offsetting biofuel export gains less likely. EU producer subsidies increase likelihood of biofuel- food resource diversion: because conversion efficiency is low; because likelihood of new production is low. EU trade policy limits scope to export biofuels.
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EU Biofuel Policy Development: ICEA, 12 February 2008 10 A modest proposal Whether or not new EU targets will cause development problems is an empirical question but: more feasible with liberal trade than without; more feasible if biofuel production encouraged in areas where most likely to be additonal. Use GSP to give Brazil, Pakistan … duty-free access for denatured ethanol. Merits: by limiting to ethanol ACP/LDC sugar exports continue; by using GSP environmental conditionality a possibility.
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EU Biofuel Policy and Development Christopher Stevens Presentation to International Consulting Economists’ Association, 12 February 2008
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