Extract from The Guardian
Signing declaration at the Paris climate talks
‘recognises the role a carbon market might play after 2020’,
foreign minister Julie Bishop says
IMF managing director Christine Lagarde on carbon:
policy makers need to ‘price it right, tax it smart and do it now’.
Photograph: Bao Dandan/Xinhua Press/Corbis
Lenore
Taylor in Paris
Thursday 10 December 2015 08.08 AEDT
Australia has signed a Paris declaration calling
for new clear rules for international carbon trading in a signal the
Coalition’s six-year carbon pricing policy veto could be softening
as it prepares to review its climate policy in 2017.
Foreign minister Julie
Bishop, who signed the declaration in Paris, said it was in
Australia’s interests to recognise the role an international carbon
market might play in reducing emissions after 2020.
“It’s just a declaration, it’s not legally
binding,” she said after a speech to an event organised by
Australia’s Carbon Market Institute.
“It’s signalling our commitment to working
with others about rules for a carbon market post 2020. The detail is
for each country to include in their domestic policies, and this is
something Australia will consider in due course.
“It is a declaration that recognises the role a
carbon market might play after 2020 and we thought it would be in our
national interest to sign up to it,” she said.
“We are engaging closely with business as we
work towards developing and reviewing our domestic climate policies
in 2017 and we deeply appreciate the private sector’s interest in
accessing international [carbon] units and recognise international
carbon markets are also a key part of the global effort to reduce
emissions. Carbon markets can provide flexibility for countries and
companies to use genuine and verified international units to help
meet their commitments.”
The declaration, pushed by New Zealand and set to
be announced at the end of the Paris meeting, calls for countries to
work on transparent rules for carbon trading after 2020 so that they
have the choice to enter into bilateral or multilateral carbon
trading arrangements.
The Coalition has said it will review its Direct
Action climate policy in 2017, including the so-called safeguards
mechanism – which could at that time become a baseline and credit
emissions trading scheme – and also whether businesses will be able
to buy offshore carbon permits.
The quality of international carbon markets has
been of concern to the Coalition in the past. Tony Abbott once
described buying international permits as being like sending “money
… offshore into dodgy carbon farms in Equatorial Guinea and
Kazakhstan”.
Australia’s opposition to allowing businesses to
buy offshore permits began to soften towards the end of Abbott’s
prime ministership, and is now considered almost inevitable after
2017.
Bishop said the declaration was not about domestic
climate policy, but companies only need offshore credits if they have
a domestic liability.
At the moment the “baselines” or benchmarks
set for emissions from the 140 businesses covered by the safeguards
mechanism are set to stop wild increases in emissions, with no
business ever likely to exceed them.
But the 2017 review will consider whether they
should be tightened to make sure policies can achieve the 2030
emissions reduction target Australia has pledged in Paris; to allow
businesses who exceed their baselines to buy emission reduction
credits from those who have managed to do better; and whether they
should be able to source permits offshore. The review could also
consider other versions of carbon pricing.
Environment minister Greg Hunt has said the
“safeguards mechanism” is slated to deliver 200m tonnes of
greenhouse gas abatement by 2030 – something that would require
major change.
There has been an overwhelming consensus from
business groups in Paris that a carbon price would be the most
efficient mechanism to drive deep emission reductions.
On
the first day of the talks the World Bank, the International
Monetary Fund and six heads of state launched the carbon pricing
leadership coalition, which called on all countries to start pricing
carbon pollution. The coalition includes more than 90 businesses and
non government organisations.
IMF managing director Christine Lagarde said “the
right carbon price” had to be at the centre of reducing emissions
and “given the slump in energy prices, there has never been a
better time to transition to smart, credible and effective carbon
pricing”.
“Policy makers need to price it right, tax it
smart and do it now,” she said,
The
call was backed by Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau,
Mexican president Enrique Peña Nieto, French president François
Hollande, German chancellor Angela Merkel, Chilean president Michelle
Bachelet Jeria, and Ethiopian prime minister Hailemariam Desalegn.
World Bank group president Jim Yong Kim said it
was important to get “momentum” behind carbon pricing.
Labor’s environment minister Mark Butler told
the same Carbon Markets Institute event Labor remained convinced that
a cap and trade scheme was the most effective policy, but indicated
Labor might reconsider – in the interests of business certainty –
if the Coalition won the next election and established its safeguards
mechanism as a working baseline and credit scheme.
He said businesses told him a baseline and credit
scheme was a “clunkier model” and that they would prefer cap and
trade, but he said “if years down the track it has become a serious
proposition and has deep roots and everyone has constructed their
operations around it, then come back to me”.
Lewis Tyndall, co-founder of GreenCollar – a
firm that has been a big winner from the government’s Direct Action
auctions, told the same event: “Greg Hunt has described the
safeguards mechanism as a baseline and credit system ... everybody is
saying we should have a carbon markets of some kind, from a tax to
baseline and credit system to an emissions trading scheme, and we
agree.”
Greens leader Richard Di Natale said he was
disappointed at the lack of ambition in the Australian government’s
position in Paris.
“We continue to be one of the few countries who
advocate the use of fossil fuels as a solution to poverty,” he
said.
New Zealand is particularly keen for clear
international carbon trading rules as its domestic emissions are
largely from agriculture and it has limited options to reduce them.
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