Carbon markets to struggle after Cancun

CANCUN, Mexico, (Reuters) – Global carbon markets  will struggle after the deal reached at annual U.N. climate  talks did little to ensure mandatory emissions caps would be  extended next year.

The modest deal forged after two weeks of talks in Cancun  commits rich countries, from 2020, to finance $100 billion a  year in climate aid for poor countries. It also sets a target  to limit the rise in average world temperatures to less than 2  degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit).

But it delayed the extremely difficult task of extending  the 1997 Kyoto Protocol until next year’s talks in South  Africa. In Cancun, Japan, Canada and Russia said they would not  support a second phase of Kyoto if it did not include caps on  the United States and rapidly developing countries like China.

Kyoto, which expires in 2012, obliges all developed  countries — except the United States, which never ratified it  — to cut emissions blamed for warming the planet or face  penalties.

It was the pact’s binding emissions cuts, and expectations  of tougher ones after a first phase, that gave birth to the  European Union’s Emissions Trading Scheme, the world’s only  carbon market that operates at national levels, as a way for  businesses to meet mandatory caps.

“The outcome of Cancun does not change the fact that most  of the important work of cutting emissions will be driven  outside the U.N. process,” said Michael Levi of the Council on  Foreign Relations in New York.

But after a bleak year, carbon markets will not do that  work either.

Banks let go many emissions traders even before the U.S.  climate bill failed in July. Canada’s Senate failed to pass a  climate bill, Australia postponed legislation and Japan is  struggling to set up a cap-and-trade market.

The Cancun agreement locked into the U.N. process a pledge  last year by China to reduce its emissions intensity, or amount  of carbon released for every unit of economic output. But it  paved no path for the world’s largest coal producer and  greenhouse gas emitter to embark on mandatory emissions  targets.

Cancun also did little to cheer bankers and brokers trying  to build a global carbon market who had hoped the world would  now be on its way to a trillion dollars or more per year of  emissions transactions.

If carbon markets remain weak and fragmented, they will do  little to tackle global warming because they fail to push the  price on carbon high enough to force emitters to make  billion-dollar clean energy investments vast wind and solar  farms, nuclear energy and carbon capture and sequestration  (CCS).

Bright spots

The U.N. deal provided some bright spots for carbon  markets, like taking steps to reform the Clean Development  Mechanism, in which polluters in the EU market pay for  emissions-cutting projects, known as offsets, in developing  countries to get credit at home.

The deal also allowed CCS to be counted as an offset, which  could lead to advances in the technology where carbon is  siphoned from coal plants and factories and buried underground  in hopes it will never reach the atmosphere.

And advances were made in reducing emissions from forest  degradation and deforestation, or REDD, an U.N. offset  program.

So far the program has generated only voluntary carbon  credits as businesses look to enhance their green image and  prepare for carbon pollution limits expected sometime in the  future. But carbon traders and environmentalists believe it can  slowly be turned into a mechanism to help save carbon-storing  forests in the Amazon, Indonesia and the Congo basin.
But progress could be slow.

“Lack of specifics on finance, including future use of  carbon markets, is a concern,” Abyd Karmali, global head of  carbon markets at Bank of America Merrill Lynch, said about the  Cancun deal.

Carbon prices in the EU market, now hovering around 14.5  euros or $19.20 a tonne, were expected to react more to EU  policies than anything that happened in Cancun. Those prices  are less than half of what would be needed to drive polluters  that burn coal to invest in nuclear energy and CCS at home.

“For the market, the expectations were low for Cancun,  because the expectations of the negotiators were low,” said  Evan Ard, a spokesman for Evolution Markets, an emissions and  energy brokerage. “The market is now focused on the  sub-national and regional developments.”

Developers in the United States, where emissions markets  were invented, have much work to do.

California will launch a carbon market in 2012 but growth  will be slow as the struggling economy has already pushed  emissions down.

Prices in regional emissions market on the U.S. East Coast  have sunk to a low below $2 per ton. Toughening the region’s  emissions cap would raise prices. But governors from the 10  states in the pact have showed no signs they can do that during  hard economic times.

“Neither the United States nor China … look willing to  take leadership roles in tackling greenhouse gas emissions,”  Robert Johnston, director of energy and natural resources at  the Eurasia Group, wrote in a research note.

“Ongoing disagreements between developed and developing  countries … on burden sharing are likely to impede progress  at the next U.N. summit in South Africa.”