The impact of Brexit on climate and energy policy

17

Click here to load reader

Transcript of The impact of Brexit on climate and energy policy

Page 1: The impact of Brexit on climate and energy policy

The impact of Brexit onclimate and energy policy

Richard S.J. TolUniversity of Sussex

Vrije Universiteit, AmsterdamTinbergen Institute

CESifo

Page 2: The impact of Brexit on climate and energy policy

Outline

• EU Emission Trading System

• Impact of ETSexit on EU

• Impact of ETSexit on UK– Costs

– Financial sector

– Regulations

• Nuclear power

• Interconnection

• Ireland

Page 3: The impact of Brexit on climate and energy policy

EU ETS

• Tradable emission permits– Regulator sets a cap on total emissions, issues

permits.

– Companies that want to emit more than allowed buy additional permits from companies that want to emit less.

– If market works well, all companies face the same emission reduction cost at the margin.

• The EU Emissions Trading System is the world’s largest emission permit market.

• ETS regulates some 45% of all greenhouse gas emissions in the EU, from some 11,000 installations.

Page 4: The impact of Brexit on climate and energy policy

EU ETS

• Started in 2005

• Now in Phase 3, from 2013 to 2020

• Emission permits are issued by Member States– Partly auctioned

– Partly grandparented

• Monitoring and enforcement by Member States

• Emission permits are valid in all of the EU.

• Permit do not have a country of origin.

• Emission permit gives the right to emit a tonne of carbon dioxide (or equivalent) at any time after January 1, 2013.

Page 5: The impact of Brexit on climate and energy policy

ETSexit

• The UK will leave the EU on March 30, 2019.

• Brexit means that the UK will leave the ECJ.

• ECJexit implies ETSexit.

• Not inevitable: Norway, Iceland, Liechtenstein are in the EU ETS.

• Swiss ETS is linked to EU ETS, overseen by PCA.

• If there is a transition agreement that keeps the UK in the ETS until the end of 2020, DG Climate Action will need to redo some of its preparatory work for Phase 4.

Page 6: The impact of Brexit on climate and energy policy

Impact on EU27

• Without a transition agreement …

• Total amount of permits will need to be adjusted downwards by some 270 mln tCO2, the UK allocation for 2019 and 2020.

• This is small relative to the 900 mln tCO2 of delayed permits that the EU plans to reinject into the market in 2019 and 2020.

• On 30 March 2019, EU will stop buying permits from the UK, and will need to declare that all permits in circulation are valid.

• Permit sale, emission and verification are not synchronous, so there will unvalidated permits.

Page 7: The impact of Brexit on climate and energy policy

Impact on EU27

• The UK is a net importer of permits.

• Permit price would fall.

• After the referendum, ETS price dropped by 20%, from €5.86 to €4.67/tCO2

Page 8: The impact of Brexit on climate and energy policy

Impact on EU27

• Increasing share of emission permits are auctioned.

• 90% of auction revenue goes to the Member State in which the buyer is incorporated.

• 10% goes to Eastern Europe.

• €150 million

• UK has been a green champion in the EU.

• Balance will shift to brown position of France, Poland.

• Weaker voice in international climate negotiations.

Page 9: The impact of Brexit on climate and energy policy

Impact on UK - ETS

• In 2013 (2014), 19% (25%) of emission reductions in the UK were met by imported permits.

• House of Commons has voted to maintain targets in Climate Change Act 2008.

• Clean Growth Strategy reaffirms this.

• Without permit imports, climate policy will be 40% more expensive.

• Climate policy cost 0.5% (CCC) to 0.9% (Lilley) of GDP in 2020.

• ETSexit alone will cost 0.2-0.4% of GDP by 2020.

Page 10: The impact of Brexit on climate and energy policy

Impact on UK - Finance

• City is heart of permit trade.

• In 2013, 1.7 billion permits were sold by UK companies.

• In 2013, UK emissions were 0.5 billion tCO2e.

• Permits do not have a country of origin, but the current permit owner does. The EU will have no choice but to close the door to UK companies selling permits.

Page 11: The impact of Brexit on climate and energy policy

Impact on UK - Regulation• Some 55% of UK emission reduction measure

originate in EU laws and regulations.

• The UK has 18 months to fix this.

• EU (Withdrawal) Bill will create a UK ETS, identical to EU ETS (but less liquid).

• The UK has a “carbon” tax.

• DECC has been folded into BEIS, which is losing people.

• BEIS has been silent on Brexit, also in Clean Growth Strategy.

• Committee on Climate Change:– UK would not import permits anyway.

– Policy implementation lags behind targets.

Page 12: The impact of Brexit on climate and energy policy

Impact on UK - EurAtom• UK climate policy has two additional planks:

nuclear and interconnection.

• Hinkley Point C (3.2 MW) and Sizewell C (1.6 MW) are only the start: 9 more units (14.2 MW) are foreseen (initially for 2030).

• Civilian use of nuclear power is regulated by EurAtom, which is overseen by the ECJ.

• Foreign companies would not be allowed to sell fuel, equipment or know-how to the UK until– regulations are non-proliferation compliant; and

– nuclear inspectorate has IAEA accreditation.

• Further delays: Hinkley C was announced in 2008 for 2018-9, now 2025-7

Page 13: The impact of Brexit on climate and energy policy

Impact on UK - interconnection• UK has 5 GW

interconnection, plans another 11 GW.

• Power markets are heavily regulated for capacity, frequency, reliability, environment, price, access.

Page 14: The impact of Brexit on climate and energy policy

Impact on UK - interconnection• Power markets are heavily regulated for

capacity, frequency, reliability, environment, price, access.

• A merchant interconnector buys power in one jurisdiction, sells in another … regulatory uncertainty doubled.

• UK policy has focussed on retail market (where the votes are), EU policy on wholesale market (where the problems are).

• Regulatory convergence and certainty has stimulated interest in interconnection – gone now.

Page 15: The impact of Brexit on climate and energy policy

Ireland• The Single

Electricity Market for generation and transmission started in 2007, overseen by EirGrid and SONI, and ECJ.

• Assets owned by Irish, US, British companies.

• SONI is NI gov’t.

Page 16: The impact of Brexit on climate and energy policy

Ireland• The Single Electricity Market will end if SONI

should be free of the ECJ.

• Northern Ireland would have a small* and, because of economies of scale in generation and reliability, expensive grid with severe market power in the wholesale market.

• Major costs imposed on Republic of Ireland, which relies on the UK for gas storage.

* 1.9 v 6.7 million people

Page 17: The impact of Brexit on climate and energy policy

Wrap-up• Brexit creates a few small problems in energy

and climate policy for the EU as a whole, but bigger problems for the Republic of Ireland.

• Brexit undermines three central planks of UK climate and energy policy, and destroys Northern Ireland energy policy.

• BEIS and CCC pretend there is no problem.