Posted on 02/18/2011 9:40:02 AM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach
SPECIAL REPORT-The California Carbon Rush (Hold the Eureka!)
It could be worse than sticky, argues Gary Stern, a power utility executive. Stern lived through the disastrous deregulation of the California power market a decade ago and fears the carbon market will be small and open to manipulation. The state refuses to set a limit for prices. Traders could learn how to corner the market (think Enron) and then hold hostage utilities and factories with no option but to buy sky-high permits on the open market.
State officials say they are working on new safeguards to stop just such efforts and will unveil them in July. California also plans to hire an external monitor to watch the markets a key recommendation of Stern. Im not saying we would expect the same thing to occur in the emissions markets, he said. However, we didnt expect that to occur in the electricity markets.
Even if all goes well, nine years of carbon trade wont be enough to end worries about climate change, especially if other states and nations dont pitch in.
The ambition doesnt add up in terms of what the science is calling for. In fact it doesnt get close, said Greenpeace forest campaigner Rolf Skar, who derides the decision to give away any pollution permits at all. He also turns up his nose at Californias plans to let industry pay for offsets projects to soak up carbon, such as forest management.
Offsets are seen as an important price safety valve letting a redwood grow bigger to capture carbon in its wood is cheaper than building a carbon-free power plant, and a substantial portion of Californias emissions reductions could come from such schemes.
Owners typically pay contractors to verify such projects which is not dissimilar to a bond issuer paying a credit agency to rate it but designers say the offset program avoids conflicts of interest and project standards are extremely strict.
To make a serious dent in emissions, regulators will target transportation. Cars, trucks and planes spew out 40 percent of the states carbon, more than utilities or industry.
The states climate change law could have been called the California Petroleum Use Reduction Act, Mary Nichols, Californias top climate change regulator, joked last year.
The state is the third biggest user of gasoline in the world, after the U.S. as a whole and China, but drivers can change emissions very quickly by leaving the car in the garage or buying a new, more efficient, car.
You are just trying to get people to drive less, effectively, which is probably going to be quite expensive, said Sikorski of Barclays.
Auto fuels are pulled into the cap-and-trade system in 2015. Gasoline prices are sure to rise as distributors are forced to buy carbon permits.
full story here
We can only hope the idiots in charge have some sort of stop-loss mechanism built in to limit the new debt this will pile on California's taxpayers.
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polistra says:
Arrggghh. We need to stop listening to these experts who claim that something or other was unexpected.
The people who design these systems know exactly what to expect, and have their Swiss bank accounts open and ready for the expected result. After its done and theyve stolen a few trillions, the experts go around repeating the word unexpected, because this magic incantation prevents lawsuits.
There is no such thing as an unintended consequence.
Pull the plug on CA. The patient is brain dead and we need the bed for a state we can still save.
They think they do...we’ll see.
As they said in a recent popular movie, "Stupid is as stupid does!"
California and other states with insanely high budget obligations are amusing to watch, but only if you do not reside in one.
WE have come to expect the unexpected in labor reports as well as global cooling/global warming/global climate change reports.
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James Sexton says:
On a very related note, ..pop quiz! Who said, The conventional viewpoint says we need a jobs program and we need to cut welfare. Just the opposite! We need more welfare and fewer jobs. Jobs for every American is doomed to failure because of modern automation and production????
Give up?
The newly elected governor of Cali, Jerry Moonbeam Brown, on his radio show 1995. Steve Goddard covered this little jewel. My sympathy to all the sane people left in Cali,
both of them.
Johnny Cash version:
That’s a good one too.
That song popped into my head as soon as I saw the coupon. LOL
Thanks Ernest.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZEZU2kPKctI
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eLa9uq-f-kY
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