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Banks Urging U.S. to Adopt the Trading of Emissions
NY Times ^ | September 26, 2007 | JAMES KANTER

Posted on 09/26/2007 11:16:21 PM PDT by neverdem

PARIS, Sept. 25 — A group representing some of the world’s leading banks will urge the United States and other industrial nations this week to move quickly to introduce a lightly regulated system for trading carbon emissions permits.

Permit-trading systems offer banks a potentially vast new business. For it to grow, leading economies — particularly the United States — will need to set limits on the quantities of greenhouse gases that can be released and to allow companies in other parts of the world to buy emissions permits.

“Where politicians opt to implement carbon constraints, then it should be cap-and-trade,” said Imtiaz Ahmad, head of emissions trading at Morgan Stanley in London and vice president of a lobbying group called International Carbon Investors and Services, which is being created to represent the banks.

The banking companies, which include Citigroup, Lehman Brothers Holdings and Morgan Stanley, are giving strong signs that Wall Street wants Washington to open the way to reduced emissions using a trading system based on the Kyoto Protocol, an agreement the United States did not ratify, rather than by enacting carbon taxes.

The group also includes European institutions like BNP Paribas, Barclays Capital and Deutsche Bank, as well as niche investment banks like Climate Change Capital and the law firms of Baker & McKenzie and DLA Piper.

A Kyoto-style trading system already operates in the European Union, where governments limit the polluting emissions that industries are allowed and require purchases of permits for any excess. But the European system had a rocky start. Overallocation led to volatility and a collapse in the price of permits last year.

Even though analysts say the European overallocation problem has largely been corrected, the banks are pushing for the European Union to auction permits to ensure that they are scarcer and...

(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Front Page News; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: airpollution; bankfartcredit; bankfartscredits; bankpollution; carbondioxide; climatechange; fartcredits; flatulencecredits; globalwarming; halfbakedfartcredits; health; nwoclimatecredits; science
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To: Beowulf

bttt


41 posted on 09/27/2007 5:11:46 PM PDT by steelyourfaith
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To: neverdem

“Trading emissions” sounds vulgar somehow.


42 posted on 09/27/2007 5:14:40 PM PDT by gitmo (From now on, ending a sentence with a preposition is something up with which I will not put.)
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To: GeneralisimoFranciscoFranco

I have no problem with banks trading carbon offsets. As long as no one is required to particpate, it is just fine.


43 posted on 09/27/2007 5:19:39 PM PDT by gitmo (From now on, ending a sentence with a preposition is something up with which I will not put.)
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To: neverdem

And some folks thought gold advocates were a little nutty... This takes the cake...


44 posted on 09/27/2007 5:21:45 PM PDT by Dead Corpse (What would a free man do?)
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