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Economic Impacts of RGGI: Following the Dollars Paul J. Hibbard The Economic Impacts of the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative on the Ten Northeast and Mid-Atlantic States Raab Roundtable – February 2012 Raab Roundtable Study of the Economic Impacts of RGGI Foundation- Funded Study (11-2011): Technical Advisory Group Only requirement from the funders: independent, with full editorial control by Analysis Group team Team: Paul Hibbard, Sue Tierney, Andrea Okie, Pavel Darling Electricity Journal Article (12-2011) February 17, 2012 David Conover, Sr. VP, Bipartisan Policy Center Richard Corey, Chief, Stat Source Div, CARB Nathan Hultman, Director, Environmental Policy Program, School of Public Policy, University of MD Brian Jones, Sr. VP, M.J. Bradley & Associates John “Skip” Laitner, Director, Economic and Social Analysis, ACEEE Michelle Manion, Climate & Energy Team Leader, NESCAUM Brian Murray, Director for Economic Analysis, Nicholas Institute, Duke University Karen Palmer, Senior Fellow, RFF Eric Svenson, Sr. VP, Policy and Environment, Health and Safety, PSEG Alexander “Sandy” Taft, Director, U.S. Climate Change Policy, National Grid Page 2 Raab Roundtable What the study is not… Review of carbon reduction benefits Review of environmental impacts What the study is… …of actual revenues, actual programs, actual impacts Evaluation of need for a carbon control program Forecast of future program participation, effectiveness, results Assessment of appropriateness of cap level Analysis of carbon market February 17, 2012 Economic study Following the money …through the electric sector …and through the macro economy Measuring results Page 3 Raab Roundtable Bottom line results: Net positive economic impacts for: the 10 RGGI states together, and for each state participating in RGGI Across the region, the initial $0.9 billion in CO2 allowance auction proceeds translates to $1.6 billion in net economic value added Economic value results from the various ways states spent auction proceeds: Biggest economic bang for buck: energy efficiency program support Economic value also created by other ways money recirculates in local economies (e.g., customer bill rebates, general fund contributions) February 17, 2012 Page 4 Raab Roundtable Study Approach: Following the Money…. Dollar Flows from RGGI Auction Proceeds through State Spending Impacts RGGI Auctions Collect Money $912 million over 3 years RGGI Proceeds Received by States Money Mandated to Programs Money Actually Allocated to Programs • Different states • • • • Different programs Different agencies Different tracking methods Different assumptions Money Released to Programs Initial Impact of Money Spent Impacts (+ and -) in electric sector and larger economy during first three years of RGGI (2009-2011) Ongoing Impact of Money Spent February 17, 2012 Impacts in electric sector and larger economy (2009-2021) Page 5 Raab Roundtable Run the $ Through the Power System and the Economy… Quarterly auction cycles Flow of Data and Modeling Outcomes Auction Proceeds Spent by RGGI States Purchases of CO2 Allowances by FossilFuel Generators ELECTRIC SYSTEM EFFECTS Lower Consumer Demand for Electricity Fossil Fuel Generators Increase Market Bids to Reflect CO2 Costs Dispatch Order of Changes for Some Power Plants $ Electricity Price Effects $ Decreased Consumer Demand ↓ Increased Generator Costs ↑ Changing Dispatch Order ↑↓ Various Other Forms of Program Funding (Education, Direct Bill Assistance, Program Admin, etc) Energy Efficiency and Renewable Project Funding Bill Reductions for Consumers Macro-economic impacts: Direct effects of RGGI program spending, consumer gains, and producer loss Indirect and induced effects of multiplier effects of gains and losses IMPLAN GE MAPS MACROECONOMIC EFFECTS RGGI Auctions Net Revenue Loss for Generators Power Plant Owners February 17, 2012 Consumers Page 6 Raab Roundtable Auction and Direct Sales Proceeds 1,000 From left to right: Vermont 900 Rhode Island Delaware 800 Maine New Hampshire RGGI Proceeds (millions of $) 700 $912 M Downward trend in auction proceeds from 2009-2011 results from: -Fewer allowances sold over time -Lower allowance prices over time Connecticut New Jersey Massachusetts 600 Maryland New York 500 All RGGI States 400 300 200 100 2009 2010 2011 Source: RGGI Inc. Notes: Figures include Auctions 1-13 and direct sales proceeds for New Jersey (2009) and Connecticut (2009/2010). Auction proceeds from Auctions 1 and 2 are reflected in the 2009 values. February 17, 2012 Total Page 7 Raab Roundtable % Use of RGGI 11% auction proceeds ($912 million)1% across the 10 states and in the 3 electric regions 10 RGGI states 6 New England States General Fund/State Government Funding EE and other Utility Programs and Audits & Benchmarking Renewable Investment Education & Outreach and Job Training Direct Bill Assistance GHG Programs and Program Administration New York (NYISO) DE, MD, NJ (PJM) EE and other Utility Programs and Audits & Benchmarking Education & Outreach and Job Training GHG Programs and Program Administration Source: Individual state reports and interviews. Note: Certain grant programs may include multiple components, and are categorized in the figure above based on the largest share of spending. February 17, 2012 Page 8 Raab Roundtable Overall economic impacts – 10 states $1.6 billion – economic value added in the region (NPV*) $0.9 billion – auction proceeds (mid-2008 through Q3 2011) $1.1 billion – consumer savings (electricity customers) (NPV*) $0.17 billion – consumer savings (natural gas & oil heat customers) (NPV*) $1.6 – lower revenues to power plant owners (NPV*) billion $0.77 billion – fewer dollars spent on out-of-region fossil fuel (NPV*) 16,000 jobs – jobs created 0.7 percent – average electricity bill increases during 3-year RGGI period [with savings over time given energy efficiency implemented with RGGI funds] * Using a 3% social discount rate February 17, 2012 Page 9 Raab Roundtable Total Economic Impact – Value Added and Job-Years 1 Value Added (millions of $) Connecticut Maine Massachusetts New Hampshire Rhode Island Vermont New England Subtotal $ Employment 2 $ 189 92 498 17 69 22 888 1,309 918 3,791 458 567 195 7,237 New York New York Subtotal $ $ 326 326 4,620 4,620 Delaware Maryland New Jersey RGGI States in PJM Subtotal $ $ 63 127 151 341 535 1,370 1,772 3,676 Regional Impact3 $ 57 601 Grand Total $ 1,612 16,135 Notes: [1] Value Added reflects the actual economic value added to the state and regional economies, and therefore does not include the costs of goods purchased from or manufactured outside of the state or region. [2] Employment represents job-years as outputted from IMPLAN. [3] Regional Impact reflects the indirect and induced impacts resulting within the RGGI region as a result of state dollar impacts. [4] Results are discounted to 2011 dollars using a 3% social discount rate. February 17, 2012 Page 10 Raab Roundtable Figure 6 7% Summary of RGGI Proceed Spending New England Figure 6 RGGI60% States in PJM 27% 7% Summary of RGGI Proceed Spending RGGI States in PJM 50% Percent of Total Revenues Percent of Value Added 27% 40% New41% York 30%13% 41% 13% 11% 11% PJM States (DE, MD, NJ) 1% 20% 10% 0% 1% New England General Fund/State Government Funding EE and other Utility Programs and Audits & Benchmarking Renewable Investment Education & Outreach and Job Training Direct Bill Assistance GHG Programs and Program Administration General Fund/State Government Funding EE and other Utility Programs and Audits & Benchmarking Renewable Investment Education & Outreach and Job Training Direct Bill Assistance GHG Programs and Program Administration February 17, 2012 New York PJM States Page 11 Raab Roundtable Value Added Multipliers: Average impacts within RGGI states Direct Bill Assistance Consumer Bill Reductions Program Administration and GHG Programs Energy Efficiency: Combines these various elements General Fund Education and Job Training Audits and Benchmarking EE - Commercial Retrofits, New Construction and Renewables Direct Value Added Power Plant Owner Net Revenue Indirect and Induced Value Added EE - Residential Retrofits and New Construction EE - Residential Lighting EE - Appliances $0 $200,000 $400,000 $600,000 $800,000 $1,000,000 $1,200,000 $1,400,000 $1,600,000 $1,800,000 Note: Each bar represents the average value added to the ten RGGI states' economies as a result of spending $1 million in each of the areas that RGGI money is allocated in the states. February 17, 2012 Page 12 Raab Roundtable Top 3 take-aways • RGGI cap/trade program integrated well with electric markets, and generated positive economic value, because… • Allowances were auctioned, capturing value for public use • Majority of funds used in ways that maximized economic benefit (energy efficiency) February 17, 2012 Page 13 Raab Roundtable A mandatory, market-based carbon control mechanism is functioning properly and can deliver positive economic benefits • Program has integrated seamlessly in regional power markets • States have collected/disbursed revenues, and worked cooperatively RGGI reduces region’s payments for out-of-state fossil fuels • Reduced generation (due to lower consumption) reduces payment for fuels • Represents additional funds that stay mostly within state economies A Region’s existing generating mix affects economic impacts • Carbon intensity of resource mix affects magnitude of impacts on revenues for power sector February 17, 2012 Page 14 Raab Roundtable The design of the CO2 market in the RGGI states affected the size, character, and distribution of public benefits • Decision by RGGI states to auction allowances transfers emission rights from public to private sector at a monetary cost • Retains value of allowances – and generates substantial revenue – for public use (preventing transfer of that value to plant owners) • Price impacts on electric markets the same either way February 17, 2012 Page 15 Raab Roundtable How allowance proceeds are used affects their economic impacts • States used funds in different ways, providing a wide variety of public benefits not captured in economic analysis • This does not decrease the value of different investment vehicles • However, how funds are used does affect economic impact • • Energy efficiency investments have strongest positive economic impact • • • Reduces consumption (particularly for participants) Depresses wholesale prices (for all) Keeps impacts largely within electric sector Other investments have strong returns, transferring value to other sectors of the economy • • • February 17, 2012 Direct bill assistance General fund contributions Education and job training Page 16 Raab Roundtable Positive job impacts with RGGI • Results in thousands of jobs more than non-RGGI case • • • • 16,000 “job-years” Reflects direct, indirect, induced jobs Some may be temporary, others longer term All associated only with first three years of program investments (but occur throughout the study period) • Jobs spread around economy, e.g. • • • • Personnel doing energy efficiency audits Installers of energy efficiency measures or renewable projects Trainers, educators State workers whose responsibilities might otherwise be eliminated due to budget challenges February 17, 2012 Page 17 Raab Roundtable RGGI’s first 3 Years of program investments point to some best practices • More rapid movement of revenues to investment vehicles speeds realization of benefits • Energy efficiency dominates benefit calculus • Standardization of tracking, measuring and verifying spending and results could reduce administrative burden of tracking progress and measuring benefits/costs • • States have done a good job But variation across states makes consistent tracking challenging February 17, 2012 Page 18 Raab Roundtable The states have used CO2 allowance proceeds creatively – supporting diverse policy and economic outcomes • Use of RGGI revenues has allowed states to meet a wide variety of social, fiscal, and environmental policy goals • • • • • Addressing budget challenges Assisting low-income energy consumers Restoring wetlands Promoting advanced energy technologies Assistance to municipalities and businesses through renewable and energy efficiency funding February 17, 2012 Page 19 Raab Roundtable Paul J. Hibbard Analysis Group 111 Huntington Avenue, 10th Floor Boston, MA 20199 [email protected] 617-425-8171 February 17, 2012 Page 20