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Climate-Relevant Policy Assessment in the OECD and IEA Jan Corfee Morlot, OECD Global and Structural Policy Division, Environment email: [email protected] OECD Overview of current work 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. OECD Outlooks and policy frameworks National policy reviews Sectoral policy evaluations Analysis of policy instruments Beyond the OECD Databases and indicators Conclusions 1. Outlooks and policy frameworks • …assess climate policies in the context of environment, energy and sustainable development policies • Environment Outlook: – Aggressive policies are required for significant improvements in efficiency and penetration of new technologies – …. OECD Environmental issues: traffic lights •Some air pollutants (lead, CFCs, NOx, SOx) •Water use •Agricultural pollution •Surface water quality •Over-fishing •Forest coverage in OECD regions •Hazardous waste & toxic emissions from industry •Greenhouse gas emissions •Energy production & use •Motor vehicle & aviation air pollution •Biodiversity & Tropical forest coverage •Forest quality in OECD •Chemicals in the regions Environment OECD Ancillary Benefits or “Multiple” Benefits of GHG Mitigation Sector GHG Policy Objective Ancillary Benefit (examples) Electricity production Fuel switching away from oil and coal to fuels with low or no GHG emissions •Improved local/regional air and water quality •Improves human health •Preserve eco-system and freshwater Limits forest die-back (due to acid rain) Transport Lower emission vehicles and demand side management •Lowers congestion in cities •Improves human health costs from air pollution Agriculture Minimise use of fertilisers •Lowers nitrogen run-off from agricultural land, improving water quality Manufactur -ing Prioritise investments in energy and materials efficiency •Improve resource efficiency of industrial operations •Long term and often short term financial savings accrue; lower energy costs 1. Outlooks & policy frameworks • World Energy Outlook (2002): – Reference Scenario: Global energy-related CO2 emissions grow by 70% over the period 20002030 – Alternative scenario: in OECD countries, energy-related CO2 emissions are stabilised only towards the end of the period OECD Key Factors Affecting Energy-Related Carbon Emissions in OECD, 1970-2020 1.8 1.8 1.6 1.6 CO 2 Emissio ns 1.4 1.2 1.4 1.2 C arbo n Intensity 1 0.8 1 TPE S 0.8 Ener gy Intensi ty GDP 0.6 0.6 0.4 0.4 19 70 19 75 19 80 19 85 19 90 19 95 20 00 20 05 20 10 20 15 20 20 Source: IEA and OECD • GDP, TPES, CO2 increase relatively rapidly • Carbon intensity declines slowly, levels off recent yrs • Energy intensity steady decline OECD 2. National policy reviews • Environment Performance Reviews (EPRs): – peer reviews of OECD Member Countries’ progress towards achieving domestic environmental objectives and international commitments (similar to UNFCCC reviews) – Includes systematic review of climate policies – 4 countries per year; second cycle started in 2001 OECD 2. National policy reviews (cont) • Special “sustainable development” chapters of OECD Economic Surveys – focus on cost-effectiveness of policies – climate as selected issue for review • IEA Country Reviews – 6 IEA Member countries reviewed annually – includes review of climate/energy policies and trends (energy/carbon intensity) OECD 3. Sectoral policy assessment • Energy policy (IEA): renewables, nuclear, gas, coal, electricity • Sustainable construction and buildings • Environmentally sustainable transport • Sustainable consumption and waste • Industry/manufacturing • Agriculture OECD 4. Policy instruments: making markets work for SD and Climate • Phase out (environmentally harmful) subsidies • Make greater use of environmental taxes; remove distortionary tax provisions • Set up tradable permits systems for GHG emission OECD Phasing-out subsidies • Environmentally harmful subsidies in OECD countries are estimated at $ 400 billion in 2000, 1.9 % of GDP. – Source: OECD (2001) • Non-OECD countries: $ 340 billion, 6.3 % of GDP (1994-1999 average). – Source: van Beers and de Moor (2001) OECD Phasing-out subsidies (cont) • Agriculture: 310 billion $, 1.3% OECD GDP (2001) – Induce intensive farming, conversion of forest and wetlands into agricultural land, overuse of fertilisers and pesticides, over production (EU CAP) • Energy production: 20-30 billion $ p.a. (of which 1/3 to support coal production) OECD Implementing green tax reforms • Environmentally related taxes in OECD countries: – 7 % of total tax revenue (OECD average) – 2.5 % of GDP (range 1- 4.5%) • Price elasticities, including cross-price elasticities, high enough to justify broader use of taxes OECD d e Em pl iss et io in n No n- Eff g su s to p o lu b a in en sta ir t t n W wa s to ces as ter wa te m pol ter Un ana lutio lea gem n d Le ed ent a d pe O th ed tro er pe l tr tr an s p D ol or ies Li t en el g e H ht f rgy e a ue vy l o Na fue il tu l oi ra l lg as O th C er oa fu Co l El el s ec , s B k tr ta io e i El city tion fuel e s M ctri con ary s M otor city um use ot p or veh pro tio ve icl du n hi es, cti cle o on s, nere of cu f rr en t O zo ne Million US dollars Revenues raised on environmentally related tax-bases 21 OECD Member countries, 1995 140,000 120,000 100,000 80,000 60,000 40,000 20,000 0 OECD Removing distortionary tax provisions • Tax rate variations or exemptions such as: – – – – under-taxing transport diesel fuel under-taxing coal tax free aviation fuel (and airlines tickets) almost complete energy tax exemption to the industrial sector • Tax exemptions for specific activities: more than 1000 recorded in the OECD tax database. OECD New work on national policy instruments OECD Assessments • Environmentally-related taxes – looks at obstacles to a broader use of tax instruments, including competitiveness issues (e.g. in the steel sector) • Environmentally-harmful subsidies – comprehensive review and quantification in different sectors according to their environmental harm • VA and emission trading in the policy mix OECD GHG trading systems Linking national systems • Benefits to linking: it broadens abatement opportunities, increases market liquidity, reduces costs • Few technical barriers to linking • Without design solutions, linking can reduce environmental performance of systems • Some design solutions required to remove barriers, though these will involve additional administrative costs OECD New work on emission trading • OECD and IEA work including work of the Annex I Expert Group – develop strategic guidelines on good practice and ex-post evaluations – share information on (and analysis of) recent developments of domestic trading policies – study issues related to linkages between domestic systems – assess transition issues: Kyoto/global markets OECD 5. Beyond the OECD • Work on PAMs in the Annex I Expert Group: – Assessment of PAMs by sector (energy supply, transport, industry workshops) – Review technology-related PAMs • Strengthening institutions in EIT countries – Implementation of Convention & Protocol – Enforcement of environmental policies – Environmental finance mechanisms OECD 5. Beyond the OECD (cont) • Development Co-operation: Integrating the Rio Conventions • Jt. Project on Development and Climate: – How to enhance adaptation through development plans and development co-operation projects • Benefits of climate policies – a framework to assess long term direct and ancillary benefits • Technology Co-operation : CTI and IEA Implementing Agreements • Adverse effects of changes in fossil fuel export markets (IEA) OECD 6. Databases and Indicators • OECD/IEA/EU database on environmentally-related taxes available at www.oecd.org/env/tax-database • IEA database on energy-related climate policies: multi-year data allow for some trend analysis OECD Dealing With Climate Change: Policies and Measures in IEA Member Countries Since 1999, IEA has continually collected, reviewed and classified information on energy-related greenhouse gas mitigation measures. over 800 records, the “Dealing with Climate Change” project is one of the most extensive sources of policy information on the subject With OECD Energy Production OECD Lu l Ja y xe pa m n N bo et h ur N erl g ew an Z e ds al an N d or w P o ay rtu ga Sp l a Sw i n S w ed itz en er la U nd ni te Tu d r K ke U i ng y ni te dom d St at es Ita st ra l Au ia st Be ria lg iu C m ze Ca ch na Re da pu Eu D blic ro enm pe an ark Un i F i on nl an Fr d a G nce er m a G ny re e H ce un ga r Ire y la nd Au Policy Sector by Country, 1999-2001 100% 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% Industry Transport Buildings Policy Type by Region, 1999-2001 100% 90% 80% Share of all PAMs 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% IEA North America Fiscal OECD Tradable Permits Regulatory Instruments IEA Europe Voluntary Agreements IEA Pacific RD&D Policy Process and Outreach New work on PAMs databases • OECD/IEA/EU database on economic instruments (e.g. taxes, tradeable permits...) available soon • New IEA searchable web-site on all energyrelated climate change policies in countries – including renewable energy policies • IEA analyses of specific technology and fuel options (including renewable energy, natural gas, and carbon capture and storage) OECD 7. Conclusions: PAMs in OECD • Significant action to date in Member countries • Some success in de-coupling (e.g. c-intensity) • OECD emissions still on the rise - much remains to be done • OECD and IEA have a mandate to assess performance and promote good practice • Need to learn together and begin to look beyond OECD for lessons (e.g. Annex I and non-Annex I) OECD 7. Conclusions: Role of FCCC Subsidiary Bodies SBs play a unique role to: • Assess progress through national communications • Review key developments, emission trends, drivers and key indicators • Identify and share lessons amongst all Parties OECD • More detailed information can be found on the OECD and IEA websites: – www.oecd.org/env/cc – www.iea.org/envissu • …and in the OECD/IEA Information Paper “Climate-relevant policy assessment in the OECD, IEA, NEA and ECMT” OECD