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CAP AND TRADE Investing in a Parachute Daniel Reader Dept. of Geography & Geology September 13, 2010

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Page 1: C AP AND T RADE Investing in a Parachute Daniel Reader Dept. of Geography & Geology September 13, 2010

CAP AND TRADEInvesting in a Parachute

Daniel Reader Dept. of Geography &

Geology

September 13, 2010

Page 2: C AP AND T RADE Investing in a Parachute Daniel Reader Dept. of Geography & Geology September 13, 2010

CLIMATE CHANGE

Natural flux due to many causes Anthropogenic contribution

Page 3: C AP AND T RADE Investing in a Parachute Daniel Reader Dept. of Geography & Geology September 13, 2010

THE GREENHOUSE EFFECT

Page 4: C AP AND T RADE Investing in a Parachute Daniel Reader Dept. of Geography & Geology September 13, 2010

GREENHOUSE GASES

Page 5: C AP AND T RADE Investing in a Parachute Daniel Reader Dept. of Geography & Geology September 13, 2010

CARBON DIOXIDE AND FOSSIL FUELS

Petroleum (gasoline, diesel, etc.) CO2 + H20

Natural Gas CO2 + H2O

Coal CO2

Page 6: C AP AND T RADE Investing in a Parachute Daniel Reader Dept. of Geography & Geology September 13, 2010

THE INTERGOVERNMENTAL PANEL ON CLIMATE CHANGE (IPCC)

Increased risk of more frequent, longer-lasting heat waves

Page 7: C AP AND T RADE Investing in a Parachute Daniel Reader Dept. of Geography & Geology September 13, 2010

THE INTERGOVERNMENTAL PANEL ON CLIMATE CHANGE (IPCC)

Increased summer dryness (drought)

Page 8: C AP AND T RADE Investing in a Parachute Daniel Reader Dept. of Geography & Geology September 13, 2010

THE INTERGOVERNMENTAL PANEL ON CLIMATE CHANGE (IPCC)

Increased winter wetness (flooding)

Page 9: C AP AND T RADE Investing in a Parachute Daniel Reader Dept. of Geography & Geology September 13, 2010

IPCC RECOMMENDATIONS

1) Get ready – the climate is changing now, and is expected to get worse.

2) Mitigation options include a “large shift in the pattern of investment in energy plants and other infrastructure.”

3) “In order to respect equity, the emissions of developed countries must decrease by between 25 and 40% between now and 2020, and between 80 and 95% between now and 2050, compared to the level in 1990.”

Page 10: C AP AND T RADE Investing in a Parachute Daniel Reader Dept. of Geography & Geology September 13, 2010

IPCC RECOMMENDATIONS

“Policies that provide a real or implicit price of carbon could create incentives for producers and consumers to significantly invest in low-GHG products, technologies, and processes.”

Page 11: C AP AND T RADE Investing in a Parachute Daniel Reader Dept. of Geography & Geology September 13, 2010

CAP AND TAX

Set limits per producer on carbon emissions Production exceeding established limits

subject to taxation Establishes a negative incentive to produce

carbon emissions Prompts greater efficiency, lower production,

or both Favored by environmentalists, but few others Politically inexpedient, and an enforcement

nightmare

Page 12: C AP AND T RADE Investing in a Parachute Daniel Reader Dept. of Geography & Geology September 13, 2010

CREATING A CARBON MARKET

Limit carbon emissions to create a fixed supply.

Provide a means to acquire units of permissible carbon emissions, enabling the expression of demand.

Competitive demand for a fixed supply will create a market for carbon emissions permits.

Page 13: C AP AND T RADE Investing in a Parachute Daniel Reader Dept. of Geography & Geology September 13, 2010

CAP AND AUCTION

“Free Market” approach to carbon capping Carbon emission permits are put to auction in

lots and then bid upon Results in the wealthiest entities amassing a

disproportionate share of emissions permits May result in necessary services (such as

mining) becoming subsidized or exempted as they fail to compete effectively

Page 14: C AP AND T RADE Investing in a Parachute Daniel Reader Dept. of Geography & Geology September 13, 2010

CAP AND TRADE

Issue a fixed number of permits to carbon producers based upon past performance.

Those producers that become more efficient produce less carbon than they have permits for, resulting in a surplus.

Those producers that require additional carbon capacity may then purchase or trade for permits from those with a surplus.

Considered to be the “least of evils” by most

Page 15: C AP AND T RADE Investing in a Parachute Daniel Reader Dept. of Geography & Geology September 13, 2010

THE REINSURANCE INDUSTRY

Insurance underwriters Some of the largest corporate entities in the

world Vested interest in objective risk assessment

Page 16: C AP AND T RADE Investing in a Parachute Daniel Reader Dept. of Geography & Geology September 13, 2010

MUNICH RE ON CLIMATE CHANGE

“Climate Change is one of the greatest risks facing mankind.”

“The figures speak for themselves… Weather related natural catastrophes have produced US$ 1,600bn in total losses since 1980, and climate change is definitely a significant contributing factor. We assume that the annual loss amount attributable to climate change is already in the low double-digit Euro range. And the figure is bound to rise dramatically in the future.”

Page 17: C AP AND T RADE Investing in a Parachute Daniel Reader Dept. of Geography & Geology September 13, 2010

SWISS RE ON CLIMATE CHANGE

“Climate is warming at a rate which cannot be explained with natural factors alone.”

“We'd be out of our minds if wewrote weather insurance on theopinion global warming would have no effect at all.”

- Warren Buffett2006 annual Shareholder meeting

Page 18: C AP AND T RADE Investing in a Parachute Daniel Reader Dept. of Geography & Geology September 13, 2010

SWISS RE ON CLIMATE CHANGE

Page 19: C AP AND T RADE Investing in a Parachute Daniel Reader Dept. of Geography & Geology September 13, 2010

THE COST OF DOING NOTHING

Simple cost-benefit analysis rejects inaction. Failure to respond immediately with some

method of curtailing carbon emissions will result in untold losses for the foreseeable future.

The most reasonable FIRST STEP in reducing carbon emissions is to establish an upper limit at some level substantially lower than current output.

We must be able to step carbon production down, preferably at a rate which the economy can withstand - but it must be done.

Page 20: C AP AND T RADE Investing in a Parachute Daniel Reader Dept. of Geography & Geology September 13, 2010

WAIT, THERE’S MORE..

Page 21: C AP AND T RADE Investing in a Parachute Daniel Reader Dept. of Geography & Geology September 13, 2010

HUBBERT PEAK

Page 22: C AP AND T RADE Investing in a Parachute Daniel Reader Dept. of Geography & Geology September 13, 2010

OPEC INTERVENTION

Page 23: C AP AND T RADE Investing in a Parachute Daniel Reader Dept. of Geography & Geology September 13, 2010

A NATURAL CAP ON CARBON

Crude oil and natural gas production are now peaking globally

Page 24: C AP AND T RADE Investing in a Parachute Daniel Reader Dept. of Geography & Geology September 13, 2010

GLOBAL PEAK COAL PRODUCTION IN 2011

Page 25: C AP AND T RADE Investing in a Parachute Daniel Reader Dept. of Geography & Geology September 13, 2010

COAL, COUNTRY BY COUNTRY

Page 26: C AP AND T RADE Investing in a Parachute Daniel Reader Dept. of Geography & Geology September 13, 2010

PEAK CARBON EMISSIONS

Peak Coal projections beat 36 of 40 IPCC projections for carbon emissions

The worst case scenarios for climate change are unlikely

Beginning in the next few years, rates of carbon emissions should peak, and go down thereafter

Page 27: C AP AND T RADE Investing in a Parachute Daniel Reader Dept. of Geography & Geology September 13, 2010

CAP AND WHATEVER

Page 28: C AP AND T RADE Investing in a Parachute Daniel Reader Dept. of Geography & Geology September 13, 2010

NO TIME LIKE THE PRESENT

We have, at most, a few years to fully implement whatever fossil fuels policy we decide upon

The price is exorbitantly high; yet the cost of inaction is higher still

The longer we wait, the faster the price increases

Now is not a good time to do this…yet there will never be a good time

The question becomes not one of carbon emissions, but instead how much plateau to invest in

Page 29: C AP AND T RADE Investing in a Parachute Daniel Reader Dept. of Geography & Geology September 13, 2010

INVESTING IN A PARACHUTE

An economy in forced decline due to resource shortfalls is non-negotiable

We can choose to invest in a brief plateau to re-tool for a managed decline

The plane is on fire. We can ride it out until we crash. Or instead, we can invest in a parachute to jump to a mountaintop from which we can hike down. The choice is ours, but we need to decide immediately.

Page 30: C AP AND T RADE Investing in a Parachute Daniel Reader Dept. of Geography & Geology September 13, 2010

FURTHER INFORMATION

For information on any of the material in this presentation, please contact me at

[email protected]