Buying high, selling low.Emissions Trading Emissions trading (or cap and trade) is an administrative approach used to control pollution by providing economic incentives for achieving reductions in the emissions of pollutants. Is a Flop on Wall Street, But Is It Reducing Pollution? Remember emissions trading? Six years ago, it was all the rage General Public's All the Rage was released in 1984 by I.R.S. Records. Track listing
The result was emissions trading, whereby coal-burning electric utilities and other industries could reduce S[O.sub.2] emissions (the primary cause of acid rain) by buying and selling the right to pollute pol·lute v. 1. To make unfit for or harmful to living things, especially by the addition of waste matter; contaminate. 2. To make less suitable for an activity, especially by the introduction of unwanted factors. . It was supposed to go like this: Of the 8.9 million tons of S[O.sub.2] industries are permitted to emit, 249,200 tons were set aside to be auctioned. A utility having difficulty meeting the new federal limits on S[O.sub.2] emissions could purchase an "allowance" (the right to emit one ton of S[O.sub.2]) from another utility that had reduced its emissions even lower than the federal goal. On the whole, the theory goes, pollution would be reduced, all thanks to market incentives. The concept was introduced to the Bush administration by the Environmental Defense Fund (EDF (algorithm) EDF - earliest deadline first. ) to persuade it to go along with the Clean Air Act's requirements that there be a 50 percent reduction of S[O.sub.2] emissions by 2010. So, six years since the Clean Air Act amendments were passed, does emissions trading work? That depends on who you ask. The big 10 environmental groups that pushed for pollution credits in 1990 say the evidence is in: The program is working. Joe Goffman, an EDF senior attorney, calls emissions trading "one of the most successful programs that Congress has ever put together in the environmental area." Goffman notes that data released by the Environmental Protection Agency Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), independent agency of the U.S. government, with headquarters in Washington, D.C. It was established in 1970 to reduce and control air and water pollution, noise pollution, and radiation and to ensure the safe handling and (EPA EPA eicosapentaenoic acid. EPA abbr. eicosapentaenoic acid EPA, n.pr See acid, eicosapentaenoic. EPA, n. ) show that there was an S[O.sub.2] reduction of 3.4 million tons last year. "At the same time," he adds, "the cost of the program is significantly lower than even the most optimistic proponents anticipated back in 1990. You're essentially looking at more emissions reductions at lower cost." In one typical trade at last March's EPA auction, Detroit Edison Detroit Edison, founded in 1903, is an investor-owned electric utility which serves most of Southeast Michigan. Its parent company, DTE Energy (NYSE: DTE), provides energy services to a variety of clients beyond Detroit Edison's service area. bought credits for 9,000 tons of pollutants pollutants see environmental pollution. , six percent of those on offer, for $603,000. The largest single sale was to Enron Power Marketing, which paid $7 million for 107,252 tons, 71 percent of the total. Beyond EDF's optimism, however, it's plain that the market for the right to pollute has hit rock bottom. In the March EPA auction, the average price of a one-ton allowance was $68, down from $140 a year ago, and $250 in 1992. It's a far cry from what utility executives were predicting in 1990, during the Congressional debate, when numbers like $1,000 a ton or more were bandied about. At the auction, there were as many buyers from high school ecology clubs and environmental groups (acting on a take-pollution-out-of-circulation strategy advocated by Greenpeace) as there were serious utilities. The utilities, though, bought thousands of tons; the greens one or two. "The green groups are 'retiring' pollution," says Goffman. "It's symbolism, but it's important symbolism." Many now say the utility industry was "gaming" - using inflated and optimistic trading figures to bolster its cause, since it was strongly opposed to further regulations. Even assuming that the utility industry exaggerated when it was trumpeting the merits of emissions trading, prices are still much lower than expected. The EPA predicted trades to run from $500 to $600 a ton. Now, everyone is scrambling for a reason why pollution rights are trading for much less than that. One reason may be the design of the auction, which fails to establish a "reserve," or bottom-line price, for emission "lots." Another reason may be simple supply and demand. "A lot of it has to do with the cheap price of sulfur coal," says the EPA's Melanie Dean, who also cites lower transportation costs as a factor in reducing prices. "It doesn't do anything to negate the program," she adds. Others aren't so sure. Many worry the low prices will make it cheaper for utilites that don't want to comply with the emissions cap to buy allowances and pollute considerably more. The most comprehensive analysis on emissions trading has come from the federal General Accounting Office (GAO). According to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. the GAO's December 1994 report, the cost savings have come from "intra-utility" trading - cutting emissions in one power plant and using the resulting allowances to cover emissions in another. Indeed, fears that acid rain problems would be merely redistributed re·dis·trib·ute tr.v. re·dis·trib·ut·ed, re·dis·trib·ut·ing, re·dis·trib·utes To distribute again in a different way; reallocate. Adj. 1. appear to have been borne out. In upstate New York Upstate New York is the region of New York State north of the core of the New York metropolitan area. It has a population of 7,121,911 out of New York State's total 18,976,457. Were it an independent state, it would be ranked 13th by population. , for example, utilities traded pollution rights to the midwest, but the emissions ended up back in the northeast because of the prevailing winds The prevailing winds are the trends in speed and direction of wind over a particular point on the earth's surface. A region's prevailing winds often show global patterns of movement in the earth's atmosphere. Prevailing winds are the causes of waves as they push the ocean. . "The sky is not a sponge it does not squeeze out and absorb things evenly over its entire surface," says John Sheehan, a coordinator of the Adirondack Council, a nonprofit environmental advocacy group. "If we don't reduce our pollution upwind of the Adirondack Park The Adirondack Park is a large area of publicly protected land in northeast New York. Through a loose collection of lands owned by various groups and private individuals, it covers 6. , we're going to see more lakes die." New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of State wants to ban its utilities from trading with other utilities in the midwest, but that prescription is imperfect. New York could sell pollution credits to a utility in, say, Florida, which could then sell them to a utility in the midwest where they may end up back in New York again. "The EPA knows what's coming out of the smokestacks and where," says Sheehan. "It's pretty clear to the government what has to happen, it's just a matter of getting Congress to order that it does." CONTACT: Environmental Defense Fund, 257 Park Avenue South, New York, NY 10010/(212)505-2100. |
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