The Kyoto Protocol is a UN-led international agreement reached in 1997 in Kyoto
Japan to address the problems of climate change and the reduction greenhouse
gas emissions. The Kyoto Protocol went into force on February 2005.
Signatory countries are committed to moving away from fossil fuel energy sources - oil,
gas, and coal, to renewable sources of energy such as hydro, wind and solar
power, and to less environmentally harmful ways of burning fossil fuels.
Greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide are mainly
generated by burning fossil fuels. Higher levels of greenhouse gas emissions
cause global warming and climate change.
The Protocol commits 38 industrialized countries to cut greenhouse gas emissions by 2008-2012 to
overall levels that are 5.2 percent below 1990 levels. Targets for greenhouse
gas emissions reduction were established for each industrialized country.
Developing countries including China and India were asked to set voluntary
targets for greenhouse gas emissions.
The Canadian target for Kyoto is to reduce by 2012, greenhouse gas emissions by six
percent below their 1990. The United States did not ratify the Kyoto Protocol,
and in February 2002 introduced the Clean Skies and Global Climate Change
initiatives, in which targets for reduction in greenhouse gas emissions are
linked directly to GDP and the size of the U.S. economy.
Trading of carbon emissions is linked to a program called Cap-and-Trade.
Understanding this concept is necessary to
begin effective trading. A central authority (usually a government or
international body) sets a limit or cap on the amount of emissions discharged
into the atmosphere. Companies that exceed the cap may be subject to fine or
regulatory sanction. Therefore, those who find they cannot meet the conditions
of the cap will look to buy credits from those who pollute less.
Many
older established companies are forced to spend considerable sums of money modernizing
plants. In many instances this takes time, usually years to achieve. In
contrast to new generation technologies which are not faced with up-grading
facilities to comply with 1990 emission standards. Trading emission credits is
a way for low emission companies such as wind farms to sell credits to benefit
higher emitting companies.
Cap-and-trade programs ultimately aid in being a net benefit to the host
country by enabling it to meet it's commitment to the Kyoto Protocol Agreement.
From
the very beginning, this first phase of the European Union Emissions Trading
Scheme, or EU-ETS, was intended to be a learning period to work out the kinks
and entice major greenhouse gas emitters on board.
On
January 1, 2005, the EU-ETS came online with the cap-and-trade program covering
approximately 12,000 installations including electricity production and some
heavy industry.These 27 member
countries of the European Union represents roughly 45 percent of total European
CO
emissions.
Now
three years later, amid a flurry of expectations and public controversy, the
European Union has credible results to back up its claim of success. Recently,
a Massachusetts Institute of Technology analysis of the EU Emissions Trading
Scheme (ETS) affirms that despite rather unstable beginnings, the system has
been an unprecedented success.
More
importantly, it opens the door for skeptical countries like the United States
to follow suit.
The
United States would have been required to reduce its emissions 7 percent below
1990 levels had it accepted ratification of Kyoto. Instead, U.S. emissions have
now risen more than 16 percent between 1990 and 2005.
The
Bush administration and Republican lawmakers opposed to emission caps have been
touting the Asia-Pacific Partnership on Clean Development and Climate, which
consists of Australia, China, India, Japan, South Korea, and the United States.
The aim of the initiative, which began in 2005, is to foster cooperation on
ways to improve clean energy development and lower emissions without global
mandates.
But since the initiative started, the United States, India, and China
have come under increased domestic pressure to move toward mandatory emission
controls. California is among several U.S. states that have entered into
partnerships or passed laws for controlling greenhouse gas ahead of the federal
government, leading to a showdown with congressional lawmakers.
Major U.S.
cities have also instituted a host of policies designed to cut greenhouse
gases.
Without
the United States entering into a binding commitment, it is feared that several
developing countries which have not yet signed plus some Kyoto signatories may
be unwilling to agree to additional international commitments.
Dwayne Strocen is a
registered Commodity Trading Advisor specializing in analyzing and hedging
Market and Operational Risk using exchange traded and OTC derivatives.Website:
http://www.genuinecta.com
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