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Friday 4 March 2016

Time Travelling on the NZ ETS

by Catherine Leining, Policy Fellow, Motu Economic and Public Policy Research Trust

Both the New Zealand Emissions Trading Scheme (NZ ETS) in operation today and the world in which it is operating are markedly different from those anticipated by policy makers when designing the system back in 2007-2008. As the New Zealand government reviews the NZ ETS, history can be a powerful teacher. What might we learn by looking back in time at how and why we arrived at today’s NZ ETS?

Motu Economic and Public Policy Research has compiled an interactive timeline for the development and implementation of the NZ ETS from 2005 to 2015. It is intended as an information resource for:

  • policy makers, 
  • NZ ETS participants, 
  • researchers, and 
  • ETS practitioners from other countries who wish to learn from New Zealand’s experience. 

The timeline focuses on the history of the government policy-making process, rather than the experience of market participants.

Timeline entries include links to key documents, which provide a way to navigate through the government’s public archive on the NZ ETS. A 3D button enables the user to zip down the NZ ETS Superhighway in three lanes: international climate policy development, NZ ETS policy development and NZ ETS legislation and implementation. A summary of key milestones is available here.

The timeline shows how the government’s NZ ETS policy emerged in a series of stages, some of which overlap:
December 2005 to August 2007
Assessment of mitigation policy options after the decision to abandon the carbon tax
April 2007 to September 2008
NZ ETS design and initial legislation for phased implementation over 2008-2013
November 2008 to November 2009
First NZ ETS review and amendment to moderate its price impact through 2012 and defer the entry of biological emissions from agriculture until 2015
December 2010 to November 2012
Second NZ ETS review and amendment to both extend moderated price settings and defer biological emissions from agriculture indefinitely
September 2011 to May 2015
Adjustment of international linkages, ending with full delinking from the international Kyoto market
November 2015 through 2016
Third NZ ETS review; outcome to be determined…

The timeline reveals some of the stories around the key pivot points that set the direction of the NZ ETS. Here are six examples.

Abandoning the carbon tax

In mid-2005, the reversal of New Zealand’s projected net Kyoto position for CP1 from a surplus to a deficit led to an urgent review of climate change policies shortly before a general election. The election returned a Labour government to power but shifted the political landscape. The government abandoned the carbon tax and started consultation on alternatives. This led to a quick change of tack, with the government pursuing an ETS whose features were strongly influenced by the 2002 policy foundation. The NZ ETS moved from the start of design to passage of legislation within 17 months.

Deciding to adopt international emission prices and place no cap on domestic emissions

The NZ ETS was designed in the context where New Zealand faced rising domestic emissions and relatively expensive mitigation options but could meet its Kyoto commitment through both domestic and international mitigation. Whereas a conventional ETS places its own cap on participants’ emissions, the government chose to nest the NZ ETS within the global Kyoto cap and enabled the international market to set the domestic emission price by giving NZ ETS participants unconstrained access to overseas Kyoto units.  When this design feature met falling international emission prices in mid-2011, the result was ongoing growth in New Zealand’s gross emissions and heavy use of low-cost overseas Kyoto units to meet NZ ETS obligations and the government’s Kyoto commitment for 2008-2012.

The 2008 election and first NZ ETS review

In September 2008, the passage of landmark NZ ETS legislation occurred shortly before a critical transition in the Global Financial Crisis and a general election. The change in government at a time of economic downturn resulted in an immediate review of the NZ ETS. This was followed by significant amendments to add a price cap of NZ$25 per tonne, halve its price impacts in non-forestry sectors, and defer unit obligations for biological emissions from agriculture until 2015.

Global rise of emissions trading 

Emissions trading has continued to gain international momentum, reinforcing the decision to proceed with the NZ ETS. As of 2016, emissions trading schemes systems are operating in 35 countries, 12 states or provinces, and seven cities, covering 40% of global GDP.  Additional systems are under consideration. Economists have modelled the potential for emissions trading to contribute to least-cost global mitigation. International cooperation on emissions trading has been facilitated through initiatives such as the International Carbon Action Partnership and World Bank’s Partnership for Market Readiness.

ETS development in Australia

The development of emissions trading in New Zealand and Australia followed a “leapfrog” process, with both countries progressing efforts concurrently and building on each other’s experience. Officials’ discussions on trans-Tasman linking of ETS began early in the process of NZ ETS design. The 2009 amendments to the NZ ETS adopted Australia’s approach to free allocation in the industrial sector. However, the initial beacon of an Australian ETS became a shadow as Australia struggled politically to implement an ETS, chose in late 2012 to link with the EU ETS, and finally abandoned its ETS in 2014.

Adjustment of international linkages

As international climate negotiations progressed slowly and the future of the Kyoto carbon market remained uncertain, New Zealand adjusted its linkages to the Kyoto carbon market. Through regulations, it first removed participants’ access to Kyoto units with environmental integrity concerns (CERs and ERUs from industrial gas destruction and large hydro projects). These had been banned in the ETS in Europe and Australia and their inclusion would have been a barrier to future linking as well as an ongoing reputational risk. In the 2012 amendments, the government removed the requirement to “back” NZUs with Kyoto units held in Crown accounts, decoupling NZU issuance from international agreements. Once the government decided in 2012 to take New Zealand’s emission reduction commitment for 2013-2020 under the UNFCCC rather than the Kyoto Protocol, it lost access to the Kyoto market as of 1 June 2015. The government issued subsequent NZ ETS regulations supporting the full delinking process. The NZ ETS now operates as a domestic-only system with ongoing unit supply driven by relatively small levels of industrial free allocation, unit issuance for forestry and industrial removals, and a substantial participant-driven bank of NZUs. Domestic auctioning bound by a cap was enabled in the 2012 amendments but has not yet been implemented.

Solutions in reach

The timeline highlights that the NZ ETS spent much of its ‘childhood’ under review and amendment. This was complicated by uncertainty over future international agreements and political disagreement on the system’s level of ambition and scope. Throughout NZ ETS history, there has been no consensus across major political parties on the long-term direction of the NZ ETS; instead, rushed policy-making processes have pushed through legislation despite opposition. Through 2015, low emission prices coupled with future policy uncertainty have failed to incentivise domestic mitigation beyond the forestry sector. However, solutions to these shortcomings lie within reach.

As future NZ ETS participants look back to the timeline that emerged from 2016, they will be able to observe whether the government’s third NZ ETS review produced a transformational pivot point in the evolution of the NZ ETS.

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