The Copenhagen Accord

The ultimate aim of science is to predict, preferably something that can be falsified. In 1994, using tools that were much older, Scott Barrett predicted that an international treaty on the provision of a global environmental good (say, greenhouse gas emission reduction) would be either narrow (that is, ratified by a few countries only) or shallow (that is, have lenient targets). That prediction was not entirely correct. The Kyoto Protocol was both narrow and shallow: Western Europe signed up to targets that will be met by virtue of lacklustre economic growth.

Since 1994, game theorists have shown that while meaningful global treaties are unlikely, regional treaties may well be feasible and effective. That prediction seems to be accurate. In Copenhagen, five nations (Brazil, China, India, South Africa, USA) came together in something of a deal. (The other 188 agreed to take note.)

The EU had put all of its cards on the table well before the meeting, and was thus sidelined from the negotiations.

As an academic, one should be happy if predictions stand up to observations. As a taxpaying citizen, one may have a different opinion. Why did 45,000 people travel to Copenhagen for a meeting that was widely predicted to fail, and indeed did?

The short answer is: bad policy advice. The debate on climate policy is not open. Group think dominates, and people who have a slightly different opinion are ignored or smeared. Policy advise is often manipulated, and decisions are regularly made in complete ignorance of the consequences. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, which is supposed to synthesize the academic literature to inform decision makers, has deliberately ignored or downplayed politically inconvenient parts of the literature such the large body of game theory.

The literature on the provision of global public goods has two straigthforward recommendations:

1. Forget about legally binding targets. Use pledge and review instead. International law is weak, and countries are reluctant to sign away part of their sovereignty.  Treaties with legally binding targets tend to codify what signatories plan to do anyway. Discussion about binding targets and sanctions tend to be acrimonious, as some countries feel threatened and “binding” has different meanings in different jurisdictions. So, countries should meet every so often to discuss their domestic plans.

Such an information exchange is important because climate policy inevitably raises the price of energy. Dearer energy implies a loss in competitiveness. A country would therefore be more inclined to unilaterally raises its energy prices if it knew its trade and investment partners would do the same.

2. Focus on policy instruments. Emission reduction is much cheaper in some places than in others. So there needs to be a mechanism through which a country can purchase emission reduction in another country. The simplest way to do this is by linking up domestic markets for emission permits. (Permits are licences, rather than commodities, so international trade is not automatic.) An international treaty should regulate international trade only. (Current attempts seek to micro-regulate both international and domestic policies.)

One could hope that the failure in Copenhagen will lead to a fundamental re-think of international climate policy. I’ve hoped that for over 15 years now, and I’m not holding my breath this time.

Climate policy after the budget

The budget introduced a carbon tax, with immediate effect on transport fuels, after the winter on some heating fuels, and after due deliberation on other heating fuels. I’ve long argued for a carbon tax. I would have set the carbon tax 67 cents lower at €14.33/tCO2. Like the government, I would have ignored the advice of the Commission on Taxation and levy the tax at the point of retail.

I would not have exempted coal and peat. I do not think that direct imports from the North would be substantial. Coal and peat emit more carbon dioxide, per unit of heat, than any other fuel. Coal and peat should be taxed most, not least.

At the same time, the government has increased the budget of its energy programmes by 13% to €105 mln. The SEI has yet to release its long-finished evaluation of the performance of these programmes in the past. With a carbon tax in place, there now is double regulation. The carbon tax induces people to invest in emission reduction, and they will get a government subsidy on top if they use the government-favoured technology. The Climate Bill is rumoured to put a domestic cap-and-trade system on top.

People who have had their homes insulated at the taxpayers’ expense will continue to be entitled to a fuel allowance (which may well go up).

The carbon budget had some bad news. According to the provisional estimates of the EPA, emissions in 2008 fell by 1% compared to 2007. The ESRI forecast for 2008 is -4%. The EPA has not released their estimates, so I am not sure what is going on. If emissions do not fall in the middle of a recession, that must mean that energy use is sticky downwards (unlike wages). This will make emission reduction even harder than we thought.

Despite that, the Climate Bill is rumoured to extent the target of a 3% annual emission reduction from 2012 to 2020, and to have an 80% emission reduction by 2050. A future government can of course pick a new target.

Returning to the budget, energy research will see its funding increase by 176%.

Climategate

This continues a previous discussion.

My piece in today’s Irish Times was meant for Friday.

The chair of the IPCC has now called for an investigation. A day later, WG1 of the IPCC declared that all was fine. A vice-chair of the IPCC declared that this whole affair is a waste of time.

The Irish Times published two regular articles on this matter, under foreign affairs (here and here). The environment correspondents was in the Maldives (at the taxpayers’ expense), incorrectly claiming that “it could be lost unless progress is made at the UN climate summit in Copenhagen”. The momentum in sea level rise is such that atolls are doomed, now matter what we do about greenhouse gas emissions. Frank McDonald is now in Copenhagen, where he toes the IPCC WG1 line. The Irish Times today published an appeal to Copenhagen, writing that “the science is complex but the facts are clear. The world needs to take steps to limit temperature rises to two degrees”. This suggests that science demands such a limit. This is not true. Any target is a value-judgement. The two degrees target is a political fact, not a scientific one. (See here.) It seems that, like the Climate Research Unit, the Irish Times mixes up science and politics.

The large welfare costs of second-best EU climate policies

The EU is committed to limiting the rise in global average temperature to 2°C above pre-industrial levels and aims to achieve this through a range of policy instruments. This column warns that climate policy need not cost a lot, but imperfect implementation could cause hundreds of billions of euros’ worth of unnecessary welfare losses.

Keynes and floods

Floods do a lot of damage.

Floods also harm production, but Ireland has overcapacity at the moment. Flood repairs are labour-intensive, and a lot of stuff will need to be replaced. This will partly be paid for by the insurance companies, who will in turn get their money back from international reinsurers. Affected households will also tap their savings.

Flood restoration thus stimulates demand.

We don’t want floods. But if we must have floods, and if we could time floods, we would have them in the depths of a recession.

This is no consolation for those affected.

See also the Irish Times