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On Offsets, New Waxman-Markey Bill is a Mixed Bag

On Friday, the House Energy and Commerce Committee released its anticipated Beta version of its comprehensive GHG and energy bill. Among other goals, the new discussion draft attempts to address concerns from moderate and conservative Democrats concerning the proposed cap and trade system and how it would work. The most notable change involves the free allocation of allowances to certain economic sectors to assist in the transition to the new system, and this is the part that seems to most directly respond to actual political pressures regarding the cost of controlling greenhouse gases.

With respect to offsets, the most problematic change is allowing the offsets, which are more uncertain than emission reductions, to be treated as equal in value to emissions allowances. The original Waxman-Markey discussion draft discounted all offsets by 20% with respect to equivalent greenhouse gas allowances, so that it took 1.25 offsets to be equal to one emission allowance credit. Though a rather blunt instrument, this was designed to account for the relative uncertainty of offset reductions, to provide an incentive to encourage actual reductions from regulated sources, and to even increase real reductions if the offsets proved 100% valid. The new draft retreats from this broad provision by allowing domestic offsets to count as equal to emission allowances on a one to one basis, though international offset credits are still subject to the 1.25 equivalency ratio. This disparity could be justified because of greater uncertainty in evaluating and accounting for international offsets, though other provisions of the bill seem to provide that foreign offsets are already as stringently regulated as domestic ones.

While a set ratio of offset to allowances is quite arbitrary, there is no other mechanism in the new draft to account for offset failures, except in the case of sequestration offsets. Moreover, with respect to sequestration offsets, the new bill backtracks on responsibility and offset integrity. In both drafts, the EPA is required to determine the risk of failure for sequestration project offsets and require the offset developer to deposit an amount in a “reserve” account to compensate for any losses. Though the EPA is given discretion to “assign liability and responsibility for mitigating and fully compensating for reversals,” the construction of the reserve account seemed to indicate that the risk of loss would be placed on the project developer since these persons were the ones who were to make the failed offsets whole. However, in the new draft, rather than requiring developers of failed sequestration offsets to replenish the offset reserve entirely, they are only required to replenish half of the lost offset potential if the failure was “unintentional.” This means that with respect to sequestration offsets, it is very possible that with offset failures, actual reductions could be less than what was guaranteed by the offset instrument.

This is not only problematic from an environmental point of view, but also from a financial point of view. It's expected that a secondary market in carbon trading securities is likely to develop with the passage of a cap and trade bill. The biggest threat to a market composed of GHG securities would be if the underlying value of the securities were to fail or be too volatile. By requiring sequestration offset project developers to make any failure of offsets completely whole, the discussion draft seemed to put the risk of loss entirely on the developer. That ensures that the market instrument derived from the sequestration offset will maintain its value in the secondary market. By explicitly requiring that sequestration developers only make failed offsets partially whole, the new bill calls into question the stability of the financial instrument based on that offset, which is not good for the GHG market or the financial sector as a whole.

Indeed, even though the bill assumes that no non-sequestration offsets will be approved until such time as the offset has actually occurred, even these non-sequestration offsets could be subject to failure (if it turned out for instance that there was fraud, or the leakage or additionality calculation was not correct). A GHG bill should be clear that it is the project developer that will always be responsible for any offset failure, and should explicitly require that offsets that fail to work be compensated by the developers in other ways, ensuring the stability of the market instruments based on these offsets.

One change that will be good for the secondary market is that the second draft accelerates when the EPA is to approve the first round of offset categories. The requirement has been moved up to one year from two years. In general, since most offset types are relatively well understood, this change will better allow the offset market to start developing. As long as there is uncertainty about what offset types the EPA will allow, or how many offset types might suddenly come on the market in the future, investors will be reluctant to buy these offsets because it will be difficult to calculate their value, both intrinsic and with respect to the total market. By requiring the EPA to establish categories quickly, the bill encourages a stable, predictable market, which allows for quick rollout of offset projects, which in turn allows for earlier and greater GHG reductions.

All in all, the new bill addresses some of the concerns over offsets in the system, but still has no mechanism to account for offset failures (except for the limited process for sequestration offsets). Any bill should still include a mechanism for the EPA to address environmental concerns with offsets on an individual basis beyond the limited analysis of environmental harms in large offset groups and should be very clear that offset failure should fall on and be compensated fully by the offset developer. This will ensure more robust environmental protection and more stability in offset financial instruments that are sure to develop

One last point: as I wrote last month regarding the first draft of Waxman-Markey, the U.S. market for offsets will dwarf anything that we have seen in the international arena, and lawmakers need to be aware of the significant load that will be placed on the EPA, and consider this in funding and staffing. That hasn't yet been addressed.  

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Victor Flatt | May 19, 2009

On Offsets, New Waxman-Markey Bill is a Mixed Bag

On Friday, the House Energy and Commerce Committee released its anticipated Beta version of its comprehensive GHG and energy bill. Among other goals, the new discussion draft attempts to address concerns from moderate and conservative Democrats concerning the proposed cap and trade system and how it would work. The most notable change involves the free […]

Matt Shudtz | May 18, 2009

COP-4: Beyond the Dirty Dozen

On May 9, at the conclusion of the Fourth Conference of the Parties (COP-4) to the Stockholm Convention, negotiators from around the world agreed to add nine chemicals to the list of persistent organic pollutants (POPs) that are too dangerous for international trade. It was an important step toward protecting the world community from toxic […]

Ben Somberg | May 15, 2009

O’Neill Testifies on Mercury From Chlor-Alkali Plants

On Tuesday, CPR Member Scholar Catherine O’Neill testified about mercury pollution from chlor-alkali plants at a hearing of the House Energy and Commerce Committee’s Subcommittee on Commerce, Trade, and Consumer Protection. At least one in ten women of childbearing age in the United States has blood levels of mercury that threaten the neurological health of […]

Ben Somberg | May 14, 2009

CPR Submits Comments to White House on Science Integrity Initiative

CPR President Rena Steinzor and Policy Analyst Matt Shudtz submitted formal comments this week to the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) with policy recommendations for separating science from politics. Back on March 9, President Obama issued a memorandum on scientific integrity, which outlined broad principles on the subject and requested that […]

Shana Campbell Jones | May 13, 2009

Obama’s Executive Order on the Chesapeake – a First

Yesterday, as the Executive Council for the Chesapeake Bay Program held its annual meeting, President Obama issued an Executive Order on Chesapeake Bay Protection and Restoration (a first), declaring the Chesapeake Bay a national treasure and signaling that EPA will play a strong role in leading Bay cleanup. For years, federal leadership on the Bay […]

Rena Steinzor | May 13, 2009

Cass Sunstein Hits the Senate and Climate Change Hits the Media Fan

Cass Sunstein had his confirmation hearing Tuesday; it was well-attended and anti-climactic. President Obama’s nominee to head the Office of Management and Budget’s (OMB) Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) testified for about an hour, and Senate approval of the nomination seems assured. Ironically, in a perfect example of timing being everything, at about […]

Rena Steinzor | May 13, 2009

Sunstein at the Helm

With his attractive family and a phalanx of top aides in tow, Professor Cass Sunstein had a cordial, 45-minute hearing before the Senate Homeland Security and Government Affairs Committee yesterday. He was introduced by former student and current Senator Amy Klobuchar (D-MN) who praised Sunstein as a teacher, mentor, and eclectic thinker, all qualities for […]

Ben Somberg | May 12, 2009

Catherine O’Neill and Amy Sinden pen op-ed in Philadelphia Inquirer on Sunstein Nomination

With Cass Sunstein’s confirmation hearing for “regulatory czar” set for today, CPR Member Scholars Catherine O’Neill and Amy Sinden have an op-ed on the subject in this morning’s Philadelphia Inquirer — “The cost-benefit dodge.” They write:  Beginning in the Reagan administration, any regulation with a significant impact has had to pass through Information and Regulatory […]

Shana Campbell Jones | May 11, 2009

Where Does Manure in the Chesapeake Come From Anyway? EPA, It’s Time to Find Out

Cattle, chickens, and hogs create more than 500 million tons of manure in the United States annually – three times more than the sanitary waste produced by people. Yet, in contrast to a concerted federal and state effort to fund and build sewage treatment plants since the Clean Water Act was enacted in 1972, dealing […]