Some environment NGOs have been quick to say that Australia鈥檚 carbon price has sharply cut carbon emissions in its first year. The claims not only contradict the evidence, but are positively deceptive: an exercise to cast a deeply flawed policy as a serious response to climate change.
The (ACF) said on July 1 that the Labor/Greens carbon price scheme was working: 鈥淭he carbon price, in its infancy, has led to a 30% increase in renewable energy in Australia, and an 8% drop in coal-fired electricity, and a 9% drop in electricity pollution overall.鈥
Similarly, campaign group on June 28 that said: 鈥淎ustralia鈥檚 electricity sector has transformed under a carbon price鈥. It attributed a 13.3% fall in brown coal-fired power use to the carbon price scheme.
The figures cited are correct: renewable energy use has indeed risen and coal use has fallen in the past 12 months. But the claim that the carbon price is responsible is pure misinformation.
Australia鈥檚 energy use in the past year fell by about 2.5% compared with the previous year, continuing a trend toward that began in 2009.
Black coal use fell in NSW, but the biggest single reason was the closure of the energy-guzzling Kurri Kurri aluminium smelter, not the carbon price. Coal use fell in South Australia too, the biggest reason being the planned closure of a very old coal-fired plant in Port Augusta.
Brown coal use fell in Victoria, but a big factor here was the disastrous (and, ironically, climate change-induced) coal-fired power plant and nearby coalmine, which sharply cut its operations for many months.
The use of emissions-free hydro power rose in Tasmania, but this was due to a commercial decision to run down water storage capacity, which fell from 55% to 33% in the first six months this year.
None of these things point to a transformation of Australia鈥檚 energy sector. This is especially the case with brown coal 鈥 the most polluting fossil fuel of all. In fact, the carbon price grants huge subsidies to brown coal, keeping it in business longer.
In February, Environment Victoria said the state鈥檚 brown coal-fired power stations 鈥渨ill in compensation payments鈥 from the carbon price 鈥渨hile their businesses are relatively unaffected by the carbon price鈥.
The pleasing rise in renewable energy has most to do with the Renewable Energy Target, a federal government scheme that mandates that 20% of Australia鈥檚 energy be renewable by 2020. The carbon price cannot be credited for the result.
There is a push to hype the performance of the carbon price over the past year, but a strange reluctance to seriously discuss its future. From June 2015, Australia鈥檚 carbon price will join with Europe鈥檚 emissions trading scheme, which remains in a deep crisis.
Plagued with an oversupply of cheap carbon permits, Europe鈥檚 carbon price has collapsed. A tonne of carbon sells for less than 5 euros. The oversupply and the low price means Europe鈥檚 big polluters are saving millions of permits, intending to cash them in later instead of cutting emissions now.
A June 26 report from British NGO Sandbag said that , Europe鈥檚 ETS was likely to drive them up, in effect 鈥渃ancelling out the emissions reductions delivered by other policies鈥.
New Labor Prime Minister Kevin Rudd has flagged the idea of Australia joining Europe鈥檚 ETS next year rather than in 2015 as planned. If this happens it will simply bring the collapse of Australia鈥檚 carbon price a year closer. As has occurred in Europe, the low carbon price will act as a brake on zero-emissions technology and help entrench fossil fuel use.
The European parliament made to deal with Europe鈥檚 carbon trading crisis in July. It voted to delay 鈥 or 鈥渂ackload鈥 鈥 the release of 900 million tonnes of carbon permits for three years.
Forty two civil society groups released a statement on July 1 that said and called on the European Parliament to end the scheme, 鈥渨hich thus far has been actively undermining climate objectives鈥. The groups said: 鈥淭he EU ETS has been designed to prolong dependency on fossil fuels and expand and increase the role of financial markets in the daily lives of people ...
鈥淲e call for coherence in EU energy and climate policy decisions. We demand that European policy makers implement a swift and just transition to fossil fuel-free energy production which does not harm communities and ecosystems, and to define a participatory process to allow the public debate that is essential for such a transition and which the European Commission is still avoiding.鈥