White paper update
Since I have now actually read the white paper, I thought that it would only be fair to make a couple of retractions.
Don’t get me wrong; 5% is a pathetic target and too low. The minimum acceptable target should have been 10/20%, and realistically we could have gone 20% now without worrying about what the rest of the world is doing, and tried to push for a 30% target in Copenhagen with the moral high ground behind us. Always start high in negotiations.
The point is, setting a high target now will stimulate technological advancements in the green sector, setting Australia up to make a lot of money in the next 50 years as the world moves towards a low carbon economy. Whoever moves first will reap the biggest rewards.
The Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme looks quite good, with a few minor cop-outs. Firstly, the price cap is stupid. The higher the price of carbon, the more money the government will receive to reinvest in efficiency, and to return to households. Same deal with not allowing exports of permits: the effect that this would have is essentially bring money into Australia to promote abatement activities and efficiency increases.
The good part of the Scheme is the allocation of EITE permits, based on an industry’s historic average emissions intensity. This has probably got a lot of greenies knickers in a knot, however the way the Scheme is structure still gives the full advantage to businesses who are operating in a more carbon efficient manner over the big polluters. Note that this is in direct contrast to my opinion yesterday, which I espoused without reading the document.
Allocating free permits to the trade-exposed heavy polluting industries prevents these industries from moving overseas and continuing to pollute. Instead, they can stay here, reduce their emissions and make a profit from the sale of their free permits. Companies who do not reduce their emissions will be forced to fork out just like everyone else, so the same incentives will apply to reducing emissions as if they didn’t receive any free permits. I guess to only objection is the fact that the government is essentially handing these guys free money, but then they’ve got $23.5 billion over forward estimates to hand out to everyone else, so we shouldn’t complain too hard.
That’s it for me.

