Leveling the Carbon Playing Field Beijing, September 2008 Rob Bradley Climate, Energy and Pollution Program World Resources Institute

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Presentation transcript:

Leveling the Carbon Playing Field Beijing, September 2008 Rob Bradley Climate, Energy and Pollution Program World Resources Institute

Trade measures in US climate policy Concern about heavy industry jobs is politically central Prevent “leakage” of emissions Encourage trading partners to take action on climate

Sector and Product Coverage 2005 Source: IEA, BEA, BLS and ILO. Emission data is 2004, Employment and GDP data is SITC Codes of included products (version 2): Steel (672, 673, 674, 675, 676, 677, 678, 679), Chemicals (51111, 51112, 51113, 51122, 51123, 51124, 51211, 52218, 52323, 52213, 52251), Cement (6612), Aluminum (6841, 6842), Paper (641, 642) Sector Products included in study Direct Emissions share of US total Total Emissions share of US total Economic Output share of US GDP Employment share of US total Ferrous Metals Steel ingots, bars, rods, plates,sheets, tubes 36 mtCO2 0.62% 96 mmtCO2 1.65% $36.7 billion* 0.29% 250, % Non-ferrous Metals Aluminum ingots, bars, rods, plates,sheets, tubes 15 mmtCO2 0.25% 75 mmtCO2 1.29% $24.4 billion* 0.20% 144, % Chemicals Olefins, Aromatics, Inorganics, Ammonia 146 mmtCO2 2.50% 377 mmtCO2 6.48% $ billion 1.68% 872, % Paper & Pulp Paper and Paperboard, cut and un-cut 64 mmtCO2 1.11% 159 mmtCO2 2.74% $54.6 billion 0.44% 484, % Non-metal Mineral Products Hydraulic cement 66 mmtCO2 1.14% 97 mmtCO2 1.66% $53.3 billion 0.43% 505, % Sub-total 327 mmtCO2 5.62% 804 mmtCO % $378.2 billion 3.04% 2,253, % All Manufacturing 631 mmtCO % 1,369 mmtCO % $1,512.5 billion 12.14% 14,226, %

Carbon-Intensive Imports by source and share of domestic consumption Source: UN Comtrade, IISI and CSA estimates As Share of ConsumptionBy Country of Origin

US Imports by Origin 2005 Rank SteelAluminumChemicalsPaperCement SourceShareSourceShareSourceShareSourceShareSourceShare 1Canada18.56%Canada51.02%Trinidad41.58%Canada66.89%Canada16.06% 2EU17.25%Russia17.08%Canada19.30%EU16.82%China14.04% 3Mexico13.08%EU6.24%Ukraine7.34%China3.53%EU13.87% 4Brazil8.24%OPEC5.10%OPEC6.60%Korea2.24%OPEC9.97% 5China7.11%Brazil3.79%EU4.49%Mexico2.20%Thailand8.60% 6Korea5.67%China3.07%Korea4.36%Brazil1.84%Greece8.28% 7Russia5.12%S. Africa2.50%Brazil3.79%Chile1.50%Korea7.94% 8Turkey4.16%Tajikistan2.43%Russia3.19%Japan0.96%Mexico6.49% 9Japan4.12%Argentina1.54%Eq. Guinea2.76%Norway0.85%Columbia5.49% 10India2.70%Australia1.27%Chile1.52%OPEC0.71%Peru3.11% AnnexI54.42%77.57%34.46%86.66%34.61% Source: UN Comtrade SITC Codes of included products (version 2): Steel (672, 673, 674, 675, 676, 677, 678, 679), Chemicals (51111, 51112, 51113, 51122, 51123, 51124, 51211, 52218, 52323, 52213, 52251), Cement (6612), Aluminum (6841, 6842), Paper (641, 642)

The Extent of US Trade Leverage US Imports as Share of Global Trade and Production Source: UN Comtrade, IISI, IAI, FAOStat, OGJ, USGS and CSA estimates US Supply and Demand as Share of Global Total US Imports and Exports as Share of Global Trade

Bali and sectors Developing country mitigation actions Technology development and transfer International sectoral approaches

Developing country actions Art. 1 (b) (ii) Nationally appropriate mitigation actions by developing country Parties in the context of sustainable development, supported and enabled by technology, financing and capacity-building, in a measurable, reportable and verifiable manner;

Conclusions There is real potential for multilateral engagement in international instruments. US policy will aim to protect energy intensive sectors against relocation. At present the trade measures being proposed are unlikely to be effective on their own.