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A new paradigm: establishing a global carbon market as element for the foundation of a ‘low carbon Bretton Woods’ system Dr. Michele Stua
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Current situation Deadline December 2015 Urgency for an agreement shared by the majority of the parties Consistency of the agreement Persistent problems
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Vested interests Conservative groups Reformist groups Socio-environmental movements (Geo)political interests
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Ideological lock-ins Not directly linked to negotiations Common but differentiated responsibilities Common responsibilities and individual duties Common rights and individual benefits
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Scope of the proposal Setting up of a global emissions reduction target (common responsibilities) Distributing emissions targets between the parties (individual duties) Organising an international institution to certify emissions reductions and to monitor the parties’ accomplishment (common rights) Defining the opportunities for different actors to operate inside the created market (individual benefits)
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Common responsibilities and individual duties Double-target structured agreement corresponding to a set of common (global) responsibilities: –A long-term and virtually-zero emissions target –A distribution of the target in milestones or time-frames along the stated period Dynamic distribution of reductions obligations (duties) between the parties –Based on comparative per-capita emissions –Automatically modified along the time-frames
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Calculating individual duties
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Example/hypothesis on responsibilities and duties Reference year 2015 Target 80% of reductions by 2080 16 time-frames of 4 years each (excluding the first one) 5% of reductions compared to the reference year for each time-frame
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Common rights and individual benefits A single reductions’ certification system is adopted Parties can only use the system to accomplish with their duties The global certification represents a shared (common) asset (right) at disposal to any reductions producer Certifications become revenues (benefits) for the (individual) actors reducing emissions
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Presumptions as pillars and scope of a carbon market A quantified global GHGs emissions reductions objective The distribution of the tasks to reach the objective An instrument to demonstrate the achievement of the tasks The different ways to obtain the instrument
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Establishment of a global carbon market A single institution for the issuance of the certifications A single international market for the certifications exchange A single organisation in charge of collecting certifications at the end of the time-frames
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The International carbon Fund Certification of reductions Issuance of certificates (GERs) for achieved reductions Virtually any form of reduction is entitled to be certified Overcoming the additionality issue
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The carbon market Demand ultimately represented by the parties emissions duties Offer represented by any action reducing emissions Exchange system based on elements of a free international market System likely to be modified at inter-parties, parties, and sub-parties levels
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The carbon bank Parties with duties need to demonstrate the accomplishment collecting a corresponding amount of GERs Parties can stock GERs that exceed their duties or can stock GERs even in absence of duties A single organisation functioning as deposit for accumulated GERs and as verifier of the parties accomplishment with their duties
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Categories of outcomes and domains Direct outcomes Possible outcomes Mixed outcomes Domains directly related to climate change Indirect domains
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Outcomes Non-economic outcomes: – Energy – Environment – Society Economic outcomes: – Investments – Productivity – Finance
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Elements for a monetary system A commodity (GHGs) measurable and finite acting as reference for the currency (GERs) GERs will have a fixed exchange rate with GHGs guaranteeing the intrinsic value of the currency A flexible exchange rate between GERs and any other currencies will be applied as consequence of GERs tradability A single institution (the ICF) will be entitled for the potential currency's issuance The exchange of the potential currency will be open worldwide A single institution (the CB) will be in charge for the collection and deposit of the GERs
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Conclusions A radical change of perspective towards climate change mitigation policy and beyond A first sketch of a new socio-economic model Requiring relevant efforts to become a proper sustainable system Time is the main matter but parties may demonstrate that time not always matters
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Thank you
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