COMMENT: Emissions trading in China – Early lessons from low-carbon pilots

Published 05:58 on August 18, 2015  /  Last updated at 13:13 on December 19, 2023  / /  Asia Pacific, China, Contributed Content, Other Content

China's upcoming national ETS will significantly alter the balance of power in global carbon markets in the mid-term. However, significant challenges remain, and the IFC, a member of the World Bank Group, is helping China to overcome them with a project in Shenzhen that addresses key barriers to carbon trading, writes IFC Senior Carbon Finance Specialist Lasse Ringius.

By Lasse Ringius, Senior Carbon Finance Specialist at the World Bank’s IFC

A local emissions exchange in China. Lasse Ringius/IFC
A local emissions exchange in China. Photo: Lasse Ringius/IFC

 

China, the biggest source of CO2 emissions globally, accounts for more than 27 percent of the world’s emissions. China is the first developing country to control CO2 emissions through a cap-and-trade system. Once a national carbon market is established, which could be as early as 2017, China will overtake the European Union (EU) to become the biggest carbon market in the world. The Chinese market will significantly alter the balance of power in global carbon markets in the mid-term. Significant challenges remain, and the IFC, a member of the World Bank Group, is helping China to overcome them with a project in Shenzhen that addresses key barriers to carbon trading.

Fundamentals of Emissions Markets

Once a liquid carbon market has been created, trading will mostly happen via forward and futures contracts. These instruments help companies to protect themselves against volatile prices and to hedge their carbon position. In the EU, exchange platforms emerged as one of the main mechanisms aimed at simplifying transactions, reducing risk and facilitating transparent pricing. As trading platforms, exchanges can facilitate price discovery and offer hedging products.

The financial sector and financial institutions (FI) play a fundamentally important role in an emissions trading system. It is to be expected that most companies in China will trade with the help of intermediaries; only large emitters will trade directly at an exchange. Thus, FIs will be in a position to offer trading-related services, as well as advisory products, to clients subject to mandatory CO2 regulation.

Seven Local Carbon Pilots

The seven local low-carbon pilots which are operating currently in China are generating valuable experiences and lessons which can help to broaden and deepen the carbon market. Nearly all regulated companies complied with their emissions ‘caps’ in the first pilot year, which is important in terms of achievement of environmental integrity. Although challenges remain, the future market will likely be underpinned by fairly reliable data and information.

But carbon could only be traded spot on the exchanges; trading was very thin in the first year of the pilots; there were significantly different prices from pilot to pilot; and some pilots were showing almost flat prices. Chinese decision-makers paid initially little attention to the dynamics and the trading aspects of the emerging carbon market, including FI intermediation, but the incipient stage of the market was noted more recently by the central government, not least by the National Development and Reform Committee (NDRC).

ETS pilots daily trading volumes and values during 2014  (in 1,000 tons)

ETS pilots daily settlement prices during 2014 (in RMB)


Source: China Carbon Market Research Report, (Environomist, 2015)

Trading Bottlenecks

Such teething problems are only to be expected. The Chinese government should be congratulated for working hard to make this new market a success. The early lessons from the IFC Advisory Services (AS) engagement with the pilot in Shenzhen (SZ) in Southern China illustrate some of the main barriers or bottlenecks as far as market participants and trading are concerned:

  • regulatory barriers, including a ban on carbon futures by the China Securities and Regulatory Commission (CSRC);
  • financial intermediaries not engaged in the carbon market;
  • capacity constrains at local pilot exchanges (e.g., spotty in-house trading experience, no clearinghouse capability, weak IT infrastructure);
  • companies not yet clear on their carbon position (long or short?) and their abatement cost and, as a result, are not likely to trade and;
  • companies largely unfamiliar with price hedging strategies and traders may not be incentivized to trade carbon.

Piloting Non-Spot Trading in Shenzhen

The IFC AS program in Shenzhen is addressing key barriers to carbon trading. The first phase aims to pilot non-spot trading products. IFC is working with the SZ emissions exchange and FIs to design and pilot contracts that could grow the local market. A stakeholder platform has been organized to support the development of the SZ pilot by providing global best practice, offering opportunities for learning and experimentation, supporting stakeholder dialogue, and engaging with authorities. The second phase of the program will build the capacity of two to three FIs to offer advisory, brokerage and risk management services to clients and to manage CO2 price risk to their loan portfolios. As the market matures, we aim to support development of carbon-related business lines at FIs, including investment products to enhance trade, liquidity and efficiency.

Lasse Ringius joined the IFC in 2009 as a Senior Carbon Finance Specialist. He has more than 20 years of global work experience across a range of climate change and clean energy issues at the IFC, World Bank, UNEP and two leading international energy-climate institutes. Lasse leads on IFC’s carbon-related advisory work with FIs, on development of carbon-linked bonds, and on the corporate engagement in the clean cooking space. Prior to joining IFC, Lasse was Transactions Team Leader in the World Bank Carbon Finance Unit. During this assignment, the transactions team structured and concluded more than 80 carbon off-take agreements, for a total commitment of more than US$540M. Lasse has served in various advisory capacities, including as member of the UN panel which originally developed methodologies for small-size clean energy projects, and has published widely on energy, climate and environmental issues. Lasse has a Ph.D. in environmental regulation from the European University Institute, and was a visiting scholar at MIT, which he attended as a Fulbright Scholar. Upon obtaining his Master’s, he joined the Danish Foreign Service. He has lived and worked in Denmark, Italy, Norway and the US.