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What am I bid for this emissions permit, still in wrapper? : Comments
By Gerard Brody, published 13/6/2008Senator Wong must not fall for the argument that energy generators and other energy intensive industries will shoulder the burden of climate change unfairly.
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Posted by c-lifeform, Monday, 16 June 2008 10:13:57 AM
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It is the case, that additional cost imposts will make domestic cement manufacture unviable. We are already seeing developments towards lower business-risk import capability which will lead to a rapid replacement of the order of another 10-20% of imports under an ETS and then a decade long drop in maintenance investment which will see a total of 50 - 60% of manufacture move offshore.
What is the climate change benefit? Nil to negative. The Australian industry competes by virtue of a high rate of technology adoption - we are among the most efficient producers in the world. To ship cement (as clinker or cement) to Australia will lead to a net increase in global CO2 emissions - outsourcing our CO2. We will become dependent for our built infrastructure on the capacity and demand constraints of our regional competitors.
We are not unhappy to see the inevitable price signal. I disagree with the comment that business is positioning for windfall profits. Yes this occureed in stage 1 of the EUETS but was a clear leasson learned and administrators of future schemes including ours, will always ensure that allocation is conservative to ensure that this does not occur. Cement is likely to see an initial price signal based on no allocation for indirect emissions (electricity) as well as benchmarking of performance to which we are not completely opposed.
It is my belief however, that the majority of these allocation hurdles can be simply addressed by utilising a border equity transitional mechanism that treats imports of emissions-intensive materials in the same way as locally manufactured materials.