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Time to rethink the CPRS?

As a description of what’s wrong with the Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme (CPRS), it’s hard to go past Deakin University academic Scott Burchill’s comment on the global financial system pre-meltdown:

"We've devised a financial system which is far too complex, too opaque, containing too many mysterious instruments for policy makers to manage and even for regulators to keep up with."

A look at the CPRS draft legislation, crisply described by Greens Senator Christine Milne as "thick as a telephone book and full of wrong numbers", suggests that complexity, opacity and mystery are to be ours in abundance if Canberra adopts the legislation.

(That's not likely, because the draft CPRS has managed to cheese off tree-hugging greens and cigar-chomping industry in equal measure, and please no-one. But that's another story.)

The idea of emissions trading was born in a pre-meltdown world, when globalisation and markets were manifestly imperfect but apparently worked.

Emissions trading was a way to get the world joining hands to fight climate change, using money, the tool we understand best.

As an innovative concept, emissions trading gets a gold star. It provides a mechanism that progressively makes greenhouse gases more costly to emit, steadily nudging industries, and societies as a whole, toward more wholesome technologies.

Its great merit over a carbon tax is that it allows international linkages, so that emissions can become a global currency that flow where they are most in demand.

The reality, as it appears in the Government's draft legislation, carries enough bureacratic overhead to negate most of the emissions it might prevent.

That complexity isn't useful in the current environment, in which markets have revealed feet of clay and globalisation has lost its savour.

Even without the accounting overhead, a global ETS looks a lot less do-able, certainly in time for the 'Kyoto II' round of talks.

If the world doesn't adopt a global ETS, then there is much less point in Australia adopting a domestic one.

Then it will be time to move to Plan B. Is there a Plan B?

Should the CPRS get up, with the world on board or not, the spotlight then shines unwaveringly on agriculture, from 2010 the only major emittor not gripped in the scheme's steady emissions squeeze.

Experience may prove the CPRS as easy to digest as the GST: agriculture may slip into the scheme without missing a beat. It's unlikely, though.

The GST is an accounting system designed to deal with money: that’s what accounting systems do. The CPRS is an accounting system designed to deal with gases in the biosphere. That's a currency not so easily accounted for.

Economics has been famously poor at accounting for nature. The rundown in ecosystems everywhere is testament to repeated failure to get real environmental costs woven into economic systems.

Farming, as NFF president David Crombie tirelessly points out, is a biological system. Accurately accounting for the emissions in a kilo of beef involves some mind-boggling variables. Location—even at the paddock-to-paddock level—seasons, and management, all influence the final result in endless permutations.

An ETS may be perfect for industries that readily fit the accounting framework. However you angle it, agriculture doesn't readily fit.

Bryan Clark, the Grain Growers Association climate change specialist, commented to me at a recent conference: "The object of policy ought to be how to manage atmospheric CO2 in a desired range, not whether we have a CPRS and whether every industry fits into it."

In other words, broaden the question from how agriculture will fit into a CPRS, to how it might play a part—any part—in reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

Looked at objectively, independently of current politics, emissions reduction is generally a positive step for agriculture.

As Agriculture Minister Tony Burke observed at the same conference, emissions are wasted energy that agriculture would do well to capture as productivity.

No sector has more to lose from the increasingly variable climate that is forecast under climate change, or more to gain from sequestration of carbon in soil and plants.

But reducing emissions poses one challenge; the CPRS has thrown up a different set of challenges altogether.

Emissions trading may ultimately prove too complex to execute, and/or too simplistic to reckon with the complexities that come from agriculture's interface with nature.

Unfortunately, it's the most workable idea on an otherwise bare table.

Has anyone got a better solution for agriculture than the scheme that Ross Garnaut described as a "diabolical dilemma"?

I think we’d be all keen to hear it.

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What an absolute mess we now find ourselves in. To think we can accurately and fairly quantify all emmissions when so much research has not been done is complete deception. Humans have continually adapted to climate change (one of the reasons we have spread all over the world). For world leaders to be concentrating so heavily on the mis-leading science, stating we can change the climate "back again", is absurd. Why isn't the major thrust aimed at adapting to climate change, something proactive as well as quantifiable.
Posted by rod, 19/03/2009 9:07:32 PM
Agriculture will be petty cash in terms of the so called CPRS. In a comment about the fate of the debt-laden owners of Victoria's Latrobe Valley electricity producers, Allan Kohler writes that the short CPRS time line of 5 years will guarantee bankrupcy for these privateers. Is there an alternative to the capacity of these cheap energy producers? Not in the short term and not in the credit drought. The outcome is reduced capacity to meet the growth in energy demand. Let's not get distracted by "Earth Day". Turning out the lights might not be a matter of choice.
Posted by phil_oc, 20/03/2009 6:46:20 AM
The Australia Institute discussion paper 'Agriculture and Emissions Trading: The impossible dream?' https://www.tai.org.au/ provides an analysis of why the CPRS will not result in reduced emissions from agriculture and is a disincentive to do so. Agriculture can play a role in mitigating climate change. Policies to help farmers move to farming practices that reduce emissions and improve adaptive capacity through restoring ecosystems services are needed now. The CPRS can't do it, and uncertainty of waiting until 2013 for alternative policies is likely to lead to perverse outcomes. We're already hearing farmers talk about abandoning no-till and releasing sequestered carbon so they aren't disadvantaged under any as yet unkown future policy.
Posted by agkid, 20/03/2009 10:26:58 AM
The whole "Global Warming" issue has always smacked of a hidden agenda, driven as it is by "science" which is at best unproven, much of it downright bogus. The fervour with which the Rudd government is promoting their ETS shows that they are inside players in this hidden agenda. So what can the hidden agenda be? A carbon tax would be much simpler and less destructive. The apparent reason for an ETS is that it stretches across borders. This ETS would be a dominating factor in our economy. So is their purpose in having a scheme which crosses borders to achieve a single world government, a single set of rules across he globe? Quite possibly. This is the stuff that wars are made of.
Posted by Ted O'Brien, 21/03/2009 5:50:25 AM
Introducing a carbon tax would be like undertaking surgery with a broadsword. The mony raised from taxes would be used in a variety of ways, least of all emisisons reductions, it would lead to a higher cost of abatement. The fact is that no one is going to like the solution, there will be winners and losers.

You want a better idea then how about this: keep coal, it represensts a fraction of global emissions and underpins our cheap energy. Nationalise the coal industry and work damn hard to clean it up. Emissions saved in the rest of the economy can subsidise coal and we can then hold onto a stable base load power, keep it cheap and use coal to continue to drive the country's prosperity through cheap power. The aluminium and steel industries would feel the flow-on effect of cheap power.

At the same time embark on a massive revegetation and greening of the environment. Farmers should be paid not only to replant, but to also undertake soil carbon seuqestration and the management and retention of remnant vegetation.

The aim of Australia should be to develop energy and food self sustainability providing a long-term stable base on which to base investemnts. I have an issue with foriegn-owned companies digging up our resources and then holding a gun to the government's head and threatening to take jobs away - for goodness sakes the money they are saving is going overseas anyway.

Massive investement from policies such as the government's stimulus package should be spent in rural areas to improve the infrastructure of the farm economy, more efficient, targeted and wothwhile, drive jobs back into the bush so the economies of scale in the regional areas supports bigger towns and industries. Restrict the growth of cities and move the people into the country, this will shift the political bias away form the cities and allow for a more deomcratic approach to national management.

Start the mass migration to the north of the country where we have many more resources, and design and build new towns with energy effeciency and sustainability as the core design parameters. It sounds strange but the lack of investment in rural Australia means we are actually in a position to start redesigning towns and communities. The run down nature of so many infrastructure assets means many are not worth saving and instead of upgrading we should be redesigning and replacing with modern technology. Self sustainable Australia, that's what we need.

Posted by the lorax, 23/03/2009 11:28:38 AM
The pretext for the whole carbon taxation and ETS by government is money in their pocket, to think that there is an underlying climate morality is naive; they are simply taking advantage of this week’s cult-like mass hysteria of all things global warming to move money into government pockets. If government was seriously worried about carbon emissions they would develop nuclear power production, this would cause very little economic turmoil (in fact it would be economically stimulatory) and end the largest carbon emissions we produce (second to bushfire). The fact that government is insincere about the subject reinforces my opinion of their disingenuous approach.
Posted by bashed and beaten farmer, 27/03/2009 2:25:47 PM
The comment about 'greening' and 'revegetation' by 'the lorax' annoy me. What the hell do people who peddle this line think happens everytime a farmer plants a crop or for that matter when a crop of weeds grow? The answer is they grow by 'breathing in' CO2. The faster they grow the more CO2 they convert and the more O2 they 'breathe out' Plant more lucerne (six or seven cuts a year) rather than plant slow-growing trees in all the wrong places - near buildings, under powerlines, alongside roadways. All places where they cause enormous damage when nature unleashes its fury.
Posted by DAW, 1/04/2009 9:15:40 PM
Nice one Daw, I am sure I mentioned planting under powerlines etc, how about all the land that has been cleared by farmers (often at the bequest of the government of the day) that should never have been cleared, that now is so marginal that it takes a lot of inputs to eeke out a living, not to mention the damage it causes to public infrastructure. I do not want to bash farmers but there are a lot out there who simply should not be on the land, they should not be running a business, they should not be allowed to continually run down the public environmental asset becasue they are too stupid, lazy or ignorant to change to better farming practices. We can not have wall to wall lucerne, it does not grow everywhere. How much feritliser do you put on it? How much irrigation does it require? How much fuel to move it and what happens when the cows eat it and burp and fart? You simply do not understand the carbon cycle or the principles of ecology.
Posted by the lorax, 6/04/2009 11:22:24 AM
Matt Cawood is based in the NSW New England region and is the science and environment writer for the Rural Press group of weekly agricultural newspapers.
How can an emissions trading system accurately account for livestock methane?
How can an emissions trading system accurately account for livestock methane?
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