Domestic substitutes schooling the market
Nations, states and sub-national governments are planting domestic capital - monetary and political - into stand-alone actions that could school Cancun negotiators on the shape of a future climate compact.
One of these stand-alone markets - California’s cap and trade program under AB32 - captivates market participants’ attention as voters axed the scheme-killing Proposition 23 in the US midterm elections, only to wake up to another, more subtle threat on November 3rd:
While some are (rightfully?) concerned about the passage of Proposition 26 - which reclassifies some regulatory “fees” as “taxes,” thus requiring a two-thirds majority vote to levy - California’s in-the-know environmental players say the sleeper initiative may not have teeth. At least not for taking a bite out of cap and trade implementation.
On the topic, National Resource Defense Council’s Legal Director for Western Energy and Climate Projects Kristin Eberhard
“Although AB 32 implementation is ongoing,” she explains, “authority to impose fees on polluters under AB 32 will not require “any change in state statute” post January 1, 2010.”
Climate Action Reserve President Gary Gero echoes the sentiment of California Air Resources Board Chair
“It was a little murky leading up to the election,” he continues, “and even as the analysis was being done not everyone was certain what the impacts would be. But it’s starting to become a little clearer.”
And everyone in the carbon schoolyard should take note of the scheme’s
Says Eric Klein, environmental markets director for broker Tradition Financial Services, “There’s a live market. We’re pretty much going to go forward in California.”
While California is sorting out its ballot challenges, regions and nations are also making some “new school” gestures at market innovation. As it turns out, California decision-makers have already turned their attention from legal minutia to extend a hand to the Brazilian state of Acre and Mexican state of Chiapas -
Elsewhere, the Japanese government continues to
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