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Brokers gather to trade emissions credits (Kyoto Protocol)
http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/news/world/8848602.htm?1c ^ | Sun, Jun. 06, 2004 | CHARLES J. HANLEY

Posted on 06/06/2004 9:06:16 PM PDT by take

Brokers gather to trade emissions credits

As carbon dioxide emissions continue to be a problem, Europe takes the lead in the fight against global warming.

Buyers, sellers, brokers and lawyers, even ''specialists in carbon asset creation management,'' convene Wednesday on the banks of the Rhine to launch a new business for a worried world.

CarbonExpo, in the cavernous congress halls of Cologne, Germany, is a three-day trade fair for those who would deal in carbon dioxide -- buying and selling permits to discharge the waste gas chiefly blamed for global warming.

This carbon trading is a Europe-wide effort to use supply-and-demand to control emissions and protect the climate, in the spirit of the Kyoto Protocol.

But the supply far outstrips demand, Europeans are finding. The climate of this marketplace itself is decidedly cloudy. Advance prices have plunged by half.

''At this point, one shouldn't portray it as a liquid, vibrant market,'' said Atle C. Christiansen of PointCarbon, a Norway-based research firm.

More than six years after governments negotiated the historic climate accord in Kyoto, Japan, the world is taking only halting steps -- not always forward, never in unison -- to follow through.

In fact, the Kyoto treaty itself is not yet in force, since it hasn't been ratified, as required, by industrial countries emitting a total of 55 percent of ''greenhouse gases,'' such as carbon dioxide, that trap heat in the atmosphere that Earth otherwise would give off.

GROWING CONCERNS

Russia's expected accession later this year would clear the 55 percent hurdle. But even a functioning Kyoto agreement would have little impact: Its limited reductions would barely slow the greenhouse buildup, and the biggest emitter, the United States, would remain outside the treaty.

Scientists, meanwhile, grow increasingly concerned.

''If carbon dioxide had a color, if people saw the sky getting darker, people would have no problem recognizing what's going on,'' said climatologist David Pierce of San Diego's Scripps Institution of Oceanography.

What's going on is that the world's daily output of man-made carbon dioxide, from burning coal, oil and other fossil fuels, is 11 percent greater today than a decade ago. Under Kyoto, industrial nations were actually supposed to be cutting back greenhouse gas discharges to 8 percent below 1990 levels by the year 2012. The planet, meanwhile, is warming. Global temperatures rose almost 1 degree Fahrenheit from 1981 to 1998, NASA scientists report.

If greenhouse emissions aren't cut back soon, temperatures could rise many degrees more, expanding oceans, causing drought, intensifying storms and altering climate in other ways, say scientists of the U.N.-organized Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

As the mercury rose in recent years, so did U.S. political opposition -- especially from the Bush administration -- to reducing power-plant and car-exhaust emissions, imposing energy taxes or taking other steps to try to stabilize the atmosphere. Higher energy and other costs would seriously damage the economy, it was said.

Economic analyses ranged widely, from a projected annual cost of $112 per U.S. family to comply with Kyoto, to $2,700 a family, with heavy U.S. job losses. Environmentalists said dire projections didn't factor in the costs -- to coastal states, agriculture and other sectors -- of doing nothing, or the job growth in new energy industries.

''It is hard to think of a public policy issue that is harder than this one,'' said American economist Jeffrey D. Sachs, who has studied climate's complexities.

PROFIT MOTIVES

But he and others say any ultimate plan must include ''cap-and-trade'' -- schemes whereby emissions caps are imposed, and companies that emit less gas than allowed can sell unused allotments to others who overshoot the target. The profit motive is expected to drive efforts and technology to rein in emissions.

''Market incentives on this can be enormously powerful,'' Sachs told an April symposium at New York's Columbia University, where he heads the Earth Institute.

Europe's ''cap-and-trade'' is by far the biggest and most ambitious.

''We want to demonstrate that this works, using market-based tools,'' the European Union's environment commissioner, Margot Wallstrom, told The Associated Press.

The EU's 25 nations, whose leaders claim a ''special responsibility'' to lead on climate with Washington on the sidelines, ratified the Kyoto Protocol in 2002 and put its provisions into European law.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Crime/Corruption; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; Government; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: climatechange; co2; credits; emissions; kyoto; marketingdoomsday; protocol; trade
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To: Southack
buying permission to speed on our highways from felons inside their prison cells

I will take some chits for 20 over.

21 posted on 06/06/2004 9:39:01 PM PDT by razorback-bert
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To: SierraWasp

TRADE:
IMF, World Bank Join Forces with WTO

Emad Mekay

Attempts by global financial institutions to synchronise their policies on developing nations threaten to further entrench a one-sided approach to development, fuel instability and widen the gap between the world's rich and poor, watchdog organisations warned Monday.

WASHINGTON, May 12 (IPS) - Attempts by global financial institutions to synchronise their policies on developing nations threaten to further entrench a one-sided approach to development, fuel instability and widen the gap between the world's rich and poor, watchdog organisations warned Monday.

The alarm comes only a day before two of the world's major wardens of the global economy, the Washington-based World Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF) were to meet in Switzerland with the Geneva-based World Trade Organization (WTO) to develop a common approach to world economic policies called the ''coherence agenda''.

The meetings will be attended by senior officials of the increasingly controversial bodies, including IMF Managing Director Horst Koehler, WTO Director General Supachai Panitchpakdi and World Bank President James Wolfensohn.

Prospects of the meeting, under the umbrella of the WTO General Council - the organization's highest level decision-making body in Geneva - sends shivers down the spine of critics of the international financial institutions (IFIs), who see their policies as counter productive and in the service of a few rich nations and their sprawling corporations.

''This will limit the room of choices and policy space,'' said Aldo Caliari from the Washington-based Centre of Concern, one of 40 groups that signed a petition opposing the meetings and warning of the possible consequences.

''It's like being forced to shop from one shop - same policies and same goods.''

The IFIs say their meeting will help strengthen the global multilateral trading system, which they consider an anchor of strength and stability in the world economy.

Developing nations will benefit by getting increased market access for their products in rich developed countries, they add.

But analysts here say the record and the structure of the organisations, especially the two Bretton Woods Institutions, the IMF and the World Bank (named for the place in the U.S. state of New Hampshire where they were launched in 1944) bode ill for developing nations.

"When you understand how much power the industrial countries hold in the governance of the Bretton Woods institutions, you realise why the trade agenda supported by these institutions tends to be aligned with the negotiating interests of those same countries within the WTO," said Caliari.

The voting structures of the IMF and World Bank are heavily biased towards rich countries. Their leaders, for instance, are chosen through processes open only to U.S. and European citizens.

The IMF and the Bank have for years been peddling trade liberalisation, deregulation, privatisation and budget austerity to developing countries, and the results, critics say, are disappointing.

Feverish privatisation urged by the Bank and the Fund, especially of public services like water and utilities, has smoothed the way for foreign corporations to supply these services and introduce commercial pricing systems, which have often led to higher rates for poor citizens, jeopardising their access and pushing them further into poverty.

''Economies of developing countries have been characterised by slow and erratic growth, increased instability and rising income gaps,'' said the groups in their Monday statement.

''With the WTO, such misguided and failed policy reforms are being progressively locked-in through trade law backed by the threat of economic sanctions through its dispute settlement mechanism.''

Under the new distributions of roles to be discussed Tuesday, the IMF and the Bank would help ease the way for full liberalisation of trade by offering ''technical and financial support''.

The Washington-based organisations would ''assist'' developing nations to manage lower revenues because of reduced tariffs, withstand a period in which their trade preferences in industrialised nations are eliminated, secure funds to support increased trade and, finally, help create export oriented economies.

The IMF and the Bank would also raise the profile of trade in borrowing countries' Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers (PRSP) and Country Assistance Strategies (CAS), documents developed with the support of the two lenders that function as borrowers' economic roadmaps.

In return, the IMF and World Bank will receive observer status in the trade negotiations committee, which handles individual negotiating issues at the WTO and its subsidiary bodies, coupled with a role at the WTO secretariat, a body often accused of bias on disputes between rich and poor countries.

Critics say these plans should cause even more concern.

They say so-called ''technical assistance'' is really one way to force-feed the same policies on developing nations rather than give them the tools to develop independent views and, possibly, development options.

''Technical assistance is being used as a political tool to win support for a 'development agenda' that is heavily disputed in the WTO,'' said Shefali Sharma from the Geneva office of the Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy in a statement.

''No amount of technical assistance in implementing policies that, in effect, handicap and shackle developing countries in the WTO can improve gains towards development.''

Cooperation between the three bodies is not new. The WTO director general often attends meetings of the IMFC - the assembly of the IMF and Bank governors - and of the development committee, the senior decision making body of the institutions.

Most recently, he attended the IMFC meeting in April 2003 and briefed finance ministers on the Doha trade negotiations and work programme, according to WTO documents.

The IMF and the World Bank have also been paying greater attention to trade issues in the past few years, both in the course of their regular country work and research papers. Documents have been flooding out of the two organisations in support of ''free'' trade.

In 2002, they issued a joint staff paper on "Market Access for Developing Countries' Exports", which examined patterns and costs of restrictions and distortions on developing countries' exports. (END)


22 posted on 06/06/2004 9:39:02 PM PDT by take
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To: take

Ah, and of course the credit traders would all make a commission right?


23 posted on 06/06/2004 9:39:03 PM PDT by McGavin999 (If Kerry can't deal with the "Republican Attack Machine" how is he going to deal with Al Qaeda)
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To: RightWhale
Greenies finally break into serious money.

Gimme a break. They've BEEN the serious money all along.

24 posted on 06/06/2004 9:40:27 PM PDT by Carry_Okie (The environment is too complex and too important to be managed by central planning.)
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To: sd-joe

Russia is poor nations" biggest benefactor
Russia is the biggest benefactor of poor nations (in relation to Russia’s GDP), Russian Finance Minister Alexey Kudrin said during his working visit to the Slovene city of Brdo on July 26, the Kommersant newspaper reports.
Theoretically, this position should help Russia become a full-fledged member of the Big Eight, a club of the world’s richest countries helping the poorest nations, the newspaper notes.

According to Mr. Kudrin, Russia wrote off $35bn in debts to the poorest nations over the past five years. He added that Russia had become the largest creditor of the world’s poorest nations, including the republics of the former Soviet Union. The Finance Minister pointed out that $5.5bn out of $35bn that was written off, was “official aid to the poorest nations”.

Russia is in third place in terms of the absolute volume of aid to the poorest nations, and it is in first place in the ratio of this aid to its GDP, according to Mr. Kudrin. He stressed that Russia, a member of the Big Eight, participates actively in developing and deciding global international problems, including poverty, the Kommersant reports.


25 posted on 06/06/2004 9:42:04 PM PDT by take
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To: Let's Roll; lewislynn; Dog Gone; snopercod; Carry_Okie; Ernest_at_the_Beach; dalereed; Robert357

How 'bout just a fart in a whirlwind? How danged stupid can these Euro-Trash Socialists git? Hain't we bought enufa their stupid Volvoids and VW Hippie vans?


26 posted on 06/06/2004 9:42:28 PM PDT by SierraWasp (Democrats are developing a drumbeat of disdain for America's values!!! Disdain the Fraidycrats!!!)
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To: SierraWasp

don't you get a emmissions test on your car?


27 posted on 06/06/2004 9:43:05 PM PDT by take
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To: take

Whaddaya keep postin more of this jibberish for? This is a "ship of fools!" and it's gonna sink!!! It's a danged exercise in futility!!! Fergedaboutit!!! Phhhhhht!!!


28 posted on 06/06/2004 9:46:14 PM PDT by SierraWasp (Democrats are developing a drumbeat of disdain for America's values!!! Disdain the Fraidycrats!!!)
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To: take

What an Fing scam! This whole stinking green barf mess is just another turd world scheme to get our money.


29 posted on 06/06/2004 9:46:14 PM PDT by Righty1
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To: SierraWasp
how did emmissions test on your car happen

Maurice Strong, Senior Advisor to the United Nations and World Bank - and organizer of the 1992 Rio Earth Summit

1992 Rio Earth Summit

30 posted on 06/06/2004 9:47:15 PM PDT by take
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To: SierraWasp

United Nations


31 posted on 06/06/2004 9:48:21 PM PDT by take
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To: take
Brokers gather to trade emissions credits

The day the U.S. caves in to the UN/NWO Kyoto demands, is the day American citizens are required to register for their "fair share" of air, food, and energy "credits."

32 posted on 06/06/2004 9:48:31 PM PDT by F16Fighter
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To: take

What I really want to know is can Carbon Credits be turned into some sort of Magic the Gathering card game?


33 posted on 06/06/2004 9:49:19 PM PDT by Liberal Classic (No better friend, no worse enemy. Semper Fi)
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To: SierraWasp

There are also big American companies or multinational companies (which) look to Europe


34 posted on 06/06/2004 9:49:24 PM PDT by take
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To: take
"don't you get a emmissions test on your car?"

Certainly not because I want to!!! I've got enough sense to know if I don't keep my car tuned up, it's gonna get bad milage and stink up my own atmosphere!!!

I don't need a stinkin local, state, national and international GovernMental EnvironMental agency tellin me what to do by some test they force me to pay for so I can keep my driving "priveledge" in order to practice my chosen profession and pursue happiness in the USA!!!

Whose danged business is it if my car needs a tune-up, or not? Huh? Huh? Huh? Come on... tell me!!!

35 posted on 06/06/2004 9:53:09 PM PDT by SierraWasp (Democrats are developing a drumbeat of disdain for America's values!!! Disdain the Fraidycrats!!!)
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To: SierraWasp
i feel sorry for you.

they are taking your FREEDOM away and you don't know it

36 posted on 06/06/2004 9:54:15 PM PDT by take
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To: take

I know all about that AlGore crappola!!! You musta posted this for newbie FReepers that never heard about whirled commonism thru GANG-GREEN!!!


37 posted on 06/06/2004 9:56:46 PM PDT by SierraWasp (Democrats are developing a drumbeat of disdain for America's values!!! Disdain the Fraidycrats!!!)
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To: take

What would be the current typical price for a credit?
...
Who decides who gets the initial batch of credits?
The carbon czar?
Did individuals get their share of credits, if not, why not?


38 posted on 06/06/2004 10:00:21 PM PDT by greasepaint
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To: F16Fighter
very American companies or multinational companies

must file a emmissions report to give to the EPA.

EPA give that report to the United Nations that being done now

39 posted on 06/06/2004 10:00:53 PM PDT by take
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To: take
"they are taking your FREEDOM away and you don't know it"

Hey take... don't you feel sorry for me! I FEEL SORRY ENUF FOR MYSELF!!!

What do ya think I should do now that you've explained it to me... give up???

40 posted on 06/06/2004 10:01:53 PM PDT by SierraWasp (Democrats are developing a drumbeat of disdain for America's values!!! Disdain the Fraidycrats!!!)
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