Wardynski & Partners
October 8, 2015 - Poland
Decarbonisation of EU economies: How does it work?
by Weronika Pelc, partner
The issue of decarbonisation of the economies of EU member
states, and in particular Poland, generates a lot of heat. Decarbonising the
economy was named as one of the EU’s five energy priorities in the Commission
communication entitled “A Framework Strategy for a Resilient Energy Union with
a Forward-Looking Climate Change Policy.”
In European Union documents, decarbonisation means elimination of CO2 emissions
because of their harmfulness to the environment. By 2030, the EU wants
emissions to be 40% less than they were in the baseline year of 1990. The basis
for the EU’s policy in this area is the Community system of emissions trading,
under which installations emitting CO2 may do so only within limits awarded to
each installation individually. These installations primarily include power
plants and combined heat and power plants, but also steel mills, cement plants,
chemical plants, paper mills, and other industrial plants that use combustion
of coal and hydrocarbons and process carbon compounds. Emissions from other
sources (vehicles, small heating installations in buildings, etc) are not
regulated in this way.
Until 2013 each installation received free emissions rights within limits
established locally and approved for the given country collectively at the EU
level. From 2013, the system for allocation of emissions rights underwent significant
changes. Each year until 2020 the number of entitlements will decrease by
1.74%. A separate list was drawn up of 177 branches of the energy-intensive
sector particularly exposed to moving of their activity outside the EU, known
as “carbon leakage industries.” They were awarded free emissions rights until
2020. Some countries, including Poland, also negotiated the possibility of
providing free rights to the power industry. At the level of the entire EU, the
number of free entitlements for the power industry is supposed to fall to zero
by 2020. From 2014, other installations receive a smaller number of free
entitlements; in 2020 this number should equal 30% of the entitlements awarded
in 2014. Enterprises can turn to the market to purchase the other rights they
need to maintain production.
Currently the prices of emissions rights are about EUR 7 per tonne of CO2. For
an average-sized installation, this could add up to tens of millions of zlotys
per year. In July 2015 a proposal was announced for further changes in the
directive governing the European emissions trading system, which would
introduce further, far-reaching restrictions on awarding of free CO2 emissions
rights. For every industrial plant emitting CO2 in EU territory, this means
many millions in additional costs. Such a plant will either conduct an
expensive modernisation to increase the efficiency of its combustion and thus
reduce CO2 emissions, or will have to set aside significant sums to purchase
additional CO2 emissions rights on the market.
While formally the EU does not prohibit the use of coal for combustion, e.g. in
the power industry, the system requiring purchase of CO2 emissions rights
burdens coal-based power the most, as it emits the most CO2. The end of the
system of free emissions rights for the coal-based power industry therefore
could result in a drastic increase in prices of electricity generated from
coal, followed by the collapse of this area of the economy, its suppliers
(mines), and some of its customers, who could no longer compete because they
would have to pay more for electricity.
From a certain level set by available technical solutions, the lack of free
emissions rights drastically limits coal-based power and coal processing,
because CO2 emissions are an inherent element of production of energy in coal
combustion processes, as well as production of coke, steel, and even silicon.
Among all EU member states, Poland falls somewhere the middle in the level of
CO2 emissions relative to the population. Poland emits 8.4 tonnes of CO2 per
capita every year, compared to 10.4 tonnes in Germany. The Netherlands emits
13.1 tonnes of CO2 per capita per year, and Romania just 4.2 tonnes. It should
be pointed out, however, that CO2 is absorbed by plants in the process of photosynthesis,
and thus a portion of the CO2 released by the industry in any country is
absorbed by the vegetation in that country. If the amount of industrial
emissions captured by forests and farms in Poland were factored in, the level
of emissions in Poland per capita would be even less.
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