turning the right corner ensuring development through a low-carbon transport sector
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Turning the right Corner Ensuring Development Through A Low-carbon Transport Sector Andreas Kopp. Transport is crucial for development. There is not necessarily a conflict between low carbon intensity and income growth (fast growing Asian countries) - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
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TURNING THE RIGHT CORNER ENSURING DEVELOPMENT
THROUGH A LOW-CARBON TRANSPORT SECTOR
Andreas Kopp
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Transport is crucial for development
• There is not necessarily a conflict between low carbon intensity and income growth (fast growing Asian countries)
• Low-carbon transport is not only a matter of progressive engine technologies
• Affordability, low transport costs depend on adaptation and mitigation policies now.
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Figure 1. Countries have a choice: energy consumption in road transport can be low at high per capita incomes
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Outline 1/2
• A narrow climate change agenda limits the chances for reform in transport– Technical change is not the solution to high
emissions– Deeper cuts in emissions depend on changing
behavior and mobility patterns– Deeper cuts depend on early action in
infrastructure policies• Financing costs of adaptation and mitigation are
high
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Outline 2/2
• Financing schemes of a narrow climate agenda have failed in transport
• Inclusion of “co-benefits” reduces the costs of change
• Fiscal measures to correct for external costs self-finance reform
• Fiscal measures make a change in the long-run• A broad reform agenda requires policy
coordination
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Technical change is not the solution to high emissions
• Even under optimistic assumptions on technical change of engine technologies, emissions will not be drastically reduced
• Deep cuts in emissions depend on breakthroughs in biofuel technologies and fuel cell technologies (and CCS in energy)
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Figure 2. Business as usual will make transport the dominant consumer of oil
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Oil consumption increases in the medium term… and in the long
Source: IEA (2009). Source: Clarke (2007).
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Figure 4. The optimistic view: reductions in transport related CO2 emissions by technical standards
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IPCC Deep cuts only after 2030
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Carbon pricing induces behavioral change…
Carbon price paths depend on biofuels and CCS
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Figure 6. …and still transport becomes the main emitter, even with carbon pricing leading to a greenhouse gas concentration of 450 ppm
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Source: Clarke and Calvin (2008).
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Figure 7. The pessimistic view: transport remains a major CO2 emitter, even with carbon capture and storage
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With CCS Without CCS
Source: Luckow and others (2010).
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Deeper cuts in emissions depend on changing behaviors and the pattern of mobility
• Inertia due to slow changes in infrastructure stocks requires early action
• Demand for modal attributes of transport services leads to inertia in consumer behavior
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Deeper cuts need a broad reform agenda: Long lifetimes of infrastructure require early action– Early stages of infrastructure development
create a technological “lock-in”.– Early emphasis on individual car use leads to
dependency on technical change in engine technologies:• Infrastructure investment is sunk: existing
infrastructure has no opportunity costs• To reduce emissions, costs of changing
engine technologies is compared to costs of building up alternative modes
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Deeper cuts need a broad reform agenda:Supply measures alone are not enough
• Energy intensity by mode, USA 1970 – 2005
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Financial needs for adaptation and mitigation are highNarrow mitigation agendas are costly• Financing requirements for green transport will
add to often existing funding deficits– Incremental costs for the adaptation to climate
change estimated $ 1.6 to 26 billion annually, substantially higher with accounting for closing for infrastructure gap and maintenance deficits in DCs
– Mitigation costs are estimated to be $ 100 billion annually between 2010 and 2020, reaching $ 300 billion in 2030 (IEA), with no change in mobility patterns
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Financing mechanisms based on a narrow climate change agenda have failed in transport• Transport has been neglected by carbon finance– CDM: 3 of more than 2200 registered projects
are in transport, investment share 0.11 percent– GEF approved 28 transport projects in 20
years, attracting 6.4 percent of all resources– Country programs of Clean Technology Fund
have 16.7 percent investment in transport on average
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Financing mechanisms on a narrow climate change agenda have failed in transport
• Reasons for underinvestment in greening transport– Mitigation outcomes are more expensive in
transport than in other sectors when focusing on one dimension of external costs
– Success of supply side measures, infrastructure and operations depends on change in demand
– Implementation of complementary demand side measures is uncertain
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Incentives based on narrow climate change agenda are insufficient to induce modal shift• Incentives of a narrow climate change agenda will
not change mobility patterns• High carbon prices lead to small changes at the
gas pump• A broad reform agenda in the sense of the World
Bank transport business strategy changes the picture.
• With a broad reform agenda the transition to a low-carbon sector is no longer more expensive than in other sectors.
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Inclusion of “co-benefits” changes the story of the relative costs of a transition to a sustainable sector• Neglected external costs:– Congestion costs– Health costs of local air pollution– Accident costs, road safety– On top of Climate change effects
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Inclusion of “co-benefits” changes the story of the relative costs of a transition to a sustainable sector• Empirically external costs of climate change are
not dominant form of external costs of transport , US 2000
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Fiscal measures to correct for the external costs of transport help financing the transition to green transport• Implementation of fiscal incentives will lead to
fiscal surplus: GHG emissions– Removal of subsidies for fossil fuel use in
transport is happening in some countries, Iran could save $ 20 billion annually
– Implementing a carbon tax could yield $ 10, 24 or 145 billion with a carbon price
of $ 20, 30, 300 per ton of carbon in the US.
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Fiscal measures to correct for the external costs of transport help finance the transition to green transport• Implementation of fiscal incentives equivalent to
accounting prices will lead to fiscal surplus: local air pollution– Local air pollution charge for Los Angeles area
(district 7 of Caltrans) of 8 cents per mile would lead to $ 40 billion annually for the district
– Health costs are not lower in cities of developing countries, estimated $ 3.5 billion for Beijing.
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Fiscal measures lead to change in the long-run
• North Americans consume 4 to 6 times more fuel per head in transport than Europeans.
• Had all OECD countries had the fuel prices of North America fuel consumption and emissions would have been 30 percent higher throughout.
• Had all countries had the taxation level of UK or NL, fuel consumption would have been 44 percent lower on average
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Summary
• Mobility is essential for economic development.• Reducing fossil fuel use now will ensure low
transport costs in the long run.• Greening of the sector will contribute to funding
deficits of the sector in many countries• Implementing fiscal measures based on charges
for external costs generates fiscal surplus and avoids mismatch of supply and demand
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Summary
• Consequences for project work– National plans for low-emission transportExample of Georgia– New evaluation framework
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Thank you!
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