Just days after the government
outlined
how it plans to auction carbon credits under the next phase of the EU's
emissions trading scheme, reports have emerged that it is considering
significant changes to the scheme that would see the proportion of credits sold
at auction increase.
The government is planning to auction seven per cent of the EU Emissions
Allowances (EUAs) issued to carbon intensive businesses and energy companies
during the next phase of the scheme running up to 2012 – a move that will net
the Treasury an estimated £1.6bn over the next three years.
However, according to reports in both the Sunday Times and the
Guardian, officials are investigating raising the proportion of EUAs
that are sold at auction to 10 per cent – the maximum level allowed under EU
rules – in an attempt to raise an extra £500m a year for investment in anti-fuel
poverty and domestic energy efficiency measures.
The proposed move is one of a number of options being considered by the
government, as it comes under growing pressure to respond to spiralling energy
prices.
Green groups and some Labour MPs have called for a repeat of the 1997
windfall tax on the profits of big utilities, but such proposals have prompted
fierce opposition from the CBI and other business groups. As such, an increase
in the proportion of EUAs sold at auction is seen as an attractive compromise
position, providing energy companies with further incentive to curb emissions
while raising revenue for increased winter fuel payments for the poor and
elderly.
A spokeswoman for Defra refused to be drawn on whether any decision on
changes to the auctioning process had been reached, but she added that the
scheme was designed to be "flexible". "As announced last week, we're planning to
auction seven per cent [of the credits]," she said. "But the scheme has always
been designed to be flexible, so that it can be adjusted based on how things
move forward."
The government is also reportedly considering reforms to the carbon emissions
reduction target (Cert), which obliges energy companies to part-fund home
insulation and other energy efficiency measures for their customers.
Under the three-year programme, energy companies are expected to invest £2bn
in helping people on low incomes to improve the energy efficiency of their
homes. But the government is now considering tweaking the scheme to increase the
amount invested in the first two years of the scheme.
Both the proposed changes to the EUA auction and the Cert scheme are likely
to further add to the upward pressure on energy bills for both business and
domestic customers, but the government hopes the new schemes will help
accelerate the adoption of energy efficiency measures while ensuring those on
low incomes are better protected against higher bills.
Comments
Have your say on this article