The market (in-)stability reserve for EU carbon emission trading: Why it might fail and how to improve it
Authored by Emile J L Chappin, Jorn C Richstein, Vries Laurens J de
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.jup.2015.05.002
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
EMLab
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
https://github.com/EMLab/emlab-generation/tree/paper/euEtsMarketStabilityReserve
Abstract
The EU parliament has accepted a proposal of the EU commission on the
backloading of EU emission allowances (EUA), where the auctioning of
EUAs is postponed to future time periods. The EU commission has also
proposed a market stability reserve (MSR), which is a quantity-based
stabilisation policy that is aimed at controlling the volume of EUAs in
circulation.
Using an agent-based electricity market simulation with endogenous
investment and a CO2 market (including banking), we analyse the
backloading reform and the proposed MSR. We find backloading to only
have a short-term impact of CO2 prices; regardless, there is a
significant risk of high CO2 prices and volatility in the EU ETS. Our
simulations indicate that the triggers of the proposed MSR appear to be
set too low for the hedging need of power producers, effectively leading
to a stricter cap in its initial 10-15 years of operation. While the
current proposal may be improved by choosing different triggers, a
reserve that is based on volume triggers is likely to increase price
volatility, contrary to its purpose. Additional problems are the
two-year delay in the response time and the abruptness of the response
function, combined with the difficulty of estimating future hedging
behaviour. (C) 2015 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
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