+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Energy and Environment issues in road transport - IEB and Environment Challenges in the... ·...

Energy and Environment issues in road transport - IEB and Environment Challenges in the... ·...

Date post: 13-Feb-2018
Category:
Upload: nguyenkhanh
View: 216 times
Download: 2 times
Share this document with a friend
33
Energy and Environment issues in road transport Prof. Stef Proost KULeuven (B)
Transcript

Energy and Environment

issues in road transport

Prof. Stef Proost

KULeuven (B)

Long term trends?

2050 World Share OECD

Road use cars

x 2.5 From 50% now

to 20% in 2050

Road use trucks x 5 From 50% now

to 20% in 2050

Air transport x 5

GHG emissions

transport

x 2 or x 3 From 60% now

to 35% in 2050

What is the right policy answer?

• EU roadmap 2050 is one of the answers

• I think we can do “better”

– By doing less

– By doing things differently

EU white paper for transport

(March 2011) – Key goals 2050 – No more conventionally fuelled cars in cities (and

50% less in 2030)

– 40 % use of sustainable low carbon fuels in aviation

– 50% shift of medium distance intercity passenger and freight journeys from road to rail and waterborne transport (30% shift by 2030)

– Triple length of HSR network by 2030

– Near zero road casualties (and 50% less by 2020)

– Move towards full application of user pays and polluter pays principles…

Outline

• Distinguish 3 issues: • Conventional air

• Energy supply issues

• Climate issues

• Issue + Policy response

• What transport policies make sense? • Land use decisions

• Modal choice

• Type of vehicle

• Intensity of vehicle use

polluting activity

Cost/unit

Price

Demand function for the polluting acivity

P°+d°

PEff +d*

Q*

Remaining env damage

Increased prod cost

PEff

Q°*

Environmental policy: best mix of technology and behaviour

Conventional air pollution 1

• Problem is health damage

• Solved mainly by better technologies

(Auto-Oil) • catalytic converter

• Cleaner fuels (less sulfur)

• Overall pollution from cars since 1995: -70 to -90%

despite growth in volume of car use

• Remaining problems • Local (hot spots)

• New health concerns

Conventional air pollution 2

• Remaining problems

– New evidence that very small particulates are

more harmful for health than expected

– Local hot spots of pollution require local policy – Low emission zones: Germany experimented in +50

cities, only vehicle emission standards worked well.

– One major mistake that can easily be

corrected: – Diesel cars are more polluting and pay less taxes per

vehicle-mile than gasoline cars, they have a very small

(5%) advantage in CO2 emissions but this does not

justify their current taxation advantage

Share of diesel in new passenger car

registrations (%)(2000 and 2009)

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

Be

lgiu

m

Luxe

mb

ou

rg

Nor

way

Fran

ce

Spai

n

Port

ugal

Ire

lan

d

Fin

lan

d

EU-1

5

EU-1

5 +

EFT

A

Au

stri

a

De

nm

ark

Ital

y

Uin

ite

d K

ingd

om

Swe

de

n

EFTA

Ice

lan

d

Ge

rman

y

Swit

zerl

and

Ne

the

rlan

ds

Gre

ece

2000

2009

Outline

• Distinguish 3 issues: • Conventional air : more or less “SOLVED”

• Energy supply issues

• Climate issues

• Issue/Policy ?

• What transport policies makes sense? • Land use decisions

• Modal choice

• Type of vehicle

• Intensity of vehicle use

Energy supply 1

• Car Transport is 90% dependent on oil

• Fuels in Cars are taxed much more than

other oil use and so transport has highest

WTP for oil

• What is problem?

– Running out of oil for the world?

– Sudden interruptions in oil supply?

Energy supply 2

- Running out of oil for the world?-

• Hotellings intertemporal arbitrage

condition for a fixed stock of oil reserves • Resource owners will arbitrage selling now or later

• They can not sell at more than choke price (or

price of backstop technology – solar, coal liquids..)

• Result: (price – extraction cost) increases over

time with rate of interest and there is already a

scarcity premium now

• Prices incorporate latest information on present

and future demand and cost information

1

TIME

PRICE

Of

Fossil

energy

Choke price or cost backstop P*

Extraction

cost

N

PRICE PROFILE 1 OVER TIME

Energy supply 3

• What is problem?

– Running out of oil for the world?

– Sudden interruptions in oil supply?

• Price fluctuations due to short term changes in

supply and demand

• Kilian (2008) shows that unanticipated supply

changes have been overemphasized – demand

fluctuations have been important too

• Main suppliers will benefit from reliability status of

their deliveries – unreliable suppliers need to give

discounts

Outline

• Distinguish 3 issues: • Conventional air : more or less “SOLVED”

• Energy supply issues

• Climate issues

• Issue/Policy ?

• What transport policies makes sense? • Land use decisions

• Modal choice

• Type of vehicle

• Intensity of vehicle use

Climate issue

• Essentials of climate issue

• Economics of international agreements

• Effects of EU climate & transport policy on

energy markets

Climate = international + stock

problem+uncertain – Economic growth requires more energy

– Energy can be more or less carbon intensive (coal = 2 gas)

– Sum of world emissions builds up a stock of greenhouse gasses

– Climate effect

– Damage

• All relations (physical + economical) are uncertain and we can only learn very slowly

Simplest model for Economics of

international agreements

• Barrett (1994)

• N identical countries, constant Marginal Benefit of emission reduction

• Endogenous determination of – Number of signatories n out of max N

– Terms of agreement for signatories

• One shot game – An equilibrium “Self Enforcing International

Agreement” requires (cfr. cartel theory) • Each country signing is as well off as a non signing country

• A signing country maximizes the total welfare of the members of the group joining the agreement

– Result: only very few countries (max 3) will sign an agreement

10 MB

Marg Benefit

3MB

Marg Abatement Cost

abatement

$/ton

1 3 10

nash

Int agreement

Total abatement effort

Nash equilibrium: 1x10 = 10

Intern Agreem 3x3 + 7= 16

Full cooperation (FB)= 10x10=100 (FB is better for everyone but you can not enforce the contract)

1

Economists are pessimistic on

international climate agreements

• Pure public bad problem for which no

international binding contracts are possible

– Repeated game (tit for tat) offers slightly better

perspectives but national leaders change (can we

blame Obama for attitude of Bush?)

– Catastrophic damages do not necessary lead to an

agreement when precise treshold for catastrophe

isuncertain

• Climate agreements exist, have been signed

– But are not observed

– Can be useful to exchange ideas

EU as climate policy forerunner

• EU policy justification?

– Feels responsible for world damages of its

emissions

– Cooperative attitude: i make efforts if the

others follow

– Show the rest of the world it is not costly to

realize deep cuts?

• But what can the EU really do and is it

cost-effective?

Reactions of energy markets to

unilateral EU climate policy

• Distinguish between – fossil fuels without rents (coal, non conventional oil and

gas)

– fossil fuels (oil, gas) with large rent element in price

• If EU reduces coal use, world price of coal may decrease somewhat but there is a decrease in total world emissions

• If EU reduces conventional oil use, it will ONLY DELAY EMISSIONS NOT REDUCE emissions (“green paradox”)

• If EU invests successfully in R&D for cheaper carbon free substitute (car running on water), it will INCREASE CURRENT EMISSIONS

Effect of unilateral commitment of EU to

reduce use of oil: from profile 1 to profile 2

Effect of breakthrough in vehicle technology

or biofuels : price over time from profile 1 to

profile 3

Smarter climate policies?

• Achieving absolutely a reduction of

emissions in Europe is NOT cost-effective

– Buy emission reductions in rest of world via

Clean Development Mechanism

– Favour technology options over behaviour

• Traditional thinking: right mix of technand

behaviour via emission taxation, a technology

standard has not right mix

• But technology advances spread over the whole

world and this has much larger effect (Europe is <

25% of world car market)

polluting activity

Cost/unit

Price

Demand function for the polluting acivity

P°+d°

PEff +d*

Q*

Remaining env damage

Increased prod cost

PEff

Q°*

EU white paper for transport

(March 2011) – Key goals 2050

• TECHNOLOGY – No more conventionally fuelled cars in cities (and

50% less in 2030)

– 40 % use of sustainable low carbon fuels in aviation

• MODAL SHIFT – 50% shift of medium distance intercity passenger and

freight journeys from road to rail and waterborne transport (30% shift by 2030)

– Triple length of HSR network by 2030

– Near zero road casualties (and 50% less by 2020)

– Move towards full application of user pays and polluter pays principles…

What transport policies make

sense 1 • No quantity targets for CO2 emissions in transport sector (even if it

is growing) as there are cheaper options in other sectors

– gasoline pays a 200 Eur/ton CO2 taks, but it is called “gasoline tax”

• Technology policies:

– Push technologies that could be adopted by rest of world (they have not

the same CO2 incentives – so you can not be world leader for

something for which there is no market)

– So prefer simple and cheap (gasoline engine) over performant and

expensive (hybrid and electric)

• Favour gasoline over diesel because of tax and health reasons

• Put same excises per mile on electric cars, hydrogen cars etc. as on

gasoline cars (implicit subsidies for electric cars of 1000 Euro/ ton of

CO2

What transport policies make

sense 2

• Modal shares:

– No quantitative ojectives (EU plans for HSR,

trains and maritime result from carbon

objectives)

– Modal shift could result from better transport

policies addressing congestion, local health

etc.

• Rethink TEN-T prioirity projects

– Half of them are not justified

Energy & Environment policies

in Road Transport – Conclude? • 3 issues:

• Conventional air : more or less “SOLVED” –except

diesel/gasoline choice

• Energy supply issues: not a major issue

• Climate issues: is a problem but EU can not do

much

• Transport policy should be guided by other

issues we can address • peak load pricing in private and public transport

Diagnosis of road transport problems


Recommended