Transition credits for hastening coal’s end
Proposed transition credits could help investors of coal-fired plants to recover lost value if the plants are retired early. BT GRAPHIC: KENNETH LIM

Transition credits for hastening coal’s end

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💡This week: Imagine you’re an investor in one of the 2,000 or so coal plants in the region. The coal plant is still relatively young (South-east Asia has one of the youngest fleets of coal plants in the world), and you’ve got a power purchase agreement with the government to provide electricity for another 15 years. You’ve spent considerable sums of money building this plant, and that purchase agreement is how you’re going to make back your investment. Asking you to retire your plant five years early would be asking you to take a loss, so there’s no way you’re going to do that.

But what if you didn’t have to lose money? You could potentially recover the lost income if you could sell credits for the emissions avoided by retiring the plant early, and those credits attract a high enough price.

That’s the idea behind transition credits. A model offered by the Monetary Authority of Singapore and McKinsey & Co estimated that a 1 Gigawatt coal plant in Indonesia with 15 years to go on a power purchase agreement has a net present value of about US$310 million. Retiring the plant five years early would reduce that value to about US$240 million, leaving an “economic gap” of about US$70 million that represents how much investors would lose from phasing out the coal plant.

If the coal plant was replaced with renewable energy, selling credits for the avoided emissions could be enough to cover that gap if the credits were priced at about US$11 to US$12 per tonne of avoided emissions, based on the model.

Whether transition credits will take off may come down to a few factors.

The first is the level of support among regional governments not simply for transition credits but for coal phase-out as well. One of the key principles of high-quality credits is that the emissions reduction should be sufficiently “permanent”. One proposed safeguard for permanence is that the host jurisdiction, in which the coal plant to be retired sits, must commit to having no new coal plants beyond what is already planned. This sounds great on paper, but in practice, it might be challenging to enforce. The strength of the host jurisdiction’s commitment ultimately rests on the government of the day, and in developing countries, political risks are high on the list of “What can screw things up?”.

The paper also deliberately takes a neutral approach toward standards and methodologies, acknowledging that there are independent efforts on those fronts from the Coal to Clean Credit Initiative, Gold Standard, the US Energy Transition Accelerator and the World Bank. The MAS framework is meant to work with any methodology.

Too many competing standards and methodologies can hinder getting a critical mass of projects and credits to create a viable asset class. One potential source of friction lies with the question of what is considered to be an acceptable replacement source of energy for coal. One side of the debate argues that lower-emitting alternatives, such as natural gas or co-firing, should be allowed because not every part of the world is physically or economically able to support renewables at this time. The other side argues that allowing non-renewable, lower-emitting replacements locks in new sources of emissions that will eventually create new but similar phase-out challenges as coal.

This can be a delicate matter with existential implications. Standards that are too harsh may not attract enough phase-out projects. Those that are too lenient will not attract enough capital from wary investors. The wrong calibration could make or break coal phase-out.

MAS has put out a call for partners to help test the idea and is looking to launch one or more pilot projects. The “data and experience” from these projects will then be used to refine the concept with the goal of rolling out large-scale implementation.

🌱 Top ESG reads:

  1. Singapore is close to releasing a whitelist of carbon credits that high-emitting businesses can use to partially offset their taxed carbon from 2024 onwards.
  2. Proceeds from Singapore’s first sovereign green bond are being used for the Jurong Region and Cross Island rail networks.
  3. Floods, droughts and chronic heat are the most urgent climate adaptation needs in South-east Asia, say the experts.
  4. Indonesia launched its first carbon credit exchange, with all of the inaugural credits coming from geothermal projects in North Sulawesi.
  5. The world must reduce its use of plastic, instead of accepting recycling as the norm, says UN environment chief Inger Andersen. 

What do you think about today’s newsletter? Let us know at btnews@sph.com.sg. Sign up for the full version here.

i-PAP .

Integrated PropTech Platform

1y

The Business Times , it's very nice and valuable information thanks for sharing by i-pap.io team Singapore.

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CHESTER SWANSON SR.

Realtor Associate @ Next Trend Realty LLC | HAR REALTOR, IRS Tax Preparer

1y

Thanks for sharing.

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