Fossil fuel subsidies and UK development finance

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Transcription:

Fossil fuel subsidies and UK development finance Shelagh Whitley Research Fellow February 7 th, 2014

Global fossil fuel subsidies 2 Subsidies to: 1. Exploration, 2. Production, and 3. Consumption Subsidies can be calculated on the basis of price gap from market prices (IEA). Subsidy accounting can include: Budget support (OECD and IMF), Tax expenditure (OECD and IMF), Failure to price externalities (IMF).

Global fossil fuel subsidies The IMF estimates that energy subsidies (oil, gas, coal and electricity) amount to a staggering $1.9 trillion worldwide the equivalent of 2½ percent of global GDP, or 8 percent of government revenues. The IEA estimates that fossil-fuel consumption subsidies worldwide amounted to $544 billion in 2012, slightly up from 2011 as moderately higher international prices and increased consumption offset some notable progress that is being made to rein in subsidies. Subsidies to oil products represented over half of the total. The OECD does not aggregate subsidy data, though it has been compiled for all OECD countries in 2013, and is now being compiled for BRICS. 3

Global fossil fuel subsidies IMF DATA IEA DATA 5

Subsidies through development finance Estimates of fossil fuel support from International Financial Institutions (IFIs) and National Development Banks (NDBs) range from $15 to $150 billion annually. International estimates of fossil fuel support from Export Credit Agencies (ECA) ranges from $50 to $100 billion annually. Including the WB Group, AfDB, ADB, IADB, and EBRD (Oil Change International) 6

Subsidies through development finance Between 2008 and 2011 the majority of IFI energy project support was to fossil fuel projects. Over 75% of energy project support from IFIs to India, South Africa, Saudi Arabia, Indonesia, Brazil, Thailand, Kazakhstan, Egypt, Venezuela, Uzbekistan, Algeria, and Nigeria was to fossil fuel projects. These are 12 of the top developing country GHG emitters. 7

UK subsidies (through IFIs) The Department for International Development (DFID), the Department for Energy and Climate Change (DECC), the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA), UK Export Finance (UKEF), and CDC (the UK s development finance institution) currently provide financial and technical support for energy sector activities in developing countries. These Government departments provide support to energy projects either directly or through International Finance Institutions (IFIs). A basic analysis by ODI of UK finance to energy projects through IFIs identified more than USD 3 billion (or GBP 2 billion) in support between 2008 and 2011. Support to fossil fuel projects through IFIs was twice as large as support for clean energy projects. 8

UK subsidies (through Export Finance) In November 2011 -UK Export Finance is guaranteeing a US$1 billion line of credit for Petroleo Brasileiro Sociedade Anonima (Petrobras) to finance UK exports for Petrobras investment programme. The line of credit is to expand Petrobras oil exploration and production facilities off the east coast of Brazil. In June 2013 - UK Export Finance (UKEF) announced that it will guarantee US $700 million of finance for UK exports to a petrochemical facility in Saudi Arabia. Others: 22 million to Norwegian offshore oil contractor, 6 million petrochemical plant in Azerbaijan, 6 million natural gas plant in Nigeria. The most important markets for UKEF were Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Brazil, Dubai, New Zealand, Norway, Russia and Saudi Arabia. Information on support by CDC and other Government departments for energy projects could not be reviewed due to a lack of publicly available information. 9

UK subsidies (through Export Finance) The Export Investment Guarantees Act 1991 does not allow UK Export Finance to discriminate in its support between different classes or types of export: "It would be unlawful for the Secretary of State simply to declare a blanket ban on certain types of investment.... I think the objective is the right one, but we are constrained by the existing legislation. David Godfrey, the UK Export Finance chief executive, a lack of green projects supported by the organisation was not the product of any discrimination on its part. The countries to which such technology is exported, he suggested, do not tend to require export support. ( 38k for hydropower project) The Coalition Government included in its programme for government the following commitment: we will ensure that UK Trade and Investment and the Export Credits Guarantee Department become champions for British companies that develop and export innovative green technologies round the world, instead of supporting dirty fossil-fuel production. 10

11 Impact of domestic subsidies in developing countries

12 Impact of domestic subsidies in developing countries

Developing country subsidies dwarf climate finance For the 42 developing countries where data is available, the volume FFS to consumers is 75 times that of climate finance US$396 billion in FFS in 2011 vs. US$5 billion avg. annual CF (2010-2012) 5 countries appear in both top 12 lists (India, Indonesia, China, Mexico, and Egypt)

International commitments In 2009 G20 committed to phase out and rationalise over the medium term inefficient fossil fuel subsidies while providing targeted support for the poorest. This commitment was reinforced in 2010 by a leaders statement from 21 Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) countries. Europe 2020 strategy calling on Member States to phase out environmentally harmful subsidies (EHS) limiting exceptions to people with social needs UN - Secure Sustainable Energy goal of the Post-2015 Development Agenda to phase out inefficient fossil fuel subsidies that encourage wasteful consumption 15

UK subsidy phase out Opportunities for UK to: address subsidies provided through development finance, and support subsidy phase out processes in developing countries (including through climate finance). in addition to phasing out subsidies at home 16

EAC Inquiry Energy Subsidies RECOMMENDATIONS DfID should make, and publish, an assessment that compares its aid expenditures and the extent of fossil fuel subsidies for each aidrecipient country UK Export Finance should similarly provide a comparative analysis of export finance support and fossil fuel subsidies. DfID should then include these analyses in a revision of its Environment Strategy, along with the two departments' assessment of why continued aid and export support in each case overrides the need for eliminating fossil fuel subsidies in those countries. (Paragraph 36) Report Published December 2, 2013 17

ODI is the UK s leading independent think tank on international development and humanitarian issues. We aim to inspire and inform policy and practice to reduce poverty by locking together high-quality applied research and practical policy advice. The views presented here are those of the speaker, and do not necessarily represent the views of ODI or our partners. Overseas Development Institute 203 Blackfriars Road, London, SE1 8NJ T: +44 207 9220 300 www.odi.org.uk s.whitley@odi.org.uk

Phase out support through development finance World Bank Group's Energy Sector document, allows "financial support for greenfield coal power generation projects only in rare circumstances. Considerations such as meeting basic energy needs in countries with no feasible alternatives to coal and a lack of financing for coal power would define such rare cases. The UK Government's recent announcement about ending support for coal power plants abroad was couched in similar terms. 19