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Market Research Report

Carbon: Integration of local and global carbon markets

Published by Datamonitor Contact us : +1-860-674-8796
Published 2007/11 Content info 27 pages
Product code DC57803
Price From  US $ 2795 Order/Price list
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Description TOC

Table of Contents

  • DATAMONITOR VIEW
    • CATALYST
    • SUMMARY
  • ANALYSIS
    • The Kyoto Protocol envisaged global carbon emissions trading
      • The EU is pivotal to establishing a truly ' global' carbon market
      • Europe' s ETS dominated global carbon trading in 2006
      • The majority of European carbon is traded over-the-counter
      • ECX leads the standardized market for EU emissions trading
      • EU member states are the key Kyoto Protocol signatories
      • Brussels is pinning its hopes on a ' cap and trade' carbon market
      • Key EU economies will ultimately determine the success of the ETS
      • The undesirable surplus of EU allowances remained in 2006
      • The UK has escaped an EC clampdown on Phase II allocations
      • Natural sellers will have their ETS allocations slashed from 2008
      • The EU is collectively off-target to meet its ETS commitments
      • ETS Phase II will bring a dramatic shift in market fundamentals
      • Carbon prices reflect the need for a notable curb in emissions
      • The CDM is key to engaging non-EU carbon market participants
      • China dominates selling into the CDM
      • Over two thirds of CDM credits are assimilated into the EU ETS
      • Former Soviet states profit from renewable energy investments
      • Former EU15 governments are the most active JI participants
      • Investors place differing emphases on project-based mechanisms
      • Voluntary schemes are the fastest growing Kyoto mechanism
      • US industry is preparing for inevitable federal action on carbon
      • Beijing bourse would cement the EU' s appetite for Chinese carbon
  • APPENDIX
    • Definitions
    • Ask the analyst
    • Datamonitor consulting
    • Disclaimer
    • List of Figures
      • Figure 1: The EU is pivotal to establishing a truly ' global' carbon market
      • Figure 2: Europe' s ETS dominated global carbon trading in 2006
      • Figure 3: Non-brokered bilateral trading accounts for just a fifth of European carbon market activity
      • Figure 4: The Anglo-Dutch ECX dominates formalized EU emissions trading
      • Figure 5: Key EU economies will ultimately determine the success of the ETS
      • Figure 6: The undesirable surplus of EU allowances remained in 2006
      • Figure 7: Both the UK and Slovakia secured European Commission (EC) approval for a larger emissions quota in their Phase II NAPs
      • Figure 8: Poland and its smaller central and eastern European neighbors have been disproportionately targeted by Brussels in Phase II
      • Figure 9: The EU is collectively off-target to meet its ETS commitments
      • Figure 10: The transition from Phase I to Phase II allocations will see the current surplus of credits replaced with an EUA shortfall from 2008
      • Figure 11: Trader focus is shifting from an increasingly meaningless ETS Phase I towards increasingly stringent Phase II allocations
      • Figure 12: While Europe' s carbon market now dwarfs the CDM as Kyoto' s most traded and valuable mechanism, project-based trade remains pivotal
      • Figure 13: China generated 70% of all CDM CERs in 2006
      • Figure 14: The UK was the largest purchaser of CERs in 2006, reflecting its large ETS Phase I deficit
      • Figure 15: Central and eastern European states are cashing in on a ' greener' economic recovery
      • Figure 16: Copenhagen and Vienna are buying ERUs to bolster their 2012 Kyoto compliance efforts
      • Figure 17: Private investors have greater interest in CDM credits, which can be used in Phase I
      • Figure 18: Governments take a longer-term view, dominating trade in JI credits post-2008
      • Figure 19: While nominal and relative growth of the EU ETS is impressive, voluntary Kyoto schemes are growing at over 300% per annum
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