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Beijing Opens Carbon Trading Scheme to Fight Emissions


FILE - Steam billows from a chimney of a heating plant near the World Trade Centre Tower III, a 330-meter-tall (1,083 feet) skyscraper, in central Beijing.
FILE - Steam billows from a chimney of a heating plant near the World Trade Centre Tower III, a 330-meter-tall (1,083 feet) skyscraper, in central Beijing.
Beijing became the third Chinese city to launch a carbon trading scheme on Thursday, hoping to better regulate soaring CO2 emissions from its main power generators and manufacturers. First trades are reported to have gone through at 50 yuan per permit.

The capital’s scheme follows newly established markets in Shenzhen and Shanghai, with Guangdong province set to open one in December that will be the second-biggest in the world after the European Union.

The regional markets are part of China's strategy to cut its greenhouse gas emissions per unit of GDP to 40-45 percent below 2005 levels by 2020 as the country seeks to limit climate change, address future energy security issues and stave off international criticism for being the world's biggest emitter.

The China Beijing Environment Exchange (CBEEX), which hosts trading in the Beijing market, said two bilateral trades for a total of 40,000 permits had been registered on Thursday at 50 yuan per permit. Each permit represents one ton of carbon dioxide.

State-owned oil and gas company Sinopec Corp and investment bank CITIC Securities each bought 20,000 permits.

In addition, a smaller deal for 800 permits went through on the exchange at 51.25 yuan.

In comparison, emission permits closed on Wednesday in Shenzhen at 80 yuan and in Shanghai at 28 yuan. The different in price levels shows it is still early days for market participants and that there is great deal of uncertainty about whether permits are scarce, according to observers.

The Beijing emissions trading scheme will rein in emissions from 490 power and heat generators, manufacturers and large buildings in China's smoggy capital.

The government has not released information on how many permits have been issued to scheme participants, but has said 42 percent of the city's total CO2 emissions will be covered.

Coal-fired power plants, which contribute to Beijing's huge air pollution problem and were linked in June to 60 percent of the region's premature deaths in a Greenpeace report, will receive free permits for 2013 equal to 99.9 percent of their average emissions over 2009 to 2012.

By 2015, the amount will drop to 99.5 percent.

Manufacturers will receive permits this year equal to 98 percent of their historical emissions, falling to 94 percent in 2015.

Those that emit more than they have permits to cover can buy additional ones, formally called Beijing Emissions Allowances (BEAs), from others or use offset credits issued by the central government, known as Chinese Certified Emissions Reductions (CCERs).
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    Reuters

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