EU carbon trading in freefall

Looks just like what happened to the Chicago Carbon Exchange is about to repeat in Europe.

Source: http://www.barchart.com/charts/futures/CKZ11

By Thomson Reuters Point Carbon

LONDON | Wed Dec 14, 2011 12:01pm EST LONDON (Reuters) –

EU carbon prices fell to their lowest ever level on Wednesday …

The ICE ECX December 2011 EUA contract fell 73 cents to an all-time low of 6.30 euros, down 10.4 percent on Tuesday’s 7.03-euro settlement. By 16.30 GMT, the contract had recovered slightly to 6.41 euros on healthy turnover of around 15 million units.

The drop sends the contract into unchartered territory, falling well below its previous low of 6.77 euros on December 6 as market traders saw few signs of respite in the EU economy to boost demand for emission permits.

“I still don’t see any bottom to this market,” said one carbon trader, who said any positive sentiment from this weekend’s landmark U.N. climate summit in Durban was purely psychological as it brought no increase in demand for permits.</p>

Read the whole story

Jo Nova writes:

The low price, 6.3 Euro, is equivalent to about $8 Australian or US.

The Australian government signed us up to pay $23A with a floor at $15 (and they think that they are creating a “free” market.)

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Neil
December 15, 2011 4:57 pm

The Australian government signed us up to pay $23A with a floor at $15 (and they think that they are creating a “free” market.)
The current Australian government’s definition of “free market” is vastly at odds with the definition used everywhere else. They have the same problem with the definitions of “integrity” and “honesty”.

JohnWho
December 15, 2011 5:00 pm

No matter how much I squint my eyes when I look at that chart,
I can not make it look like an upside down hockey stick.
Maybe if I ran the numbers through Mann’s algorithm and then displayed it upside down, Mann/Tiljander style?
🙂

Leon Brozyna
December 15, 2011 5:01 pm

At this rate, it’ll be below one Euro by spring. Who’s gonna be left holding the bag on this sad bet?

tokyoboy
December 15, 2011 5:01 pm

Since this is in the public eye, I bet they cannot hide the decline.

Pingo
December 15, 2011 5:02 pm

I blame capitalism for this market not working.

R. de Haan
December 15, 2011 5:09 pm

They try to make it to 2013 but I think the EU can call it’s self lucky if they make it to through the end of this year.
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/australian-banks-given-one-week-prepare-european-meltdown

David Larsen
December 15, 2011 5:12 pm

Bull market or cow sheeeeeeeeeeet?

Curiousgeorge
December 15, 2011 5:14 pm

Tulips anyone?

DANEgerus
December 15, 2011 5:20 pm

Selling valueless ‘credits’ to save the earth from plant food is the foulest sort of fraud. They should all lose everything for their attempts to steal from the poor.

AdderW
December 15, 2011 5:25 pm

JohnWho says:
December 15, 2011 at 5:00 pm
No matter how much I squint my eyes when I look at that chart,
I can not make it look like an upside down hockey stick.
Maybe if I ran the numbers through Mann’s algorithm and then displayed it upside down, Mann/Tiljander style?
🙂

It will look much, much “better” if you just swivel it around the y-axis

December 15, 2011 5:26 pm

Added to the Canadian pullout, this explains why the authorities need to start arresting people now.
When the real bosses lose real money, their underlings (sometimes called “governments”) feel the pain and start looking for even lower underlings to whip.

John M
December 15, 2011 5:42 pm

Maybe it’s time for a reverse split.

Brian H
December 15, 2011 5:43 pm

The market is trying to find its true level, which is about -10 Euros.

TomRude
December 15, 2011 5:44 pm

Thomson Reuters Point Carbon is the perfect illustration why this organization cannot be trusted on climate change issues. Their Trustee Sir Crispin Tickell is a stalwart of UNEP and involved in green alarmism as demonstrated by the Climategate 2.0 emails. Their newspaper in Canada, the Globe and Mail is a rabid warmist paper.

mpaul
December 15, 2011 5:50 pm

Oh my, there go the BBC pensions — up in smoke, er, down in carbon.

December 15, 2011 5:50 pm

But can: Europe, Australia, California and now Quebec be that wrong or that stupid?

bushbunny
December 15, 2011 5:51 pm

This will get worse and unlike gilt edge stocks, you can’t sell them, just transfer them. Well with gilt edged stocks at least you earned interest, and could regain some of your capital expenditure,
by selling them by transfer. Happy Christmas everyone, and I am signing off now till the new\year

Methow Ken
December 15, 2011 5:56 pm

Darn: Dummy me: Was thinking I should have shorted ICE ECX futures a while back; never took action. So it goes. . . .

December 15, 2011 5:56 pm

On the bright side, climate delegate agree to keep getting paid.

December 15, 2011 5:59 pm

Leon Brozyna says:
December 15, 2011 at 5:01 pm
At this rate, it’ll be below one Euro by spring. Who’s gonna be left holding the bag on this sad bet?>>>
There’s still going to be a Euro in the spring?

December 15, 2011 6:02 pm

I think that should read “uncharted” territory. In any case, don’t you guys know that this would have never happened if independent thought hadn’t got in the way? The centralised planners know better, and if all their plans had gone to plan, the plan for the price of “carbon” trading above $15/tonne would have come to fruition.
Curses, foiled again!

JohnWho
December 15, 2011 6:03 pm

AdderW says:
December 15, 2011 at 5:25 pm
JohnWho says:
December 15, 2011 at 5:00 pm
No matter how much I squint my eyes when I look at that chart,
I can not make it look like an upside down hockey stick.
Maybe if I ran the numbers through Mann’s algorithm and then displayed it upside down, Mann/Tiljander style?
🙂
It will look much, much “better” if you just swivel it around the y-axis

Would that be Mann’s “de-natured” trick?

Leon Brozyna
December 15, 2011 6:09 pm

davidmhoffer says:
December 15, 2011 at 5:59 pm
…coffee spew…best one-liner of the day

December 15, 2011 6:15 pm

By spring, you will be able to buy worthless carbon credits with worthless Euros.
Steamboat Jack (Jon Jewett’s evil twin)

ferd berple
December 15, 2011 6:16 pm

The Australian government signed us up to pay $23A with a floor at $15 (and they think that they are creating a “free” market.). The low price, 6.3 Euro, is equivalent to about $8 Australian
Perfect. Buy EU carbon credits for $8 and sell them for $15 in Oz. $7 profit as fast as you can turn them over. Looks like everyone in Oz can simply quit their jobs and retire. Have their broker buy/sell more carbon credits any time the nest egg falls below $1 million.
Tulip mania anyone?

Interstellar Bill
December 15, 2011 6:22 pm

Prop up the carbon exchange by adding to the ObamaCare mandate
a further mandate to buy carbon credits before you get to start your car.

December 15, 2011 6:38 pm

This outcome with further decreases to come reflects the failures of Copenhagen, Cancun and Durban despite how the worthless mainstream media try to portray these realities. The facts remain that nothing will happen concerning emissions reductions for a decade or more. The idiots who brought us this doomed from the start approach to try to create global wealth transfer schemes hidden by phony climate fear bs have failed. Great end result.

Jimmy Haigh
December 15, 2011 6:41 pm

Leon Brozyna says:
December 15, 2011 at 6:09 pm
davidmhoffer says:
December 15, 2011 at 5:59 pm
coffee spew…best one-liner of the day
Agreed!

Roh234
December 15, 2011 6:56 pm

Carbon trading is anything but a free market.

Caleb
December 15, 2011 7:04 pm

RE: “mpaul says:
December 15, 2011 at 5:50 pm
Oh my, there go the BBC pensions — up in smoke, er, down in carbon.”
If you can’t stand the heat, don’t sell your soul to the devil.
Seriously, all you BBC employees ought be re-thinking your loyalties. Certain rich, fat-cat market manipulators (naming no names) promiced you that you’d be taken care of, and could retire at age fifty, if you played along. They likely sold out long ago, and may well have played you for chumps, for when they sold out your pension plan bought what they sold. Now it looks you won’t be able to retire until you are eighty. There is only one way to get even. Do what they fear most: REPORT THE TRUTH!

tokyoboy
December 15, 2011 7:05 pm

The trend of atmospheric CO2 concentration:
http://junksciencearchive.com/MSU_Temps/MaunaLoaCO2.png
hasn’t changed at all since 2005, when the KP came into force and scammers worldwide began crying wolf.
Their sole target was controlling the CO2 time course, but NOTHING HAS HAPPENED, as is crystal clear even to the eye of kids.

Gordon Melville Ford
December 15, 2011 7:06 pm

What else is new?

Mac the Knife
December 15, 2011 7:44 pm

““I still don’t see any bottom to this market,” said one carbon trader.”
Not much of a ‘trader’, if he doesn’t know with certainty that any market has an absolute bottom at “0”.
Reducing your carbon footprints is as simple as wiping your feet before you come in the door!
It’s value is nontrivial… and your moms will thank you….
MtK

Marian
December 15, 2011 7:45 pm

“Neil says:
December 15, 2011 at 4:57 pm
The current Australian government’s definition of “free market” is vastly at odds with the definition used everywhere else. They have the same problem with the definitions of “integrity” and “honesty”.
Same applies for the NZ Govt. Carbon is set a NZ$25.
NZ Govt’s over the years have been fairly zealous on the ‘freemarket’ economy principle.
It doesn’t apply to carbon pricing though.

G. Karst
December 15, 2011 7:53 pm

Warm fuzzy feelings can get very expensive. GK

December 15, 2011 7:55 pm

“I still don’t see any bottom to this market,” said one carbon trader>>>
I heard that more than one said that. But the media never reported the others because they were just carbon copies.

December 15, 2011 8:00 pm

Where is Maurice Strong,the failed Canadian Pol, who started the IPCC?? Oh yes hiding out in China, being protected by the Chinese, as he counts his Oil for Food money from the Iraq scam. Guess he will have to live with those millions as his Carbon Credit scam seems to be going down in flames.

Fitzy
December 15, 2011 8:05 pm

Yeah, Carbon is worth Minus 60,000 Zimbabwe Drachma’s. Or about 3.5 Euro-Cents, actually subtract the sales tax, its around (Minus) -1 U.S Treasury Bond, or about zero divided by 1 Goldman Sachs Shares (pre-bailout).
Lucky for us, many green thinking retirement funds are banking on this FIAT currency to top up the portfolio. Which equates to the value of 1.5 standard Euro Oranges on retirement – as long as you grow them yourself, in your own land, having paid a carbon tax for adding fruit trees to the diverse biological backdrop that is the modern industrial/urban landscape.
Cha-CHING!

December 15, 2011 8:07 pm

…any positive sentiment from this weekend’s landmark U.N. climate summit in Durban was purely psychological >>>
Ouch. I was trying to come up with a witty sarcastic remark… and then I realized that the original quote actually IS a witty sarcastic remark.

Brian H
December 15, 2011 8:07 pm

Dennis Nikols says:
December 15, 2011 at 5:50 pm
But can: Europe, Australia, California and now Quebec be that wrong or that stupid?

Rhetorical question, I know, but it’s clear the historical and contemporary evidence says, “Fer damn shure!”

Brian H
December 15, 2011 8:10 pm

As for the mandated/hoped for/delusory “floor price” of $15, I seem to recall a UN analysis that said that the price had to be north of $45 to achieve any “mitigation”.
Oopsie! -har -hack -choke -snort!

December 15, 2011 8:11 pm

Looks like a grade black ski slope – next stop the bottom!
To certain extent this was inevitable – there is no intrinsic value to back up what was being traded – it wasn’t even scarce, the darn stuff is freely available everywhere!
When they do get to zero – the credits will have some value – as fire lighters… Good riddance!

December 15, 2011 8:15 pm

I was trying to explain the carbon markets to my students last week. It was extremely difficult to convince them that they are real because even to a knuckleheaded ninth grader it sounds like an overabundance of horse manure.

Justa Joe
December 15, 2011 8:18 pm

It couldn’t have happened to a nicer bunch of guys. I hope the BBC pension fund takes a bath on this.

Tom Harley
December 15, 2011 8:19 pm

Photos here of what we are going to have to pay for under scammer Gillard’s #lunatic tax, our new power station is gas fired. http://pindanpost.com/2011/12/16/the-invisible-gas-and-media-propaganda/
Includes Matt Ridley’s item on gas vs wind and the usual media propaganda pic of emissions.

pat
December 15, 2011 8:36 pm

this and more are now posted at Jonova’s site:
15 Dec: BBC: Firms say low carbon price threatens EU green targets
Some of Europe’s biggest energy and manufacturing firms say the EU must act to raise the price of carbon and ensure that CO2 emissions targets are met.
A letter to the European Commission from the industry group warns that the future of the EU’s Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS) is at stake.
The EU Corporate Leaders Group on Climate Change (EUCLG) includes Royal Dutch Shell, Enel, Alstom and Acciona…
***The EUCLG’s patron is Britain’s Prince Charles. The group’s letter called for permits to be withheld in Phase Three of the ETS, which begins in 2013…
The EUCLG Director, Sandrine Dixson-Decleve, told BBC News that “the ETS is no longer functioning as it should be functioning”.
“We’re in a financial crisis, and as we’re trying to look at the eurozone we need to look at the existing [carbon] market and make sure it’s functioning, so recalibrating the market to take into consideration the situation we’re in.”
She said the financial crisis had helped to reduce Europe’s CO2 emissions, because of the slump in industrial output…
The EUCLG wants the EU’s Energy Efficiency Directive to be aligned with the ETS, because it expects a 13.9% reduction in carbon prices if firms in the ETS increase their energy efficiency.
The letter says the EU must take account of the potential impact of the directive and other green energy policies on the carbon price, to ensure that the ETS remains viable.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-16193954

James
December 15, 2011 8:37 pm

Well I recall reading that the recession did more to drop emissions than anything else. If you think europe is heading for more recession (a very good bet imo), then I guess it makes sense that there will be more indulgences than sinners.
As someone hinted at above, the clearing price is zero if permits are in excess supply…
Look out below!

December 15, 2011 8:47 pm

@ Pat
“She said the financial crisis had helped to reduce Europe’s CO2 emissions, because of the slump in industrial output…”
There is just no end to the humour as the whole facade crumbles. What she meant to say was:
“…the slump in industrial output is a crisis caused by the forced reduction in CO2 emissions…”

Steve Keohane
December 15, 2011 9:03 pm

Looks like ‘Peak Carbon’ was in late June 2008, 3 months after the market opened.

Brian H
December 15, 2011 9:06 pm

James says:
December 15, 2011 at 8:37 pm
Well I recall reading that the recession did more to drop emissions than anything else.

To date, the ONLY thing that drops emissions. The hoped-for vicious spiral is CO2 controls→recession→lower emissions→support for more controls→depression→ban on emissions→total de-industrialization.

TRM
December 15, 2011 9:07 pm

” Dennis Nikols says: December 15, 2011 at 5:50 pm
But can: Europe, Australia, California and now Quebec be that wrong or that stupid?”
Quebec has huge hydro and could easily supply most of the northeast USA if they got the contracts and developed James Bay 2, 3, 4 etc. You have no idea just how massive the amount of untapped hydro is in northern Quebec my friend. They obviously will go along with anything that gets them more sales.
I’ll let the Auzzies, Europeans and Left Coasters explain their angles. Quebec is purely a mercenarial move. Follow the money!

RobW
December 15, 2011 9:26 pm

“At this rate, it’ll be below one Euro by spring. Who’s gonna be left holding the bag on this sad bet?”
Um that would be the European governments. But hey they are flush these days right?

December 15, 2011 9:27 pm

Brian H says:
December 15, 2011 at 5:43 pm
The market is trying to find its true level, which is about -10 Euros.
===================================================
🙂 Brian, I’m sure you ‘thick’ fingered the keyboard and meant to type “0,00” Euro.

Mike
December 15, 2011 9:37 pm

the smart money was shorting this market last summer or before…still it is not too late to short it into the dirt and buy incandescent bulbs with some of the profits.

Cassandra King
December 15, 2011 9:54 pm

The trade in a harmless trace gas and plant food is perhaps the most evil part of the CAGW fraud, it is stealing money from those least able to afford it and enriching those least in need and least deserving of it. Will we ever learn who got rich and how and more importantly will these profiteers ever be brought to justice?
It is the essence of criminality second only to the windmill/solar FiT fraud and it highlights perfectly how corrupt our political elites have become and how insulated from the consequences of their actions they now are. This political class elite can lie and cheat and deceive and manipulate and there are no consequences. Is it any wonder they have run wild?
It seems to be a case of the West in decline, a systemic failure and a blurring of the concept of right and wrong in those where that concept is vital for us all, where justice is no longer blind. Is this how civilisations end I wonder. When this carbon trading fraud fails and it will fail, when it fails what will happen to the fraudsters and the profiteers?

JEM
December 15, 2011 9:56 pm

Oh, at the rate things are going it might be back up to Eu100 or so next year.
Of course, at that point we’ll be referring to it as the ‘Weimar Euro’ anyway.

Pete H
December 15, 2011 11:44 pm

That’s why the news presenters on the BBC look so glum this morning!

Tipocaldo
December 16, 2011 1:25 am

Actually I would get rid of any euros \asap!

Tipocaldo
December 16, 2011 1:33 am

Looks like AGW is really collapsing now from the various news stories now becoming mainstream re above the raid was probably caused by the free fall in carbon trading, just follow the money that would have really hurt the big wigs controlling police in uk and doj in \\\usa

Graham Green
December 16, 2011 1:42 am

I seem to remember reading some time ago that the BBC had its pension scheme mixed up in this sort of ‘market’. I don’t know the ins and outs or even if there is any truth in that but I would like to hear from anyone who is in the know.

Dodgy Geezer
December 16, 2011 2:12 am

@Galane
“…..I wouldn’t mind it a bit if the fallout blows apart the EU. That was just Germany and France trying to take over Europe again, economically rather than by force of arms….”
Yes, the Brits are going to have to stand alone again… I hope the US and Canada will be able to come to their help as before – it looks like Australia and maybe New Zealand and South Africa will sit this one out.
At the same time we have a corresponding Asian fight with India battling with China (rather than Japan)
Funny how history keeps repeating itself…..but where is the Churchill for the financial sector when you need him…?

richard verney
December 16, 2011 2:36 am

tokyoboy says:
December 15, 2011 at 7:05 pm
The trend of atmospheric CO2 concentration:
http://junksciencearchive.com/MSU_Temps/MaunaLoaCO2.png
hasn’t changed at all since 2005, when the KP came into force and scammers worldwide began crying wolf.
Their sole target was controlling the CO2 time course, but NOTHING HAS HAPPENED, as is crystal clear even to the eye of kids.
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
See how linear the increase in CO2 is from the 1950s and yet manmade emissions of CO2 running from the same time are anything but linear.
That graph should always be superimposed with a plot of manmade emissions over the same time scale, and it would then be apparent that Mauna Loa is not plotting/recording/reflecting manmade emissions.

Jack
December 16, 2011 3:55 am

It was all bound to fail. The warmist scammers marketed the trading of CO2 as trading in carbon credits rather than carbon dioxide credits. In reality there is no such thing as carbon exchanges rather carbon dioxide exchanges. They lied to the public because as has been mentioned before, the ordinary public would be up in arms if they knew they were being forced to pay for carbon dioxide credits.
When it comes to fire in the home, which would you prefer, a carbon detector or carbon monoxide detector?

Brian H
December 16, 2011 4:01 am

Streetcred says:
December 15, 2011 at 9:27 pm
Brian H says:
December 15, 2011 at 5:43 pm
The market is trying to find its true level, which is about -10 Euros.
===================================================
🙂 Brian, I’m sure you ‘thick’ fingered the keyboard and meant to type “0,00″ Euro.

Nope. Did you miss the minus sign in front of the ’10’?
CO2 is a valuable resource. Emissions should be subsidized.

Ralph
December 16, 2011 4:24 am

Bound to happen.
The Carbon Credit is a monetry currency, just like the dollar or euro, but with printing presses all over the world churning out credits. An oversupply of money devalues a currency – even a Carbon Credit currency. And a huge oversupply of money, means you put you money into another currency, to keep it safe.

Ralph
December 16, 2011 4:34 am

I hope Lazy Teenager and Mr (Greg) Bin Laden bought loads and loads of CCs at the top of the market. Scientist can lie and hide a decline, but markets eventually catch up with financial lies and scams – ask Bernie Madoff how long you can cover up the hole in the accounts for. 😉
.

Editor
December 16, 2011 5:02 am

Not really on topic, not really off topic, but not worth a separate post:
Here in the US northeast, the last RGGI auction for the year sold 63% of the available CO2 allowances, a much greater percentage than I expected, which was less than the paltry 18% in the last quarter.
Buyers may have decided there will be no competition from speculators and no chance that all will be sold, so may be adopting a “just in time” buying practice.
I’ve updated http://wermenh.com/rggiwatch/index.html with that datum but have been a bit lax about tracking other RGGI news. It hasn’t been very interesting anyway.
One recent item – New Hampshire has made grants some projects with the expectation that RGGI funds would pay for them.
http://newhampshire.watchdog.org/9573/rggi-running-600k-deficit-in-new-hampshire/ says in part:

RGGI running $600K deficit in New Hampshire
By Grant Bosse on December 14, 2011
(CONCORD) Plummeting demand for carbon allowances has left New Hampshire officials $600,000 short of the grants they’ve made with the state’s Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative revenues. The quarterly RGGI auctions are the sole source of revenues for the state’s Greenhouse Gas Emissions Reduction Fund (GHGERF), which has pledged more in its first two years than the RGGI program generated for the Granite State in its first three years.
When the Legislature signed New Hampshire up for RGGI in 2008 it set aside $1.2 million from the future auctions to boost the state’s existing Weatherization Program. The Legislature also diverted $3.1 million from the GHGERF in June 2010 as part of a budget balancing package put forward by Governor John Lynch to close the state’s $300 million deficit. In 2009, the Public Utilities Commission handed out $17.66 million from the GHGERF. In 2010, the PUC issued $13.4 million in grants.
The Legislature and the PUC committed a total of $35.36 million dollars in RGGI’s first two years, while auction revenues from the program’s first three years brought in only $34.7 million.
The deficit won’t impact New Hampshire General Fund budget. Jack Ruderman is Director of the Sustainable Energy Division at the PUC, and he tells NH Watchdog that not all of the grants awards in 2010 have been paid out yet.
“We’re not going to have any trouble paying out those grants,” Ruderman explains. He says while RGGI is the only way to replenish the GHGERF, they can use proceeds from next year’s RGGI auctions to fulfill last year’s grants.

I raised the possibility of this shortfall in my testimony at statehouse hearings into a bill to have New Hampshire withdraw from RGGI.

Frank K.
December 16, 2011 5:13 am

Pingo says:
December 15, 2011 at 5:02 pm
“I blame capitalism for this market not working.”
I do too. Capitalism is all about letting the free market pick winners and losers. Carbon trading was obviously a LOSER…

E.M.Smith
Editor
December 16, 2011 5:24 am

TRM says:
I’ll let the Auzzies, Europeans and Left Coasters explain their angles. Quebec is purely a mercenarial move. Follow the money!

Well, out here on the Left Coast we don’t have an angle. We’re just committing eco-hari-kari along with our long plunge into economic ruin. Gov. just announced something like “Tax Beatings to continue until morale improves, or else… or else we’ll have to cut spending by $1 Billion” Which would be fine except that we are somewhere between $14 B and $40 B in the hole depending on which lies you believe. (Add in unfunded obligations it’s much higher…) And, of course, the economic base has packed up and left as fast as the taxes were raised and the regulatory choke chain was applied…
We do have a couple of old nuke plants, located on earthquake fault lines and next to the ocean (hey, we taught Fukushima everything they know!) and we’ve got about 10% hydro; but mostly we have decorative wind turbine tax dodges and buy our electricity from Arizona and Washington State at nice high prices… (but it keeps our ‘carbon footprint’ low and folks don’t need California Carbon Indulgences to build a plant out of state…)
SIgh…
Oh, and per the European Carbon ETS:
Say I’m a factory that burns 100,000 tons of coal a year to make steel. I can either pay $10/ton for the coal AND a projected $20/ton ‘carbon tax / permit’ or I can move to China. As it takes time to build a new steel mill, I start building one (about a decade ago…) when the economy is going great. (I can use both, then). When the economy slows down, I shut the more expesive EU plant and dump my carbon tax problem. IFF the economy ever improves, I’ll open my second plant in China.
In trading, this is called “Legging in” to a position… (or “legging out” of the EU.)
I’ve watched it happen to California for about a decade+ now…
That, btw, is why they are so desperate to make a GLOBAL straight jacket tax at IPCC.
As long as anyone is outside the scheme, it collapses. Slowly in good times, or much faster in downturns.
China knows this (and knew it), which is why the went along with Koyoto (where they got a free pass). Now that they have all the industry, their incentive is to just say “up yours” to a new deal and follow that with “If you want products, we have them, if you do not want them, you have no factories and no competitive position”.
Any attempt to revive the ETS / Carbon Price will just drive more stuff to China (as we’ve been saying here for years…)

December 16, 2011 5:28 am

JohnWho says:
December 15, 2011 at 5:00 pm
No matter how much I squint my eyes when I look at that chart,
I can not make it look like an upside down hockey stick.

No, the trend appears to be pretty much linear, not even exponential. In fact, extrapolating the straight line best fit to the data, the curve reaches “zero” by sometime in May or June of next year, although there is a small additional negative trend clearly visible close to the end probably associated with the fact that Durban was a complete bust. If one extrapolates just this latter segment, the market could bottom at zero by around March or even sooner.
Of course the way markets really work is on confidence. The negative trend indicates a lack of confidence. At some point, even the most rosy cheeked optimists and true believers are going to be asking themselves whether or not they are about to lose whatever shirt they have tied up in carbon futures, and when that happens the market could fall the rest of the way to the ground in a day or two. That will be quite apparent if and when it happens, as the volume of trading will plummet as there are no takers at any price on an offer to sell. At the moment they are still finding buyers, as the canny investors seek to get out at a loss but with some of their investment intact, but there won’t be buyers for long if the curve continues its linear or better descent.
The interesting question is then — with Durban over, what could possibly restore confidence in carbon futures? Some government stepping in to buy them to prop them up? More laws mandating their use? How will either of these ever come to pass, given that “carbon emissions” have absolutely no real value and the entire market is artificial? What they are is “United Nations Bucks” — money issued by the UN, expected to be backed by its member nations, which is (IMO) the entire point of the IPCC and CAGW hysteria at the international level from the beginning. Durban’s “last minute success” was, after all, pretty much complete and abject failure, one that (one suspects) allows all of the inside traders and UN officials and participants in this entire debacle a small window in which to unload their holdings.
Is that what we are seeing? The small increase in slope over December could well be people such as Al Gore selling off their shares as the writing on the wall became clear. It could be other IPCC committee members selling theirs. We could be seeing the rats leaving the sinking ship, getting out while there are still suckers around who will buy the shares on the basis of the artificial “euro-phoria” of Durban, the illusion of a Kyoto-2 agreement and a huge trillion dollar bank that everybody knows will not ever happen. What happens when there are no longer rats willing to take the place of the ones leaving? What happens when the trickle of a leak becomes a flood, water running over the gunwales?
One good outcome will be that the complete collapse of this market will both defund a lot of the people who hoped to exploit this. It is probably too much to hope that they will be beggared and left out in the street to starve, but they ought to exit a lot poorer than they went in and hence less prone or able to create future trouble. Another is that this, like nothing else, will reveal the deep and intrinsic corruption of the entire process when fingers are being pointed and governments begin investigations into the whole thing.
I think it is fair to doubt that carbon futures or other UN funny money will ever again arise from the ashes of this particular phoenix. Deprived of all hope of “carbon taxes” or a “currency” of its own, with the international money and power removed from the CAGW equation and individual nations thrown back on sanely moving to alternative energy resources (such as solar) to the extent that they make economic sense (because they do, already, make sense in certain milieu and will make more sense in the near future as the costs per watt continue to descend) will rationality return to climate research? I suspect that it will. The vested interest, the possibility of profit thus removed, who will benefit from it? We will quickly see whether or not the real concern has been about flooded coastlines in 2100 or if it has been about the money and power all along.
I’m betting that it has been about the money and power. With the IPCC defanged, with its UN and international pushers no longer able to see any plausible chance of getting their hands on the hundreds of billions to trillions of dollars they were dreaming of, the unfunded and non-vested voices of reasonable doubters will very likely emerge, especially if the climate cooperates with global temperatures remaining more or less flat to slowly descending and (one hopes) our understanding of the physics of the system improves. True data and method transparency should also help a lot. In the future there will not be much of a window between the publication of an egregiously awful result (e.g. Steig) and the publication of refutations based on the same data and an exposure of weakness in the methods. We’re already seeing some of that now IN the case of Steig, where far less time elapsed than it did with, say, MBH before it was debunked, but expect more of the same, and more pressure (post Climategate 2) on e.g. the media and journals to present balanced treatments and be less egregious in their gatekeeping and CAGW-CBCPD (Catastrophic Anthropogenic Warming based on Confirmation-Biased, Cherry-Picked Data) editorial stance.
rgb

E.M.Smith
Editor
December 16, 2011 5:50 am

Dodgy Geezer says: December 16, 2011 at 2:12 am
@Galane
“…..I wouldn’t mind it a bit if the fallout blows apart the EU. That was just Germany and France trying to take over Europe again, economically rather than by force of arms….”
[…]
Funny how history keeps repeating itself…..but where is the Churchill for the financial sector when you need him…?

I noticed this a while ago.
http://chiefio.wordpress.com/2011/12/09/cameron-tells-angela-no-fourth-reich/
Has a rough summary of the way that Europe has repeatedly tried to reassemble the Central Europe Empire (Holy Roman Empire, Napoleon, Lesser German Reich, Greater German Reich, 3rd Reich, Austriia-Hungary, Frankish Empire, EMU) and through it all Britain has stood outside…
It really is a remarkable feature of history. How France and Germany take turns trying to own all of Europe… Only this time it looks more like a Joint Venture… I think it will end the same way, though… Seen this movie before…

Grant
December 16, 2011 7:10 am

Carbon will be using the traditional Telemark landing…

Jørgen F.
December 16, 2011 8:12 am

Who invaded and burned down Western Europe – only to see the communists siege all of Eastern Europe?
Who then executed all of the involved senior German management – expect from the scientists who later on brought them to the moon?
Who then used all their money fighting the same communists, that the Germans were close besiege before the invasion Western Europe. Now only to see the Muslims start a new fight, that had to be fought on deficit money, and funny enough fought in the same territories that was controlled by western European countries – before the invasion and burn down of Europe in 44-45’.
So who has been fu….. up the last 75 years of western civilization – spend all their money and 15 trillion§ more – and is now practically owned by Chinese banks?
If you don’t know the answer please ask Sarkozy and Merkel. They know and are desperately trying to mitigate. The Euro will stand.

December 16, 2011 9:22 am

Anyone know exactly how to short these? Is it possible?

Justa Joe
December 16, 2011 11:35 am

Jørgen F. says:
December 16, 2011 at 8:12 am
————————————
I won’t bother responding to the bulk of your not entirely accurate harangue against the USA, but I will ask who kept the communists out of Western Europe?

RS
December 16, 2011 1:21 pm

The real question is whether a carbon credit purchased for $5 allows the same amount of smugness to a greenie (with a limo and large estate of course) that one purchased at $15 provided?
And if credits drop to zero, can green absolution still be purchased?

KnR
December 16, 2011 1:49 pm

The smart ones have already made a stack of cash and got out , this market is dead unless laws start to be made to make it viable again and given the current economic situation that situation is very unlikely .

Gary Pearse
December 16, 2011 1:58 pm

UK: I have appealed to you on numerous occasions over several years to get out of the EU nightmare and make a free market with the English-speaking world that you created employing the real economics that you also invented (I also invited hard-working Germany to come with you). The offer still stands but you will have to also leave behind the European politics that was designed to thwart the Industrial Revolution in the first place. The people you leave behind will also be happier without you. Probably carbon prices would go back up for them along with just about every other kind of price, too. Either I am not a good enough persuader or I have over estimated you-all.

December 16, 2011 2:15 pm

Jorgen F,
That is as ugly and ill intentioned rewrite of history as I have seen in some time. Whatever the source of your hate is for America, stop and consider than not only are your statements gross misrepresentations of the facts, but that you are free to make such ignorant and unwarranted statements in a public forum only because the freedom of speech you enjoy was bought and paid for in blood by those you denigrate.

bubbagyro
December 16, 2011 2:16 pm

If carbon credits go to zero, I will purchase a whole slew of them. I trust I will still get the tax break?

Downdraft
December 16, 2011 3:22 pm

Does anyone know how to sell Euro carbon credits to Australia? We could sell them to the Aussies at below market price and still make a killing.
To bubbagyro: Carbon credits on the Chicago Carbon Exchange went to zero already. Maybe you can get some of those.
To Jørgen F.: I think you took a wrong turn somewhere. This is not the Nazis blog you apparently thought you have arrived at.

john
December 16, 2011 5:54 pm

Regulators sue former top Fannie, Freddie execs
http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/12/16/us-fannie-freddie-sec-idUSTRE7BF16F20111216
flashback:
HEAT OF THE MOMENT
Disgraced Fannie Mae deep in carbon scheme
Mortgage giant set to collect millions marketing homeowners’ energy savings
http://www.wnd.com/?pageId=171457

David Eyles
December 17, 2011 3:26 am

There are two possibilities for this decline which cannot be hidden:
Firstly: that there is an element of climate realism finally creeping into the markets and the smart money is taking the view that all the “scientific” hype will be discredited sometime soon.
Secondly: the Euro is in what appears to be a terminal fix as Euro-land leaders cannot and have not sorted the means for fixing structural deficits and debts, imbalances between the Northern and Southern halves of the Eurozone; and so on. All UK banks are now cutting their risks and exposure to European Banks which have just had their credit ratings downgraded, or are about to. There is widespread talk of zombie banks within the Eurozone i.e. those banks which can only stay afloat by continual borrowings from their central banks, because other banks will not lend to them.
Just about everything to do with the Euro, which paradoxically still remains overvalued on the markets, is going downhill. And EU carbon credits is part of the same high risk, low income scene. So if you have carbon credits, sell them.

Brian H
December 18, 2011 4:35 am

David E.;
Also, there is the wee problem that virtually all the “CO2 reduction” schemes selling credits turn out to be dodges and fudges. Trees promised but never planted, factories closed but output replaced from somewhere with even higher emissions, promises not to manufacture GHG super-chemicals that weren’t going to be produced anyway, VAT refunds claimed for taxes never paid, and on and on and on. I.e., the whole operation is a wide-open web of (frequently criminal) deceit.
Nice work if you can get it, but really bad to be on the buying end of the stick.

John-X
December 18, 2011 7:49 am

6.30 euros – for imaginary gas futures, offsets, exchanges, credits, indulgences, mafia protection money.
This silliness was overpriced at a nickel in the Chicago Imaginary Securities Carbon Dioxide Except No Actual Carbon Dioxide Market Scheme Trading Casino.