Carbon trading halted due to 'possible fraudulent conduct'
- "“Our concern is that the whole market for secondary CERs could come to a grinding halt while this problem lingers,”
- Abyd Karmali, managing director and head of carbon emissions at BofA Merrill Lynch, said today at the Bloomberg New Energy Finance conference today in London."...
- in the bloc’s cap-and-trade program.
The EU statement came in response to a dispute that may bring trading of UN carbon credits
- to a “grinding halt,” according to a managing director at BofAMerrill Lynch.
- BlueNext SA and Nasdaq OMX Inc.
- reacted by halting spot trading today of UN credits until they can determine
what happen to offsets sold by Hungary after they were turned in for EU credit.
- The UN, for its part, said the EU is responsible for resolving the matter.
The European Commission, the EU regulatory arm that oversees the world’s biggest carbon market, will investigate “further interim measures” that could be taken to stave off
- concerns that investors may get stuck with
- UN Certified Emission Reduction credits
that won’t be valid again in Europe, it said in an e-mailed statement today....
- Hungary made it clear when it sold the permits that they couldn’t be used again in the EU system, the country’s Environment Ministry said today in a statement. There may have been
- “fraudulent conduct” by a dealer if the credits ended up on EU markets, the statement said....
The UN ...said the EU is responsible for protecting buyers. ...
- The UN sets the rules for how CERs can be used to comply with emission-reduction targets set for nations bound by the
- 1997 Kyoto Protocol. The EU oversees the use of CERs in Europe’s cap-and-trade system....
Hungary’s sale of UN credits that were previously surrendered in the European Union program is reducing demand in the world’s second-biggest emissions market, a JPMorgan Chase & Co. executive said.
- “The supply and demand dynamics have been changed,” said Paul Kelly, chief executive officer of
- JPMorgan’s EcoSecurities unit. While the scope of the problem has yet to be determined, buyers are
“questioning the authenticity” of what they are buying,
- he said today at the New Energy Finance conference."
- from TimesOnlineUK, 3/18/10, "Chaos on Carbon Market over 'recycled' permits," by Carl Mortished
- but by the United Nations under its Clean Development Mechanism — to be traded.
Investors in the carbon market took fright as it emerged that some of the Hungarian CERs had found their way back into the market, despite having been used to meet the carbon targets of Hungarian companies.
The double counting is threatening confidence in the ETS, according to staff at one energy consultancy. Icis Heren said: “For companies
- obliged by law to buy carbon credits ... government-led carbon credit recycling means they risk
- buying a worthless asset.”
The Hungarian Government said that the used CERs were sold to non-European investors,
- but BlueNext said that it had found some of the suspect CERs trading on its system.
The ETS, which was intended to create a market incentive for companies to reduce their carbon emissions, has suffered from repeated crises of confidence. At first, too many carbon allowances, known as EUAs, were issued by individual governments, creating a glut and a
- collapse in the price of carbon."... via Joanne Nova, via Tom Nelson
Labels: More fraud in carbon trading brings market to a halt
Tweet Stumbleupon StumbleUpon
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home