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Dramatic growth in carbon market in 2005
report

Copenhagen, 2 March: Some €9.4 billion ($11.3
billion) worth of carbon was traded on the international market
last year, up from an estimated €377 million in 2004,
according to a new report.
Carbon 2006, from Norwegian consultancy and analysis
company Point Carbon, found that around 362 million tonnes
(Mt) of carbon dioxide (CO2) were traded in the EU Emissions
Trading Scheme last year, and contracts were signed for reductions
of 397 Mt of CO2e from Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) projects.
The figures for 2004 were 17 Mt and 188 Mt respectively.
"Carbon is becoming like a real commodity market,"
said Kristian Tangen of Point Carbon, addressing a conference
in Copenhagen on Tuesday. "We expect continued growth,
as the EU ETS is gaining momentum.
"We also see massive growth in the CDM and [Joint Implementation,
JI]," he added, referring to the Kyoto Protocol's two
project-based mechanisms, which allow investors in projects
in, respectively, developing countries and industrialised
ones to earn carbon credits.
The figures were based on Point Carbon's transaction and
projects database. The company also conducted a web-based
survey, which attracted 800 respondents, and interviews with
67 selected market participants.
Tangen said that the company was surprised that the CDM still
accounted for a larger volume of carbon than the EU ETS. "We
were taken by surprise we would have assumed a slower
growth," he said.
The EU ETS, meanwhile, began operating in January 2005, and
sets carbon dioxide emissions caps on around 12,000 installations
across Europe, in the electricity generation, oil refining,
building materials, pulp and paper and ferrous metals sectors.
It is designed to help move the EU towards meeting its Kyoto
targets, and has helped drive demand for credits from CDM
and JI projects.
"It's role as a market driver cannot be exaggerated,"
Tangen said. "Through kick-starting CDM and JI, it has
started a process that will lead to massive reductions in
the long-term."
Within the EU ETS, some 79% of the volume was conducted bilaterally,
via the broker market, with the remainder traded on exchanges,
of which the European Climate Exchange is the largest.
The report did not provide hard figures on Point Carbon's
expectations for growth in the carbon market in 2006, although
it noted that more than 91Mt had traded in the EU ETS by 10
February.
It also featured the results of a survey of price expectations,
with 51% of respondents expecting allowance prices to be higher
in a year's time than in December (when the survey was conducted),
when they traded just above €20/tonne. One in five expected
them to be lower.
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