Nov 20, 2017 - NESP TWQ Project 3.1.6 ..... Model @ 250m x 250m resolution from earlier NESP N-trading project. ⢠Over
NESP TWQ Project 3.1.6 Exploring trading in water quality credits as a costeffective approach for managing water quality in the Great Barrier Reef Jim Smart, Syezlin Hasan, Adrian Volders, Andrew Buckwell, Peter Dew, Graeme Curwen, Chris Fleming, Poh-Ling Tan, Michele Burford NESP Science Day - Townsville 20th November 2017
photo iStock
Project 3.1.6 objectives: • determine the scope for water quality credit trading within the GBR catchments • develop appropriate configurations for credit trading frameworks for DIN and sediment in representative catchments along the Reef coast • estimate how revenues from credit trading could potentially stimulate rural economies and create jobs by incentivising innovative business opportunities for supplying nitrogen and sediment credits
Bilateral credit trading (perhaps ‘sole-source offsets’) Demand for offsets
Supply of offsets DIN credits
expansion
STP
$$$
Farm 1 wetland
Farm 2 Aquaculture
IPA
Urban Dev
Gully Remediation
Bilateral credit trading (perhaps ‘sole-source offsets’) Demand for offsets
Supply of offsets DIN credits
expansion
STP
$$$
Farm 1 wetland
Farm 2
$$
practice change Aquaculture
IPA
Urban Dev
Gully Remediation
Bilateral credit trading (and ‘sole-source offsets’) Demand for offsets
Supply of offsets DIN credits
expansion
STP
Farm 1
$$$ $$
Farm 2
$$ Aquaculture
intensify
new Urban Dev
$$$ Gully Remediation
IPA
Bilateral credit trading (and ‘sole-source offsets’) Demand for offsets
Supply of offsets DIN credits
expansion
STP
$$$
Farm 1 wetland
Farm 2
$$ $$
practice change
$$$
IPA
Aquaculture
sediment credits
Urban Dev
$$$$
Gully Remediation
Bilateral credit trading (perhaps ‘sole-source offsets’) Demand for offsets
Supply of offsets DIN credits
expansion
STP
Farm 1
$$$ $$
Farm 2
$$ Aquaculture
intensify
$$$ sediment credits
new Urban Dev
Regulator $$$$
Gully Remediation
IPA
Bilateral credit trading (perhaps ‘sole-source offsets’) Demand for offsets
Supply of offsets DIN credits
expansion
STP
Farm 1
$$$ $$
Aquaculture
Farm 2
$$ Transaction costs high
Transaction costs high
intensify
$$$ sediment credits
new Urban Dev
Regulator $$$$
Gully Remediation
IPA
Centralised credit trading (‘brokered offsets’, ‘clearing house’) Demand for credits @ fixed offset pricing expansion or tighten terms of EA
Aquaculture
STP
$$
Environ Aggregator
$
intensify $$ new Urban Dev
Centralised credit trading (‘brokered offsets’, ‘clearing house’) Demand for credits @ fixed offset pricing expansion or tighten terms of EA
Aquaculture
STP
$$
Environ Aggregator
$
intensify
$$$$$ $$
new Urban Dev
Centralised credit trading (‘brokered offsets’, ‘clearing house’) Demand for credits @ fixed offset pricing expansion or tighten terms of EA
Aquaculture
STP
Supply of credits e.g. via reverse auction Practice Farm 1 change (C to B)
$$
DIN credits $$
Farm 2
bioreactor
Environ Aggregator
$
intensify
$$$$$
NGO
wetland $$ new Urban Dev
DIN credits $$
IPA
coastal wetland
Centralised credit trading (‘brokered offsets’, ‘clearing house’) Demand for credits @ fixed offset pricing expansion or tighten terms of EA
Aquaculture
STP
Supply of credits e.g. via reverse auction Practice Farm 1 change (C to B)
$$
DIN credits $$
intensify
$$$$$ $$
new Urban Dev
$$ NGO
$$ DIN credits $$
Farm 2
bioreactor
Environ Aggregator
$
$
wetland IPA
coastal wetland Maximise DIN reduction within budget constraint
Centralised credit trading (‘brokered offsets’, ‘clearing house’) Demand for credits @ fixed offset pricing expansion or tighten terms of EA
STP
Supply of credits e.g. via reverse auction Practice Farm 1 change (C to B)
$$
$ Aquaculture
bioreactor
Environ Aggregator
$
intensify
$$$$$ $$
new Urban Dev
$$ NGO
$$ DIN credits $$
Farm 2
wetland IPA
coastal wetland Maximise DIN reduction within budget constraint
Centralised credit trading (‘brokered offsets’, ‘clearing house’) Demand for credits @ fixed offset pricing expansion or tighten terms of EA
STP
Supply of credits e.g. via reverse auction Practice Farm 1 change (C to B)
$$
$
Aquaculture
Environ Aggregator
$
intensify
$$$$$ $$
new Urban Dev
DIN credits $$
sufficient bioreactor DIN $$ reductions NGO $$ wetland ? Farm 2
IPA
coastal wetland Maximise DIN reduction within budget constraint
Centralised credit trading (‘brokered offsets’, ‘clearing house’) Demand for credits @ fixed offset pricing expansion or tighten terms of EA
STP
Supply of credits e.g. via reverse auction Practice Farm 1 change (C to B)
$$
$ Aquaculture
bioreactor
Environ Aggregator
$
intensify
$$$$$ $$
new Urban Dev
$$ NGO
$$ DIN credits $$
Farm 2
wetland IPA
coastal wetland Maximise DIN reduction within budget constraint
Centralised credit trading (‘brokered offsets’, ‘clearing house’) Demand for credits @ fixed offset pricing expansion or tighten terms of EA
STP
Supply of credits e.g. via reverse auction Practice Farm 1 change (C to B)
$$
$
Aquaculture
intensify
Environ Aggregator
$ offset trading ratio ?
$$$$$ $$
new Urban Dev
DIN credits $$
sufficient bioreactor DIN $$ reductions NGO $$ wetland ? Farm 2
IPA
coastal wetland Maximise DIN reduction within budget constraint
Centralised credit trading (‘brokered offsets’, ‘clearing house’) Demand for credits @ fixed offset pricing expansion or tighten terms of EA
Aquaculture
STP
Supply of credits e.g. via reverse auction Practice Farm 1 $$ change (C to B)
$$
DIN credits $$
intensify
$$$$$ $$ $$
new Urban Dev
DIN credits $$
Farm 2
bioreactor
Environ Aggregator
$
$ $$
NGO
$$
wetland IPA
coastal wetland
Increase budget to achieve required DIN offset
Centralised credit trading (‘brokered offsets’, ‘clearing house’) Demand for credits @ fixed offset pricing expansion or tighten terms of EA
Aquaculture
STP
Supply of credits e.g. via reverse auction Practice Farm 1 $$ change (C to B)
$$
DIN credits $$
Transaction costs low
intensify
$$$$$ $$ $$
new Urban Dev
DIN credits $$
Farm 2
bioreactor
Environ Aggregator
$
$
$$
$$ Transaction costs high
NGO
wetland IPA
coastal wetland
Increase budget to achieve required DIN offset
Centralised credit trading (‘brokered offsets’, ‘clearing house’) Demand for credits @ fixed offset pricing
Supply of credits e.g. via reverse auction Practice expansion or STP Farm 1 Conflicting tensions $$ $$ change (C to B) • tighten Low transaction costs encourage participation (both demand & supply) DIN •terms of EA ‘Flat rate’ pricing for offset purchase and credit supply reduces transaction costs Transaction credits $$ Farm 2 $ costs low • Not all offsets are equally benign [vary offset prices or trading ratio by location] bioreactor $ Environ • Aquaculture Not all credits are equally effective [vary offer prices by location] • Economic efficiency ? – ‘charge for damage risk’ & ‘pay for what you get’ Aggregator $$ Transaction offset intensify costs high trading $$$$$ $$ NGO • Use trading ratio to cover variations in consequences and effectiveness $$ ratio ? not enough demand for offsets • Trading ratio too high – wetland • Trading ratio too low – not enough $$$$ for credit supply $$ DIN credits $$ new Urban Dev • What can we learn from other schemes ?
IPA
coastal wetland
Increase budget to achieve required DIN offset
Demand for credits Supply of credits
Demand for credits expansion or tighten terms of EA
STP
Farm 1
$$
$ Aquaculture
intensify
$$$$$ $$
new Urban Dev
$$ NGO
$$ DIN credits $$
Farm 2
bioreactor
Environ Aggregator
$
Practice change (C to B)
wetland IPA
coastal wetland Maximise DIN reduction within budget constraint
Supply of credits Supply of offsets
Demand for credits expansion or tighten terms of EA
STP
Farm 1
$$
$ Aquaculture
intensify
$$$$$ $$
new Urban Dev
$$ NGO
$$ DIN credits $$
Farm 2
bioreactor
Environ Aggregator
$
Practice change (C to B)
wetland IPA
coastal wetland Maximise DIN reduction within budget constraint
Literature Review of National and International Water Quality Trading Schemes • Broad ranging international literature on water quality trading examined • Literature review examined 30 major studies on water quality trading and more than 50 individual water quality trading schemes. • Majority of studies focused on the United States where TMDL imposed under the Clean Water Act have facilitated state/territory, watershed and local trading schemes • USEPA has actively encouraged trading as cost effective way to meet regulated point source load limits and address diffuse pollution • Virtually all trading schemes involved point / non-point trading schemes and the trading of nitrogen and phosphorus • Typical market involves a heavily regulated point source buying credits from non-regulated non-point sources
Literature Review of National and International Water Quality Trading Schemes • Demand Drivers and Supply Barriers – Tightening regulatory standards for point source discharges on the basis of recognised environmental problems – Inadequate and poorly enforced regulation is identified as the greatest barrier to implementing a successful water quality trading scheme – Demand for credits from point sources is limited by generous license conditions and poor enforcement – Supply of credits is limited by landowners concerns that demonstrating low cost reductions may increase case for regulation – Meaningful supply and demand in water quality markets will only occur with strong regulation and enforcement of pollution allowances for both point and non-point sources (King 2005).
Literature Review of National and International Water Quality Trading Schemes
– Success Factors (US EPA) • single pollutant in common form, • appropriate watershed conditions (proximity of dischargers, presence of tributaries, or complexity of hydrology) that allow reliable relationships between load reductions and water quality in receiving waters, • incremental costs of trading low relative to the incremental costs of other control options, • appropriate market structure for transacting trades
Literature Review of National and International Water Quality Trading Schemes
– Other Key Success Factors • • • • • •
transparency clearly delineated roles and responsibilities third party brokers stakeholder participation in rule development third party verification move away from state subsidies of BMP practices to stimulate credit supply
Literature Review of National and International Water Quality Trading Schemes
– Key Challenges • concerns about increased liability, • potentially high transaction costs, • concern that complicated trading procedures might result in delays in receiving payments • resistance to bringing government employees onto private land, • fear that trading rules will change.
‘Co-benefits’ Demand for credits Supply of credits
Demand for credits expansion or terms of EA
STP
Farm 1
DIN $$
Airline
$
Aquaculture
intensify NGO
$$
$$$$$$$$$ DIN $$
new Urban Dev
Farm 2
bioreactor
Environ Aggregator
DIN $
Practice change (C to B)
NGO
$$
DIN credits $$ BioD credits $$
wetland IPA
coastal wetland
Maximise credit supply within budget constraint
Estimating potential demand for credits • GIS mapping of existing point sources and their licence conditions • predictions for new developments: residential / industrial expansion, farming / aquaculture expansion Stimulating demand for credits • consider governance arrangements • design ‘demand side’ structure to encourage participation (but still ensure environmental objectives are achieved) • tightening existing licence conditions • facilitate private market investments in Reef credits • opportunities for ‘co-benefits’ to deepen the pool of credit buyers and strengthen credit demand (e.g. carbon + nitrogen, other GHG + sediment , carbon + nitrogen + biodiversity etc.)
‘credit stacking’ Supply of credits
Demand for credits expansion or terms of EA
STP
Farm 1
DIN $$
Airline
$
Aquaculture
intensify NGO
$$
$$$$$$$$$ DIN $$
new Urban Dev
Farm 2
bioreactor
Environ Aggregator
DIN $
Practice change (C to B)
NGO
$$
DIN credits $$ BioD credits $$
wetland IPA
coastal wetland
Maximise credit supply within budget constraint
Estimating potential supply of credits • Spatial prediction of DIN losses and gross margins from cane (& bananas) in Tully catchment • Model @ 250m x 250m resolution from earlier NESP N-trading project • Overlay DIN loss predictions from Reef Project Prioritiser tool
Estimating potential supply of credits Spatial prediction of DIN losses and gross margins from cane (& bananas) in Tully catchment • simulate @ 250m x 250m resolution from earlier NESP N-trading project • overlay DIN loss predictions from Reef Project Prioritiser tool • predict spatially-specific credit supply (DIN credits @ source), based on covering forgone gross margin and ‘transport’ down catchment to Reef Lagoon • estimate supply curve for total credit expenditure vs DIN reduction in receiving water Supply cost ($) • covering forgone gross margin • include transaction costs • include % non-participation
DIN load reduction (tonnes)
Estimating potential supply of credits Spatial prediction of DIN losses and gross margins from cane (& bananas) in Tully catchment • simulate @ 250m x 250m resolution from earlier NESP N-trading project • overlay DIN loss predictions from Reef Project Prioritiser tool • predict spatially-specific credit supply (DIN credits @ source), based on forgone gross margin and ‘transport’ down catchment to Reef Lagoon • estimate supply curve for total credit expenditure vs DIN reduction in receiving water Supply cost ($) • covering forgone gross margin • include transaction costs • include % non-participation • credit stacking opportunities ? • sediment, carbon, biodiversity DIN load reduction (tonnes)
Quantifying potential supply of credits Spatial prediction of DIN losses and gross margins from cane (& bananas) in Tully catchment • simulate @ 250m x 250m resolution from earlier NESP N-trading project • overlay DIN loss predictions from Reef Project Prioritiser tool • predict spatially-specific credit supply (DIN credits @ source), based on forgone gross margin, then ‘transport’ down catchment to Reef Lagoon
Farmers’ compensation requirements
• estimate supply curve for credit expenditure vs DIN reduction in receiving water Supply cost ($) • based on forgone gross margin • include transaction costs • include % non-participation
DIN load reduction (tonnes)
Water quality improvements and land management in Nidderdale UK
Importance of land management activities Inorganic Fertilizer
Farmyard Manure
Applies to Inbye Grassland
Grip Blocking Applies to Moorland
Help to Improve water quality
Management activities
Inorganic fertiliser
Farmyard manure
Grip Blocking
Compensation payments and agreement length
Agreement length
Compensation payment
Choice card #1
Program X
Program Y
Program Z
Choice card #1
Program X
Program Y
Program Z
ü
Choice card #2
Program X
£25 per acre
Program Y
£2 per acre
Program Z
Allow25% of grips to be blocked
£15 per acre
Choice card #2
Program X
£25 per acre
Program Y
£2 per acre
Program Z
Allow25% of grips to be blocked
£15 per acre
ü
Compensation required ($)
Farmers overall average
0
25
50
Fertiliser reduction (%)
Compensation required ($) Dairy
Beef
0
25
50
Fertiliser reduction (%)
Compensation requirements • Choice experiments with farmers can be used to estimate: • farmers’ compensation requirements for different levels of change to management practices and different types of land use change • how configuration of credit purchasing / monitoring / evaluation arrangements affect compensation requirements • how compensation requirements are influenced by characteristics of farm business and socio-demographics of farmers Supply cost ($)
Based on compensation requirements from choice experiments
DIN load reduction (tonnes)
Thank you for listening For more information please contact: Jim Smart: j.smart @ griffith.edu.au
Literature Review of National and International Water Quality Trading Schemes • Theoretical basis of water quality trading – Trading must occur within a fixed regulatory emissions cap (TMDL, No net worsening, Targets) – Market transaction reallocate emissions under the cap by trading – The existence of significant cost differentials in pollution abatement costs between emitters facilitates trading – Trading allows meeting of compliance conditions at lowest cost – Diffuse pollution can be addressed through practice and land use change and trading allows the generation of an income stream to support such activities
Literature Review of National and International Water Quality Trading Schemes
– Other key challenges identified – Insufficient Government resources to implement trading framework – Lack of clear water quality standards for some pollutants – Liability concerns – Legal challenges to trading – Administrative burdens – Ratios – Cap Allocation » Rewarding poor historical performance » Virginia best management practice qualification
Literature Review of National and International Water Quality Trading Schemes • 3 Case Studies (example) » Minnesota Sugar Beet Cooperative • 1 demand source – wwtp to meet new no discharge legislation • Phosphorous allocation being traded • Offset providers – cooperative - farmers meeting BMP • Trading ratio 2.6:1 • 600 non point traders • Third party auditors • Trust fund established to implement BMP
» Others - Lake Taupo – Greater Miami Water Quality Trading Program
Literature Review of National and International Water Quality Trading Schemes
• The Key Questions raised by the Literature » Are the key drivers in place (nitrogen and sediment) • Pollution cap or allowance across all sources • Legislation – enforcement • Sufficient demand and supply • Clearly defined unit of transaction • Sufficient cost differential • Market design and type • Economic feasibility and efficiency
Literature Review of National and International Water Quality Trading Schemes
• Sediment (Initial Analysis) » Limited point sources » Limited legislative responsibilities » Significant private and government investment » Suitable voluntary market or sole source offset » Testing levels of demand » Testing level of supply
Literature Review of National and International Water Quality Trading Schemes • Nitrogen (Initial Analysis) » Number of regulated point sources » Emerging legislative responsibilities » Significant private and government investment » Emerging market structures » Potentially suitable for smart market design » Testing levels of demand (scenarios) • Current • No net worsening • 80% reduction » Testing level of supply • Compensation requirements per unit of credit generation
Discussion & update meeting with DEHP Office of GBR: 16th November 2017 1. 2.
3.
Short description of project Presentation of work so far a) Review of how offsets, funds & credits operate b) Findings from literature review c) Demand drivers d) Supply modelling e) Choice experiments f) Sediments General discussion
Literature Review of National and International Water Quality Trading Schemes – Types of Trading Schemes Market Structure
Advantages
Disadvantages
Exchanges
Low transaction cost
Requires uniformity in commodity to be traded
Bilateral negotiations
Provides latitude for buyer when commodities are not uniform
High transaction costs
Clearing houses
Reduced transaction costs, can enable greater monitoring by government agencies
Added responsibility for third party running the clearinghouse
Sole source offsets
Suitable in cases where no formal markets exist, lower oversight costs than in more formal markets
High transaction costs
Voluntary markets
Provide funding for offset projects, allows early adopters to reduce footprint and build public confidence for future more complex markets
Allows free riding, unlikely to achieve environmental goals on their own
Smart markets
Low transaction costs, can optimise allocation of Need a means to induce all sources pollution rights given complex variation in to participate transfer coefficients
Smart market credit trading Demand for credits expansion or terms of EA
STP
Supply of credits $$$
a DIN credits
x DIN credits Bids for credit purchase Aquaculture
intensify
$$ y DIN credits
Credit Market $$$$$ $$$$
z DIN credits
$$$$ Urban Dev
Farm 1
$$$
d DIN credits
$
Farm 2
$$$ NGO
$$ Offers for credit supply IPA
catchment load cap Maximise gains from trade subject to catchment load cap & bid offer match
Credit trading Demand for credits expansion or terms of EA
Supply of credits Farm 1
STP
Farm 2
Credit Market
Aquaculture
intensify
NGO
Urban Dev
catchment load cap
IPA
Smart market credit trading Demand for credits expansion or terms of EA
Supply of credits Farm 1
STP
Farm 2
Credit Market
Aquaculture
intensify
NGO
Urban Dev
catchment load cap
IPA
Smart market credit trading Demand for credits expansion or terms of EA
STP
Supply of credits Farm 1
$$$
x DIN credits Aquaculture
intensify
Farm 2
$$ y DIN credits
Credit Market $$$$$
NGO
z DIN credits
$$$$ Urban Dev
catchment load cap
IPA
Smart market credit trading Demand for credits expansion or terms of EA
STP
Supply of credits Farm 1
$$$
x DIN credits Bids for credit purchase Aquaculture
intensify
$$ y DIN credits
Practice C initial alloc.
Practice C Farm 2 initial alloc.
Credit Market $$$$$
NGO
z DIN credits
$$$$ Urban Dev
catchment load cap
IPA
Smart market credit trading Demand for credits expansion or terms of EA
STP
Supply of credits $$$
a DIN credits
x DIN credits Bids for credit purchase Aquaculture
intensify
$$ y DIN credits
Farm 2
$$$ NGO
z DIN credits Urban Dev
$
C to B
C to B
Credit Market $$$$$
$$$$
Farm 1
$$$
d DIN credits
$$ wetland Offers for credit supply
catchment load cap
IPA
coastal wetland
Smart market credit trading Demand for credits expansion or terms of EA
STP
Supply of credits $$$
a DIN credits
x DIN credits Bids for credit purchase Aquaculture
intensify
$$ y DIN credits
Credit Market $$$$$
Urban Dev
$
Farm 2
$$$ NGO
z DIN credits
$$$$
Farm 1
$$$
d DIN credits
$$ Offers for credit supply IPA
catchment load cap Maximise gains from trade subject to catchment load cap & bid offer match
Smart market credit trading Demand for credits expansion or terms of EA
STP
Supply of credits $$$
a DIN credits
x DIN credits Bids for credit purchase Aquaculture
intensify
$$ y DIN credits
NGO
z DIN credits Urban Dev
Farm 2
Credit Market $$$$$
$$$$
Farm 1
$$$
d DIN credits
$$ Offers for credit supply IPA
catchment load cap Maximise gains from trade subject to catchment load cap
Smart market credit trading Demand for credits expansion or terms of EA
STP
Supply of credits $$$
a DIN credits