Federal Register of Legislation - Australian Government

Primary content

Clean Energy Bill 2011

  • - C2011B00166
A Bill for an Act to encourage the use of clean energy, and for other purposes
Administered by: Climate Change and Energy Efficiency
For authoritative information on the progress of bills and on amendments proposed to them, please see the House of Representatives Votes and Proceedings, and the Journals of the Senate as available on the Parliament House website.
Registered 13 Sep 2011
Introduced HR 13 Sep 2011
Table of contents.

2010-2011

 

The Parliament of the Commonwealth of Australia

 

 

 

House of Representatives

 

 

 

Clean Energy Bill 2011

 

 

 

 

Explanatory Memorandum

 

 

 

 

(Circulated by the authority of the Minister for Climate Change
 and Energy Efficiency, the Honourable Greg Combet AM MP)


Table of contents

Glossary.............................................................................................................. 5

Policy context.................................................................................................... 9

Outline of the Clean Energy Bill 2011........................................................ 27

Part 1                        Design of the carbon pricing mechanism................. 43

Chapter 1              Liable entities and covered emissions........................... 45

Chapter 2              Pollution caps................................................................... 105

Chapter 3              Emissions units................................................................ 115

Chapter 4              Assessing and meeting liabilities.................................. 137

Part 2                        Industry assistance...................................................... 157

Chapter 5              Jobs and Competitiveness Program............................. 159

Chapter 6              Energy security................................................................. 181

Part 3                        Administration................................................................ 223

Chapter 7              Compliance and enforcement....................................... 225

Chapter 8              The Regulator’s decisions and review of decisions.. 257

Chapter 9              Public information............................................................ 263

Chapter 10           Independent reviews....................................................... 271

Chapter 11           Administrative and miscellaneous provisions............ 279

Index............................................................................................................... 291

 


 

The following abbreviations and acronyms are used in this explanatory memorandum.

Abbreviation

Definition

ACCC

Australian Competition and Consumer Commission

ACCU

Australian carbon credit unit

ANREU Act

Australian National Registry of Emissions Units Act 2011

ASIC

Australian Securities and Investments Commission

Austrac

Australian Transaction Reports and Analysis Centre

Authority

Climate Change Authority

Authority bill

Climate Change Authority Bill 2011

bill or main bill

Clean Energy Bill 2011

carbon pricing mechanism or mechanism

The carbon pricing mechanism set up by the Clean Energy Bill 2011

CEI plan

Clean Energy Investment Plan

CFI

Carbon Farming Initiative

CFI Act

Carbon Credits (Carbon Farming Initiative) Act 2011

Charges bills

The Clean Energy (Unit Shortfall Charge—General) Bill 2011; Clean Energy (Unit Issue Charges – Fixed Charge) Bill 2011, Clean Energy (Unit Issue Charges – Auctions) Bill 2011, Clean Energy (Charges—Excise) Bill 2011, Clean Energy (Charges—Customs) Bill 2011 Clean Energy (International Unit Surrender Charge) Bill 2011.

Clean Energy Legislative Package

The Clean Energy Bill 2011 and related legislation

CO2

CO2-e

Carbon dioxide

Carbon dioxide equivalence

Consequential Amendments bill

The Clean Energy (Consequential Amendments) Bill 2011

CPRS

Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme

Database

Liable Entities Public Information Database

DCCEE or Department

Department of Climate Change and Energy Efficiency

EN

Emissions number

Eligible emissions unit

A carbon unit, an eligible international emissions unit or an eligible ACCU

Eligible international emissions unit

Defined in section 4 of the ANREU Act as a certified emission reduction (other than a temporary certified emission reduction or a long-term certified emission reduction); or an emission reduction unit; or a removal unit; or a prescribed unit issued in accordance with the Kyoto rules; or a non-Kyoto international emissions unit.  It is immaterial whether a unit covered by paragraph 4(d) was issued in or outside Australia.

Fixed charge period

The financial years 2012-13, 2013-14 and 2014-15, being ‘fixed charge years’

Fund

The Energy Security Fund in Part 8 of the bill

Garnaut Review

 

 

Garnaut Review Update 2011

R Garnaut (2008) The Garnaut Climate Change Review: Final Report, Commonwealth of Australia, Cambridge University Press, Melbourne

R Garnaut (2011) The Garnaut Review 2011: Australia in the Global Response to Climate Change, Commonwealth of Australia, Cambridge University Press, Melbourne

Green Paper

Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme Green Paper, July 2008

GW

GWh

Gigawatt

Gigawatt hour

IPCC

Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change

JV

Joint venture

Kyoto rules

This term is defined in section 5.  In brief, it includes the Kyoto Protocol, decisions of the Meeting of the Kyoto Parties, certain standards adopted by such a Meeting and prescribed instruments

Kyoto units

An assigned amount unit, a certified emission reduction, an emission reduction unit, a removal unit or a prescribed unit issued in accordance with the Kyoto rules

LI Act

Legislative Instruments Act 2003

LETI

Low Emissions Transition Incentive

LTC

Liability transfer certificate

MW

MWh

Megawatt

Megawatt hour

MPCCC

Multi-Party Climate Change Committee

NGER Act

National Greenhouse and Energy Reporting Act 2007

Non-Kyoto international emissions units

A prescribed unit issued in accordance with an international agreement (other than the Kyoto Protocol) or a prescribed unit issued outside Australia under a law of a foreign country

Opt-in Scheme

The Opt-in Scheme set out in Part 3, Division 7 of the bill

OTN

Obligation transfer number

Ozone Act

Ozone Protection and Synthetic Greenhouse Gas Management Act 1989

PC Act

Productivity Commission Act 1998

PEN

Provisional emissions number

Program

The Jobs and Competitiveness Program in Part 7 of the bill

Registry

Australian National Registry of Emissions Units

Regulator

Clean Energy Regulator

Regulator bill

Clean Energy Regulator Bill 2011

White Paper

Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme: Australia’s Low Pollution Future, White Paper, December 2008


The Government’s Climate Change Plan

On 10 July 2011, the Government released Securing a clean energy future: The Australian Government’s climate change plan[1], which explains the policy basis for the introduction of the carbon pricing mechanism (the mechanism) and related measures. 

The need for action

The evidence that the world is getting warmer is unequivocal.  In Australia and around the globe, 2001 to 2010 was the warmest decade on record.  In Australia, each decade since the 1940s has been warmer than the last.

If we do not reduce carbon pollution, the world risks serious effects from climate change.  Global average temperatures could increase by up to 6.4 degrees Celsius above 1990 temperatures by 2100.  Sea levels are estimated to rise by between 0.5 and 1 metre by 2100 from 2000 levels and the acidity of the world’s oceans to increase significantly.  Cyclones, storms, floods and other extreme weather events are likely to increase in severity or frequency and rainfall patterns around the world to change, making some places drier and other places wetter.

Australia is a hot and dry continent.  This means that among the world’s developed countries, Australia faces acute risks.  Studies indicate that warming of more than 2 degrees Celsius will overwhelm the capacity of many of our natural ecosystems to adapt.  With that level of warming, for instance, the survival of the Great Barrier Reef will be in jeopardy as higher ocean temperatures and acidity levels cause major changes to coral reefs.

Climate change will not just damage the natural environment.  Left unchecked, it also poses risks to Australia’s economic prosperity.  Climate change will impose economic costs on our society.  These costs can be reduced and managed if the world takes action to reduce carbon pollution.  But the longer action is delayed, the more it will cost and the worse the impacts will be.

How high temperatures might rise in coming decades will depend on how much carbon pollution increases.

Governments around the world have agreed to limit carbon pollution so that average global temperature rise can be held below 2 degrees Celsius above preindustrial levels.  If the global 2 degree goal is achieved, Australia will still face some impacts.  However, our communities and environment will be better able to cope.  It is in our national interest to do our fair share.

The task of reducing carbon pollution is achievable.  Economies can be retooled so that growth and rising prosperity are decoupled from growth in carbon pollution.  This will require changes to the way we live and the way we do business, especially to the ways we produce and use energy.

Studies in Australia and around the world have demonstrated that, with known technologies, pollution can be reduced while maintaining economic growth.  Indeed, the retooling of our economy will deliver new technologies, new jobs and new opportunities. 

Australia’s carbon pollution levels are very high given our population size and our economy is heavily dependent on emissions-intensive energy sources.  To maintain our international competitiveness in the future as more countries take action on climate change, we need to reduce our carbon pollution and concentrate on cleaner pathways to economic growth.

Australia’s carbon pollution represents 1.5 per cent of global emissions of greenhouse gases.  That makes us one of the top 20 polluting countries in the world.  Our annual carbon pollution is roughly the same as that of countries like Spain, France, Italy, South Korea and the United Kingdom.  All of those countries have populations two to three times larger than Australia.  In fact, Australia produces more carbon pollution per head of population than any developed country in the world, more even than the world’s biggest economy, the United States.

Reflecting the availability of cheap and abundant coal, electricity generation is Australia’s largest source of carbon pollution.  Electricity generation is responsible for just over a third of Australia’s total carbon pollution.  Direct fuel combustion—reflecting the use of gas and other fuels in industry and homes—accounts for another 15 per cent.  Transport and agriculture each contribute around another 15 per cent. 

The remaining sources are ‘fugitive’ emissions—mainly the methane and carbon dioxide which escapes into the atmosphere when coal is mined and gas is extracted—along with pollution from industrial processes and decomposition of waste in landfills and elsewhere.  Trees absorb carbon dioxide, so when land is cleared there is an increase in carbon pollution and when vegetation grows there is a decrease.  The net impact of these sources—deforestation, reforestation and afforestation—contributes 3 per cent of Australia’s total carbon pollution.

Australia’s emissions are projected to continue to grow by almost 2 per cent a year without action to put a price on carbon.  Even taking into account existing climate change policies such as the Renewable Energy Target and the CFI, our emissions are expected to be around 22 per cent higher than 2000 levels in 2020.

The Government has committed to reduce carbon pollution by 5 per cent from 2000 levels by 2020 irrespective of what other countries do, and by up to 15 or 25 per cent depending on the scale of global action.  These targets will require cutting pollution in 2020 by at least 23 per cent from the level it would otherwise be expected to be.

The Government has also committed to a new 2050 target to reduce emissions by 80 per cent compared with 2000 levels, in line with targets announced by the United Kingdom and Germany.

Australia’s targets represent a fair contribution from Australia, and provide guidance and confidence to investors working to achieve our clean energy future.

The carbon pricing mechanism

A broad-based carbon price is the most environmentally effective and cheapest way to reduce pollution.

A carbon price puts a price tag on carbon pollution.  Under the mechanism, around 500 of the country’s biggest polluters will be required to pay for each tonne of pollution they release into the atmosphere.  This will have two effects. 

It creates a powerful incentive for all businesses to cut their pollution by investing in clean technology or finding more efficient ways of operating.  A price on carbon will also create economic incentives to reduce pollution in the cheapest possible ways, rather than relying on more costly approaches such as government regulation and direct subsidies.

These incentives will flow through the economy.  The carbon price will make lower-polluting technologies, especially clean energy technologies, more competitive and will boost investment in these technologies.  In this way, introducing a price on carbon will trigger the transformation of the economy towards a clean energy future.

Our economy has successfully handled comparable structural changes over its history.  In fact, transformative changes—new products and technologies, and the integration of our economy into the global economy set in train by the reforms of the 1980s and 1990s—have underpinned rising prosperity and sustainable growth in Australia.

Table I: Key elements of the carbon pricing mechanism

Price

Fixed price period



Emissions trading scheme

A two stage approach:

The mechanism will commence on 1 July 2012, with a price that will be fixed for the first three years.  The price will start at $23 per tonne and will rise at 2.5 per cent per annum in real terms.

On 1 July 2015, the carbon price will transition to a fully flexible price under an emissions trading scheme, with the price determined by the market.

Coverage

 

Broad coverage from commencement, encompassing the stationary energy sector, industrial processes, nonlegacy waste, and fugitive emissions (other than from decommissioned coal mines).

Treatment of fuel and transport

 

Transport fuels comprising liquid petroleum fuels, liquid petroleum gas, liquefied natural gas and compressed natural gas will be excluded from the mechanism.  However, an equivalent carbon price will be applied to some business transport emissions and non-transport uses of these fuels through changes in fuel tax credits or fuel excise.

Users of specified fuels can choose to opt into the mechanism instead of paying the equivalent carbon price through the fuel tax system.

International linking

 

International linking to credible international carbon markets and emissions trading schemes will be allowed from the commencement of the flexible price period.  At least half of a liable entity’s compliance obligation must be met through the use of domestic units or credits.

Price ceiling and floor

 

A price ceiling and floor will apply for the first three years of the flexible price period.  The price ceiling will be set at $20 above the expected international price and will rise by 5 per cent in real terms each year.  The price floor will be $15, rising annually by 4 per cent in real terms.

Carbon Farming Initiative

Kyoto-compliant credits created under the CFI can be used for compliance under the mechanism subject to a 5 per cent limit in the fixed charge period.

Governance

Climate Change Authority

Clean Energy Regulator

Productivity Commission

 

Establishment of the Authority to advice on pollution caps, progress towards meeting targets, and undertake reviews of the mechanism.

Establishment of the Regulator to administer the mechanism.

The Productivity Commission will undertake reviews on industry assistance, fuel tax arrangements and carbon pollution reduction activities internationally.

 

 

 

The carbon pricing mechanism’s governance structure


 

Household assistance

The carbon price will be accompanied by a household assistance package.[2] Over 50 per cent of carbon price revenue will be spent on households.

A carbon price will add modestly to the cost of living.  The average household will see cost increases of around $9.90 per week, while the average assistance provided will be around $10.10 per week.  The prices of most household purchases will barely be affected by the carbon price—for almost everything other than electricity and gas, the estimated price impact is likely to be less than 0.5 per cent in most cases.  Taking electricity and gas into account, the overall impact on the Consumer Price Index (CPI) is expected to be around 0.7 per cent in 2012–13.  Households will not face a carbon price on transport fuels.

The household assistance package is targeted at those who need help the most, particularly pensioners and low-and middle-income households.  Around two in three households will receive assistance that offsets their expected average price impact.  About nine out of ten households will receive some assistance.

Because the carbon price raises revenue, it provides an opportunity to cut other taxes.  The Government will cut income taxes by raising the tax-free threshold so that, initially, up to 1 million people will no longer need to file a tax return.  From 2015, a second phase of tax reform will mean that up to an additional 100,000 people will not have to file a tax return.  Reducing taxes by increasing the tax-free threshold is an important change in Australia’s tax mix: it involves reducing taxes on desirable things (work and income), boosting incentives to work, and replacing them with a charge on something undesirable (carbon pollution).

The taxfree threshold will be more than trebled to $18,200 in 2012–13.  From 2015, the taxfree threshold will be further raised to $19,400.  People with incomes below the new taxfree thresholds will get to keep all of their wages in their regular pay packets.

In addition to tax cuts, pensions, allowances and benefits will increase.

Other features of the household assistance package include:

       special payments for people who have high energy use due to medical needs

       shared assistance between aged care residents and providers

       the development of an optin program where household assistance payments can be directed towards accredited energy efficiency measures through nongovernment organisations.

Household assistance will be permanent and will keep up with increases in the cost of living.

Pensions and other benefits are automatically indexed to keep pace with the cost of living, while the tax changes will be set at a level to cover the expected impact of the expected carbon price to 2019-20.

Jobs and Competitiveness Package

To support Australian businesses to make the transition to a clean energy future, the Government has designed a number of assistance measures for the business community, from large industrial producers to small businesses.  The Government will allocate around 40 per cent of revenue from the mechanism to help businesses and support jobs.

Assistance measures will target emissionsintensive, tradeexposed industries, other areas of manufacturing, food processing, foundries and small business.

The Jobs and Competitiveness Program will ensure that businesses that produce a lot of pollution and compete in international markets remain competitive, while still retaining strong incentives to reduce carbon pollution.  Almost all emissions-intensive and trade-exposed activities are in the manufacturing sector.  The Program will provide support to activities that generate over 80 per cent of emissions within the manufacturing sector.

The food processing, metal forging and foundry industries will also be assisted to support jobs in these parts of manufacturing.  More general assistance for small businesses and manufacturing industries will target improvements in energy efficiency.

All of these measures have been carefully designed to avoid interfering with the purpose of the carbon price: creating incentives to reduce carbon pollution.

In addition to these measures, the Government has decided to provide a Coal Sector Jobs Package and a Steel Transformation Plan.

Clean energy

The transformation of Australia’s energy sector towards clean energy sources will unfold over the coming decades.  The carbon price will play a major role, creating powerful commercial incentives to avoid traditional highpollution solutions and to adopt lowpollution alternatives.  However, given the scale of the transformation and the imperative to change, additional measures to support innovation and investment in clean energy are required.

The Government will provide significant levels of financial support for innovation in clean energy technologies.

A new $10 billion commercially oriented Clean Energy Finance Corporation will invest in renewable energy, low pollution and energy efficiency technologies.

A new Australian Renewable Energy Agency (ARENA) will administer $3.2 billion in Government support for research and development, demonstration and commercialisation of renewable energy.

The Renewable Energy Target, combined with other elements of the Government’s plan, including the carbon price, will drive $20 billion of investment in large-scale renewable energy by 2020 in today’s dollars.

Energy markets

The Government will implement measures to underpin a successful energy market transition and maintain secure energy supplies.  These measures will supplement the carbon price and clean energy policies.

An Energy Security Fund will be established to ensure there is a smooth transition which preserves energy security.  The Energy Security Fund comprises two elements. 

The first element is an allocation of free carbon units and cash payments to strongly affected coal-fired electricity generators.  These allocations will be conditional on electricity generators strongly affected by a carbon price publishing Clean Energy Investment Plans, which show how they will reduce their pollution, and by meeting power system reliability standards.

Second, the Government will seek to negotiate the closure of around 2,000 megawatts (MW) of highly polluting generation capacity by 2020.  Closing down some of our highest polluting coalfired generation capacity makes room for investment in lower pollution plants—and kickstarts the transformation of our energy industry in a managed way.

In addition to the Energy Security Fund, as a transitional measure the Government will offer loans to coal-fired generators for the purchase of future vintage carbon units at auction for the first three years that auctions are held.  The Government may also offer loans to coal-fired generators for the purpose of refinancing existing debt. 

The Government has also announced the establishment of an Energy Security Council which will provide advice to the Government in the event that systemic risks to energy security emerge from the financial impairment of power stations arising from any source, including form the introduction of carbon pricing.

Energy efficiency

Using energy more efficiently can lower carbon pollution and save money—which is why energy efficiency is the third element in the Government’s clean energy future plan.

The Government is helping households and businesses improve their energy efficiency and will expand these efforts.  The carbon price will create a strong incentive to use energy more efficiently.  A large proportion of industry and household assistance is also directly targeted at facilitating further energy efficiency improvements.

The Low Carbon Communities Program will be significantly expanded to promote energy efficiency at a local level and among lowincome households and to ensure the services of charities who are heavy users of maritime and aviation fuel are not adversely affected by the introduction of a carbon price.

The Government will expedite the development of a national energy savings initiative, as recommended by the Prime Minister’s Task Group on Energy Efficiency.  The energy savings initiative will be a ‘white certificate’ scheme, creating and trading credits that reward energy efficiency activities.

Land sector initiatives

The farming, forestry and land sectors have just as important a role to play in reducing carbon pollution as governments, households and the wider business community.

A carbon price will not apply to agricultural emissions.  This means there will be no requirement for farmers to pay for emissions from livestock or fertiliser use.

Australia faces significant opportunities to reduce carbon pollution and increase the amount of carbon stored on the land.  Those who pursue these opportunities will be rewarded through the CFI, which allows farmers and land managers to receive credits for carbon storage and pollution reduction activities.  Kyoto-compliant credits can be sold to liable entities under the mechanism, and all credits can be sold in the domestic voluntary market or exported to foreign purchasers.

The Government will also provide substantial funding for a range of new land-based measures, including an ongoing fund for landholders to undertake projects that establish, restore, protect and manage biodiverse carbon stores.  The Biodiversity Fund will improve the resilience of Australia’s unique species to the impacts of climate change, enhance the environmental outcomes of carbon farming projects, and help landholders protect biodiversity and carbon values on their land.

An ongoing Carbon Farming Futures program will help farmers and landholders benefit from carbon farming by supporting research and development, measurement approaches and action on the ground to reduce emissions or store carbon.

The Government is also providing ongoing support for Indigenous communities to participate in carbon farming, and support for natural resource management bodies to plan for climate change.

Major steps to date

International commitments

United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change

On 30 December 1992 Australia ratified the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change.[3] The Convention is aimed at stabilising greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere at a level that would prevent dangerous anthropogenic interference with the climate system.  It includes an obligation on Australia to ‘adopt national policies and take corresponding measures on the mitigation of climate change, by limiting anthropogenic emissions of greenhouse gases and protecting and enhancing its greenhouse gas sinks and reservoirs’ (Article 4.2(a)).  It provides an overall framework for intergovernmental efforts on climate change.

Ratification of the Kyoto Protocol

On 3 December 2007 Australia formally ratified the Kyoto Protocol to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change[4] and the ratification entered into force on 11 March 2008.  Under the Kyoto Protocol, Australia is committed to restraining its national emissions to an average of 108 per cent of 1990 levels over the first commitment period (2008 to 2012).

Cancun Agreements

The 2010 Cancun Agreements[5] anchor under the Climate Change Convention the mitigation pledges made by developed and developing countries in the Copenhagen Accord.  The agreements recognise the need to hold any increase in global temperature to below 2 degrees Celsius.  Over 85 countries, including both developed and developing economies, have already made pledges to limit their emissions.  Together, these countries represent more than 90 per cent of the global economy and are responsible for more than 80 per cent of global emissions.

The Garnaut Review and Update

On 30 September 2008, the Government published The Garnaut Climate Change Review: Final Report.[6]  This was an independent study conducted by Professor Ross Garnaut AO commissioned by the Australian, state and territory governments.  In November 2010, the Australian Government commissioned Professor Garnaut to provide an update to the 2008 Review. 

Professor Garnaut released a series of papers in early 2011 addressing developments across a range of subjects including climate change science and impacts, emissions trends, carbon pricing, technology, land and the electricity sector. 

Professor Garnaut presented his final report, called The Garnaut Review 2011: Australia in the Global Response to Climate Change[7], to the Government on 31 May 2011.  The Report concluded that a broad-based market approach will best preserve Australian prosperity as we make the transition to a low carbon future. 

Previous policy development and legislative processes

In the late 1990s the Australian Greenhouse Office released a series of discussion papers on the design of an Australian emissions trading scheme.

In 2006, a task force set up by the States and Territories released a paper on setting out a proposed design of an Australian emissions trading scheme.

In 2007, the Howard Government's Prime Ministerial Task Group on Emissions Trading[8] — a group of leading business representatives and senior officials — recommended that the Government adopt an emissions trading scheme.  Later that year, the States and Territories released their final report on emissions trading scheme design. 

On 16 July 2008 the Government released its Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme Green Paper.[9] This Paper reflected the Government’s preferred positions on issues concerning the CPRS.

On 15 December 2008, the Government released a White Paper called Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme: Australia’s Low Pollution Future.[10] The decisions in the White Paper formed the basis the CPRS legislative packages.

In 2009 and 2010, the Government introduced three packages of legislation to implement the CPRS.  These were not passed by the Parliament. 

Treasury modelling

On 10 July 2011, the Government released Strong growth, low pollution: Modelling a carbon price[11], which models various scenarios concerning the proposals set out in Securing a clean energy future: The Australian Government’s climate change plan.  This built on Australia’s Low Pollution Future: The Economics of Climate Change Mitigation[12], which was released on 30 October 2008.

The reports present the results of the Treasury’s economic modelling of the potential economic impacts of reducing emissions over the medium-and long-term.  They span global, national and sectoral scales, and look at distributional impacts, such as the implications of carbon pricing for the goods and services that households consume.

The Treasury’s modelling demonstrates that early global action is less expensive than later action; that a market-based approach allows robust economic growth into the future even as emissions fall; and that many of Australia’s industries will maintain or improve their competitiveness under an international agreement to combat climate change.

Architecture for a carbon pricing mechanism

In September 2010 the Government announced the establishment of the Multi-Party Climate Change Committee (MPCCC) to consult, negotiate, and report to the Cabinet, through the Minister for Climate Change and Energy Efficiency, on agreed options for the implementation of a carbon price in Australia; and to provide advice on, and participate in, building community consensus for action on climate change.[13] 

On 24 February 2011, the Prime Minister announced the climate change framework outlining the broad architecture for a mechanism, which had been considered by the MPCCC.  The proposed mechanism focused on the high level architecture, start date, potential mechanisms to allow flexibility to move to emissions trading, sectoral coverage and international linking arrangements.

DCCEE conducted a public consultation process on the proposed mechanism in April and May 2011.

Securing a clean energy future

On 10 July 2011, the Government published Securing a clean energy future: The Australian Government’s climate change plan.  This set out the details of the mechanism and related proposals for fostering renewable energy generation, energy efficiency and action on the land.  It also set out measures to assist Australian households and businesses to adapt to the mechanism and to support energy markets. 

Exposure draft legislation

On 28 July 2011, the Government released the following draft bills to implement the mechanism and related initiatives for public comment:

       Clean Energy Bill 2011;

       Clean Energy (Consequential Amendments) Bill 2011;

       Clean Energy Regulator Bill 2011;

       Climate Change Authority Bill 2011;

       Clean Energy (Unit Shortfall Charge—General) Bill 2011;

       Clean Energy (Unit Issue Charge—General) Bill 2011;

       Clean Energy (Charges—Excise) Bill 2011;

       Clean Energy (International Unit Surrender Charge) Bill 2011;

       Ozone Protection and Synthetic Greenhouse Gas (Manufacture Levy) Amendment Bill 2011;

       Ozone Protection and Synthetic Greenhouse Gas (Import Levy) Amendment Bill 2011;

       Fuel Tax Legislation Amendment (Clean Energy) Bill 2011;

       Excise Tariff Legislation Amendment (Clean Energy) Bill 2011; and

       Customs Tariff Amendment (Clean Energy) Bill 2011.

The exposure process

During the period from 28 July 2011 to 22 August 2011, DCCEE:

       met with government representatives from the States and Territories;

       convened a forum for peak industry, environmental, community and other non-government organisations;

       convened three legal experts workshops (in Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane);

       convened four technical working group meetings on the treatment of natural gas, the point of liability and landfill (in Canberra and Perth);

       conducted meetings and teleconferences with business representative groups, businesses and other stakeholders; and

       received over 300 submissions on the draft legislation. 


The 2011 Clean Energy Legislative Package

A description of the bills introducing the mechanism is set out below.

Table II: The Clean Energy Bill 2011 and related bills

Main bill

The Clean Energy Bill 2011 creates the mechanism.  It sets out the structure of the mechanism and process for its introduction.  These include:

       entities and emissions that are covered by the mechanism;

       entities’ obligations to surrender eligible emissions units;

       limits on the number of eligible emissions units that will be issued;

       the nature of carbon units;

       the allocation of carbon units, including by auction and the issue of free units;

       mechanisms to contain costs, including the fixed charge period and price floors and ceilings;

       linking to other emissions trading schemes;

       assistance for emissions-intensive, trade-exposed activities and coal-fired electricity generators;

       monitoring, investigation, enforcement and penalties;

       administrative review of decisions; and

       reviews of aspects of the mechanism over time.

Statutory bodies

The Clean Energy Regulator Bill 2011 sets up the Regulator, which is a statutory authority that will administer the mechanism and enforce the law. 

The responsibilities of the Regulator include:

       providing education on the mechanism, particularly about the administrative arrangements of the mechanism;

       assessing emissions data to determine each entity’s liability;

       operating the Australian National Registry of Emissions Units (the Registry);

       monitoring, facilitating and enforcing compliance with the mechanism;

       allocating units including freely allocated units, fixed charge units and auctioned units;

       applying legislative rules to determine if a particular entity is eligible for assistance in the form of units to be allocated administratively, and the number of other units to be allocated;

       administering the National Greenhouse and Energy Reporting System (NGERS), the Renewable Energy Target (RET) and the Carbon Farming Initiative (CFI); and

       accrediting auditors for the CFI and NGERS.

 

The Climate Change Authority Bill 2011 sets up the Authority, which will be an independent body that provides the Government with expert advice on key aspects of the mechanism and the Government’s climate change mitigation initiatives.

The Government will remain responsible for carbon pricing policy decisions.

This Bill also sets up the Land Sector Carbon and Biodiversity Board which will advise on key initiatives in the land sector.

Consequential amendments

The Clean Energy (Consequential Amendments) Bill 2011 makes consequential amendments to ensure:

       NGERS supports the mechanism;

       the Registry covers the mechanism and the CFI;

       the Regulator covers the mechanism, CFI, the Renewable Energy Target and NGERS;

       the Regulator and Authority are set up as statutory agencies and regulated by public accountability and financial management rules;

       that emissions units and their trading are covered by laws on financial services;

       that activities related to emissions trading are covered by laws on money laundering and fraud;

       synthetic greenhouse gases are subject to an equivalent carbon price applied through existing regulation of those substances;

       the Regulator can work with other regulatory bodies, including the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC), the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) and the Australian Transaction Reporting and Analysis Centre (Austrac);

       the taxation treatment of emissions units for the purposes of GST and income tax is clear; and

       the Conservation Tillage Refundable Tax Offset is established.

Procedural bills

Those elements of the mechanism which oblige a person to pay money are implemented through separate bills that comply with the requirements of section 55 of the Constitution

These bills are the Clean Energy (Unit Shortfall Charge—General) Bill 2011, Clean Energy (Unit Issue Charge – Fixed Charge) Bill 2011, Clean Energy (Unit Issue Charge – Auctions) Bill 2011, Clean Energy (Charges—Excise) Bill 2011, Clean Energy (Charges—Customs) Bill 2011, Clean Energy (International Unit Surrender Charge) Bill 2011, Ozone Protection and Synthetic Greenhouse Gas (Manufacture Levy) Amendment Bill 2011 and Ozone Protection and Synthetic Greenhouse Gas (Import Levy) Amendment Bill 2011

Related bills

Other elements of the Government’s Climate Change Plan are being implemented through other legislation.  These are:

       the Clean Energy (Excise Tariff Legislation Amendment)  Bill 2011 and the Clean Energy (Customs Tariff Amendment) Bill 2011, which imposes an effective carbon price on aviation and non-transport gaseous fuels through excise and customs tariffs;

       the Clean Energy (Fuel Tax Legislation Amendment) Bill 2011, which reduces the business fuel tax credit entitlement of non-exempted industries for their use of liquid and gaseous transport fuels, in order to provide an effective carbon price on business through the fuel tax system; and

       the Clean Energy (Household Assistance Amendments) Bill 2011, Clean Energy (Tax Laws Amendments) Bill 2011 and the Clean Energy (Income Tax Rates Amendments) Bill 2011, which will implement the household assistance measures announced by the Government on 10 July 2011.  These bills amend relevant legislation to provide payment increases for pensioners, allowees and family payment recipients and provide income tax cuts and establish new supplements for low- and middle-income households. 


Structure of the Clean Energy Bill 2011

The bill creates the mechanism.  The mechanism is also implemented through other bills, and reference should also be made to those bills where appropriate.  This Explanatory Memorandum indicates where those other bills are relevant. 

Table III: Structure of the Clean Energy Bill 2011

Part

Title

Description

Part 1

Preliminary

Part 1 sets out the objects of the bill, arrangements for commencement, definitions and explains specific concepts of relevance to the mechanism.

Part 2

Carbon pollution cap

Part 2 provides that a carbon pollution cap can be set by the Government through regulations.

Part 3

Liable entities

Part 3 sets out the circumstances in which a person is liable under the mechanism, deals with mechanisms for transferring liability and establishes the Opt-in Scheme for specified fuels. 

Part 4

Carbon Units

Part 4 provides for carbon units and the way in which these are issued by the Regulator and dealt with under the Registry. 

Part 5

Emissions Number

Part 5 sets out how a person’s emissions number is determined. 

Part 6

Surrender of eligible emissions units

Part 6 sets out the way in which a person may make a payment or surrender units to meet their obligations under the mechanism.

Part 7

Jobs and Competitiveness Program

Part 7 provides for assistance to emissions-intensive trade-exposed industries to adjust to the mechanism. 

Part 8

Coal-fired electricity generation

Part 8 provides for assistance to coal-fired electricity generators to support energy markets.

Part 9

Publication of information

Part 9 sets out the Regulator’s obligations to publish specific information about the mechanism. 

Part 10

Fraudulent conduct

Part 10 sets out the circumstances in which a person may be ordered to relinquish units if they are convicted of a criminal offence involving fraudulent conduct. 

Part 11

Relinquishment of carbon units

Part 11 sets out the way in which a person relinquishes units where he or she must do so. 

Part 12

Notification of significant holdings of carbon units

Part 12 sets out the obligations of corporate groups and others to notify the Regulator of a significant holding of units. 

Part 13

Information gathering powers

Part 13 sets out the Regulator’s information gathering powers when investigating possible contraventions. 

Part 14

Record-keeping requirements

Part 14 sets out liable entities’ reporting requirements under the mechanism and the consequences of not complying with them.

Part 15

Monitoring powers

Part 15 sets out the Regulator’s powers to engage in monitoring activities, including entering premises under warrant, when investigating possible contraventions

Part 16

Liability of executive officers of bodies corporate

Part 16 provides that executive officers of bodies corporate may be liable for contraventions in certain circumstances. 

Part 17

Civil penalty orders

Part 17 sets out the way in which civil penalties, including pecuniary penalties, are imposed for contraventions. 

Part 18

Infringement notices

Part 18 sets out the way in which infringement notices may be issued. 

Part 19

Offences relating to unit shortfall charge and administrative penalties

Part 19 sets out the way in which sanctions for contraventions of criminal offences are imposed. 

Part 20

Enforceable undertakings

Part 20 provides that the Regulator may accept enforceable undertakings from persons who may have engaged in a contravention, and the way in which these undertakings may be enforced. 

Part 21

Review of decisions

Part 21 provides for reviews of administrative decisions made by the Regulator and the Government. 

Part 22

Reviews by Climate Change Authority

Part 22 sets out the obligations of the Authority to undertake periodic reviews about the mechanism and aspects of it and also specific reviews requested by the Minister or both Houses of Parliament.

Part 23

Miscellaneous

Part 23 provides for a range of matters which facilitate the operation of the mechanism.

The objects of the carbon pricing mechanism

The objects of the mechanism are:

       to give effect to Australia’s international obligations on addressing climate change under the Climate Change Convention and the Kyoto Protocol;

       to support the development of an effective global response to climate change, consistent with Australia’s national interest in ensuring that average global temperatures increase by not more than 2 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels;

       to take action directed towards meeting Australia’s long-term target of reducing net greenhouse gas emissions to 80 per cent below 2000 levels by 2050 and take that action in a flexible and cost-effective way; and

       to put a price on greenhouse gas emissions in a way that encourages investment in clean energy, supports jobs and competitiveness in the economy and supports Australia’s economic growth while reducing pollution.

The objects of the bill are set out in Part 1.  The constitutional basis of the mechanism is addressed in Chapter 11. 

The mechanism

The mechanism starts on 1 July 2012.  From that date, businesses covered by it will pay for each tonne of carbon pollution they put into the atmosphere each year.

The commencement arrangements of the bill are set out in Part 1 (see Chapter 11).

There will be two stages.  For the first three years, the carbon price for each tonne of pollution will be fixed, and will operate like a carbon tax.  Then, from 1 July 2015, the mechanism will shift to a ‘cap and trade’ emissions trading scheme.  In this second ‘flexible charge’ stage, the carbon price will be set by the market.

The fixed charge period

An initial stage with fixed carbon charges will provide stability and predictability.  This will give businesses time to get used to the new system, to understand their obligations and to start planning ways to reduce their pollution.  Businesses will reduce their pollution when it is cheaper to do so than to pay the fixed charge.  Thus the market will create incentives to cut carbon pollution.

The fixed charge will start at $23 per tonne on 1 July 2012.  In each of the next two years, it will rise by around 2.5 per cent in real terms, assuming inflation of 2.5 per cent a year, which is the mid-point of the Reserve Bank of Australia’s target range for inflation.  The carbon charge will be $24.15 per tonne in 2013-14 and $25.40 per tonne in 2014-15.

This issue is discussed in Chapters 1, 2, 3 and 4 of this Explanatory Memorandum.  The operation of the fixed charge period is covered in Parts 3, 4, 5 and 6. 

Moving to a flexible price

The mechanism will move automatically to a flexible, market-driven approach on 1 July 2015.  From this date, the carbon charge will no longer be fixed, but will be set by the market.

During the flexible price period, an overall limit (or cap) will be placed on Australia’s annual greenhouse gas emissions from all sources of pollution covered by the carbon price.  There will be no limits on individual sectors, firms or facilities.

The Government will set the cap by issuing a fixed number of carbon units each year.  Each unit will represent one tonne of pollution.  This will be one of the main ways Australia meets its pollution targets.  Some of the carbon units issued each year will be sold by the Government at auction.  Others will be allocated to businesses without charge to support jobs and competitiveness, and help strongly affected industries make the transition to a clean energy future. 

Businesses will be free to buy and sell the carbon units they have acquired from the Government.  This will create a market for carbon units that is designed to ensure the reductions in pollution under the carbon price are achieved at the lowest cost to the economy: firms will buy units if they cannot reduce their pollution for less than the cost of the units.

This issue is discussed in Chapters 1, 2, 3 and 4 of this Explanatory Memorandum.  The operation of the flexible price period is covered in Parts 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6. 

Pollution caps

In the flexible price period, the Government will set annual caps on pollution.  Before the start of this flexible price period, the Government will be required to set out the caps for the first five years from 1 July 2015.  Once the flexible price system is under way, the caps will be extended each year.  This is designed to ensure that businesses always have five years of certainty about the pollution caps they face.

Table IV: Timeline for setting pollution caps

Deadline

Pollution cap announced for financial year(s) beginning:

31 May 2014

2015, 2016, 2017, 2018 and 2019

30 June 2016

2020

30 June 2017

2021

 

Pollution caps will continue to be set annually

Pollution cap timelines are discussed in Chapter 2 of this Explanatory Memorandum.  Pollution caps are covered in Part 2. 

Climate Change Authority

The bill provides for reviews by an independent statutory body, the Authority, which will provide independent advice to the Government on the performance of the carbon price and other initiatives.  It is set up by the Authority bill. 

One of the Authority’s roles will be to make recommendations to the Government on pollution caps and on any national emissions trajectory or carbon budget.  The Government will make the final decisions.  The Authority will report regularly on progress.  The Authority will conduct regular, public reviews and its reports will be made public.  The Government will respond to its recommendations within a limited timeframe.

The Authority will complete its first review – which will provide recommendations on the mechanism’s first five years of pollution caps –  February 2014.

This issue is discussed in Chapter 10 of this Explanatory Memorandum.  The Authority’s responsibilities are set out in Part 22 and the Authority bill. 

Price ceilings and floors

For the first three years of the flexible price period, safety valves will be built into the system, in form of price ceilings and floors, to avoid price spikes or plunges.  This will reduce the risk for businesses as they gain experience in having a market set the carbon price.

A price ceiling will be set $20 higher than the expected international carbon price at the start of the flexible price period (1 July 2015).  A price floor will mean that the carbon price cannot fall any lower than $15 a tonne in 2015-16.  The floor is designed to reduce the risk of sharp downward movements in the price, which could undermine long-term investment in clean technologies.  Both the price ceiling and the price floor will increase gradually each year.

The price ceilings and floors will apply for the first three years of the flexible price period.  A review by the Authority of the role of the price ceiling and price floor will occur in 2017.

This issue is discussed in Chapter 2 of this Explanatory Memorandum.  Price ceilings and floors are addressed in Part 4, Division 2 and in Part 23.

Coverage of the carbon price

Carbon pollution from the following sources will be covered by the mechanism: stationary energy, non-legacy waste, industrial processes and fugitive emissions (other than from decommissioned coal mines). 

Some business transport emissions will face an equivalent carbon price through changes to fuel tax credits or fuel excise.  Emissions from non-transport uses of liquid petroleum transport fuels (for example, diesel and petrol) and gaseous transport fuels (LPG, LNG and CNG) will also be subject to an equivalent carbon price in this way.  This issue is discussed in greater detail in the section below on transport. 

The bill also allows for the establishment of an Opt-in Scheme to enable large users of specified fuels to voluntarily opt into the mechanism instead of paying the equivalent carbon price under the fuel tax or excise systems.

Treasury modelling shows that a broad-based carbon price will encourage pollution reductions across all sectors of the economy.  If sectors are excluded, it means that Australia misses out on their full contribution to the pollution reduction task. 

Around 60 per cent of Australia’s emissions will be directly covered by the mechanism and around two-thirds will be covered by a carbon price applied through various means.

This issue is discussed in Chapter 3 of this Explanatory Memorandum.  Coverage is addressed in Part 3.

Carbon Farming Initiative

Farming and other land-based activities will not be covered by the mechanism.  However, the CFI will give farmers and other land managers an opportunity to generate income from taking action to reduce their pollution.

The CFI is covered by the CFI Act and the Carbon Credits (Consequential Amendments) Act 2011. 

Gases

The mechanism will cover four of the six greenhouse gases counted under the Kyoto Protocol – carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide and perfluorocarbon emissions from the aluminium sector.  The remaining greenhouse gases counted under the Kyoto Protocol (hydrofluorocarbons and sulphur hexafluoride) as well as other perfluorocarbon emissions will face an equivalent carbon price through existing synthetic greenhouse gas legislation.

Amendments to apply an equivalent carbon price to synthetic greenhouse gases are set out in the Consequential Amendments bill. 

Large polluters

It is important to ensure that the mechanism is practical and minimises costs to business.  For this reason, only facilities that release over a certain amount of carbon pollution a year, or are users or natural gas suppliers, will pay the carbon price under the mechanism.  Facilities that have direct greenhouse gas emissions of 25,000 tonnes of CO2-e a year or more (excluding emissions from transport fuels and some synthetic greenhouse gases) will be covered.  There will be a lower threshold for certain landfill facilities.  Facilities that consume large volumes of natural gas will also be covered.  Natural gas suppliers will be liable for carbon pollution from the use of natural gas they supply to small-to medium-sized customers.

Liable entities will be required to either make a payment for emissions or surrender an equivalent number of units.  If a liable entity does not surrender any units or an insufficient number to meet their liability, then it will become liable for a shortfall charge.  Those who choose to pay, or who are liable for, a shortfall charge will pay a premium above the value of the unit. 

This issue is discussed in Chapters 3 and 4 of this Explanatory Memorandum.  The operation of the fixed charge period is covered in Parts 3 and 6. 

Transport

Households and light commercial vehicles will not face a carbon price on the fuel they use for transport.  In addition, the agriculture, forestry and fishing industries will not face a carbon price on their off-road fuel use.

An effective carbon price will apply to fuels used in domestic aviation, marine and rail transport.  Similarly, a carbon price will apply when liquid petroleum and gaseous transport fuels are used for non-transport purposes, such as running diesel generators on a mine site. 

In general, where an effective carbon price applies to transport fuels, it will be applied through changes in fuel tax credits or changes in excise.  The changes will be calculated to have the same price effect as coverage by the mechanism and will be adjusted periodically to ensure the effective carbon price on transport fuels is in step with the carbon price applying to the rest of the economy.

The Government intends to apply an effective carbon price to heavy on-road transport from 1 July 2014. 

While no transport fuels will be covered directly under the mechanism on a mandatory basis, large users of specified transport fuels may, in certain circumstances, choose to opt into coverage by the mechanism via the Opt-in Scheme.  These opt-in arrangements will be available from 1 July 2013.  By opting-in, fuel users will have their fuel emissions directly covered by the mechanism and will not face the equivalent carbon price through the fuel tax system.


 

Table V: Treatment of transport fuels

A carbon price will be applied to:

A carbon price will not apply to:

Domestic aviation

Fuel used by households for transport

Domestic shipping

Light on-road commercial vehicles

Rail transport

Ethanol, biodiesel and renewable diesel

Off-road transport use of liquid and gaseous fuels (except in agriculture, forestry, fisheries)

Gaseous fuels used for on-road transport

Off-road fuel use by the agriculture, forestry and fishing industries

Non-transport use of liquid and gaseous fuels

Transport fuels when used as lubricants and solvents or in other ways that do not result in emissions

The treatment of transport fuels is addressed through the:

       Clean Energy (Fuel Tax Legislation Amendment) Bill 2011;

       Clean Energy (Excise Tariff Legislation Amendment) Bill 2011; and

       Clean Energy (Customs Tariff Amendment) Bill 2011.

Jobs and Competitiveness Program

The Government recognises the importance of manufacturing and heavy industries that compete on international markets and use large amounts of energy or generate significant levels of carbon pollution.  The goods these industries produce will remain important in a clean energy economy. 

In most industries, a carbon price will represent a very small proportion of total revenue.  However, some industries, particularly heavy manufacturing industries, are pollution intensive. 

Without appropriate assistance arrangements, applying constraints on carbon pollution in Australia before other countries could risk ‘carbon leakage’ — activities could be relocated from Australia to countries where those activities may not be subject to comparable carbon constraints.  Carbon leakage is not in Australia’s interests — either from an environmental or an economic point of view.  The Jobs and Competitiveness Program (the Program) is designed to reduce this risk.

The Government has designed the Program to provide assistance to our emissions-intensive, trade-exposed industry while still maintaining a strong price signal for industries to reduce the pollution intensity of their products.  Making products like steel, aluminium, glass, clinker and chemicals in cleaner and more efficient ways is good for the environment, supports Australian jobs and will ensure our industry remains competitive.

This issue is discussed in Chapter 5 of this Explanatory Memorandum.  The Program is set out in Part 7.

Energy Security Fund and coal-fired electricity generation

An Energy Security Fund will be established to smooth the transition and maintain energy security.  This Fund will incorporate two main initiatives.  First, there will be transitional assistance to highly emissions-intensive coal-fired power stations in Australia.  This assistance will come with conditions to ensure security of supply and transparent information on the action taken by these generators to move to a cleaner energy future.  Second, there will be scope for payments for the closure of around 2,000 megawatts (MW) of very highly emissions-intensive coal fired generation capacity by 2020.  This will start the process of replacing existing, highly polluting electricity assets with cleaner generation. 

This issue is discussed in Chapter 6 of this Explanatory Memorandum.  The Fund and assistance for coal-fired electricity generation is covered in Part 8.

International linking

Australia’s carbon price will be linked to carbon markets around the world from the start of the flexible price period.  This will allow reductions in carbon pollution to be pursued globally at the lowest cost.  Carbon pollution is not confined to national borders.  It affects the whole planet.  International linking of carbon markets will allow businesses that release carbon in one country to be matched up with businesses in other countries that are able to reduce their carbon pollution at lower costs.  International linking encourages action to reduce carbon pollution around the world, and plays an important role in helping developing countries adopt clean technologies.

International linking will start when the carbon price moves to its flexible price period from 1 July 2015.  Australian businesses will be able to buy international units from credible international carbon markets or emissions trading schemes in other countries.  They will be allowed to use these units to meet some of their local obligations.  When an Australian business buys an international unit, it means that a tonne of pollution cannot be released overseas.  In addition, farmers will be able to sell credits generated from the CFI to international markets.

Safeguards will be in place to ensure international units are credible and do not undermine the environmental integrity of Australia’s pollution reduction efforts.  Until 2020, businesses will have to meet at least half of their annual obligations each year by buying carbon units or Australian Carbon Credit Units (ACCUs).  It will be more efficient and less costly to reduce Australia’s carbon pollution by a mixture of domestic reductions and international unit purchases compared with relying on domestic action alone.  International linking allows Australian businesses to pursue credible, cheaper carbon pollution reduction opportunities wherever they are available.

If reducing carbon pollution in Australia is more expensive than reducing carbon pollution in another country, Australian firms will be able to purchase an international unit.  With international linking, the carbon price in Australia will be set by international supply and demand for units.

This issue is discussed in Chapter 3 of this Explanatory Memorandum.  International linking issues will be addressed in Part 4 of the bill and in the Consequential Amendments bill. 

Governance

Sound governance will ensure that the mechanism is efficient and effective.  The roles of making, administering and reviewing the rules have been carefully allocated to ensure that appropriate accountabilities are in place.

The Government and the Parliament will be responsible for major policy decisions that require the balancing of environmental, economic and social factors.

Clean Energy Regulator

The Regulator will administer key elements of the mechanism, as well as the CFI and the Registry.  It will have robust powers to ensure the integrity of the mechanism and the Registry. 

The Regulator is set up through the Regulator bill.  This issue is discussed in Chapter 7 of this Explanatory Memorandum and the Explanatory Memorandum for the Regulator bill.  The Regulator’s responsibilities and powers to administer and enforce the mechanism are set out throughout the bill, and general powers set out in Part 23. 

Climate Change Authority

The Authority will review pollution caps, the future trajectory of Australia’s pollution levels and the performance of the carbon price and will track Australia’s progress towards meeting its targets for reducing carbon pollution.

The Authority is set up through the Authority bill.  Its role is discussed in Chapters 2 and 10 of this Explanatory Memorandum and the Explanatory Memorandum for the Authority bill.  The Authority’s responsibilities and powers to conduct reviews are set out in Part 22. 

Productivity Commission

The Productivity Commission will review industry assistance under Parts 7 and 8.  It will also review the impact of the carbon price on industry and continue reporting on actions by other countries to reduce carbon pollution.

This issue is discussed in Chapters 5 and 6 of this Explanatory Memorandum.  The Commission’s responsibilities and powers to conduct reviews are set out in Parts 7 and 8.

Links to other Regulators

The mechanism will be administered by the Regulator; however other national economic Regulators and law enforcement agencies will also have a role.  Under the Package, the Regulator will be given powers to share information and cooperate with these agencies. 

The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) administers and enforces economy-wide competition, fair trading and consumer protection laws, which will apply to business activity under the mechanism.  The ACCC has received additional funding of $12.8 million over four years for additional resources to deal with false and misleading claims about the carbon price.

The Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) administers and enforces Australia’s financial services laws, which will cover emissions units, as these will be defined as financial products.  It will also have responsibility for the regulation of related trading markets. 

The Regulator will also have powers to work with the Australian Transaction Reports and Analysis Centre (Austrac), the Australian Federal Police and the Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions concerning activities that may contravene the requirements of the mechanism and be linked with fraud and criminal activity, such as money laundering. 

The bill’s operation and background

Simplified outlines

The bill includes a simplified outline of the mechanism and each Part of the bill includes a simplified outline of that Part’s contents. 

Date of effect and application

Once passed:

       clauses 1 and 2 will commence on the date the bill receives the Royal Assent;

       the substantive provisions of the bill (clauses 3 to 303 and 304 to 311) will commence on a date to be proclaimed; and

       clauses 303A, 303B and 312 will commence on the day after the bill receives the Royal Assent. 

The first year for which entities will be liable under the mechanism will commence on 1 July 2012.  This is achieved by use of the phrase ‘eligible financial year’ which is defined to mean the financial year beginning on 1 July 2012 or a later financial year. 

Prompt commencement will allow liable entities and the Regulator to prepare for the mechanism and for the Regulator to prepare for its functions as the responsible agency for the CFI and the Registry.  The timeframe will also provide time for:

       education and assistance for entities which are likely to be liable and their representatives; and

       receipt and assessment of applications, for example, for certificates of eligibility for coal-fired generation assistance, Registry accounts, obligation transfer numbers, emissions-intensive trade-exposed assistance and for reforestation.

Proposal announced

The measures are based on the announcement on 10 July 2011 and the publication of Securing a clean energy future: The Australian Government’s climate change plan

Transitional provisions and consequential amendments

The transitional provisions and consequential amendments are included in the Consequential Amendments bill.  There is a separate Explanatory Memorandum for that bill.

Financial impact

The financial impact associated with the legislative proposals in the Clean Energy Legislative Package, is reflected in Fiscal Tables 1 to 4 below.[14] 

Further detail on the financial implications of these measures is provided in Securing a clean energy future: The Australian Government’s climate change plan and related documents.

The Government will use all of the revenue it receives from the sale of emissions units to help households and businesses adjust and move Australia to the low pollution economy of the future.


 

Fiscal Table 1: Plan for a clean energy future

 

Fiscal Impact ($m)

Fwd Est’s.

 

2011-12

2012-13

2013-14

2014-15

Revenue from the sale of units

0

7,740

8,690

9,190

25,620

Revenue from the application of carbon price via other measures[15]

0

290

320

320

930

Fuel tax credit reductions[16]

0

570

70

70

710

Household assistance measures

-1,534

-4,230

-4,809

-4,830

-15,403

Assistance for low- to middle-income households

-1,470

-4,125

-4,672

-4,700

-14,967

Increases in transfer payments[17]

-1,470

-775

-2,302

-2,380

-6,927

Tax reform

0

-3,350

-2,370

-2,320

-8,040

Low Carbon Communities - redesign and extension

-5

-39

-83

-90

-217

Other household energy efficiency measures[18]

-7

-13

-15

-13

-48

Household assistance implementation

-51

-54

-39

-28

-172

Support for jobs

-26

-3,017

-3,475

-3,773

-10,291

Jobs and Competitiveness Program

0

-2,851

-3,059

-3,312

-9,222

Clean Technology Program[19]

-19

-142

-245

-312

-717

Increased small business instant asset write-off

0

0

-100

-100

-200

Regional structural adjustment

0

-10

-50

-30

-90

Other business energy efficiency measures[20]

-7

-15

-21

-19

-62

Clean Energy Finance Corporation[21]

-2

-21

-467

-455

-944

Energy security and transformation[22]

-1,009

-1

-1,003

-1,042

-3,054

Land and biodiversity measures

-69

-131

-506

-489

-1,194

Carbon Farming Initiative

0

-47

-65

-81

-193

Biodiversity Fund

-37

-35

-250

-251

-572

Carbon Farming Futures Program

-31

-30

-113

-102

-276

Carbon Farming Initiative Non-Kyoto Carbon Fund

0

-1

-50

-47

-97

Regional Natural Resource Management Planning

0

-13

-23

-4

-40

Other land and biodiversity measures[23]

-1

-5

-5

-4

-16

Governance

-78

-90

-106

-107

-382

Clean Energy Regulator

-68

-68

-61

-59

-256

Coverage of synthetic greenhouse gases

-1

-2

-26

-31

-60

Climate Change Authority

0

-6

-9

-9

-25

Productivity Commission Reviews

-4

-4

-5

-5

-18

Other governance

-5

-9

-5

-4

-23

Total impact

-2,717

1,110

-1,285

-1,116

-4,008

Fiscal Table 2: Plan for a clean energy future

 

Underlying Cash Balance Impact ($m)

Fwd Est’s.

 

2011-12

2012-13

2013-14

2014-15

Total receipts (net of free units)

0

4,270

6,680

7,211

18,161

Total payments

-2,683

-4,779

-7,078

-7,303

-21,843

Total impact

-2,683

-509

-398

-92

-3,682

 

Fiscal Table 3: Plan for a clean energy future including Government measures

 

Fiscal Impact ($m)

Fwd Est’s.

 

2011-12

2012-13

2013-14

2014-15

MPCCC agreed measures

-2,717

1,110

-1,285

-1,116

-4,008

Additional Government measures

-223

-48

-322

178

-416

Coal Sector Jobs Package

-222

0

-231

-243

-696

Coal Mining Abatement Technology Support Package

0

-11

-16

-15

-41

Steel Transformation Plan

-1

-38

-75

-75

-189

Additional fuel tax credit reductions for heavy on-road transport from 2014-2015

0

0

0

510

510

Total impact

-2,940

1,061

-1,607

-938

-4,424

 

Fiscal Table 4: Plan for a clean energy future including Government measures

 

Underlying Cash Balance Impact ($m)

Fwd Est’s.

 

2011-12

2012-13

2013-14

2014-15

MPCCC agreed measures

-2,683

-509

-398

-92

-3,682

Additional Government measures

-223

-48

-304

124

-452

Total impact

-2,907

-558

-701

32

-4,134

 

Regulation impact statement

The Regulation Impact Statement, entitled Australia’s plan for a clean energy future, is available at http://ris.finance.gov.au.  The RIS was prepared by the Department and has been assessed as adequate by the Office of Best Practice Regulation.



Outline of chapter

1.1                  Chapter 1 explains:

       which greenhouse gas emissions give rise to liability;

       which entities are responsible for those emissions;

       how obligations may be transferred voluntarily from one entity to another, to allow liability to be met more efficiently; and

       the arrangements allowing entities using specified fuels to choose to opt into coverage by the mechanism.

This chapter covers Part 3.

Context

1.2                  The mechanism covers emissions from stationary energy, industrial processes, fugitive emissions (except from decommissioned coal mines) and non-legacy waste.  Amendments to other legislation covering fuel tax and synthetic greenhouse gases apply an equivalent carbon price to some business transport emissions, non-transport use of transport fuels, and synthetic greenhouse gases. 

1.3                  Around 60 per cent of Australia’s emissions will be directly covered by the mechanism, and around two-thirds are covered by a combination of the mechanism and equivalent carbon pricing arrangements.  Together, these approaches cover all six greenhouse gases counted under the Kyoto Protocol.

1.4                  This broad coverage will ensure that the economy as a whole starts moving towards a clean energy future and that the cheapest ways of reducing pollution will be implemented, thereby lowering the overall cost to the Australian economy. 

1.5                  Treasury modelling shows that a broad-based carbon price will encourage pollution reductions across all sectors of the economy.  If sectors are excluded, Australia misses out on their full contribution to the pollution reduction task. 

1.6                  Agricultural emissions are not covered by the mechanism.  However, the CFI will give farmers and other land managers an opportunity to generate income from taking action to store carbon in the landscape and to reduce their pollution.

1.7                  To minimise costs to business and reduce administrative complexity, only firms that directly release large amounts of greenhouse gas emissions or are natural gas suppliers (and are responsible for potential greenhouse gas emissions embodied in the natural gas) will pay the carbon price.  It is expected that around 500 large polluters will be liable entities under the mechanism.

Summary of new law

Liability of direct emitters

1.8                  Part 3, Division 2 deals with the liability of direct emitters under the mechanism.  Liable entities include those who operate a facility which emits more than a specified amount of greenhouse gases, and those who are liable for emissions from a facility because they are members of a JV or hold an LTC.  It also deals with the way in which landfill operators are covered by the mechanism. 

Liability for emissions embodied in natural gas

1.9                  Part 3, Division 3 deals with the liability under the mechanism for emissions embodied in natural gas. 

1.10              Part 3, Division 4 deals with the way in which an OTN is issued and used.  An OTN is used to transfer liability for emissions arising from the use of natural gas from the supplier to the user of that gas.  An OTN is used to keep track of liability so that it is not imposed twice on the same emissions.  For example, it ensures that emissions from the use of natural gas that count towards a facility’s emissions do not count towards a gas supplier’s liability.  OTNs also ensure that liability is not imposed on natural gas that is used in a way that does not result in emissions.

Direct emitters - Liability for participants in unincorporated joint ventures

1.11              Part 3, Division 5 deals with unincorporated JVs which operate facilities covered by the direct emitters provisions.  These may be ‘mandatory designated JVs’ and ‘declared designated JVs’: 

       A ‘mandatory designated JV’ is designated when a facility is operated by a JV, but no one party has operational control of that facility.  The liability for emissions from the facility is shared between participants in proportion to their interest in the JV.  Applying liability directly to JV participants will facilitate the pass-through of the carbon price under contracts for sale of the output of the facility held by the JV participants.

       A ‘declared designated JV’ is declared when a facility is operated exclusively for a JV by an operator and the JV participants voluntarily assume the liability for emissions, with the current operator’s consent.  This will provide JV participants more flexibility to manage emissions obligations from a facility by allowing them to directly assume those obligations if they wish to do so.

Direct emitters - Transfers of liability by liability transfer certificates

1.12              Part 3, Division 6 covers LTCs.  LTCs are used to transfer liability for a facility from the facility operator to another member of the corporate group or to a person who has financial control of a facility. 

Opt in arrangements for entities covered by the fuel tax system

1.13              Part 3, Division 7 allows the Minister to make regulations establishing the Opt-in Scheme.  This will allow entities who use significant quantities of liquid petroleum fuels to opt into the mechanism to manage their carbon emissions liability for specified fuels instead of paying the equivalent carbon price through the fuel tax system.  The Opt-in Scheme will start from 1 July 2013.

Detailed explanation of new law

Liability for emissions under the mechanism

1.14              Under the mechanism a person may be liable as:

       a ‘direct emitter’ for greenhouse gas emissions directly emitted by a facility; or

       a ‘natural gas supplier’ for greenhouse gas emissions embodied in natural gas supplied to another person; or

       a person that opts-in under the Opt-in Scheme  for greenhouse gas emissions embodied in specified fuels.  [Part 3, clause 19], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘covered emission’], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘facility’], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘greenhouse gas’], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘natural gas’]

Such a person is a ‘liable entity’.  [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘liable entity’]

Direct emitters

1.15              A person is liable for greenhouse gases emitted from the operation of a facility if:

       the person has operational control of that facility (with specific arrangements for JVs or LTC holders (see below)); and

       the facility produced covered emissions (see below); and

        the amount of those covered emissions exceeds a threshold or the facility is a ‘large gas consuming facility’ (see below).  [Part 3, clause 20(1)-(3)], [Part 3, clause 21(1)-(3)], [Part 3, clause 22(1)-(3)], [Part 3, clause 23(1)-(3)], [Part 3, clause 24(1)-(3)], [Part 3, clause 25(1)-(3)], [Part 3, clause 55A]

The types of liability for direct emitters are set out in Diagram 1.1

Diagram 1.1 Liability of direct emitters under the carbon pricing mechanism


Operational control

1.16              Generally, a person with liability for emissions from a facility is the person with ‘operational control’ of that facility.  Operational control has the same meaning as in section 11 of the NGER Act.  [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘operational control’] Operational control is generally held by the person that:

       has the greatest ability to introduce and implement operational, environmental and health and safety policies for a facility; and

       is declared to have operational control by the Regulator.

1.17              The Consequential Amendments bill broadens the range of entities that can have operational control for the purposes of the NGER Act from ‘a controlling corporation or another member of the corporation’s group’ to ‘a person’ (see Schedule 1, Part 2, items 340-348 of the Consequential Amendments bill).[24]  [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘group’]

1.18              The person with operational control will generally have the greatest ability to bring about emissions reductions.  This person will also generally hold the contracts for sale of the output of the facility, and will be in the best position to pass through the carbon price to customers of the facility.  If liability was placed on another party then carbon price clauses in existing contracts may not be triggered.

1.19              Exceptions to this approach are provided through LTCs and designated JVs (see below).  These exceptions aim to address situations where a person other than the operator can more efficiently manage carbon liabilities.

Direct (facility) emissions covered by the mechanism

Covered emissions

1.20              ‘Covered emissions’ are those greenhouse gas emissions that count towards facility thresholds and give rise to liability under the mechanism.  Broadly, these are ‘scope 1 emissions’, where:

       the greenhouse gas is released into the atmosphere as a direct result of the operation of the facility;

       the greenhouse gas is released in Australia; and

       a method or criteria for measurement has been provided to measure those emissions under the NGER Act (currently the National Greenhouse and Energy Reporting (Measurement) Determination 2008);

       the greenhouse gas is not one of the excluded types of emissions (see below).  [Part 3, clause 30(1) and (2)], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘covered emissions’], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘scope 1 emission’]

Scope 1 emissions

1.21              ‘Scope 1 emissions’ are defined by reference to section 10 of the NGER Act and regulation 2.23 of the NGER Regulations, and for which methods or criteria for measurement are provided under the NGER (Measurement) Determination 2008.  Scope 1 emissions are those that are the direct result of an activity or series of activities (including ancillary activities) that constitute the facility (for example the emissions produced when coal is burned at a power station). 

Greenhouse gases

1.22              ‘Greenhouse gas’ has the same meaning as in section 7 of the NGER Act.  [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘greenhouse gas’] Greenhouse gases include:

       carbon dioxide;

       methane;

       nitrous oxide;

       sulphur hexafluoride;

       hydrofluorocarbons specified in the regulations; or

       perfluorocarbons specified in the regulations.

1.23              However, as explained below, most synthetic greenhouse gas emissions are excluded from the meaning of ‘covered emissions’ and are covered by alternative arrangements under the Ozone Protection and Synthetic Greenhouse Gas Management Act 1989

1.24              The Consequential Amendments bill amends the NGER Act to provide for additional gases to be included through regulations (see Schedule 1, Part 2, item 323 of the Consequential Amendments Bill).  This allows additional greenhouse gases which are internationally recognised to be brought into the mechanism in the future.

Direct (facility) emissions not covered by the mechanism

1.25              Some scope 1 emissions from facilities are not covered emissions for the purposes of the mechanism and give rise to no liability under it.  [Part 3, clause 30(2)-(12)] 

Fuels subject to excise or customs

1.26              Where liquid petroleum fuel, LPG, LNG or CNG are combusted and are subject to excise or customs duty, the resulting emissions will not count as covered emissions.  [Part 3, clause 30(2)], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘compressed natural gas’], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘liquified petroleum gas’], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘liquified natural gas’] 

1.27              This ensures that emissions from transport fuels that are excluded from a carbon price, for example, emissions from private passenger vehicles, are not subject to a carbon price.  It also ensures that fuels subject to an equivalent carbon price under fuel tax legislation are not also subject to a carbon price under the mechanism. 

1.28              An equivalent carbon price will be applied to some uses of excisable liquid petroleum fuels, LPG, LNG and CNG under the Clean Energy (Excise Tariff Legislation Amendment) Bill 2011, Clean Energy (Customs Tariff Amendment) Bill 2011 and Clean Energy (Fuel Tax Legislation Amendment) Bill 2011.  [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘liquid petroleum fuel’]

1.29              Where liquid petroleum fuel, LPG, LNG or CNG are combusted and are not subject to excise or customs duty, the resulting emissions will count as covered emissions.  [Part 3, clause 30(2)], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘compressed natural gas’], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘liquified petroleum gas’], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘liquified natural gas’]  For example, certain fuels are combusted at petroleum refineries and are exempt from excise – the emissions from the combustion of these fuels are covered emissions.

Combustion of biomass, biofuels and biogas

1.30              Emissions from the combustion of biomass, biofuels and biogas are not covered emissions.  Carbon dioxide produced from these sources is part of the natural carbon cycle and does not count towards Australia’s emissions obligations.  Other greenhouse gases from the combustion of these sources are a minor source of emissions and are excluded for administrative simplicity.  [Part 3, clause 30(3)]

Agriculture

1.31              Emissions from agricultural sources are excluded from the mechanism.  [Part 3, clause 30(4)] Agricultural emissions correspond to many of the emissions sources covered by the CFI Act, which broadly correspond to the agricultural emissions that countries are required to report under international accounting rules.

1.32              The exclusion of soil-related emissions is limited to emissions that arise from, or that are produced in, soil.  Emissions that result from carbon capture and storage, or emissions attributable to the operation of a landfill facility are not exempted.  [Part 3, clause 30(5)]

Other emissions from land

1.33              Emissions, other than emissions attributable to the operation of a landfill facility, from changes in the levels of carbon sequestered in living biomass, dead organic matter or soil and that are attributable to land use, changes in land use (including land clearing) or forestry activities, are not covered emissions.  [Part 3, clause 30(6) and (7)]

Fugitive emissions from decommissioned underground mines

1.34              Fugitive emissions from decommissioned underground mines are not covered emissions.  A ‘decommissioned underground mine’ will be defined in the NGER Regulations, and this definition will be used to determine whether an underground coal mine has been decommissioned or not.  [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘decommissioned underground mine’], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘fugitive emissions’], [Part 3, clause 30(8)]

Legacy emissions from landfill facilities

1.35              Emissions attributable to waste deposited in a landfill facility prior to 1 July 2012 are not included in a landfill facility’s liability.  [Part 3, clause 30(9)], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘landfill facility’], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘legacy emissions’]

1.36              These legacy emissions are excluded from liability because, in many cases, there is little or no opportunity for landfill operators to recover the cost of meeting a liability for waste that was deposited in the past.  However, as discussed below legacy emissions do count for the purpose of determining whether a landfill facility exceeds emission thresholds.

1.37              Details on developing a legacy emissions profile to allow liable landfill facilities to determine the ongoing annual emissions from legacy waste will be set out in regulations.  [Part 3, clause 32]

Closed landfill facilities

1.38              Landfill facilities which no longer accept waste and closed prior to 1 July 2012 are excluded from the mechanism.  [Part 3, clause 30(10)]

1.39              The operator of a landfill facility that closed after 30 June 2011 will be a liable entity if the facility meets one of the thresholds outlined below.  If there is a change in operational control after the facility is closed, obligations transfer to the new entity with operational control.  In many cases, this will be the land owner.  The liable entity will be determined through the operational control definition.

Synthetic greenhouse gases

1.40              Emissions of synthetic greenhouse gases (hydrofluorocarbons, perfluorocarbons and sulphur hexafluouride) are excluded from the mechanism, except for emissions of perfluorocarbons emitted as a result of aluminium production.  [Part 3, clause 30(11) and (9)] Synthetic greenhouse gases emissions that are excluded from the mechanism will face an equivalent carbon price using existing import and manufacture controls under the Ozone Act (which is covered by the Consequential Amendments bill).

Scope 2 and 3 emissions

1.41              Indirect scope 2 emissions, such as those concerning electricity use, and scope 3 emissions are not included in the definition of a facility’s emissions.  This ensures that there is no double counting of emissions.  .  Scope 2 emissions are defined in section 10 of the NGER Act and regulation 2.23 of the NGER Regulations.  Scope 3 emissions are not defined in the NGER legislation; they are greenhouse gas emissions that are generated in the wider economy as a consequence of a facility’s activities but that are physically produced by another facility and that are not scope 2 emissions (for example, a gas-fired electricity generator will not be liable for fugitive emissions associated with the production and transport of the natural gas that it uses).  [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘covered emissions’], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘scope 1 emission’]

Facilities covered by the mechanism

1.42              The mechanism covers three types of facilities:

       landfill facilities;

       large gas consuming facilities; and

       facilities that are neither landfill or large gas consuming facilities.

Different rules apply to liability for emissions from each of these types of facilities. 

Facilities that emit greenhouse gases with a CO2-e of 25,000 tonnes or more

1.43              A person is a liable entity if a facility it operates emitted covered greenhouse gases with a CO2-e of 25,000 tonnes or more during an eligible financial year.  [Part 3, clause 20(4)], [Part 3, clause 21(4)], [Part 3, clause 22(4)] This threshold broadly aligns with the facility threshold in section 13 of the NGER Act. 

Example 1.1 Application of 25,000 tonnes of CO2-e threshold

During a financial year HosCo Ltd operates a facility that emits 20,000 tonnes of CO2-e from the combustion of coal, and 15,000 tonnes of CO2-e from cement clinker production (an industrial process). 

The total covered emissions from the facility total 35,000 tonnes of CO2-e.  HosCo Ltd is a liable entity.

Large gas consuming facilities

1.44              A person is a liable entity if it operates a facility that is a ‘large gas consuming facility’, which is a facility that has, in a financial year after 1 July 2010, combusted natural gas with a CO2-e of 25,000 tonnes or more.  A facility ceasesto be a large gas consuming facility when it satisfies the conditions specified in the regulations.  [Part 3, clause 20(1)], [Part 3, clause 21(1)], [Part 3, clause 22(1)], [Part 3, clause 55A], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘large gas consuming facility’]

1.45              The arrangements for large gas consuming facilities are designed to ensure that facilities do not move in and out of coverage from year to year.  They provide certainty as to when an OTN quotation should be used and will ensure that gas suppliers will know that they are not liable for emissions from particular facilities in advance of a financial year. 

1.46              The threshold for large gas consuming facilities is based on emissions in an earlier financial year.  Once a facility reached this threshold it is considered to be a large gas consuming facility for all future years until such time that it satisfies the conditions specified in the regulations.  The regulations will provide that facilities that have consistently reduced their natural gas combustion emissions to below 25,000 tonnes CO2 equivalence will cease to be a large gas consuming facility. 

Example 1.2 Liability for facility with natural gas emissions

Brick Factory is operated by NG Limited, which receives supplies of natural gas for use at the facility from GasCo.  In 2012-13, covered emissions from the operation of the facility comprise:

    10,000 tonnes of CO2-e from use of natural gas; and

    20,000 tonnes of CO2-e from other sources.

Natural gas emissions from Brick Factory have never been over 25,000 tonnes of CO2-e in previous financial years.  Therefore Brick Factory is not a large gas consuming facility and NG does not have to quote an OTN. 

Brick Factory has total covered emissions of 30,000 tonnes of CO2-e.  Because the facility is over the direct emitters threshold, NG is liable for emissions from the operation of the facility in 2012-13.

Since NG did not quote an OTN for natural gas used at Brick Factory, it has a total liability of 20,000 tonnes of CO2-e for Brick Factory.

Landfill facilities that exceed an emissions threshold

1.47              A landfill facility may be a liable entity if it meets one of two thresholds:

       the landfill facility emits covered plus legacy waste emissions with a CO2-e of 25,000 tonnes or more; or

       the landfill facility emits covered plus legacy waste emissions with a CO2-e of 10,000 tonnes or more in an eligible financial year, and is located within a prescribed distance of another landfill facility which:

      is a ‘designated large landfill facility’; and

      accepts a similar classification of waste.  [Part 3, clause 23(4) and (10)], [Part 3, clause 24(4) and (10)], [Part 3, clause 25(4) and (8)]

1.48              A ‘designated large landfill facility’ is a landfill facility that triggered the 25,000 tonnes of CO2-e threshold in the previous eligible financial year’.  The Regulator may publish a list of designated large landfill facilities and their locations to assist landfill operators to determine whether the 10,000 tonnes of CO2-e threshold applies to them for an eligible financial year.  [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘designated large landfill facility’], [Part 9, clause 206]

1.49              The additional, lower threshold is intended to prevent diversion of waste from designated large landfill facilities to smaller facilities nearby. 

Example 1.3 Application of 10,000 tonnes of CO2-e threshold for landfill facilities

LandfillCo, a landfill facility, emits 14,000 tonnes of CO2-e in an eligible financial year. 

LandfillCo is within the prescribed distance of another open landfill facility, operated by TipCorp, which accepts the same classification of waste and in the previous eligible financial year emitted 25,000 tonnes or more of CO2-e. 

LandfillCo is covered by the mechanism and is a liable entity. 

Emissions that count towards determining whether thresholds are met

1.50              All covered emissions count when determining whether a facility meets the relevant threshold.  To avoid doubt, for those facilities that are not landfill facilities, their emissions from solid waste disposal count for the purposes of determining whether that facility meets the threshold. 

1.51              For landfill facilities, all covered emissions plus legacy waste emissions from the facility count for the purposes of determining whether that facility meets the threshold for inclusion in the mechanism.  This includes covered emissions from combustion of energy sources at the facility.

Facilities that exceed a pro-rata emissions threshold

1.52              A pro-rata threshold is applied where the liable entity for a facility changes during an eligible financial year.  If a facility’s emissions reach or exceed the relevant pro-rata threshold, then the operator of that facility will be a liable entity.  This also applies when an entity holds an LTC for a facility for only part of the year, or when there is a designated JV concerning the facility for only part of a year.  [Part 3, clause 20(1)], [Part 3, clause 21(1)], [Part 3, clause 22(1)], [Part 3, clause 23(1)], [Part 3, clause 24(1)], [Part 3, clause 25(1)]

1.53              The pro-rata threshold ensures that facilities that would reach a threshold during an entire financial year continue to be covered under the mechanism for the full compliance year even when the operator changes.  This maintains consistent coverage under the mechanism and prevents entities from avoiding thresholds, deliberately or otherwise, by changes in operational control or the issue of an LTC.

1.54              Pro-rata thresholds are calculated using a specified formula.  [Part 3, clause 20(5)], [Part 3, clause 21(5)], [Part 3, clause 22(5)], [Part 3, clause 23(5)], [Part 3, clause 24(5)], [Part 3, clause 25(5)] The calculation is:

25,000 × number of control days or certificate days (whichever is relevant)

=

pro-rata threshold

365

 

 

1.55               ‘Control days’ are the days in the financial year, where this is less than the full year, that a facility was under the operational control of one or more members of a controlling corporation’s group.  [Part 3, clause 20(1)], [Part 3, clause 21(1)], [Part 3, clause 23(1)], [Part 3, clause 24(1)], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘group’]

1.56              ‘Certificate days’ are the days in the financial year, where this is less than the full year, that a person was the holder of an LTC for a facility.  [Part 3, clause 22(1)], [Part 3, clause 25(1)]

Example 1.4 Pro rata threshold

A.M.Y Limited had operational control of a facility for 100 days of the year.  A.M.Y’s pro-rata threshold for that facility is worked out as follows:

25,000 × 100 control days ÷ 365

=

6,849 tonnes of CO2-e

If the emissions from that facility are 6,849 tonnes of CO2-e or more during the 100 control days then those emissions will count towards A.M.Y’s liability.

Provisional emissions numbers

1.57              If an entity is liable for a facility, then the number of tonnes of covered emissions in CO2-e emitted from the facility will be a PEN for that facility.  PENs are used to work out an entity’s total liability under the mechanism, and therefore the number of eligible emissions units the entity must surrender (see Chapter 4).  [Part 3, clause 20(1)], [Part 3, clause 21(1)], [Part 3, clause 22(1)], [Part 3, clause 23(1)], [Part 3, clause 24(1)], [Part 3, clause 25(1)], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘provisional emissions number’]

1.58              However, to ensure that emissions from natural gas combustion are not counted twice - once by the liable entity for the facility and once by the natural gas supplier to the facility - covered emissions that are from the combustion of natural gas will not count towards the facility PEN when a natural gas supplier is responsible for emissions embodied in the natural gas.  A liable entity for a facility will know whether they are responsible for the natural gas combustion emissions from the facility as follows:

       the liable entity for the facility will be responsible for the emissions if an OTN has been quoted  for the gas supplied to the facilty;

       the supplier of gas to the facility will be responsible for the embodied emissions if an OTN has not been quoted  for the gas supplied to the facilty.

In the case of a large gas consuming facility OTN quotation is mandatory and therefore liability will always rest with the liable entity for the facility.

Further information about OTNs is provided below.

Re-allocation of liability for direct emitters under the mechanism

1.59              In certain circumstances liability for a covered facility will be shared between two or more entities.  In other circumstances a liable entity may transfer its liability to one or more other persons.  The situations covered by the bill are:

       where the JV participants in a JV collectively operate a facility, liability will be allocated amongst those participants.

       a direct emitter may share or transfer liability to the participants in a JV. 

       a direct emitter may transfer liability to another member of its corporate group or the financial controller of the facility outside of the corporate group by means of a LTC. 

These arrangements are shown in Diagram 1.2

Diagram 1.2 Re-allocation of liability by direct emitters


Designated joint ventures

1.60              Where a JV has a covered facility, specific rules apply to the way in which liability for that facility’s emissions will be treated under the mechanism.  These rules ensure that liability for a facility is allocated where the JV participants collectively operate a facility and assist with the efficient management of liability under the mechanism.  Where there is a distinct operator the treatment of JVs differs, depending on whether the JV is a:

       mandatory designated JV; or

       declared designated JV.  [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘designated joint venture’], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘joint venture’]

Mandatory designated joint ventures

1.61              A mandatory JV exists where:

       a JV has a facility; and

       the JV participants have an agreement concerning the facility; and

       two or more persons have the ability to introduce the operational, health and safety and environmental policies at the facility (that is, satisfy the requirements of section 11(1)(a) of the NGER Act); and

       no one person has greater authority to introduce the operational, health and safety and environmental policies (and no declaration has been made by the Regulator under sections 55 or 55A the NGER Act that a person has operational control of the facility),

(see Example 1.5).  [Part 3, clause 65], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘mandatory designated joint venture’]

1.62              Where there is no one party with operational control of a facility operated by a JV, JV participants are likely to hold separate contracts for the sale of outputs of the facility and may not have arrangements in place that allow for the pass-through of the carbon price in those contracts. 

1.63              Imposing mandatory liability on each of the JV participants will maximise the chance that change of law or price pass-through clauses in contracts will be triggered, so as to allow for pass-through of the price to customers. 

Example 1.5 Mandatory designated joint venture

Companies A, B and C are members of an unincorporated JV that operates an emitting facility.  They receive shares in the output of the facility of 20 per cent, 50 per cent and 30 per cent respectively.  They collectively operate the facility, and no one party has the most authority to implement operational, health and safety and environmental policies.

Accordingly, liability for the emissions from the facility will be allocated to cach company in proportion to its interest.

1.64              The requirements that:

       a JV has a facility; and

       that JV participants have an agreement in place for the facility,

are intended to ensure that the JV is sufficiently related to the facility, and that the JV participants should have liability for the facility, even if the JV participants do not formally own the facility.  [Part 3, clause 65(1)(a)]

1.65              The JV participants must notify the Regulator that they are participants in a JV, and of the facility to which the JV relates, by 31 July 2012 (where a facility already exists on 1 July 2012), or within 30 days of the JV coming into existence (for a JV that comes into existence after 1 July 2012).  [Part 3, clause 66(1), (2) and (3)]

1.66              Where a JV ceases after 1 July 2012to be a mandatory designated JV and it would be reasonable to expect that, were the JV a company (rather than a JV), the company would be a liable entity, then  the JV participants must jointly notify the Regulator within 30 days if a JV ceases to fulfil the requirements for a mandatory designated JV.  A JV will cease to be a mandatory designated JV is any of the requirements of clause 65 are no longer satisfied.  [Part 3, clause 66(4)]

1.67              The participants must also apply for a ‘participating percentage determination’, which is used to allocate liability for the emissions from the facility between the JV participants.  [Part 3, clause 66(5)]

1.68              If a person fails to notify the Regulator of the JV, or of the cessation of a JV that has previously been declared a mandatory designated JV, then they are liable to pay a civil penalty.  [Part 3, clause 66(6)]

Declared designated joint ventures

1.69              A declared designated JV is where:

       the JV has a facility; and

       the JV participants are parties to an agreement concerning the facility; and

       a facility is operated exclusively for the JV by a person who may be a JV participant; and

       none of the participants is an individual; and

       the JV is not a mandatory designated JV.

 (see Example 1.6).  For the purposes of the mechanism, this is the ‘joint venture declaration test’.  [Part 3, clause 67], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘declared designated joint venture’]

1.70              This transfer of liability recognises the potential complexity of JV arrangements and facilitates efficient management of emissions liabilities by the participants. 

1.71              As the operator of the facility may change over time, and that accordingly provisions that refer to the operator should refer it is the current operator (the ‘relevant operator’) that is involved in processes such as consenting to the start date of a JV declaration.  [Part 3, clause 67A]

1.72              The JV participants can apply to the Regulator for a declaration that the JV is a declared designated JV if they have the written consent of the relevant operator and have provided any other documents required by the regulations or information requested by the Regulator.  [Part 3, clause 68], [Part 3, clause 69]

1.73              Before making a declaration, the Regulator can require the participants to provide more information about the application, and must not make a declaration unless satisfied that the JV meets the required criteria, namely:

       the JV passes the JV declaration test;

       the applicants have, and are likely to continue to have, the capacity, the access to information and the financial resources necessary for them to comply with the mechanism; and

       such other requirements as are specified in regulations.  [Part 3, clause 70]

1.74              If a JV participant has previously been subject to obligations under the Clean Energy Act (once enacted) or associated legislation, the Regulator must also be satisfied that the participant has a satisfactory record of complying with those obligations.  This provision is intended to provide additional assurance that the participants in the JV will meet their obligations under the mechanism by excluding participants that, irrespective of their capacity to meet obligations, might have a history of not meeting those obligations.

1.75              The declaration of the designated JV may come into effect from an earlier date than the declaration is made, as long as that date is within the same financial year.  The declaration may also come into effect in the future, at a date up to the end of the following financial year.  In each case the applicants and the relevant operator must consent to the start date.  This provides additional flexibility around the application to facilitate forward planning and certainty for participants, and to reduce time pressure on processing applications.  [Part 3, clause 71]

1.76              The declaration continues indefinitely, although the Regulator must revoke the declaration if:

       requested by the JV participants, with the consent of the current operator of the facility;

       the Regulator is satisfied that the JV no longer meets the JV declaration test for that facility; or

       there is a continuing failure by one of the JV participants to pay a unit shortfall.  If a JV participant has an outstanding shortfall charge for more than 3 months the Regulator must notify all of the JV participants that their declaration will be revoked by the next 1 July unless the shortfall charge is paid, If the payment is not made by 1 July the Regulator must revoke the declaration by written notice to the JV participants.  [Part 3, clause 72]

1.77              In the last case, The liability for the emissions from the facility from 1 July will return to the operator of the facility, but the liabilities for emissions up to that time will remain separately with the JV participants (that is, the operator and the other JV participants will not have liability for the default on emissions, which will remain with the defaulting participant). 

1.78              This provision is intended to ensure that a JV participant cannot fail to meet its obligations indefinitely.  The declared designated JV is allowed to continue until 1 July to allow an opportunity for the JV participants to seek to bring the defaulter back into compliance, and to provide certainty for the operator and JV participants about emissions liabilities for the remainder of the financial year.  [Part 3, clause 67], [Part 3, clause 71], [Part 3, clause 72]

1.79              The participants in a declared designated JV will also be required to jointly notify the Regulator within 30 days if the JV ceases to pass the designated JV declaration test in relation the facility.  A JV will cease to pass the test if any of the requirements in clause 67 are no longer satisfied.  [Part 3, clause 71A]


Example 1.6 Designated declared JV arrangements

 

 

Companies A, B and C are JV participants. 

A facility is operated for the JV, but the party with operational control (and therefore liability) is an independent contractor that operates the facility (this transfer would also apply if the operator was owned by the JV participants or if one of the JV participants was the operator). 

The JV members apply to the Regulator for a declaration and, if granted, each is liable for the facility’s emissions in proportion to its interest in the facility.

Participating percentage declaration

1.80              Designated JV participants must make an application to the Regulator for a participating percentage declaration.  This sets out the shares of liability for emissions from the facility for each JV participant.  The application must be made in an approved form and the Regulator may request further information concerning the application.  [Part 3, clause 73], [Part 3, clause 74], [Part 3, clause 75]

1.81              The Regulator must make a determination of the ‘participating percentage’ of emissions for each participant in the JV, with the percentages adding up to 100 per cent of the facility’s emissions.  [Part 3, clause 76]

1.82              The participating percentage determination must be made according to a hierarchy of criteria, namely:

       the share of goods each participant receives from the facility; then

       if the first criterion does not apply, the share of access to services that each participant has; then

       if the second criterion does not apply, any criteria set out in regulations.  [Part 3, clause 78]

1.83              The participants in a designated JV may also apply for a replacement participating percentage determination to replace an existing one.  This is intended to allow for changes in the interests of the participants over time, for instance if it is known that the amount of the output of the facility taken by each participant will change as the JV progresses.  The percentages must always add up to 100 per cent so that all covered emissions from a facility are accounted for.  [Part 3, clause 79]

1.84              The determination can also be specified as a formula, for instance based on participant shares of a variable product mix from the facility.  This flexibility recognises that JVs may be complex and evolve over time.  A static allocation of percentages might not reflect changing interests, and require frequent changes to the determination.  [Part 3, clause 76]

1.85              The Regulator may also make a determination on its own initiative, but before making any such determination must provide a copy to the JV participants and have regard to submissions made within a specified period, which is not to be less than 28 days.  [Part 3, clause 77]

1.86              At each step the Regulator can accept an alternative percentage if it is satisfied that this reflects equally well or better the economic benefits received by JV participants.  The determination may also be varied by the Regulator issuing a replacement determination.  [Part 3, clause 78], [Part 3, clause 79]

1.87              This approach is intended to provide flexibility to recognise the wide range of JV arrangements, while ensuring that the sharing of emissions liability between JV participants accurately reflects the economic benefits participants receive from the facility and minimising risks of avoidance activities concerning the distribution of liability for emissions from the facility.

1.88              The participating percentage determination will come into force on a date specified in the determination.  For a new designated JV this date must be the same as the date of the declaration of the JV (that is, the participating percentage must apply from the start date of the designated JV). 

1.89              For a designated JV which is already in existence but is receiving a replacement participating percentage determination, the determination may come into force at an earlier date than the determination, as long as it is in the same financial year, or a later date as long as it is before the end of the next financial year.  In either case the JV participants and the operator of the facility must consent to the date.  This is intended to allow flexibility for JV participants to apply for a determination in advance, or to backdate the determination to reflect the timing of a change in circumstances of the designated JV.  [Part 3, clause 78A]

Liability transfer certificates

1.90              The operator of a facility that is a direct emitter may transfer its liability to a range of other specified entities by means of an LTC.  LTCs take two forms: corporate group transfers and financial control transfers.  [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘liability transfer certificate’]

Corporate group transfer test

1.91              A registered company can apply to the Regulator for an LTC to transfer to itself liability for a facility, where the facility is under the operational control of another company within the same corporate group.  [Part 3, clause 80], [Part 3, clause 81], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘corporate group transfer test’]

1.92              Where an LTC is issued, the operator is taken to have guaranteed the payment of any unit shortfall charge or associated late payment penalty which is payable by the holder of the LTC for the relevant financial year.  [Part 6, clause 138] This ensures that there is always a liable entity for a covered facility and prevents the transfer being used to avoid emission liabilities.

Example 1.7 Corporate group liability transfer

A corporate group LTC is issued for Subsidiary Y concerning Facility 2. 

Subsidiary Y takes on the emissions liability for Facility 2 under the mechanism.  As a liable entity subsidiary Y also has requirements to provide reports, under the NGER Act, to the Regulator for the purposes of determining emissions obligations (see Schedule 1, Part 2, Item 367 of the Consequential Amendments bill). 

Corporation A will not have emissions obligations or liability for Facility 2 but, as the controlling corporation of the corporate group, will continue to have reporting obligations under the NGER Act. 

Subsidiary X will, however, have consented to the application for the transfer and in doing so will have guaranteed the payment of shortfall charges incurred by Subsidiary Y.

Facility 2 will continue to form part of Corporation A’s group for the purposes of meeting the NGER Act group thresholds, and Corporation A will retain general reporting obligations under the NGER Act.

Financial control transfer test

1.93              Liability may be transferred from the operator of a facility to another person who has ‘financial control’ (see below) over the facility.  [Part 3, clause 84], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘financial control’], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘financial control transfer test’] As the person with financial control of a facility may also have an influence over its emissions, it is appropriate to let that person accept liability with the agreement of the operator. 

1.94              Transfers are not allowed to certain persons:

       the person cannot be an individual person; this avoids complications that may arise when an individual person is liable, such as the person’s death or incapacity. 

       the person cannot be a foreign person; this prevents liability from being transferred to a person overseas to avoid compliance under the mechanism, recognising that it would be more difficult enforce obligations against a foreign person.  [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘foreign person’]

       the person cannot be within the same controlling corporation’s group as the operator; this is because an application for a transfer in this instance is intended to be made under the corporate group transfer test,

(see Example 1.8).  [Part 3, clause 84]

1.95              In many circumstances the operator of a facility has financial control of that facility.  However, in some circumstances, for example contract mining and pipeline operations, the person with financial control of a facility contracts out the operation of a facility to another person. 

1.96               ‘Financial control’ covers a person that has a significant ability to control a facility through financial means only and, therefore, can give effect to decisions concerning emissions reductions.  It is not intended to include an agent or person acting on behalf of an entity that has financial or operational control of a facility that does not have any direct influence on emissions reductions.  [Part 3, clause 92]

1.97              ‘Financial control’ recognises that more than one person may have financial control over a facility.  For example, several persons may be participants in a JV or partnership that collectively have financial control of a facility.  In these circumstances, the person with the equal or greatest share in the economic benefits from a facility will have financial control for the purposes of the mechanism.  [Part 3, clause 92]

Criteria for the issue of a liability transfer certificate

1.98              An entity must meet the same criteria for the issue of an LTC by the Regulator for a corporate group transfer (see above).  [Part 3, clause 87] These criteria are included to ensure that an entity has the capacity, access to financial resources and information to comply with its obligations under the mechanism, as well as the NGER Act.

1.99              The financial criterion ensures that a person does not transfer liability to a person that cannot meet mechanism obligations in order to avoid or delay compliance.  This test is not, however, intended to involve an exhaustive explanation by the applicant of its financial situation.  [Part 3, clause 87]

Reporting obligations and liability transfer certificates

1.100          The LTC holder will take on any obligation to report under the NGER Act for a facility under a financial control LTC.  This includes reporting obligations concerning not only greenhouse gas emissions, but also energy production and energy consumption where currently required under the NGER Act.  This is given effect by the Consequential Amendments bill (see Schedule 1, Part 2, items 175-181 of the Consequential Amendments bill). 

1.101          The LTC holder will not take on any obligation to report under the NGER Act for a facility which is the subject of a corporate group LTC because general reporting obligations under the NGER Act do not follow the transfer, but remain with the controlling corporation of the corporate group.

Example 1.8 Transfer of liabilities from the operator to the financial controller of a facility

Subsidiary F, which is part of Controlling Corporation B’s group, has financial control over Facility 1.  Subsidiary F (with consent from Corporation A and Corporation B) applies for an LTC. 

An LTC is issued and Subsidiary F takes on all obligations and liability for Facility 1 under the mechanism and under the NGER Act — this includes reporting concerning emissions, energy production and energy consumption.

Corporation A will not have obligations or liability for Facility 1 under the mechanism or under the NGER Act. 

Application process for a liability transfer certificate

1.102          An application for an LTC must be made in writing in a form approved by the Regulator and include specific information:

       An application for a corporate group LTC must be accompanied by a written statement from the operator of the facility that it has operational control of the facility, is a member of the same corporate group as the transferee and consents to the transfer.  [Part 3, clause 81(c)], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘member’]

       An application for a financial control LTC must include the written consent of the controlling corporation of the corporate group (if the operator is a member of a corporate group), or the facility operator.  In either case, the application must include any information and documents specified in the regulations.  This is intended to include information and documents that support an entity’s application and demonstrate that the entity meets the criteria for the issue of an LTC.  [Part 3, clause 85(3)]

1.103          To assist the Regulator’s decision making, the Regulator may request further information about an application within a period specified in a notice given by the Regulator.  The Regulator must ensure that the information requested is relevant to its consideration of the application and must exercise this power reasonably.  [Part 23, clause 297] If the applicant does not provide the information in the time required, then the Regulator may refuse to consider the application or refuse to take any action, or any further action, concerning the application.  [Part 3, clause 82], [Part 3, clause 86]

1.104          The Regulator must take all reasonable steps to ensure that a decision is made on an application for an LTC within 90 days of receiving an application or within 90 days of being given further information.  The Regulator must inform an applicant in writing if it decides to refuse to issue an LTC.  [Part 3, clause 83], [Part 3, clause 87]

Duration of a liability transfer certificate

1.105          The start date may be at an earlier date within the same financial year as the day on which the LTC is issued, or a later date up to the end of the next financial year if the applicant and the relevant parties consent to that start day.  This ensures that all persons that may be liable under the mechanism know who is liable for a given period.  It also provides flexibility for advance applications to increase certainty for applicants and assist with forward planning to meet obligations under the mechanism.  This flexibility may also even out the spread of applications over the year and consequently spread the workload for the Regulator in assessing applications [Part 3, clause 88]

1.106          Once made, an LTC remains in force indefinitely unless it is surrendered or cancelled.  [Part 3, clause 88(4)]

Voluntary surrender of liability transfer certificate

1.107          If an entity wants to surrender an LTC it must obtain written consent from the Regulator.  The Regulator must not consent to the surrender unless:

       where applicable, the controlling corporation(s) or facility operator that agreed to the making of the application for the LTC agrees to the surrender; and

       the LTC has been in force for at least four years; or

        the LTC has been in force for less than four years, but the Regulator is satisfied that there are special circumstances that warrant the giving of its consent to the surrender.  [Part 3, clause 89]

1.108          If the Regulator refuses its consent, then it must give written notice to the person.  [Part 3, clause 89(5)]

1.109          Special circumstances are unlikely to include a change of operator or contract, as these changes are normal business practice and are foreseeable by a person at the time of their application for an LTC.  The four year requirement ensures that the liable entity remains consistent and prevents multiple transfers of liability aimed at avoiding liability.  [Part 3, clause 89]

Cancellation of liability transfer certificate

1.110          The Regulator must, by written notice, cancel an LTC in the following circumstances:

       if a company ceases to pass a corporate group or financial control liability transfer tests;

       in the case of corporate group LTC, the company is no longer a member of the controlling corporation’s group;

       in the case of a financial control LTC, the holder of the LTC ceases to be a member of the corporate group of the controlling corporation that consented to the application;

       if a company has not paid a unit shortfall charge more than 30 days after it became due for payment;

       if the company has become an externally-administered body corporate (within the meaning of the Corporations Act 2001); or

        if regulations specify one or more other grounds for cancellation and at least one of those grounds is applicable to entity.  [Part 3, clause 90]

1.111          The cancellation or surrender of an LTC will result in future obligations and liability returning to the person that would have had obligations and liability in the absence of the LTC.  The Regulator will be required to provide written notice of the cancellation to the person with operational control of the facility of the cancellation of an LTC to ensure that the operator is aware that it has reassumed liability for the emissions from the facility.  [Part 3, clause 89], [Part 3, clause 90]

1.112          Each LTC relates to a single facility.  This allows a person to apply for the transfer of liability for particular facilities at different times, as the person’s circumstances change.  [Part 3, clause 80], [Part 3, clause 81]

1.113          An LTC transfers significant obligations concerning a facility.  For this reason an LTC can only be issued by the Regulator and is not transferable.  [Part 3, clause 91]

Definitions relevant to direct emitters

‘Persons’ that may be liable entities

1.114          The mechanism applies to liable entities, which are responsible for their emissions of greenhouse gases.  The way in which these entities are liable is set out in Part 3.  [Part 3, clause 19]

1.115          A liable entity may be any type of legal person, including an individual, a trust (a trustee or trust estate), a body corporate, corporation sole, a body politic (that is, the Australian, state and territory governments) and a local governing body.  [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘person’], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘local governing body’], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘trust’], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘trustee’], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘trust estate’]

1.116          The Australian Government and the state, territory and local governments are bound by the bill.  In line with normal practice, the Crown is not subject to prosecution for a criminal offence or a pecuniary penalty, with the exception of penalties for late payment of shortfall charge and for failure to meet relinquishment requirements.  This protection does not apply to an authority of the Crown, such as a body conducting a business activity.  [Part 1, clause 8]

1.117          Government bodies may be liable under the mechanism if they fall within the criteria set out in Part 3.

Meaning of ‘facility’

1.118          ‘Facility’ is defined in section 9 of the NGER Act.  Broadly, a facility is an activity, or a series of activities, where:

       greenhouse gas emissions are produced; or

       energy is produced; or

       energy is consumed. 

1.119          The activity or activities must form a single undertaking or enterprise and meet requirements in the regulations, or they must be declared to be a facility by the Regulator.[25]

1.120          A ‘landfill facility’ is defined as a facility for the disposal of solid waste as landfill, and includes a facility that is closed for the acceptance of waste.  [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘landfill facility’]

1.121          The landfill provisions are not intended to cover facilities for which disposal of solid waste is a secondary purpose, for example a mine that disposes of mine-generated waste on‑site.  It should be noted that direct emissions from waste still count towards emissions thresholds and emissions liabilities for facilities that are not landfills.

Measurement of covered emissions

1.122          Under the mechanism, greenhouse gases emitted from the operation of a facility will be measured using methods to be determined under subsection 10(3) of the NGER Act, or methods which meet criteria under that subsection, where the use of those methods satisfies any conditions specified under that subsection.  [Part 3, clause 31]

1.123          The Consequential Amendments bill provides for subsection 10(3) of the NGER Act to allow the Minister to determine the methods and criteria for methods by which amounts of emissions are to be measured.  A single determination will apply for the mechanism and the NGER Act (see Schedule 1, Part 2, items 337-339 of the Consequential Amendments bill).  These methods are currently published in the National Greenhouse and Energy Reporting (Measurement) Determination 2008.

Liability for emissions from natural gas

Overview

1.124          Natural gas is used by large facilities, small and medium-sized businesses, and households.  Given the significant amount of natural gas used beyond large facilities, a two-tiered approach applies to provide efficient and complete coverage of greenhouse gas emissions embodied in natural gas:

       large users of natural gas are responsible for their own emissions; and

       natural gas suppliers are responsible for the remaining emissions from natural gas used by other end-use customers. 

Applying liability to a relatively small number of suppliers is an effective way of applying a carbon price to the natural gas emissions of many small to medium end-users. 

1.125          To ensure that there is no double counting of emissions OTNs are used to let suppliers and end-users know who is responsible for the emissions that will result from a particular supply of gas.  In some circumstances, there is also flexibility for medium sized gas users to quote an OTN and assume liability for their natural gas emissions, instead of their supplier.

Responsibility for emissions from natural gas combustion

1.126          Under the mechanism liability for natural gas applies to the following entities:

       to a natural gas supplier when it supplies gas to another person who does not quote an OTN and when it may reasonably be expected that the gas is wholly or partly for use by that other person [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘distribution pipeline’]

       to a person who is a liable entity for a large gas consuming facility (see above); in this case a natural gas supplier is not liable for the emissions when that person quotes an OTN to the supplier;

       other OTN holders who are permitted to quote an OTN for natural gas supplied to them.  Typically the OTN holder will purchase gas for a facility under its operational control (which is  not a large gas consuming facility) and will want to assume liability from the supplier.

These types of liable entities are set out in Diagrams 1.4 and 1.5.

1.127          For natural gas suppliers gas liability applies to potential emissions embodied in natural gas and not actual emissions.  This is because liability generally arises before the gas is combusted and emissions are released.  In practice, there is little difference between the actual emissions arising from the combustion of natural gas among different customers: the use of potential emissions does not lead to material inaccuracies compared with actual emissions.

 

 

Diagram 1.3 Liability for gas supplied

Diagram 1.4 Liability for natural gas

Liability for natural gas suppliers

1.128          Natural gas suppliers are liable where:

       the natural gas has been withdrawn from a natural gas supply pipeline to supply to a customer; and

       it may reasonably be expected that the customer will consume all or part of the gas; and

       the customer does not quote an OTN to the supplier for that natural gas[26];[Part 3, clause 33], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘supply’], [Part 1, clause 6], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘natural gas supplier’]

1.129          Any supplies that occur within the natural gas supply pipeline system (which would include both transmission and distribution pipelines), such as wholesale gas supplies between gas producers and gas retailers, do not involve consumption of the gas and, therefore, do not create a liability for the natural gas supplier (in this case, the producer). 

1.130          Gas supplies that may result in liability for the gas supplier (assuming no OTN is quoted) include, but are not limited to, supplies to:

       a residential customer;

       a business customer, such as an office building or a small to medium business that uses gas for heating;

       the operator of a gas pipeline, where gas is supplied to the pipeline operator for use in compressors that are attached to the pipeline. 

1.131          A supply occurs when the natural gas passes a point ascertained in accordance with the regulations.  If the regulations do not specify such a point, a supply occurs at the point when the gas is delivered to the customer.  [Part 1, clause 6]

Preliminary and provisional emissions numbers

1.132          Each supply of natural gas for which a natural gas supplier is liable gives rise to a preliminary EN.  A preliminary EN is equal to the amount of greenhouse gas emissions in tonnes of CO2-e embodied in the amount of natural gas supplied, and which is withdrawn from a gas supply pipeline for the purpose of the supply to the customer. 

1.133          The PEN of the natural gas supplier is the sum of the supplier’s preliminary ENs for the financial year.  [Part 3, clause 33]

1.134          The regulations may specify that the natural gas supplier can ‘net out’ certain amounts of natural gas from their PEN.  [Part 3, clause 33(3)]  This allows for ‘fine tuning’ of a supplier’s liability, which addresses specific circumstances where the general rules result in liability being applied in situations when it should not. 

Example 1.9 Natural gas supplier

In a financial year, a GasCorp supplies a total amount of natural gas to its customers with potential emissions embodied in the natural gas of 150,000 tonnes of CO2-e.  Of this amount of natural gas:

       natural gas with embodied emissions of 70,000 tonnes of CO2-e is withdrawn by customers who quote an OTN to the supplier.  The supplier is not liable for this amount of emissions – liability rests with the OTN holders.

       natural gas with embodied emissions of 80,000 tonnes of CO2-e is withdrawn by small residential customers who are not required or permitted to quote an OTN.  GasCorp is liable for this amount of emissions.

Liability for large gas consuming facilities

1.135          Large gas consuming facilities are responsible for their own emissions (see above).  A large gas consuming facility is a facility that, in any previous financial year starting from 2010-11, had emissions from natural gas of at least 25,000 tonnes of CO2-e, or the amount specified in the regulations.  This regulation making power allows for the definition of a large gas consuming facility to change to reflect, among other things, future industry arrangements. 

1.136          To ensure natural gas suppliers have no liability for these emissions the recipient of natural gas that is for use in the operation of a large gas consuming facility must quote an OTN for the supply of natural gas for use at that facility.  [Part 3, clause 55A], [Part 3, clause 55B] The recipient of the natural gas does not need to be the operator of the large gas consuming facility to be subject to this requirement.  Failure to quote an OTN will result in a civil penalty.  [Part 3, clause 55B(3)]  

1.137          To give a natural gas supplier time to make any necessary supply arrangements, a customer must notify the supplier of its intention to quote an OTN.  The notice must be in writing and given to the supplier at least 28 days before the first OTN quotation, or within a shorter time agreed by the supplier and the customer.  [Part 3, clause 55B(2)]  A natural gas supplier must accept an OTN quotation made in this way.  [Part 3, clause 59(4)], [Part 3, clause 60(4)]

Example 1.10 Large gas consuming facilities

Maximus Gas operates the Maximus Facility, a large facility.  Another company, AntheCo, is the recipient of supplies of natural gas from GasCorp for combustion at the Maximus Facility.

In the 2010-2011 financial year, the Maximus Facility had emissions from natural gas combustion of 70,000 tonnes of CO2-e. 

From the 2011-12 financial year onwards (that is, from 1 July 2011), the Maximus Facility is a large gas consuming facility, because its emissions from natural gas combustion in the previous financial year  were greater than 25,000 tonnes of CO2-e.

As the recipient of natural gas for use at a large gas consuming facility, AntheCo is required to quote its OTN to GasCorp.  28 days before the start of the mechanism, AntheCo notifies GasCorp in writing of its intention to quote its OTN.  AntheCo quotes its OTN to GasCorp on 1 July 2012 to take on liability for the natural gas supplied.

For a few months during the 2014-2015 financial year, the Maximus Facility temporarily closes, and the natural gas emissions from its operation are only 20,000 tonnes of CO2-e during that financial year.  In 2015-16, the Maximus Facility’s natural gas emissions  return to 70,000 tonnes of CO2-e.  The Maximus Facility remains a large gas consuming facility, despite dropping below the threshold in 2014-15, because it passed the threshold test in a previous financial year.  The OTN quotation by AntheCo remains in place in 2014-15 and future financial years.

Pentagon: The Maximus Facility is a
large gas 
consuming 
facility from 
2011-12 onwards
 

 


 


Preliminary and provisional emissions numbers

1.138          In some situations natural gas consumed at a facility is purchased by an entity other than the facility operator. In such cases, double counting of liability is avoided by ensuring that where an OTN is quoted for the gas, whether by the facility operator or another person, liability always rests with the liable entity for the facility. [Part 3, clause 35(2)], [Part 3, clause 20(1)], [Part 3, clause 21(1)], [Part 3, clause 22(1)], [Part 3, clause 23(1)], [Part 3, clause 24(1)], [Part 3, clause 25(1)], [Part 3, clause 20(8)-(9)], [Part 3, clause 21(7)-(8)], [Part 3, clause 22(6)-(7)], [Part 3, clause 23(8)-(9)], [Part 3, clause 24(7)-(8)], [Part 3, clause 25(6)-(7)]

1.139          In the above circumstances, if some of the natural gas is not ultimately combusted at the facility, the OTN holder will be liable for that portion of natural gas not combusted at the facility. For example, this would apply where a facility owner purchases gas for use at a facility that is operated by another person, but also uses some of the gas at its own smaller facility nearby.

Example 1.11 Large gas consuming facility, where all natural gas received is combusted at the facility

Steel Mill is a large gas consuming facility operated by JCL Limited. Another company, Danmetals Limited, receives supplies of natural gas from a natural gas supplier for combustion at Steel Mill.

In 2012-13, covered emissions from Steel Mill comprise 90,000 tonnes of CO2-e from use of natural gas.

In a given financial year, Danmetals receives three supplies of natural gas. The amount of natural gas in each supply has embodied emissions of 30,000 tonnes of CO2-e. All of these amounts of natural gas are combusted at Steel Mill.

Danmetals must quote its OTN to its natural gas supplier, and the supplier must accept the quotation. Usually, under clause 35(1), a preliminary EN arises for OTN holders who quote their OTNs. However, since Danmetals is not the operator of the facility it is not a liable entity.

JCL Limited is liable for Steel Mill’s emissions, because the facility has total covered emissions of 90,000 tonnes of CO2-e.

Example 1.12 Liability where some of the gas is not used at the facility

In 2013-14, ElsieRylee Inc. operates Steel Mill and AmYear Ltd receives supplies of natural gas from a natural gas supplier for combustion at Steel Mill.

In 2013-14, AmYear receives supplies of natural gas with total embodied emissions of 90,000 tonnes of CO2-e. Most of this gas is combusted at Steel Mill, resulting in emissions of 80,000 tonnes of CO2-e. The rest of the gas, embodying emissions of 10,000 tonnes of CO2-e, is used by AmYear at Ferro Forge which is under its operational control. AmYear combusts half of this gas at Ferro Forge, resulting in emissions of 5,000 tonnes of CO2-e. The other half of the gas, embodying emissions of 5,000 tonnes of CO2-e, is used at Ferro Forge as a feedstock. There are no other emissions from the facility. See diagram below which represents these arrangements.

AmYear must quote its OTN to its natural gas supplier, as the recipient of natural gas to be used at a large gas consuming facility. It is liable for emissions of 5,000 tonnes of CO2-e from Ferro Forge. No liability arises for natural gas used as a feedstock.

ElisieRylee is liable for emissions of 80,000 tonnes of CO2-e at Steel Mill.


 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 


Liability for OTN holders who voluntarily take on liability

1.140          In certain situations, entities can quote an OTN and take on liability for natural gas emissions where the natural gas is not for use in a large gas consuming facility.  In these circumstances OTN quotation is voluntary.  [Part 3, clause 56], [Part 3, clause 57], [Part 3, clause 58], [Part 3, clause 59], [Part 3, clause 60]

1.141          There are two types of voluntary OTN quotation:

       the first is where a supplier must accept the OTN quotation.  This is the case where natural gas will be used in a way that does not result in emissions (including as a feedstock) or where the gas is converted into LPG, LNG or CNG that will subsequently fall within the fuel tax system.   

       the second is where a supplier may accept an OTN quotation but they are not required to do so.  This applies where a person is permitted to quote an OTN for a large gas consuming facility and has other facilities under their operational control that are not large gas consuming facilities.  This also applies where a person expects that a facility under their operational control will become a large gas consuming facility in the future. 

Voluntary OTN quotations

Eligibility to quote an OTN where quotation is voluntary

1.142          Entities eligible to voluntarily quote an OTN to a natural gas supplier and assume liability for embodied emissions from natural gas are:

       large users of natural gas; [Part 3, clause 56(1)(e)(ii)]

       persons approved by the Regulator; [Part 3, clause 56(1)(e)(i)]

       users of natural gas as a feedstock; [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘feedstock’]

       users of natural gas in manufacturing CNG, LNG or LPG.  [Part 3, clause 56(1)], [Part 3, clause 57], [Part 3, clause 58]

Large user of natural gas

1.143          A person is a large user of natural gas if they are required to quote their OTN because they are the recipient of natural gas for use at a large gas consuming facility.  [Part 3, clause 55B]

1.144          If a person is a large user of natural gas, they may quote an OTN to their natural gas supplier to assume liability for natural gas supplied for use at other facilities which are under their operational control which do not meet the ‘large gas consuming facility’ threshold.  [Part 3, clause 56]

1.145          This approach allows large users of natural gas to manage all their liability for natural gas, as long as one facility for which they receive natural gas was a large gas consuming facility.  This will simplify billing arrangements where a large fuel user purchases natural gas from one supplier for use at more than one facility.

Example 1.13 Large user of natural gas

SDK has operational control over a large manufacturing plant and is supplied natural gas for use at the plant which it withdraws from a natural gas supply pipeline.  In 2010-11 emissions from the plant comprise 40,000 tonnes of CO2-e from use of natural gas.

In 2012-13, SDK is required to quote an OTN to take on liability for emissions from this supply of natural gas because the plant is a large gas consuming facility. 

SDK also has operational control over another smaller plant which is a facility in its own right.  In 2011 emissions from this second plant comprise 15,000 tonnes of CO2-e from use of natural gas.

In 2012-13, SDK is permitted to quote an OTN to its natural gas supplier for the natural gas supplied to it at the smaller plant. It is permitted to do this because it is required to quote its OTN as the recipient of natural gas for use at a large gas consuming facility. 

The company makes an OTN quotation in its natural gas supply contract, and the OTN quotation is accepted by the natural gas supplier.  SDK must manage mechanism obligations for all natural gas supplied under this contract.

Approved person

1.146          An ‘approved person’ can also quote an OTN for natural gas supplied to them by a natural gas supplier.  [Part 3, clause 56(3)] Entities can apply to the Regulator to become an approved person in accordance with the specified procedures and requirements.  [Part 3, clause 56(4), (5) and (6)] The Regulator will only approve an application if satisfied that the person operates a facility and it is likely that this facility will have emissions from natural gas of at least 25,000 tonnes of CO2-e, or an amount specified in the regulations.  [Part 3, clause 56(8)]

1.147          This allows entities that do not yet qualify as a ‘large user’ to quote an OTN if a facility that they operate is likely to exceed the large gas consuming facility threshold.  This might occur, for example, where an entity expects to permanently increase production at an existing facility or where they are setting up a new facility.

Example 1.14 Start-up company that expects to be a large user of natural gas

NatGas is in the process of commissioning a manufacturing plant.  It expects to emit 50,000 tonnes of CO2-e of greenhouse gases from the combustion of natural gas withdrawn from a distribution pipeline in its first year of operation.  NatGas applies to the Regulator for an OTN and submits all information and documents specified in the regulations. 

The Regulator assesses the application and decides that it is likely that NatGas’s emissions from natural gas combustion will exceed the threshold value specified in the regulations.  The Regulator, by written notice, declares that the company is an approved person.  NatGas is permitted to quote an OTN for the natural gas it purchases for its new electricity plant. 

User of natural gas as a feedstock

1.148          If a person uses natural gas as a feedstock, they may quote an OTN to their natural gas supplier to assume liability for embodied emissions in natural gas supplied to them.  [Part 3, clause 57] ‘Feedstock’ is defined as ‘a substance that is converted by a chemical process into another substance that is not a greenhouse gas’.  [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘feedstock’]

1.149          The person may ‘net out’ from their gross liability any amounts of natural gas which are used as a feedstock and which therefore do not result in greenhouse gas emissions.  No liability arises for uses of natural gas which ultimately do not result in the release of greenhouse gas into the atmosphere.

User of natural gas in manufacturing CNG, LNG or LPG

1.150          An equivalent carbon price applies to CNG, LNG and LPG at the point that these fuels attract excise and customs duty through fuel taxation legislation.

1.151          Some entities manufacture these fuels from natural gas supplied by a natural gas supplier.  Without special provision, liability under the mechanism might arise for these fuels twice: once through the mechanism when the fuel is supplied by a natural gas supplier, and again when an ‘equivalent carbon price’ is applied at the time that excise or customs duty is paid on the CNG, LNG or LPG.

1.152          Therefore, if a person receives natural gas from a supplier, and carries on a business manufacturing CNG, LNG or LPG, the person may quote an OTN to the natural gas supplier for the natural gas supplied.  [Part 3, clause 58]

1.153          As with users of natural gas as a feedstock, the person can ‘net out’ from their gross liability for the emissions embodied in any amounts of natural gas which are used to manufacture these fuels.  This will avoid applying a carbon price twice to these fuels.

Mandatory acceptance of OTN quotation for natural gas used as a feedstock or in manufacturing CNG, LNG or LPG

1.154          To ensure that a carbon price is not applied to non-emissive uses of natural gas, and that a carbon price is not applied twice to fuels which enter the excise system, natural gas suppliers are required to accept an OTN quotation for a supply of natural gas which is used as a feedstock or in manufacturing CNG, LNG or LPG.  [Part 3, clause 59(4)], [Part 3, clause 60(4)]

1.155          Where a person makes an OTN quotation that a supplier must accept the OTN holder must provide the supplier with a written declaration that sets out that quotation is being made under a relevant section of the Bill.  [Part 3, clause 59(3)], [Part 3, clause 60(3)]  It is an offence to make a false or misleading declaration.  The maximum penalty is a period of imprisonment for up to 12 months.  [Part 3, clause 62]

Preliminary and provisional emissions numbers

1.156          Each supply of natural gas for which an OTN is quoted gives rise to a preliminary EN for the OTN holder.  The exception to this rule is where natural gas is supplied for use in a large gas consuming facility (see above).  A preliminary EN is equal to the number of tonnes of potential greenhouse gas emissions embodied in the amount of natural gas supplied, in CO2-e. 

1.157          The PEN of the OTN holder is the sum of the OTN holder’s preliminary ENs for the financial year.  [Part 3, clause 35(3)] If an OTN holder has a PEN, they are a liable entity under the mechanism. 

Netted-out numbers

1.158          Particular amounts of natural gas can be ‘netted out’ from an OTN holder’s PEN.  The OTN holder’s PEN is reduced by the netted-out numbers (but not below zero).  [Part 3, clause 35(4)-(9)]  The purpose of netted out numbers is to reduce the PEN (but not below zero) to take account of:

       the need to avoid double counting, that is to account for where a PEN has arisen for that gas under another provision of the Bill; and

       uses of natural gas which do not result in greenhouse gas emissions; and

       amounts of natural gas that will be manufactured into a substance which will have a carbon price applied through alternative arrangements (i.e CNG, LNG or LPG).  [Part 3, clause 35(4)-(8)]

1.159          In particular, if an OTN holder quotes an OTN for an amount of natural gas, a netted-out number arises for the OTN holder where:

       the OTN holder used an amount of that natural gas as a feedstock or in a way that did not result in greenhouse gas emissions; [Part 3, clause 35(5)]

       an amount of that natural gas counts towards the OTN holder’s ‘direct emitter’ liability under Division 1 of Part 3; [Part 3, clause 35(6)]  Note that this netted out number does not apply to amounts of natural gas combusted at a large gas consuming facility as these amounts do not give rise to a PEN under clause 35(3) in the first place. 

       the OTN holder manufactures CNG, LNG or LPG from an amount of that natural gas, and the OTN holder holds a licence under the Excise Act 1901 to manufacture that fuel, and that fuel is entered for home consumption and attracts excise duty; and [Part 3, clause 35(7)]

       the OTN holder supplies an amount of that natural gas to another person who quotes their OTN concerning the supply.  [Part 3, clause 35(8)]

       the regulations provide for additional netted out numbers.  These will be included where necessary provided they are consistent with the purposes of clause 35.  [Part 3, clause 35(9)]

1.160          Once netted-out numbers are taken into account, a person may have a PEN that is greater than zero.  This will represent the potential greenhouse gas emission embodied in amounts of natural gas that are combusted at facilities that are not covered facilities. 

Example 1.15 Feedstock user of natural gas

JBurn Limited (JBurn) receives an amount of natural gas from AK Gas.  JBurn uses a portion of the natural gas as a feedstock in a fertiliser manufacturing process that completely sequesters the natural gas into the fertiliser.  JBurn also uses a portion of the natural gas for heating purposes. 

JBurn quotes its OTN to AK Gas concerning the supply.  AK Gas is required to accept this OTN quotation, as it is made by a feedstock user of natural gas.

The emissions embodied in the portion of gas which is used as a feedstock is a netted-out number.  JBurn will not be liable for these potential emissions.  However, JBurn will be liable for greenhouse gas emissions released from the portion of fuel combusted for heating purposes.  It will have a PEN which is equal to the potential emissions embodied in the natural gas supplied by AK Gas minus the netted-out number representing the use of gas as a feedstock.

Example 1.16 OTN quotation for natural gas used to produce CNG

The WA Facility is operated by JW Pty Limited (JW).  In 2012-13, JW receives a number of supplies of natural gas from its supplier with total embodied emissions of 30,000 tonnes of CO2-e. 

In 2012-13, covered emissions from the operation of the WA Facility comprise:

    15,000 tonnes of CO2-e from use of natural gas; and

    5,000 tonnes of CO2-e from other sources.

In 2012-13, natural gas with embodied emissions of 15,000 tonnes of CO2‑e is converted into CNG at the WA Facility and on-sold to another company.

JW quotes its OTN to its natural gas supplier because it creates CNG from natural gas.  The supplier is required to accept the OTN quotation.

JW (as the OTN holder) receives a preliminary EN under clause 35(1) for each supply of natural gas in 2012-13.  JW is a liable entity under clause 35(3). 

JW adds the preliminary ENs to give a PEN of 30,000 tonnes of CO2-e, however it nets-out from this amount 15,000 tonnes of CO2-e for natural gas converted to CNG under clause 35(7).  Therefore under clause 35, JW is a liable entity but has a PEN of 15,000.  This amount represents the gas which is combusted at the facility. 

JW is not liable for the other emissions of 5,000 tonnes of of CO2-e from the facility as the WA Facility does not exceed the 25,000 tonne threshold. 

Using OTNs

Issuing an OTN

1.161          An OTN may be issued in one of two ways; as a result of an application, or on the Regulator’s own initiative.  [Part 3, clause 37]

1.162          The Regulator may issue an OTN to a person if satisfied that the person is likely to be permitted or required to quote an OTN and the Regulator has carried out an identification procedure that enables the Regulator to verify the identity of the person.  [Part 3, clause 40], [Part 3, clause 41] Once issued, an OTN is not transferable.  [Part 3, clause 44]

1.163          The power for the Regulator to issue OTNs without an application will simplify the process for entities that the Regulator can readily identify as needing an OTN.  For example, the Regulator can identify many entities that are large users of natural gas from emissions data reported under the NGER Act. 

1.164          Where the Regulator is not able to readily identify a person that needs an OTN, the person can apply for an OTN.  [Part 3, clause 39]

1.165          If the Regulator refuses to issue an OTN, it must give written notice of the refusal to the person.  [Part 3, clause 42(4)]

Cancelling or surrendering an OTN

1.166          OTN holders no longer permitted or required to quote an OTN may continue to hold their OTNs except where the Regulator decides to cancel an OTN.  [Part 3, clause 43]

1.167          The Regulator may, by written notice, cancel an OTN:

       that is held by a person not permitted or required to quote it and who is unlikely to be permitted or required to quote it in the future; and [Part 3, clause 43(2)(a)]

       if a person has contravened a provision of the bill or an associated provision.  It is anticipated that the Regulator may take this step where there is an unacceptably high risk of further breaches of the bill or associated provisions concerning the use of that OTN.  [Part 3, clause 43(2)(b)], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘associated provisions’]

1.168          The Regulator must cancel an OTN if the person to whom it was issued has ceased to exist.  [Part 3, clause 43(3)]

1.169          Where a person is no longer required or permitted to quote an OTN and is not likely to be required or permitted to quote an OTN in the future they may surrender their OTN with the written consent of the Regulator.  [Part 3, clause 42] 

Example 1.17 Cancellation of an OTN and grace period for OTN quotation

From 1 July 2012, NatGas makes weekly supplies of natural gas under an OTN quotation to Davidson Ltd.  Davidson Ltd has previously quoted its OTN and advised NatGas in writing that it intends to use the natural gas as a feedstock.  Davidson Ltd is liable for emissions from its use of the gas.

The Regulator discovers that Davidson Ltd is not permitted to quote an OTN, as the company is combusting all of the natural gas rather than using it as a feedstock. 

The Regulator cancels Davidson Ltd’s OTN on 1 August 2012.  The Regulator removes Davidson Ltd’s entry on the OTN Register and lists the OTN and the time of cancellation on its website.  The Regulator sends an email to all natural gas suppliers that are listed on the OTN Register, notifying the suppliers of the cancellation and the time of its effect. 

Davidson Ltd and NatGas agree that the grace period before liability reverts to NatGas will be 21 days, rather than the default period of 28 days. 

During these 21 days, NatGas supplies gas to Davidson Ltd with embodied emissions of 1000 tonnes of CO2-e.  Davidson Ltd remains liable for emissions resulting from its use of this gas.  After this time, NatGas is liable for emissions embodied in the natural gas it supplies to Davidson Ltd.

1.170          If an OTN quotation is in effect, and the OTN is cancelled or surrendered, a 28-day grace period applies, during which further supplies of gas made to the OTN holder will be treated as if the OTN were still in effect.  As such, during the grace period, liability for emissions embodied in the gas will accrue to the OTN holder, not the supplier.  The grace period may be reduced by agreement of the supplier and the OTN holder.

The OTN Register

1.171          The Regulator must keep an electronic register called the OTN Register.  The OTN Register will enable suppliers to confirm that an OTN is valid, and that it belongs to the person that quotes it.  This register will be available for public inspection on the Regulator’s website.  It will contain an entry for every current OTN.  When an OTN is cancelled or surrendered the Regulator must remove the entry from the register.  [Part 3, clause 45]

1.172          An entry in the OTN Register will include an OTN, the identity of the person that was issued with that OTN, that person’s last known address, and their ABN if they have one.  [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘ABN’], [Part 3, clause 45]

1.173          The OTN Register will also include a list of natural gas suppliers. 

1.174          The listing of natural gas suppliers on the OTN Register will serve two main purposes.  It will assist users of natural gas to find a supplier who may be willing to accept their OTN quotation.  It will also provide the Regulator with list of supplier who wish to be notified of any changes to the OTN Register, such as when an OTN is cancelled, surrendered, when the name of an OTN holder changes, or when a new entry is made in the register.  This will lower compliance costs for suppliers as they will be sent up-to-date information on changes to the OTN Register.

1.175          The Regulator must, if requested by a natural gas supplier, include an entry for that supplier in the register.  An entry for a natural gas supplier will include the name of the supplier, their last known address, their telephone number, their website address, their ABN and any conditions the supplier places on the acceptance of OTN quotations which the supplier is not required to accept.  [Part 3, clause 45]

1.176          An OTN holder (or a natural gas supplier with an entry in the Register) who changes their name or address as set out in the register must within 28 days notify the Regulator of the change.  A person who fails to meet this requirement may incur a civil penalty.  [Part 3, clause 47]The regulator may make an alteration to the OTN Register when an OTN holder changes their name [Part 3, clause 47]

Quotation of an OTN by a natural gas customer

1.177          A person quotes an OTN concerning a supply or a class of supplies of natural gas by making a statement in writing concerning the supply or class of supplies.  The statement may be included in a contract, order or similar document and may be in electronic form.  [Part 3, clause 48]

1.178          A quotation must set out:

       the words ‘quotation of OTN’ followed by the OTN;

       the person’s name;

       if the person has an ABN, the person’s ABN; and

       any other information that is specified in the regulations.  [Part 3, clause 48(1)]

1.179          Where the acceptance of an OTN is mandatory, it is mandatory for a supplier to accept an OTN for natural gas that is for use:

       in the operation of a large gas consuming facility; or

       as a feedstock or in other ways that do not result in emissions; or

       to manufacture CNG, LNG or LPG.

In this situation, the OTN holder must provide notice on the first occasion on which they quote their OTN.

1.180          This is intended to allow natural gas suppliers time to make any necessary supply arrangements, including reading the customers meter.  This notice must be in writing and must be given to the supplier at least 28 days before the first OTN quotation, or a shorter time if agreed by the supplier and the recipient.  [Part 3, clause 55B(2)], [Part 3, clause 57(2)], [Part 3, clause 58(2)]

1.181          In other circumstances OTN acceptance is voluntary and there is no requirement for the OTN holder to give written notice.

1.182          A person must not purport to quote a number as if it was that person’s OTN if it is not that person’s OTN.  This is a ‘bogus OTN’.  [Part 3, clause 64(1)]

1.183          If a person purports to quote a bogus OTN, and that number is not shown in the OTN Register as the person’s OTN, the natural gas supplier must not supply natural gas to that person.  [Part 3, clause 64(3)]

1.184          Natural gas suppliers will therefore need to check the OTN register at the time an OTN quotation is made and ensure that the person quoting the OTN is the person listed on the OTN register against that OTN.

1.185          A person is liable to pay a civil penalty if a court finds that the person has quoted a bogus OTN or aided a person who quotes a bogus OTN.  [Part 3, clause 64], [Part 21, clause 252]

1.186          If an OTN holder purports to quote a number as an OTN (that is, quotes an incorrect OTN) and the purported quotation is due to an honest mistake, then the Regulator may determine that the Act has, and is taken to have had, effect as if the OTN holder had quoted the correct OTN concerning the supply.  A determination by the Regulator must be in writing and must be given to the OTN holder and the natural gas supplier.  [Part 3, clause 53]

Process of acceptance

1.187          For an OTN quotation to take effect it must be accepted.  Acceptance of an OTN quotation involves the supplier giving a written notice to the OTN holder that the OTN quotation is accepted. 

1.188          This may be included in a contract, order or similar document and may be in electronic form.  This formal process of acceptance ensures that both the OTN holder and supplier understand when an OTN quotation comes into effect.  [Part 3, clause 59], [Part 3, clause 60]

1.189          The notice of acceptance must set out:

       the words ‘acceptance of quotation of OTN’ followed by the OTN;

       the OTN holder’s name;

       if the OTN holder has an ABN, that ABN;

       a description of the supply or class of supplies;

       the name of the natural gas supplier;

       if the natural gas supplier has an ABN, that ABN; and

       any other information that is specified in the regulations.  [Part 3, clause 59(5)], [Part 3, clause 60(5)]

1.190          If the acceptance is voluntary and the supplier chooses not to  accept the quotation, the supplier may still choose to supply to the OTN holder, however the supply would take place as if the quotation had not been made.  [Part 3, clause 59], [Part 3, clause 60] That is, the supplier would be liable for the potential greenhouse gas emissions embodied in the gas supplied to that customer.

Example 1.18 Notice period for OTN quotation where acceptance of quotation is mandatory

Anastasios Enterprises Limited (AEL) operates the TS Factory, a medium-sized facility.  In the 2012-13 financial year, PY Gas will supply natural gas with embodied emissions of 15,000 tonnes of
CO2-e to AEL for use at the TS Factory. 

During this financial year, AEL intends to use some of this natural gas as a feedstock at the TS Factory, which will result in no emissions.

Upon application by AEL, the Regulator issues the company an OTN because AEL intends to use natural gas as a feedstock. 

AEL intends to quote its OTN to PY Gas on 1 July 2012 to take on liability for the supply of natural gas.  In this case, acceptance of an OTN quotation by PY Gas is mandatory, and AEL must notify PY Gas of its intention to quote its OTN.  AEL and PY Gas agree on a notice period of 14 days rather than the default 28 days.  AEL notifies PY Gas in writing of its intention to quote its OTN on 17 June 2012.  AEL then quotes its OTN to PY Gas on 1 July 2012 to take on liability for emissions from natural gas from this date.

Withdrawal of OTN quotation

1.191          An OTN quotation can be withdrawn and, when withdrawn, an OTN quotation ceases to be in place.  An OTN holder may withdraw an OTN quotation by notifying the supplier in writing when either:

       an OTN holder ceases to be permitted to quote their OTN concerning a supply or class of supplied to which the quotation relates[Part 3, clause 51]; or

       an OTN holder has a voluntary OTN quotation in effect and the natural gas supplier agrees to the withdrawal of a quotation concerning a supply or class of supplies.  [Part 3, clause 52]

1.192          An OTN quotation is deemed to have been withdrawn if a person’s OTN is surrendered or cancelled and a quotation of that OTN was in effect immediately prior to the surrender or cancellation.  [Part 3, clause 49], [Part 3, clause 50]

1.193          In these circumstances, the natural gas supplier would have little notice of the withdrawal.  Therefore, to enable the supplier time to read the customers meter and begin a new billing period (in the case that the supplier continues to supply the customer), the OTN holder will be liable for the potential greenhouse gas emissions in any supply  that occurs in the 28 days from when the surrender or cancellation takes effect.  However if the supplier and OTN holder agree to an earlier date, the OTN holder will only be liable for supplies that occur up to that date.  [Part 3, clause 54], [Part 3, clause 55] 

1.194          To provide suppliers with early notice of the cancellation or surrender of OTNs, suppliers may apply to the Regulator to be in the OTN Register.  Suppliers who register in this way will receive an email from the Regulator informing them of any cancellations and surrenders.   

Misuse of OTN

1.195          The fact that the Regulator issues an OTN does not permit a person to quote it.  When a person quotes an OTN for a particular supply or class of supplies the person must, at the time of quotation, be required or permitted to do so.  An OTN holder breaches the provisions in the bill if they quote an OTN in circumstances where they are not required or permitted to do so.  [Part 3, clause 63]  For the avoidance of doubt, a person does not misuse their OTN if they are no longer permitted or required to to quote an OTN concerning a supply but an OTN quotation is in effect concerning that supply because the person was permitted or required to quote an OTN at the time that the quotation was made. 

1.196          If a person quotes an OTN in circumstances where they are not required or permitted to do so, the validity of the transaction is not affected by the breach.  This ensures that a supplier accepting the quotation of a valid OTN is not penalised by having a liability for emissions embodied in natural gas supplied under an OTN quotation that the supplier believed was permitted or required under the Bill.  That is, the quotation will relieve the supplier of liability concerning that supply.  However, unlike a quotation which is required or permitted, a person who misuses an OTN is liable for the potential greenhouse gas emissions embodied in the fuel supplied and does not have the benefits of any netted out numbers.  [Part 3, clause 36], [Part 3, clause 63(4)]

1.197          A person is liable to pay a civil penalty, if a court finds that the person has contravened the requirement not to quote an OTN in circumstances where it is not required or permitted or has, for example, aided such a contravention.[27] [Part 3, clause 63(1)], [Part 21, clause 252]

Definitions relevant to liability for emissions from natural gas

1.198          Liability for fugitive emissions from pipelines will apply through the general facility rules.  [Part 3, clause 20], [Part 3, clause 21], [Part 3, clause 22]

1.199          ‘Natural gas’ will be defined in amended regulations to the NGER Act.  [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘natural gas’] This definition will exclude substances which are not intended to be captured by the upstream liability arrangements but which can be conveyed in a pipeline, for example, pure ethane. 

1.200          ‘Supply’ is defined as supply (including re-supply) by way of sale, exchange or gift.  [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘supply’] A supply of natural gas will be taken to occur when the natural gas passes a point specified in the regulations or, if this does not apply, when the gas is physically delivered.  [Part 1, clause 6]

1.201          It is intended, where possible, to align a gas supplier’s emissions liability with metering arrangements for end-use customers, so that the measurement occurs when the gas supplied passes through a meter used to measure the volume of gas supplied for billing purposes.  However, in the absence of a meter, liability for emissions should reflect the amount of gas delivered to the customer under the contract, noting that the gas must also be withdrawn from a gas supply pipeline. 

1.202          These arrangements are not intended to apply outside the natural gas supply pipeline system (including both transmission system and distribution networks).  For this reason, gas must be withdrawn from a ‘gas supply pipeline’.  A ‘gas supply pipeline’ will be defined, for these purposes, in the regulations and will exclude specified types of pipelines to which these arrangements will not apply, including pipelines that convey natural gas between a gas well and a gas processing plant, or a gas well and an LNG export plant.  [Part 1, clause 5 definition of gas supply pipeline’]  For the avoidance of doubt, any emissions from the combustion of natural gas at facilities that are supplied by way of such excluded pipelines will count towards the covered emissions of those facilities. 

1.203          Certain types of ‘natural gas supply pipeline’ can be excluded in the regulations.  This allows for the exclusion of gas supplies in pipelines which do not form part of the wider system that conveys gas to end-use customers, for example, gas that is transferred along a pipeline from a gas well to a gas production facility and sold to the production facility. 

1.204           ‘Withdrawal’ will be defined in the regulations.  This definition will encompass situations where:

       natural gas is taken out of a natural gas supply pipeline for combustion at residential and commercial properties and upstream facilities; and

       amounts of gas are combusted by pipeline operators in pipeline compressors in the process of operating the pipeline.  Including this situation in the definition of ‘withdrawal’ will ensure comprehensive mechanism coverage of natural gas.

Potential greenhouse gas emissions

1.205          Liability for natural gas is based on potential greenhouse gas emissions, rather than actual emissions, except where direct emitters are liable for emissions from natural gas.  This is because the liability generally arises before the fuel is combusted and emissions are released [Part 3, clause 33(1)(e)], [Part 3, clause 35(1)(d)], [Part 3, clause 36(1)(e)]

1.206          The potential greenhouse gas emissions embodied in an amount of natural gas means the amounts of the greenhouse gas or gases that would be released into the atmosphere as a result of its combustion.  This is defined by reference to the NGER Act, which will be amended to define this concept [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘potential greenhouse gas emissions’] (see Schedule 1, Part 2, items 309, 323 of the Consequential Amendments bill).

1.207          It is intended that the potential greenhouse gas emissions embodied in an amount of natural gas will be calculated in two ways (see Schedule 1, Part 2, item 323 of the Consequential Amendments bill).

       Under the first method, known as the default method, the calculation will involve multiplying the amount of natural gas by a value specified in the regulations.

       Alternatively, a person may elect to use a prescribed alternative method which involves, among other things, testing one or more samples of the natural gas. 

Opt-in arrangements for entities otherwise covered by the fuel tax system

1.208          During the public exposure period for the Package industry stakeholders expressed a desire to manage their carbon liability for fuels under the carbon pricing mechanism instead of paying the equivalent carbon price through the fuel excise and fuel tax credit systems.  This arrangement is given effect through the Opt-in Scheme. 

1.209          The Regulator will be responsible for administering the Opt-in Scheme.  It will work with the Australian Taxation Office and Australian Customs Service to ensure entities comply with their obligations under the mechanism and the fuel tax system.

Establishment of the Opt-in Scheme

1.210          Regulations may establish an Opt-in Scheme that allows a person who meets the criteria under the Scheme to choose to have emissions from fuels covered directly under the mechanism instead of paying an equivalent carbon price through the fuel tax system.  The regulations will specify the types of fuels that are eligible for the Opt-in Scheme.  [Part 3, clause 92A]

1.211          The bill sets out the parameters of the Opt-in Scheme and its main design features.  The regulations would prescribe matters such as the eligibility criteria for opting-in (including which other persons would need to consent to the opt-in), the timeframes for opting-in and opting-out, and how the arrangement will take into account the pollution cap setting process.

1.212          The use of regulations will allow the Government to consult with stakeholders on the detailed design of the technical requirements for the Opt-in Scheme, and to allow for their adaptation over time to respond to changing regulatory and business circumstances.  This is particularly important given the need to maintain a degree of flexibility in the arrangements to ensure the ongoing effectiveness of the interaction between the mechanism and the fuel tax system. 

1.213          The Minister must take all reasonable steps to ensure that the regulations establishing the Opt-in Scheme are made before 15 December 2012.  The phrase ‘take all reasonable steps’ is used because, despite his or her best endeavours, a Minister cannot guarantee that the Governor-General will make regulations.  [Part 3, clause 92A(5)]

Main design features of the Opt-in Scheme

1.214          The regulations establishing the Opt-in Scheme will provide:

        that the Regulator may declare a person a designated opt-in person for an amount of fuel of a specified kind; [Part 3, clause 92A(1)(a)(i),(ii), (iii) and (5)]

       the requirements that must be met before the Regulator may declare a person a designated opt-in person; [Part 3, clause 92A(1)(a)(v)]

        that a designated opt-in person will be liable for the potential greenhouse gas emissions in the fuel (of a kind specified in the regulations) for which they are opting-in.  [Part 3, clause 92A(1)(a) and (b)]

1.215          As well as meeting criteria specified in regulations, the designated opt-in person must, for the fuel for which they are opting in:

        be a member of a GST group where that GST group  is entitled to the fuel tax credits for that fuel; or [Part 3, clause 92A(4)(a)]

       be a member of a GST joint venture where that GST joint venture is entitled to the fuel tax credits for that fuel; or [Part 3, clause 92A(4)(b)]

       if neither of these criteria apply, then be the entity entitled to the fuel tax credits for that fuel.  [Part 3, clause 92A(4)(c)]

1.216          The Clean Energy (Fuel Tax Legislation Amendment) Bill 2011 provides that a designated opt-in person will no longer pay an equivalent carbon price through the fuel excise and fuel tax credit systems for the amount of fuel for which they have opted-in. 

1.217          To ensure that a person liable under the Opt-In Scheme is not liable for emissions that are not included in the carbon price, the regulations will also allow for liability to be reduced if certain conditions are met.  [Part 3, clause 92B]

1.218          The regulations will also be able to provide for opting-out of the Opt-in Scheme.  The regulations will set out the process for doing so and the obligations on the Regulator.  [Part 3, clause 92A(1)(a)(v)]

1.219          To ensure consistency between the mechanism and the taxation, excise and tariff systems, the Regulator will be required to notify the Commissioner of Taxation and the Chief Executive Officer of Customs when the Regulator makes a declaration under the Opt-in Scheme.  [Part 3, clause 92G]

1.220          Application procedures, times and fees will be set out in regulations.  [Part 3, clause 92E]

1.221          To the extent that it is necessary t supplement the reporting and record-keeping requirements for liable entities under the NGER Act, further requirements will be set out in regulations.  [Part 3, clause 92C and 92D]

Commencement of the Opt-in Scheme

1.222          The Opt-in Scheme will take effect from 1 July 2013, so that the 2013-14 financial year is the first year in which designated persons can manage the liability for their fuel emissions under the carbon pricing mechanism.  [Part 3, clause 92A(2)]

1.223          The commencement of the Opt-in Scheme on 1 July 2013 will facilitate its implementation, enabling detailed consultation on its practical requirements and implementation.  For the 2012-13 financial year, entities that would opt-in if the Opt-in Scheme was in operation are liable for emissions under the fuel tax system.

Anti-avoidance

1.224          Chapter 7 outlines the provisions addressing schemes entered into with the substantial purpose of obtaining the advantage of a threshold.  Put briefly, attempts to avoid the mechanism’s operation may result in any benefit of the threshold provision being lost.[28] [Part 3, clause 29]

 


Chapter 2   
Pollution caps

Outline of chapter

2.1                  Chapter 2 explains pollution caps.  It covers Part 2.

Context

2.2                  The pollution cap is a limit on the total number of carbon units issued in an eligible financial year under the mechanism.  Pollution caps only apply to the flexible price period. 

2.3                  Pollution caps are fundamental to the operation of the mechanism, the achievement of national targets and meeting Australia’s international obligations. 

2.4                  Pollution caps will be reduced over time and will contribute to meeting Australia’s emission reduction targets.  Pollution caps can reflect different trajectories towards the same emissions target. 

2.5                  In the first stage of the mechanism (covering the eligible financial years beginning on 1 July 2012, 1 July 2013 and 1 July 2014), there will be no pollution caps.  Liable entities can purchase carbon units at a fixed charge and the Commonwealth will allocate a limited number of free carbon units as industry assistance.

2.6                  In the second stage of the mechanism (starting on 1 July 2015) there will be a pollution cap for each eligible financial year.  Liable entities can buy a limited number of carbon units at auction and the Commonwealth will allocate a limited number of free carbon units as industry assistance. 

2.7                  Covered emissions can exceed the pollution cap where they are offset by the surrender of other eligible emissions units, such as eligible international units or eligible ACCUs. 

Summary

2.8                  Pollution caps will be set in regulations, which are to be prepared in accordance with the requirements of Part 2.

2.9                  If regulations setting pollution caps are not tabled or are disallowed by Parliament, default pollution caps apply.  The default caps are consistent with a trajectory implied by Australia’s unconditional target of reducing national emissions to 5 per cent below 2000 levels by 2020. 

Detailed explanation of new law

Setting national pollution caps

2.10              The Government sets a ‘pollution cap’ for each eligible financial year (except for fixed charge years) of the mechanism, and issues carbon units equal to the pollution cap.  [Part 2, clause 13] The ‘pollution cap number’ for an eligible financial year is set as a quantity of greenhouse gases that has a carbon dioxide equivalence of a specified number of tonnes.  [Part 2, clause 13], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘carbon dioxide equivalence’]

2.11              Pollution cap numbers for each eligible financial year (except for fixed charge years) will be specified in regulations.  [Part 2, clause 14] The Government intends that these should be consistent with Australia’s national emissions reduction targets. 

2.12              As the basis for pollution caps may be subject to considerations which may change over time, it is appropriate that they be set out in regulations.  The regulations are subject to a number of controls:

       in setting pollution caps, the Minister must have regard to specific matters and may have regard to thirteen other matters (see below); [Part 2, clause 14(2)]

       one of the matters the minister must have regard to is the most recent report of the Authority, which must, in making recommendations to the Minister about pollution caps, consider specific matters identified in the legislation; [Part 22, clause 289], [Part 22, clause 292]

       the regulations may be disallowed if either House of Parliament passes a resolution within 15 days of the regulations being tabled.  [Part 2, clause 15]

2.13              The Authority will make recommendations to the Government about pollution caps (see Chapter 10), having regard to each of the specified matters.  [Part 22, clause 289] The Government must respond to these recommendations and table its response in Parliament.  This would include justification for any differences from the recommendations of the Authority.

2.14              The Minister must take all reasonable steps to ensure that regulations specifying the pollution cap numbers for the first five flexible charge years of the mechanism (that is, the eligible financial years beginning on 1 July 2015, 1 July 2016, 1 July 2017, 1 July 2018 and 1 July 2019) are tabled in Parliament no later than 31 May 2014.  [Part 2, clause 16(1)] The Government will include the pollution caps and its response to the Authority’s recommendations in the 2014-15 Budget.  This will be in a new budget paper.

2.15              If not made or tabled by 31 May 2014, the initial regulations setting pollution caps for the first five flexible charge years must not be made or tabled.  [Part 2, clause 16(2)]

2.16              If regulations establishing the first five years of pollution caps did not come into effect by May 2015, then the Minister must, on an annual basis by 31 May, take all reasonable steps to table regulations setting pollution caps for five years until the regulations come into effect.  [Part 2, clause 16(3) and (4)]

2.17              Once regulations establishing five years of pollution caps have come into effect, the Minister must take all reasonable steps to ensure that regulations setting the pollution cap and declaring the pollution cap number are in place at least five years before the end of the relevant year.  [Part 2, clause 16(5)] That is, the five years of pollution caps will be extended by a year every year so that five years of pollution caps are always known.  This will provide a level of certainty to investors and the market. 

2.18              The phrase ‘take all reasonable steps’ is used because, despite his or her best endeavours, a Minister cannot guarantee that the Governor-General will make regulations. 

Default pollution caps

2.19              Default pollution caps exist in the event the regulations setting pollution caps do not take effect.  This is only a concern when regulations setting pollution caps are either not tabled in the Parliament by the deadline or are tabled and then disallowed.

2.20              Having a default in the legislation ensures that the mechanism continues to operate in the event that regulations setting pollution caps do not come into effect.  The default caps follow a trajectory consistent with Australia’s unconditional target of reducing national emissions to five per cent below 2000 levels by 2020, taking into account projections for emissions from uncovered sectors (including the impact of emissions reduction measures on those sectors).

2.21              The default pollution cap for the first flexible charge year, beginning 1 July 2015, is set at 38 megatonnes (Mt) less than the total covered emissions from liable entities for the year beginning 1 July 2012.  The total covered emissions for the year beginning 1 July 2012 will be taken from the Liable Entities Public Information Database administered by the Regulator.  [Part 2, clause 17]

2.22              The default pollution caps for all years beginning on or after 1 July 2016 will be 12 Mt less than the previous year’s pollution cap.  [Part 2, clause 18]

Example 2.1 Regulations not in place for the first five flexible price years

The Minister tables regulations setting the pollution caps for the financial years beginning in 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018 and 2019 by 31 May 2014. 

These regulations are disallowed by the House of Representatives in June 2014.  Because the 31 May 2014 deadline has passed, the Minister is not able to table further regulations. 

The carbon pollution cap for the year beginning 1 July 2015 will be the default as set in the legislation: the emissions for the financial year beginning 1 July 2012 less 38,000,000. 

By 31 May 2015, the Minister must take all reasonable steps to ensure the tabling of regulations declaring the pollution caps for the financial years beginning in 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019 and 2020.

If these regulations are not disallowed by either house of Parliament, the pollution caps set in those regulations will be the pollution caps for the respective years and the Minister will be required to table regulations containing the pollution cap for 2021-22 by 30 June 2017.

Example 2.2  Regulations not in place for a subsequent flexible price year

It is 2017 and the pollution caps have previously been set in regulations for the flexible price years beginning 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019 and 2020.  The Minister has tabled regulations setting the pollution cap for the flexible price year beginning 1 July 2021.  In July 2017, these regulations are disallowed by the Senate.  As it is now less than five years before the end of the financial year beginning 1 July 2021 (that is, 30 June 2017 has passed), the Minister is not permitted to table or make further regulations setting the pollution cap for the year beginning 1 July 2021.

The carbon pollution cap number for 2021-22 will therefore be the default as set in the bill: the pollution cap number for 2020-21 (as was set in regulations) minus 12,000,000.

The Minister must then take all reasonable steps to ensure that regulations setting the next pollution cap (2022-23) are tabled by 30 June 2018.

Matters to be taken into account when setting pollution caps

2.23              In recommending to the Governor-General that she make the regulations, the Minister must have regard to:

       Australia’s international obligations under international climate change agreements.  [Part 2, clause 14(2)(a)], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘international climate change agreement’]

      The mechanism will be the primary means by which Australia will meet its international obligations.  This includes the Climate Change Convention, Kyoto Protocol and allows for future agreements to which Australia becomes a party.

       the most recent report outlining recommendations for pollution caps and carbon budgets by the Authority.  [Part 2, clause 14(2)(b)]

      Pollution caps are a fundamental component of the mechanism, and the provision of independent expert advice enhances the transparency and accountability of cap setting process.  [Part 22, clause 292]

      A carbon budget is defined as the total amount of net Australian emissions of greenhouse gases during a specified period. [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘carbon budget’]

2.24              The Authority’s recommended carbon budgets will be important in quantifying Australia’s short and long term emissions reduction objectives and demonstrating how particular pollution caps contribute to those objectives.

2.25              While taking into account Australia’s international obligations and the most recent report of the Authority plays a central role in setting pollution caps, the Minister may also have regard to thirteen additional factors (as set out below).

2.26              Factor 1: Australia’s undertakings concerning the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions that Australia has given under international climate change agreements.  [Part 2, clause 14(2)(c)(i)]

       In addition to binding obligations under international agreements, Australia may make high-level political undertakings concerning the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions, such as under the Climate Change Convention.  Although not legally binding, Australia implements these undertakings solemnly and in good faith and expects other countries to do likewise.  Where such undertakings relate to greenhouse gas emissions reductions, the Minister may take these into account when setting pollution caps.  For example, subject to a further international agreement which quantifies Australia’s 2020 emissions reduction obligations, the Government intends to take into account its emissions reduction pledges made to the Climate Change Convention under the Copenhagen Accord and the Cancun Agreements.

2.27              Factor 2: Australia’s medium-term and long-term emissions reduction targets.  [Part 2, clause 14(2)(c)(ii)]

       The mechanism is the primary means for achieving the national emissions reduction targets.  Pollution caps therefore need to be set at a level consistent with the carbon price playing its role in achieving these targets. 

2.28              Factor 3: Australia’s progress toward emissions reductions.  [Part 2, clause 14(2)(c)(iii)]

       The Minister may want to consider whether the Australian economy has sufficiently reduced its emissions intensity and adopted low carbon practices to reach medium and long-term emissions reduction targets.  The Minister may also want to ensure that such a transition to a low carbon economy is as smooth as possible. 

2.29              Factor 4: global action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.  [Part 2, clause 14(2)(c)(iv)]

       This includes progress towards, and development of, comprehensive global action under which all major economies commit to substantially restrain emissions and advanced economies take on reductions comparable to Australia.  It includes consideration of the actions committed to and action which has been implemented through domestic mitigation policies.

       Actions by major economies are relevant to decisions on the trajectory of Australia’s emissions and so should be considered when setting pollution caps. 

2.30              Factor 5: Estimates of the global greenhouse gas emissions budget.  [Part 2, clause 14(2)(c)(v)]

       This is to take into account Australia’s share in global efforts to reduce emissions as well as the rate of progress in global action.

2.31              Factor 6: The economic and social implications associated with various levels of pollution caps, including implications of the carbon price.  [Part 2, clause 14(2)(c)(vi)]

       Different levels of pollution caps will have different economic and social implications, including the flow of funds outside Australia to purchase eligible international emissions units. 

       Decisions on the appropriate level of caps may take into account the carbon price and economic and social impacts arising from observing the actual operation of the cap in previous years.

       The carbon price may be higher or lower than expected as a result of a number of factors.  For example, technological developments may mean that economic costs are lower than expected as new unanticipated abatement opportunities come into play. 

2.32              Factor 7: The extent of actions voluntarily taken to reduce Australia’s greenhouse gas emissions.  [Part 2, clause 14(2)(c)(vii)]

       Voluntary action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions can help ameliorate the economic implications associated with various levels of national pollution caps, increasing the likelihood that more stringent caps can be set over time. 

       The Government acknowledges that its national emissions target does not include voluntary action, meaning that Australia can achieve emissions abatement beyond its national emissions target. 

       Voluntary action can be achieved through voluntary cancellation of units, whereby a person voluntarily gives up a greater number of units than they would otherwise have to (voluntary cancellation is covered by Part 6 of the ANREU Act).

       As a matter of policy, the Government is committed to taking account of GreenPower purchases in setting pollution caps.  Households and businesses that purchase GreenPower increase the demand for renewable energy and assist in the transition to cleaner energy sources.  To recognise individual action in purchasing GreenPower, the Government will take all GreenPower purchases into account in setting future pollution caps. 

       In the fixed charge period the Government will measure GreenPower purchases on an annual basis and take these into account when setting the initial pollution caps.  The Authority must provide recommendations on the initial pollution caps by 28 February 2014.  The Authority will take into account the GreenPower purchases that have been reported by that time.   

       In the flexible price period, the Government would measure GreenPower purchases on an annual basis and directly take these into account in setting pollution caps five years into the future. 

       Voluntary action in addition to GreenPower and voluntary cancellation of units may also be recognised, on advice from the Authority on whether a robust methodology can be developed to recognise additional voluntary action.

2.33              Factor 8: Estimates of emissions that are not covered by the mechanism.  [Part 2, clause 14(2)(c)(viii)]

       The Government will set pollution caps based on the difference between the indicative national emissions trajectory (that is, its proposed path for national emissions) and the latest projection of emissions that are not covered by the mechanism (excluding abatement from the CFI).  In this way, sufficient ‘room’ is left for uncovered emissions, and national targets can still be met.  This will take into account the impact of emissions which come into the mechanism through the opt-in provisions in Part 3, Division 7. 

2.34              Factor 9: Estimates of the likely issue of ACCUs.  [Part 2, clause 14(2)(c)(ix)], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘Australian carbon credit unit’]

       Abatement from the CFI will decrease emissions from the uncovered sectors and ACCUs will either be exported, voluntarily cancelled or used to offset increased emissions covered by the mechanism, which will impact the accounting for national emissions targets. 

       The Government will therefore need to be mindful of the likely volume of ACCUs expected to be generated when setting pollution caps to ensure that these emission reductions are not double counted. 

2.35              Factor 10: The extent of non-compliance under the mechanism.  [Part 2, clause 14(2)(c)(x)]

       To comply, liable entities can either surrender eligible emissions units or pay a charge for each tonne of pollution that they generate (see Chapter 4).  If liable entities do not meet their obligations for an eligible compliance year their emissions will not have been accounted for through the surrender of eligible emissions units or through paying the charge. 

       To ensure Australia meets its national emissions targets, the Government may tighten the pollution cap that will be set to make up for these unaccounted for emissions. 

2.36              Factor 11: The extent (if any) to which liable entities have failed to surrender sufficient units to avoid liability for unit shortfall charge.  [Part 2, clause 14(2)(c)(xi)]

       If liable entities do not surrender sufficient units, but instead meet their obligations through payment of unit shortfall charges, the emissions will not be backed by an emissions unit. 

       To ensure Australia meets its national emissions targets, the Government may choose to use some of the revenue raised from the charge to purchase emissions units to account for these emissions or tighten the next pollution cap to account for the emissions. 

2.37              Factor 12: Any past or planned government purchase of international units.  [Part 2, clause 14(2)(c)(xii)]

       If the Government chooses to purchase eligible international units to meet national emissions targets, the pollution cap could be increased to reflect those purchases.

2.38              Factor 13: When setting caps, the Minister may take into account such other matters (if any) as the Minister considers relevant.  For example, the Minister could take into account the precautionary principle or considerations of intergenerational equity.  [Part 2, clause 14(2)(c)(xiii)]


Chapter 3   
Emissions units

Outline of chapter

3.1                  Chapter 3 explains the nature of the various emissions units (domestic and international) recognised under the mechanism.  It also explains the ways in which carbon units are issued under the mechanism and key provisions around eligible international emissions units.  This chapter covers Part 4 of the bill.

Context

3.2                  The central element of the mechanism is the ability of liable entities to make a payment for or surrender eligible emissions units for each tonne of emissions for which they are liable during an eligible financial year (see Chapter 4).

3.3                  A carbon unit is an eligible emissions unit issued by the Regulator on behalf of the Commonwealth.  Other eligible emissions units include eligible ACCUs issued under the CFI and eligible international units. 

3.4                  During the fixed charge period from 1 July 2012 to 30 June 2015, the Regulator will allocate free carbon units under Parts 7 and 8 (see Chapters 5 and 6) and entities can purchase carbon units for a fixed charge from the Regulator.  Entities cannot use eligible international emissions units to meet domestic liabilities during the fixed charge period.

3.5                  On 1 July 2015 the mechanism will transition to an emissions trading scheme and a limited number of carbon units will be issued which equals the pollution cap (see Chapter 2).  Carbon units are tradeable, establishing a carbon market that allows these units to be allocated to the most highly valued uses across the economy. 

3.6                  Letting liable entities use eligible ACCUs from 1 July 2012 and eligible international units from 1 July 2015 to meet their liabilities gives them additional flexibility under the mechanism.  It means that covered emissions can exceed the pollution cap, provided they are offset by an eligible ACCU or eligible international unit.

3.7                  Letting liable entities surrender eligible ACCUs links the mechanism and the CFI.  This will provide an incentive for those actions that reduce emissions or increase carbon sinks to be part of the CFI. 

3.8                  Letting liable entities surrender international units links the mechanism and international markets for emissions units.  It lets liable entities access lower cost abatement opportunities and allows for emission reduction targets to be achieved in a flexible and cost-effective way.  However, the use of international units is subject to qualitative and quantitative restrictions, to ensure the environmental integrity and ongoing credibility of the mechanism. 

3.9                  Allowing for the sale and transfer to foreign registries of Australian emissions units, such as carbon units and ACCUs, will open up the mechanism to foreign markets and has the potential to increase the flow of foreign capital, providing a stimulus for domestic abatement and investment in low-pollution technologies.  Export of ACCUs will be permitted from 1 July 2012.  Export of carbon units will not be permitted during the fixed charge period and will also be restricted until 1 July 2018, except where expressly permitted under a bilateral link to an international emissions trading scheme.

3.10              In the first three flexible charge years, there will be a transitional price ceiling and price floor.  A price ceiling is a maximum carbon price, while a price floor is a minimum carbon price.  The Government’s intention is that these be set at a level significantly higher than the expected price for the price ceiling and lower than the expected price for the price floor. 

Summary

Issuing of carbon units

3.11              Part 4, Division 2 sets out the way in which carbon units are issued, when they may be issued and limits on the number of units that may be issued.

Property in carbon units

3.12              Part 4, Division 3 deals with property in carbon units and the processes for transferring carbon units, including arrangements for international transfers of carbon units.

Auctioning carbon units

3.13              Part 4, Division 4 provides for the auctioning of carbon units.  The design of the auction process is to be set out in regulations.

Cancellation and buy-back of carbon units

3.14              Part 4, Division 5 provides for the cancellation and buy-back of free carbon units issued under Part 7 (the Jobs and Competitiveness Program) and Part 8 (assistance to coal-fired electricity generators). 

International linking

3.15              Eligible international emissions units are defined under section 4 of the ANREU Act.  Restrictions on the surrender of these units are set out in Part 6, Divisions 2 and 3 of the bill.

Detailed explanation of new law

Eligible emissions units

3.16              The Regulator may issue carbon units, which a liable entity may surrender to meet its obligations under the mechanism.  [Part 4, clause 93], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘carbon unit’], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘surrender’]

3.17              An ‘eligible emissions unit’ is a carbon unit, an eligible international emissions unit, or an eligible ACCU issued under the CFI.  [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘Australian carbon credit unit’], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘carbon unit’], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘eligible Australian carbon credit unit’], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘eligible emissions unit’]

Link to the CFI

3.18              A liable entity may surrender eligible ACCUs to meet its liabilities under the mechanism (see Chapter 4):

       in the fixed charge period, a liable entity may surrender eligible ACCUs up to an amount equal to five per cent of its total emissions liability; and

       in the flexible charge period, a liable entity may surrender as many eligible ACCUs as it wants to meet its emissions liability.  [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘eligible Australian carbon credit unit’]

Carbon units

Issue of carbon units and entry in the Registry

3.19              The Regulator may issue carbon units on behalf of the Commonwealth.  [Part 4, clause 94], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘carbon unit’]

3.20              To hold a carbon unit, a person must have a Registry account.  [Part 4, clause 98(3)] Such a person is the ‘registered holder’ of the units.  [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘registered holder’] The Regulator issues a carbon unit by making an entry for the carbon unit against a Registry account in the Registry.  [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘Registry’], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘Registry account’], [Part 4, clause 98(1)] The carbon unit is represented by an electronic entry in the Registry, and not by any form of paper certificate.  [Part 4, clause 98(2)]

3.21              Each carbon unit will have a unique number known as the ‘identification number’.  [Part 4, clause 95], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘identification number’] An entry in the Registry for that unit will consist of its identification number.  [Part 4, clause 98(2)]

Vintage year of a carbon unit

3.22              Each carbon unit will have a specific vintage year, which will be an eligible financial year.  [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘eligible financial year’], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘vintage year’] Part of the identification number of a carbon unit will represent the vintage year of that carbon unit.  [Part 4, clause 96]

3.23              The Regulator may issue a carbon unit with a particular vintage year at any time before the end of 1 February following the vintage year.  [Part 4, clause 97]

Example 3.1 Allocation of a carbon unit

The Regulator may, at any time before the end of 1 February 2014, issue a carbon unit with the vintage year that ends on 30 June 2013.  This will allow for an auction of units in the interval between the end of the relevant financial year and 1 February, the final date for surrender. 

Units issued for flexible charge years

3.24              Carbon units that have a vintage year that is a flexible charge year do not have a ‘use by’ date.  They can be used for surrender in their vintage year and any year after that.  This is referred to as ‘banking’.  There is also limited capacity to surrender carbon units which are of the following vintage year (‘borrowing’).  [Part 6, clause 122(4)]

3.25              The purpose of allowing banking and limited borrowing is to allow liable entities to shift the timing of their emissions and abatement activities to reduce their costs.  It will also have the effect of smoothing the unit price over time (see Chapter 4 for an explanation of the payment and surrender process).

Units issued in fixed charge years

3.26              An unlimited number of carbon units whose vintage year is a fixed charge year will be available to liable entities at a fixed charge.  These units will not be able to be banked for use in future years.  [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘fixed charge year’]

3.27              Those carbon units that are issued free of charge under Parts 7 and 8 (see Chapters 5 and 6) can only be surrendered for the eligible financial year corresponding to their vintage year and, if not surrendered, will be cancelled at the end of 1 February of the next financial year.  [Part 4, clause 115], [Part 6, clause 122(7)], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘eligible financial year’]

3.28              ‘Borrowing’ will not be allowed during the fixed charge years.  [Part 6, clause 122(6)] A liable entity cannot surrender a carbon unit of a later vintage to meet its obligations for a fixed charge year.

3.29              Carbon units issued for a fixed charge are automatically surrendered for the eligible financial year corresponding to their vintage year.  [Part 4, clause 100(7)] They cannot be banked.

Circumstances in which the Regulator can issue carbon units

3.30              The Regulator can only issue carbon units in the following circumstances: [Part 4, clause 99]

       as the result of an auction conducted by the Regulator;

       when it issues units for a fixed charge;

       under Part 7 (see Chapter 5); and

       under Part 8 (see Chapter 6).

Vintage years and pollution caps

3.31              The Regulator must ensure that, when a particular vintage year is a flexible charge year and there is a pollution cap for that year, then the sum of carbon units for that vintage year:

       offered at auction (whether before or during that year); [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘auction’]

       allocated under Part 7 (see Chapter 5); and

       allocated under Part 8 (see Chapter 6),

does not exceed the pollution cap for that vintage year.  [Part 4, clause 102] This provision does not apply to carbon units with vintage years that are fixed charge years, as there will be no pollution cap for those years. 

A carbon unit is a property right

3.32              A carbon unit issued by the Regulator is personal property and, subject to the requirements of the mechanism, transmissible by assignment (that is, as a result of some form of agreement to transfer the units to another person), by will (that is, as part of a deceased person’s estate) and by other forms of transfer permitted by law.  [Part 4, clause 103]

3.33              While a carbon unit is always equivalent to one tonne of carbon dioxide equivalent emissions, the value of that unit will be determined by the demand for that unit in the market.  It is envisaged that any decisions made under the mechanism concerning its operation, such as the setting of pollution caps and allocation of free carbon units, may affect the value of units, and that regard should be had to that in making those decisions (see Chapter 10).

3.34              If there is an entry for a carbon unit in a person’s Registry account, then that person is the legal owner of the unit, subject to the requirements of the ANREU Act.  [Part 4, clause 103A]  Furthermore, a transfer of a carbon unit is of no force until it is registered in the Registry.  This provision protects a bona fide purchaser of carbon units, if they purchased the units for value and without knowledge of any defects in the registered holder’s title to the affected carbon units.  It would, for example, permit the person to sell the units or use them as security.  [Part 4, clause 103A] 


 

Example 3.2 Defects in title

Defects in title might arise, for example:

       if a carbon unit was transferred by the registered holder in error and sold on by an unintended recipient before the error is detected;

       if a carbon unit was transferred fraudulently, such as if evidence of a transmission by operation of law was false; or

       there is unauthorised access to a Registry account. 

3.35              Transparent and secure property rights over and legal interests in carbon units will promote confidence in the integrity of the units and reduce uncertainty for their holders, and further promote confidence in the development of the market for carbon units.  Similar provisions have been made for ACCUs, Kyoto units and prescribed international units in consequential amendments to the CFI Act and ANREU Act.

3.36              The bill does not affect the creation or enforcement of, or any dealings with (including transfers of), equitable interests in carbon units.  [Part 4, clause 110] This provision has been included for the avoidance of doubt.  In addition, the bill does not prevent the taking of security over carbon units.

3.37              Regulations may provide that legal interests in carbon units that are conferred upon the registered holder are subject to any equitable interests that might be registered, in the Registry, concerning the units.  Security interests for carbon units would be registered in the Personal Property Securities Register in accordance with the Personal Property Securities Act 2009[Part 4, clause 109A] 

3.38              Once a carbon unit is surrendered, it is cancelled (see Chapter 4).  [Part 6, clause 122(10)] Some units are cancelled following their relinquishment (see Chapter 7).  [Part 11, clause 210]

Transfer and transmission of carbon units

3.39              A person may transfer carbon units, except for those that are issued for a fixed charge.  In general, a transfer occurs when the Regulator removes an entry for the unit from the Registry account of the transferor and makes an entry for the unit in the Registry account of the transferee.  [Part 4, clause 104], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘transfer’]

3.40              A person may:

       transmit carbon units by assignment; [Part 4, clause 105]

       transmit carbon units by operation of law; [Part 4, clause 106]

       transfer carbon units between Registry accounts that are both in the name of that person; and [Part 4, clause 107]

       transfer carbon units to an account in a prescribed foreign registry held by that person or another person, provided the instruction is on or after 1 July 2018, the units have a flexible charge vintage year and the conditions specified in regulations are met. [Part 4, clause 108], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘foreign account’]

3.41              A transfer is initiated by an electronic instruction from the transferor to the Regulator.  The Regulator then removes the entry for the carbon unit from the transferor’s account and makes a new entry for that unit in the transferee’s account. 

Transfers of carbon units by operation of law etc

3.42              Transmissions that occur as a result of a will or by operation of law (that is, a transfer that does not occur by assignment) give rise to some additional issues arising from the nature of that transfer, as the recipient of the units may need to prove his or her entitlement to the units and may not have a Registry account of his or her own.  [Part 4, clause 106]

Example 3.3 Transfer from a deceased estate

Transmission of a unit to a person as the trustee of a deceased person’s estate will require the transferee to establish evidence of transmission and, if necessary, open a Registry account.

3.43              A person must provide the Regulator with a ‘declaration of transmission’, along with evidence of the transmission, within 90 days, to ensure that the new holder of the carbon units has ample time to provide the proof of that ownership.  The Regulator may extend the period either on the application of the transferor or transferee or on its own initiative.  [Part 4, clause 106(7)]  Should the Regulator refuse to extend the period, then it must give the transferor or the transferee (as the case may be) notice in writing.  [Part 4, clause 106(2) and (8)]

3.44              A transferee must, if he or she does not have a Registry account, also request that an account be opened in his or her name.  [Part 4, clause 106(5)]

3.45              The Regulator must effect the transfer of carbon units as soon as possible after receiving a declaration of transmission and the required evidence from the transferee and set out a record of that transmission.  [Part 4, clause 106(9), (10) and (11)] If the Commonwealth is the transferee of the units, then the Minister may give the declaration of transmission and provide any required evidence.  [Part 4, clause 106(12)]

Fixed charge carbon units, including those issued under price ceiling arrangements

Fixed charge carbon units

3.46              The Regulator will issue fixed charge carbon units with vintage years that are a financial year between 1 July 2012 and 30 June 2018.  This includes fixed charge carbon units issued for the fixed charge years and fixed charge carbon units issued in the first three flexible charge years under price ceiling arrangements.  [Part 4, clause 100]

The fixed charge for a unit

3.47              The fixed charge per carbon unit is:

       $23.00 in 2012-13;

       $24.15 in 2013-14; and

       $25.40 in 2014-15.  [Part 4, clause 100], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘charge’]

3.48              These charges rise by 2.5 per cent in real terms allowing for 2.5 per cent inflation per year, which is the midpoint of the Reserve Bank of Australia’s target range (that is, the fixed charge for the preceding year × 1.025 × 1.025, rounded to the nearest 5 cents).  [Part 4, clause 100(1)]

Price ceiling

3.49              A price ceiling will apply to the first three flexible charge years and be implemented by issuing carbon units at a fixed charge.  The amount of the fixed charge for carbon units issued in 2015-16 will be prescribed in regulations.  [Part 4, clause 100(1)], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘flexible charge year’] The Government has announced that this will be set at $20 above the expected international price in 2015-16.  These regulations are to be made before the end of 31 May 2014 and can be amended before 1 June 2015, in case the expected international price has moved considerably from that originally estimated.  [Part 4, clause 100(14) and (15)]

3.50              The reason why regulations will set the level of the price ceiling is so that circumstances in the period prior to 2015-16 can be taken into account in setting the level, including decisions about what eligible international emissions units can be surrendered, and what their expected prices are.

3.51              The level of the price ceiling for fixed charge units issued in 2016-17 and 2017-18 will rise by 5 per cent in real terms per year, allowing for 2.5 per cent inflation per year, which is the midpoint of the Reserve Bank of Australia’s target range (that is, the carbon price for the preceding year × 1.05 × 1.025, rounded to the nearest 5 cents).  [Part 4, clause 100(1)]

3.52              To provide liable entities with certainty over the level of the price ceiling, the Regulator will publish its exact value in advance of each compliance year.  [Part 4, clause 100(9)] This will allow liable entities to determine the maximum cost of compliance. 

Acquisition of fixed charge units

3.53              In fixed charge years, a liable entity may apply to the Regulator for an allocation of fixed charge carbon units for a particular compliance year from 1 April in that compliance year until 15 June.  [Part 4, clause 100(1)], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘acquire’] These carbon units are for a liable entity to meet their liability to surrender carbon units by 15 June (see Chapter 4).

3.54              A liable entity may also access fixed charge units for a fixed charge year from a date that its emissions number is published until 1 February of the following year (the final surrender date).  These carbon units are for a liable entity to meet its liability to surrender carbon units by 1 February.  [Part 4, clause 100(1)]

3.55              In the first three flexible charge years, a liable entity may apply to the Regulator for an allocation of fixed charge carbon units under the price ceiling for a particular compliance year from 1 July in that compliance year until 1 February in the following compliance year.  [Part 4, clause 100(1)]

3.56              The period in which fixed charge carbon units (including units issued under the price ceiling) can be issued may be extended in certain circumstances; for example, as a result of a fault or malfunction concerning a computer system under the control of the Regulator.  [Part 4, clause 100A]

Safeguards

3.57              There are safeguards to prevent liable entities from acquiring more fixed charge units than they need to meet their liabilities under the mechanism.  This is important because, as discussed below, fixed charge units are automatically surrendered (see Chapter 4).  [Part 4, clause 100(7)]

3.58              The number of fixed charge carbon units that can be acquired by a liable entity is limited as follows:

       in the first issue period in a given year (1 April to 15 June), the limit is the amount that must be surrendered at the provisional surrender date less the number of eligible emissions units that have already been surrendered; and [Part 4, clause 100(3)]

       in the second issue period (from the emissions number publication date to 1 February), the number of fixed charge units that can be acquired by a liable entity is limited to the emissions number for the liable entity minus the number of eligible emissions units that have already been surrendered.  This also applies to carbon units issued under price ceiling arrangements.  [Part 4, clause 100(4)], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘emissions number publication time’]

3.59              The Regulator must not issue a fixed charge carbon unit to a person unless the person pays the charge.  [Part 4, clause 99] This avoids the need for the Regulator to collect debts owing on fixed charge carbon units, and lowers the cost of administering the mechanism. 

Auctions

3.60              The Regulator may issue carbon units through auctions.  [Part 4, clause 111], [Part 4, clause 112], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘auction’]

3.61              The primary policy objectives of the auction are to promote allocative efficiency and efficient price discovery.  Auctions will also raise revenue that can be used for other policy objectives, such as providing assistance to households and businesses.

3.62              The detailed policies, procedures and rules for the conduct of auctions will be determined by the Minister in a legislative instrument.  [Part 4, clause 113], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘auction’] This will be a disallowable legislative instrument for the purposes of the LI Act and will be finalised following consultation.  The Regulator may conduct auctions even when a legislative instrument is not in force but it is intended that a legislative instrument be made.  [Part 4, clause 113(9)]

3.63              The instrument may deal with, but is not limited to, any or all of the following matters:

       the types of auction;

       the timing of auctions and advertising;

       participants and entry fees (provided such fees do not amount to taxation);

       proxy bidding and representatives of bidders;

       minimum number of units in bids;

       variation of bids;

       the total number of carbon units with a specific vintage year that may be auctioned;

       limits on the number of carbon units of a type that may be acquired;

       reserve prices for secondary market auctions of relinquished carbon units;

       deposits and refunds of deposits;

       guarantees for payments and securities that may be provided;

       the timing and method of payment; and

       penalties for defaulting purchasers and collateral matters.  [Part 4, clause 113(2), (3) and (4)]

3.64              In particular, the Regulator is able to have regard to the past behaviour of prospective participants in deciding whether they can participate in auctions.  [Part 4, clause 113(6)]

3.65              The Government has announced that there will be advance auctions of future vintage carbon units.  Advance auctions can assist the development of forward price signals and help promote business certainty about future carbon prices.

3.66              The Regulator must not issue a carbon unit as the result of an auction unless the person pays the charge for the issue of units to the Regulator on behalf of the Commonwealth.  [Part 4, clause 111(2)] This avoids the need for the Regulator to collect debts owing on units issued following an auction, and lowers the cost of administering the mechanism.

3.67              The amount of the charge payable for a carbon unit issued as the result of an auction must be an amount that the person bid in the course of an auction, which was then accepted by the Regulator in the course of the auction.  This approach to defining the charge payable allows for the prescription of forms of auction in which the clearing price is not necessarily the final price bid by the person or the final price bid in the auction.  [Part 4, clause 111(6)]

Advance auctions of carbon units

3.68              In fixed charge years, the Regulator may auction carbon units with vintage years that are flexible charge years.  The amount of carbon units that can be auctioned is limited to a maximum of 15 million carbon units for each vintage per year, where the auction occurs more than 6 months before the beginning of the relevant vintage year and there are no regulations in force declaring a carbon pollution cap and the carbon pollution cap number (see Chapter 2).  [Part 4, clause 101]

3.69              Fifteen million carbon units is equivalent to approximately 3 per cent of total Australian emissions in 2000, and so does not limit the Government’s ability to set pollution caps.  It is also greater than one sixteenth of the total amount of units that are expected to be auctioned in a particular vintage year. 

3.70              The pollution cap for a vintage year will be known with certainty no later than six months before the start of that year (either by being set in regulations or by the operation of a default cap). This means that the regulator will then be able to auction carbon units consistent with the pollution cap, so no other limit is required. 

3.71              The detailed auction schedule will be set out in the auction design instrument.  [Part 4, clause 113] This arrangement will allow for the auction of carbon units with a flexible year vintage during the fixed charge years in such a way that these auctions do not limit the ability to set pollution caps. 

Secondary auctions

3.72              The Regulator may auction carbon units which have been relinquished under Parts 10 and 11.  Auctions of these units can be combined with other auctions.  [Part 4, clause 112]

3.73              In certain situations where excess carbon units have been issued, a person may be required to relinquish carbon units (see Chapters 5 and 7).  These situations are:

       where a person has received excess carbon units for emissions-intensive trade-exposed activities that have ceased; and

       the issue of carbon units as a result of fraudulent conduct by the recipient. 

Benchmark average auction charge

3.74              The benchmark average auction charge is calculated and published by the Regulator as soon as practicable after the end of each financial year.  [Part 4, clause 114], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘benchmark average auction charge’] It is used to calculate:

       the administrative penalty for a failure to comply with relinquishment requirements; [Part 11, clause 212], [Part 11, clause 213]

       the unit shortfall charge in a flexible price year (as specified in the Charges bills, see Chapter 4); and

       the manufacture levy and import levy of synthetic greenhouse gases (as set out in the Ozone Protection and Synthetic Greenhouse Gas (Manufacture Levy) Amendment Bill 2011 and the Ozone Protection and Synthetic Greenhouse Gas (Import Levy) Amendment Bill 2011 (see the Explanatory Memorandum for the Consequential Amendments bill for an explanation of these bills)). 

3.75              In order for the benchmark average auction charge to be close to the level of the carbon price paid by most liable entities, it is the maximum of two numbers:

       the average auction charge for the whole financial year (calculated by dividing the auction proceeds by the number of units sold, including units sold with a future vintage); and

       the average auction charge for the final auction where the units auctioned have the same vintage as the year of auctioning (also calculated by dividing the auction proceeds by the number of units sold, including units sold with a future vintage).  [Part 4, clause 114], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘benchmark average auction charge’]

3.76              The auction reserve price will be prescribed in regulations.  [Part 4, clause 111(5)] The reason why the reserve price will be prescribed in regulations rather than in legislation is that detailed auctioning arrangements are dealt with in a legislative instrument, so there needs to be flexibility when determining reserve prices.  In 2015-16, 2016-17, and 2017-18, there will also be a minimum reserve price (see below).

Publication of auction results

3.77              The Regulator will publish and maintain a record of all auction results (see also Chapter 9).  This will include that date of each auction, the vintages of carbon units issued at the auction, the per unit charges for the carbon units that are auctioned, and the number of carbon units auctioned for a given per unit charge.  [Part 9, clause 195]

3.78              From 2015 onwards, the Regulator will publish the average auction charge for the 6 months leading up to the end of May, and the 6 months leading up to the end of November.  For the 6 months leading up to May 2015, this average will take into account all auctions (including advance auctions).  For every other 6 month period, this average will only take into account auctions of carbon units whose vintage is the same as the financial year in which the auction took place.  [Part 9, clause 196] Publication of price relevant information is discussed in more detail in Chapter 9.

Charges for the issue of units

3.79              If a charge for the issue of a unit is taxation within the meaning of section 55 of the Constitution, the charge is not imposed by the bill but by the relevant Charges bill (see the Explanatory Memorandum for the Charges bills).  [Part 4, clause 100(11)], [Part 4, clause 111(4)]

3.80              The Commonwealth does not consider that the charges for the auction of carbon units amount to taxation.  However, separate bills impose the charges so far as they are taxation to ensure that there can be no argument that there has not been compliance with section 55 of the Constitution.

3.81              If a charge is a tax, the Regulator must not exercise powers or functions in a way which would contravene the constitutional requirement that taxation must not be arbitrary.  [Part 4, clause 111(7)]

Price Floor

3.82              A price floor will apply for the first three years of the flexible charge period.  A price floor is a minimum carbon price.  The responsible Minister will request the Authority to review, by 30 June 2017, the role of the price floor beyond the first three years of the flexible price period.

3.83              The price floor will be implemented through a minimum auction reserve price and a fee on the surrender of international units.  If regulations establishing the fee on surrender of international units are not made or are disallowed there will be no price floor in operation.  [Part 4, clause 111(5)]

3.84              The level of the price floor, and the minimum auction reserve price, will be:

       $15 in 2015-16;

       $16 in 2016-17; and

       $17.05 in 2017-18. 

3.85              These prices increase by 4 per cent in real terms allowing for 2.5 per cent inflation per year, which is the midpoint of the Reserve Bank of Australia’s target range (that is, the carbon price for the preceding year × 1.04 × 1.025, rounded to the nearest 5 cents).  [Part 4, clause 111(5)]

3.86              For the first three flexible charge years, there will be a charge imposed on the surrender of eligible international units.  This charge is imposed by the Clean Energy (International Unit Surrender Charge) Bill 2011.  [Part 6, clause 124]

3.87              The surrender charge will be established through regulations and based on the difference between the estimated international price for a unit type and the price floor, such that:

       If the price for a type of eligible international unit is equal to or above the price floor, the charge will be equal to zero.

       If the price for a type of eligible international unit is below the price floor, the charge will be equal to the amount specified in regulations so that it is equal to the difference between the price floor and the estimated price for that type of unit.

3.88              If regulations setting a surrender charge for eligible international units are not in effect, then there will not be a minimum auction reserve price, but the Regulator may still choose to have an auction reserve price for reasons other than implementing a price floor.  [Part 4, clause 111(5)]

Free carbon units during the fixed charge period

3.89              Free carbon units may be allocated to liable entities under Parts 7 and 8 (see Chapters 5 and 6).  The rules for these free carbon units ensure the integrity of future pollution caps.  [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘free carbon unit’]

3.90              These free carbon units:

       can only be surrendered for their vintage year; [Part 6, clause 122(7)]

       must be cancelled by the Regulator if they have not been surrendered at the end of 1 February of the eligible financial year after their vintage year; [Part 4, clause 115], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘eligible financial year’]

       may, on request, be bought-back and cancelled by the Regulator during the period between 1 September of their vintage year and 1 February of the financial year following from their vintage year at the fixed charge for the relevant year discounted by a factor in the regulations; and [Part 4, clause 116]

       are cancelled if they are relinquished, rather than transferred to the Commonwealth relinquished units account.  [Part 11, clause 210(3)]

3.91              Some liable entities that receive free carbon units with fixed charge vintage years may not want to surrender these units against a liability for that vintage year. 

3.92              To ensure that persons who hold carbon units (which can include persons who are not liable entities under the mechanism) can sell these units when they do not wish to surrender them, the mechanism allows the Regulator to ‘buy-back’ these units.  [Part 4, clause 116(2)]

Example 3.4 Circumstances where a person may not want to surrender free carbon units

A person may receive units for the cost increase it faces from, for example:

       its use of electricity in an emissions-intensive trade-exposed activity; or

       from the cost increase it faces that is related to the upstream emissions from the extraction, processing and transportation of natural gas and its components used as feedstock in an emissions-intensive trade-exposed activity. 

The person may wish to sell these units to receive cash, which can then be used to offset the increase in monetary costs it faces due to its use of electricity or natural gas and its components as a feedstock, rather than hold these units for surrender. 

3.93              The buy-back facility will be open from 1 September of the vintage year of the carbon units until 1 February of the next calendar year.  It lets persons receive the corresponding level of the fixed charge for each free carbon unit he or she wants to sell back to the Regulator, discounted by a factor specified in the regulations.  [Part 4, clause 116(2)]

3.94              In certain circumstances, the Regulator may, by legislative instrument, grant an extension to the period in which the buy-back facility can be accessed.  This will be a disallowable legislative instrument for the purposes of the LI Act.  If such an extension is granted, the automatic cancellation of freely allocated units issued for fixed charge years would also be extended.  An extension may be granted, for example, because of a fault or malfunction concerning a computer system under the control of the Regulator.  [Part 4, clause 116A]

3.95              For buy-backs occurring in the period before 15 June of the relevant eligible financial year, the Government proposes that the price paid by the Regulator for these carbon units will be discounted to 15 June of the relevant eligible financial year by the latest Reserve Bank of Australia index of the BBB corporate bond rate, so that the buy-back price reflects the present market value of the carbon unit.  From 15 June onwards the price paid will be equal to the fixed charge carbon units of that vintage.  [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘eligible financial year’]

3.96              If the Regulator receives a request to buy-back free carbon units, then it must, within a time period specified by the Regulations, cancel the units and remove the entries for those units from the Registry account of the liable entity that held them and, as soon as practicable after that day, pay the buy-back amount to the person and set out a record of that cancellation.  [Part 4, clause 116(3) and (4)]

3.97              There will be a standing appropriation for the Regulator for the purpose of making payments for the buy-back of free carbon units.  [Part 4, clause 116(5)] The scope of this standing appropriation is limited in two ways:

       firstly, the amount of the buy-back facility cannot exceed the maximum number of units that can be issued under Parts 7 and 8 for fixed charge years (see Chapters 5 and 6) for which the price is fixed in each year; and

       secondly, it is limited to the fixed charge years (that is from 1 July 2012 to 30 June 2015), and does not carry on indefinitely.

Linking to international markets

3.98              The mechanism is linked to international emissions trading markets by allowing liable entities to surrender eligible international emissions units from the commencement of the flexible price period.  These links are, however, subject to certain conditions:

       eligible international emissions units cannot be surrendered during the fixed charge period; [Part 6, clause 122(8)]

       a liable entity may surrender eligible international emissions units to meet its surrender obligations under the mechanism in the flexible charge period, subject to certain quantitative and qualitative restrictions; and [Part 6, clause 133(7)], [Part 6, clause 123]

       export of carbon units will not be allowed in the fixed price period, nor, generally, in the first three years of the flexible price period (that is, not prior to 1 July 2018).  [Part 4, clause 108(3)] Exports of carbon units may however be allowed in the period from 1 July 2015 where a bilateral linking agreement with another country is in place.  [Part 4, clause 108(3)]

Quantitative restriction on the use of international units

3.99              In the flexible charge period, until 2020, liable entities must meet at least 50 per cent of their annual liability with domestic carbon units.  During this period, if a liable entity surrenders a number of eligible international emissions units that exceeds 50 per cent of its emissions number, then the excess does not count toward the calculation of the emissions number for that financial year.  Instead, the excess counts toward the calculation of the emissions number for the subsequent financial year.  [Part 6, clause 133(7)], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘eligible international emissions unit’]

Initial list of eligible international emissions units

3.100          A unit is an ‘eligible international emissions unit’ if it is defined to be such under section 4 of the ANREU Act.  [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘eligible international emissions unit’] The initial list of eligible international emissions units includes currently traded Kyoto units which are likely to continue to be traded through to 2015. 

3.101          The ANREU Act currently defines eligible international emissions units to include:

       certified emission reductions (CERs), other than long-term or temporary CERs;

       emission reduction units (ERUs);

       removal units (RMUs);

       any further prescribed units issued in accordance with the Kyoto rules; and [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘Kyoto rules’]

       any other international unit (which is prescribed in regulations).

Adding to the list of eligible international units

3.102          Section 4 of the ANREU Act provides for addition of further credible units from bilateral and/or other international agreements, as well as any further Kyoto units (if agreed internationally).  [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘eligible international emissions unit’] The Government may allow other international units by regulation where:

       the addition does not compromise the environmental integrity of the mechanism;

       the addition is consistent with the objective of the mechanism and with Australia’s international objectives; and

       there has been consultation with stakeholders, and analysis of the expected impact on the carbon unit price, by the Authority, and advance notification to the market by the Government.

3.103          The Government has announced that the types of units accepted and qualitative restrictions on use imposed by the European Union Emissions Trading Scheme and the New Zealand Emissions Trading Scheme will be taken into account when determining what international units may be accepted for compliance under the mechanism (as the considerations of these jurisdictions can be drawn upon to maintain the integrity of the mechanism).

Qualitative restrictions on the use of international units

3.104          The bill provides a power for the Government to disallow, by regulation, eligibility of certain international units to ensure that only credible international emissions units are used for compliance, supporting the environmental integrity of Australia’s pollution reduction efforts.  [Part 6, clause 123], [Part 6, clause 122(9)]  The Authority will play a key advisory role on the integrity of international units and recommend which units should be accepted and which should be prohibited.

3.105          The bill sets out key criteria that the Minister may consider concerning prohibiting the surrender of eligible international units.  These include:

       Australia’s international objectives and obligations (to ensure that credits accepted can be counted towards international commitments);

       the environmental integrity of the mechanism;

       the expert recommendations of the Authority;

       whether the units are accepted by either the European Union or New Zealand emissions trading schemes; and

       such other matters (if any) as the Minister considers relevant.  [Part 6, clause 123(2)], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘associated provisions’], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘international climate change agreement’]

3.106          The concept of ‘environmental integrity’ is not specifically defined in the bill.  However, the objects of the bill are relevant to this concept, in that they explain the purpose of the mechanism and define its environmental objectives.  International units derived from poorly designed emissions trading schemes may undermine the mechanism’s ability to achieve these objectives. 

3.107          Including these provisions is consistent with the policy that a type of eligible international emissions unit can be disallowed for surrender at any time to ensure the environmental integrity of the mechanism and consistency with Australia’s international objectives and obligations.  However, the regulation-making power is restricted in that if an eligible international emissions unit is disallowed, liable entities holding such units in their Registry accounts will be able to surrender those units for the compliance year in which the unit was disallowed, but not subsequently.  [Part 6, clause 123(3)], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘eligible international emissions unit’]

3.108          In addition to the exclusion of time limited CERs (that is, long term or temporary CERs), the Government has already announced[29] that CERs and ERUs if they arise from:

       nuclear projects;

       the destruction of trifluoromethane;

       the destruction of nitrous oxide from adipic acid plants; and

       large-scale hydro-electric projects not consistent with criteria adopted by the EU (based on the World Commission on Dams guidelines).

Surrender charge

3.109          For the first three flexible charge years, there will be a charge potentially imposed on the surrender of eligible international units.  This charge is imposed by the Clean Energy (International Unit Surrender Charge) Bill 2011 where if observed international unit prices fall below the specified price for the relevant year a charge will be imposed on users of international units, representing the difference between the observed price and the floor price.  (See also the section headed ‘Price Floor’.)  [Part 6, clause 124]

Linking to other schemes

3.110          The Government has stated that linking with other credible trading schemes, including the New Zealand and European Union schemes, is in Australia’s national interest.  The ability to prescribe other additional units could be used to make other schemes’ units eligible, should linking arrangements be agreed.  Provision exists for recognising such agreements through prescribing foreign registries by regulation.  This is done under the ANREU Act (as amended by the Consequential Amendments bill), which defines ‘foreign registry’.

3.111          The Government will only consider future bilateral links with schemes that are of a suitable standard, based on a range of criteria including:

       an internationally acceptable (or, where applicable, a mutually acceptable) level of mitigation commitment;

       adequate and comparable monitoring, reporting, verification, compliance and enforcement mechanisms; and

       compatability in design and market rules.

 


Outline of chapter

4.1                  Chapter 4 explains how a liable entity determines its liability for emissions under the mechanism and the process by which it meets its liabilities through the payment and surrender process.  This chapter covers Parts 5, 6 and 11. 

Context

4.2                  The mechanism imposes a liability on a liable entity for the emissions or potential emissions for which they are responsible. 

4.3                  Liable entities must report emissions or potential emissions under the NGER Act, which is to be amended by the Consequential Amendments bill (these changes are explained in a separate Explanatory Memorandum for that bill).

4.4                  The mechanism creates a system for:

       assessing liability for emissions, which is how a liable entity knows whether it is liable for emissions;

       meeting liability for emissions through payment and surrender processes for eligible emissions units, which cover the fixed charge and the flexible charge periods of the mechanism; and

       in certain circumstances, relinquishing units, which is where units are returned to the Commonwealth without them being surrendered.

4.5                  The surrender of eligible emissions units is relevant to unit banking (where carbon units can be surrendered in years that are later than their vintage year); unit borrowing; international linking; linking with the CFI; and the price floor.

4.6                  If a liable entity does not meet its emissions obligations through the surrender of eligible emissions units, then it will be subject to a unit shortfall charge for those units it has not surrendered.  This charge is set at 130 per cent of the fixed charge for the relevant fixed charge year.  Once the mechanism moves to the flexible charge phase, the unit shortfall charge will be up to 200 per cent of the benchmark average auction price for the relevant period.  The amount of the charge is designed to provide a clear incentive to liable entities to surrender units, and thereby avoid the need to pay any charge.

4.7                  Unit shortfall charges are imposed through the Charges bills, so as to ensure compliance with the requirements of section 55 of the Constitution.

4.8                  Quantitative and qualitative restrictions are also imposed on the surrender of eligible international emissions units which help safeguard the environmental integrity of Australia’s pollution reduction efforts. (Chapter 3 sets out in detail the operation of these restrictions.)

Summary

Emissions numbers

4.9                  Part 5 deals with emissions numbers, the way in which they are determined and what happens if a liable entity provides an incorrect emissions number which the Regulator considers to be incorrect or does not provide one at all.

Surrender of eligible emissions units

4.10              Part 6, Division 2 sets out the process by which eligible emissions units are surrendered, restrictions on surrender and the charge applicable to surrendering eligible international units.

Unit shortfalls

4.11              Part 6, Division 3 deals with the way in which liable entities meet their liabilities for unit shortfalls under the mechanism.  Subdivision A sets out the payment and surrender process in fixed charge years, including the provisional payment or surrender point on 15 June of each eligible fixed charge year.  Subdivision B sets out the payment and surrender process in flexible charge years.

Unit shortfall charges

4.12              Part 6, Division 4 deals with the way in which liable entities pay units shortfall charges, including provisions about what happens when payments are made late or not at all.  Unit shortfall charges are also addressed in the Charges bills (see the separate Explanatory Memorandum for an explanation of these bills).

4.13              Part 6, Division 5 deals with the way in which the Regulator assesses unit shortfalls and unit shortfall charges.

Extension of surrender deadline

4.14              Part 6, Division 6 provides for the extension of the surrender deadline in certain circumstances. 

Relinquishment of carbon units

4.15              Part 11 deals with the process by which carbon units may be relinquished.  Relinquishment may occur voluntarily or as a result of a court order to relinquish units. 

Detailed explanation of new law

Emissions number

4.16              Liability will be based on the emissions number which liable entities must include in their report to the Regulator in accordance with new section 22A of the NGER Act (see Schedule 1, Part 2, item 367 of the Consequential Amendments bill).  A person’s emissions number for an eligible financial year is defined to be the sum of the person’s Provisional Emissions Number (PENs) for the eligible financial year.  [Part 4, clause 117], [Part 4, clause 118], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘emissions number’]

4.17              A PEN represents the emissions which give rise to liability under the mechanism.  Part 3 of the bill describes the situations which result in a PEN.  The person with operational control of a facility, or the holder of an LTC or a designated JV concerning a facility, may have a PEN calculated by reference to the emission of greenhouse gases from that facility during a financial year (Part 3, Division 2).  Natural gas suppliers and others may have PENs calculated by reference to potential emissions embodied in natural gas supplied during a financial year (Part 3, Division 3).  PENs are discussed in Chapter 1 of this Explanatory Memorandum.


 

Example 4.1 Calculation of emissions number

In 2014-15, Elhu Ltd has operational control over three facilities. 

The NSW Facility emits less than 25,000 tonnes of CO2-e per annum and the facility is therefore not covered by the mechanism. 

The Queensland Facility emits 530,000 tonnes of CO2-e per annum.

The Victorian Facility emits 220,000 tonnes of CO2-e per annum. 

Elhu Ltd has PENs of 530,000 and 220,000, and an emissions number of 750,000. 

Example 4.2 Calculation of emissions number

WilkCo is a natural gas supplier that supplies natural gas with a CO2-e of 30,000 tonnes.  It supplies the gas to customers, none of which quote an obligation transfer number. 

WilkCo has a PEN of 30,000.  If it does not engage in any other activity which gives it a PEN, its emissions number is 30,000. 

Assessment of a liable entity’s liability for emissions

4.18              There are two circumstances in which the Regulator may make an assessment of the person’s emissions number for a financial year and provide the person with written notice of it:

       when a liable entity has provided a report under new section 22A of the NGER Act by 31 October but the Regulator has reasonable grounds to believe that the number specified in the report as the person’s emissions number is incorrect; [Part 5, clause 119]

       where no such report has been provided by 31 October and the Regulator has reasonable grounds to believe that the person is a liable entity for the financial year.  [Part 5, clause 120]

4.19              An assessment may be done by the Regulator either on the application of the person to whom the assessment relates, or on the Regulator’s own initiative.  Should the Regulator refuse to make an assessment or refuse to amend the assessment, then it must give notice in writing to the person.  [Part 5, clause 119(5) and (7)], [Part 5, clause 120(5) and (7)]

4.20              If an assessment is made before 1 February following the relevant eligible financial year, it will be accompanied by a statement explaining that the person may need to acquire and surrender eligible emissions units to avoid being liable for a unit shortfall charge and late payment penalty.  If an assessment is made after 1 February following the relevant eligible financial year, it will be accompanied by a statement explaining that the person may be liable to pay a unit shortfall charge and late payment penalty.  [Part 5, clause 119(3)], [Part 5, clause 120(3)]

4.21              Each of these assessments may be amended by the Regulator at any time.  If this is done, then written notice of it must be provided.  [Part 5, clause 119(4) and (6)], [Part 5, clause 120(4) and (6)]

4.22              The original and any amended assessments are advisory in nature.  [Part 5, clause 119(9)], [Part 5, clause 120(9)] In other words, the legal liability is not set by the assessment.  The number of units that need to be surrendered to avoid a unit shortfall charge depends on the emissions number (emissions measured and attributable to the liable entity in accordance with the law), not on any action taken by the Regulator.

Meeting liabilities under the mechanism

4.23              Liable entities meet their liabilities under the mechanism by either surrendering units or paying a shortfall charge.  This process differs between the fixed charge years and flexible charge years (see Diagrams 4.1 and 4.2).  [Part 6, clause 121]


Diagram 4.1 Payment and surrender process in fixed charge years


Diagram 4.2 Payment and surrender process in flexible charge years

Surrender: unit shortfall and excess surrender

4.24              In each financial year, each liable entity must surrender the number of eligible emissions units equal to its emissions number to avoid a unit shortfall.  [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘unit shortfall’] In general, liable entities must surrender eligible emissions units by 1 February of the following financial year in order to avoid having a unit shortfall.  If the liable entity has a unit shortfall, it will be required to pay a charge.  The mechanism is designed so that paying a charge would be more expensive than surrendering units.

The provisional surrender obligation

4.25              In the fixed charge period, most liable entities must surrender sufficient units by 15 June to account for 75 per cent of the entity's estimated emissions for the current financial year.  If a liable entity does not meet its provisional surrender obligation, it will have a provisional unit shortfall and be required to pay a unit shortfall charge.  [Part 6, clause 125], [Part 6, clause 134]

4.26              All liable entities will be required to make a provisional surrender, with the exception that a provisional surrender will not be required concerning direct emissions from facilities that:

       were not required to provide a report under the NGER Act for the previous financial year (noting that this exception does not apply to natural gas suppliers, which will be required to make a progressive payment for supplies of natural gas);

       had covered emissions of less than 35,000 tonnes in the previous year; or

       are reasonably expected to have covered emissions of less than 35,000 tonnes in the current financial year. 

4.27              The emissions from these facilities will be excluded from the calculation of interim emissions numbers.  [Part 6, clause 127]

4.28              Liable entities will then surrender the rest of the eligible emissions units by 1 February of the following year, in order to avoid a shortfall (the ‘true-up’).  Where liable entities were not required to make a provisional surrender concerning a facility they will be required to surrender units for the total emissions from that facility by 1 February.  [Part 6, clause 128]

4.29              The estimated emissions number used for the provisional surrender obligation is known as the ‘interim emissions number’.  [Part 6, clause 126], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘interim emissions number’] Liable entities that are required to make a provisional surrender will be required to submit a report to the Regulator by 15 June providing interim emission numbers for each facility, or supplies of natural gas, for which they are liable to make a progressive payment, under new section 22AA of the NGER Act (see Consequential Amendments bill, Schedule 1, Part 2, item 367). 

4.30              Entities with liabilities for direct emissions from facilities under Part 2, Division 3 will have the option of estimating their interim emissions numbers based on the reported PEN of each facility in the previous year’s NGER report, or choosing to provide a reasonable alternative estimate for one or more facilities.  [Part 6, clause 126] The interim emissions number concerning those facilities will be the total of the PENs multiplied by 0.75.

4.31              If a liable entity provides an estimate that is not based on the previous year’s NGERS report, then that estimate will be subject to an estimation error calculation that may give rise to a unit shortfall, as discussed below.

4.32              The use of the previous year’s report for a facility under the NGER Act is intended to be simple and minimise administrative and compliance costs associated with the progressive obligation.  However, in some cases use of the previous year's emissions as an estimate for the current year may result in an overestimate of the progressive obligation (if emissions have decreased from the previous year).  In this case the liable entity will be able to choose to use an alternative estimate of emissions.

4.33              Natural gas suppliers will not have the option of using a previous year’s NGERS report but will instead be required to provide an estimate of actual emissions for the first three quarters of the financial year.  As these entities do not currently report under the NGER Act, natural gas suppliers will not have a report on which to base an estimate in the first year of the scheme.  In addition, these entities are expected to have well-developed reporting systems for the purposes of billing and accordingly have capacity to estimate emissions in the current year. 

4.34              The provisional surrender obligation during the fixed charge period is similar to the approach taken to payments for some forms of taxation, such as company tax and the GST.  With a provisional surrender of 75 per cent, it is expected that the cash flow impact on business should be minimal as they should receive revenue from production before they need to meet their surrender obligation.

Example 4.3 The provisional surrender obligation

A liable entity submits a report of its interim emissions numbers under section 22AA of the NGER Act for the financial year 2013-14. 

The report estimates the entity’s PEN based on the previous year’s reported emissions for 2012-13 of 100,000. 

By 15 June 2014, the liable entity will be required to surrender 75,000 units (75 per cent of its PEN for 2012-13) in order to discharge its provisional surrender obligation.  In other words, the liable entity’s interim emissions number for 2013-14 is 75,000.

Alternatively, the liable entity may elect to provide an alternative estimate of emissions from a facility.  If the liable entity does so and estimates that its emissions number for 2013-14 will be 80,000, the liable entity will be required to surrender 60,000 units in order to discharge its provisional surrender obligation.

Unit shortfalls for fixed charge years

4.35              Because of provisional surrender, unit shortfall works slightly differently in fixed charge years compared to flexible charge years.

4.36              For fixed charge years, there will be a unit shortfall calculated in accordance with the obligation to surrender permits by 15 June during the compliance year – this is known as the ‘provisional unit shortfall’.  The provisional unit shortfall is equal to the total interim emissions numbers minus the number of eligible emissions units surrendered for the liable entity, rounded to the nearest whole number.  If this number is zero, there is no unit shortfall; if this number is negative, the entity has a ‘provisional surplus surrender number’ which is positive and equal to this number; if this number is positive, the entity has a unit shortfall, which is the provisional unit shortfall.  [Part 6, clause 125]

4.37              During the fixed charge period, there will also be a unit shortfall calculated in accordance with the obligation to surrender permits by 1 February following the compliance year.  This is known as the ‘final unit shortfall’.  The final unit shortfall for a liable entity is calculated by starting with the liable entity’s emissions number and then subtracting:

       the number of eligible emissions units surrendered after 15 June and before 1 February;

       the number of units that needed to be surrendered to avoid having a provisional unit shortfall (in other words, to comply with the provisional surrender obligation); and

       the surplus and estimation error adjustment.  [Part 6, clause 128]

4.38              If the final unit shortfall is calculated to be zero, the liable entity does not have a shortfall; if it is calculated to be negative, the entity has a ‘final surplus surrender number’, which is positive and equal in magnitude to the final unit shortfall; if the final unit shortfall is calculated to be positive, the liable entity has a final unit shortfall for the eligible financial year.  [Part 6, clause 128]

4.39              If a liable entity has a positive final surplus surrender number corresponding to a fixed charge year, the liable entity will be refunded in cash.  The refund is equal to the final surplus surrender number multiplied by the level of the fixed charge for that year.  The Consolidated Revenue Fund is appropriated for the purpose of making these refunds.  [Part 6, clause 132]

4.40              For the provisional surrender, it is possible for a liable entity to provide its own estimate of emissions.  [Part 6, clause 126] If the estimate is incorrect, then there may be an estimation error unit shortfall on which unit shortfall charge will be payable.  The estimation error for each facility will be equal to the difference between the estimated facility emissions (which was 75 per cent of estimated emissions for the year) and 75 per cent of the actual emissions from the facility for that year.  [Part 6, clause 129], [Part 6, clause 134]

4.41              If a liable entity relies on its estimated emissions from the NGERS Report and surrenders sufficient units to discharge this liability but the estimated emissions do not represent the actual emissions for the current compliance year, then that entity does not have a unit shortfall arising from the discrepancy.

4.42              The purpose of the estimation error shortfall is to provide a strong incentive for entities that choose to provide an alternative estimate of emissions to provide an accurate estimate.  However, the amount of an estimation error is netted off against any surplus of units acquitted in the provisional surrender (that is, the surplus can be used to reduce or eliminate the estimation error) via the calculation of the surplus and estimation error adjustment.  This netting off is carried out as it could be unfair to impose a 130 per cent charge for an estimation error where the liable entity had in total surrendered more than 75 per cent of actual emissions for the year as a progressive payment.  [Part 6, clause 128], [Part 6, clause 131]

4.43              The Regulator has power to remit some or all of a unit shortfall charge arising out of an estimation error (but not any other form of shortfall charge).  [Part 6, clause 130] This allows the Regulator to respond to particular circumstances where it would be unfair or unreasonable to impose the estimation error unit shortfall charge.  However, when considering whether to remit the charge the Regulator must have regard to:

       whether the person took reasonable steps to avoid having the unit shortfall;

       the extent to which the unit shortfall is attributable to an increase in emissions that could not reasonably have been foreseen by the person when the person gave the Regulator an estimate under sub-clause 126(3);

       whether the person has had a unit shortfall under clause 129 for a previous eligible financial year;

        such other matters (if any) as the Regulator considers relevant. 

Example 4.4 Unit shortfall and the provisional surrender obligation

PK Limited has provided an alternative estimate of its emissions number for the 2012-13 financial year of 80,000. 

PK Limited must surrender 60,000 units by 15 June 2014 to avoid a provisional unit shortfall.  The liable entity surrenders the required 60,000 units on 15 June, and therefore has no provisional unit shortfall or surplus. 

When PK Limited submits its final emissions report for the year to the Regulator, its actual emissions number reported for the financial year 2012-13 is 100,000.

This means that PK Limited’s estimation error unit shortfall will be 15,000 (the difference between the 75 per cent of its actual emissions number (75,000) and the 60,000 units surrendered to meet the provisional surrender obligation). 

PK Limited will be required to surrender a further 25,000 units to meet its final surrender obligation, and will have an estimation error shortfall of 15,000 that will give rise to a shortfall charge of 1.3 times the shortfall multiplied by the fixed charge for that year.

Unit shortfalls for flexible charge years

4.44              During the flexible charge period, the unit shortfall corresponds to the obligation to surrender permits by 1 February.  The unit shortfall is calculated by taking the liable entity's emissions number, subtracting the number of units surrendered before 1 February, and subtracting the final surplus surrender number.  If the unit shortfall is zero, the liable entity has no unit shortfall; if the unit shortfall is positive, the liable entity has a unit shortfall; if the unit shortfall is negative, the liable entity has a surplus surrender number equal in magnitude to the unit shortfall.  [Part 6, clause 133]

Unit shortfall charges

4.45              When a liable entity has a unit shortfall, a unit shortfall charge is imposed, and is payable five business days after the surrender date.  [Part 6, clause 134], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘business day’], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘unit shortfall charge’] The amount of unit shortfall charge is specified by clause 9 of the Clean Energy (Charges—Customs) Bill 2011 (so far as the charge is a duty of customs), clause 9 of the Clean Energy (Charges—Excise) Bill 2011 (so far as the charge is a duty of excise) or clause 8 of the Clean Energy (Unit Shortfall Charge—General) Bill 2011 (so far as the charge is not a duty of customs or excise).  [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘unit shortfall charge’]

4.46              For the fixed charge period, the amount charged for each unit in the shortfall is 130 per cent of the relevant fixed charge issue charge under clause 100(1). 

4.47              For the flexible charge period, the amount charged for each unit in the shortfall is 200 per cent of the benchmark average auction charge for the previous financial year.  The charge can also be set in regulations, but cannot be lower than 130 per cent, or exceed 200 per cent, of the benchmark average auction charge for the previous financial year (see clause 9(3) and (4) of the Clean Energy (Charges—Customs) Bill 2011, clause 9(3) and (4) of the Clean Energy (Charges—Excise) Bill 2011 or clause 8(3) and (4) of the Clean Energy (Unit Shortfall Charge—General) Bill 2011).

4.48              After the time the unit shortfall charge becomes payable, a late payment penalty will accrue at a rate of 20 per cent per annum (or a lower rate if prescribed in regulations).  The Regulator may remit the late payment penalty in whole or part.  [Part 6, clause 135]

4.49              The unit shortfall charge and the late payment penalty are debts due to the Commonwealth which can be recovered by the Regulator in a court with the relevant jurisdiction.  [Part 6, clause 136]

4.50              Amounts of a kind specified in regulations and due from the Commonwealth may be set off against the amount due to the Commonwealth arising from the unit shortfall charge or late payment penalty.  [Part 6, clause 137]

4.51              Overpayments of the unit shortfall charge or late payment penalty can be refunded.  [Part 6, clause 140]

4.52              Where liability has been transferred to another member of a corporate group under an Liability Transfer Certificate (LTC), the controlling corporation which consented to the transfer is taken to have guaranteed the payment of the unit shortfall charge and late payment penalty.  [Part 6, clause 138] 

Remission of unit shortfall charge – voluntary disclosure of error

4.53              The Regulator may remit part of a unit shortfall charge if the liable entity voluntarily discloses to the Regulator that its reported emissions number was underestimated.  [Part 6 clause 134A] For the Regulator to consider any remittal, the disclosure must:

       be made after 1 February next following the relevant eligible financial year; and

       be made before any relevant investigative action takes place. 

4.54              The Regulator cannot remit the unit shortfall charge by more than an amount that would result in the remaining charge being less than:

       for a fixed charge year, the number of units in the unit shortfall multiplied by the fixed charge for that year; or

       for a flexible charge year, the number of units in the unit shortfall multiplied the benchmark average auction charge for the previous financial year.  [Part 6 clause 134A(4)]

Assessment of unit shortfall and unit shortfall charge

4.55              The Regulator may make an assessment of a liable entity's unit shortfall and unit shortfall charge for a financial year and provide the entity with written notice of its assessment.  The Regulator may rely on a report provided under the NGER Act in making the assessment.  [Part 6, clause 141(2) and (5)]

4.56              The assessment may be amended by the Regulator at any time either on the application of the person to whom the assessment relates or the Regulator’s own initiative.  If this is done, then written notice of it must be provided.  [Part 6, clause 141(3) and (4)]

4.57              The original and any amended assessments are advisory in nature.  [Part 6, clause 141(9)] In other words, the legal liability is not set by the assessment.  Calculation of a unit shortfall and unit shortfall charge depends on the operation of the law (the bill and related legislation), not on any action taken by the Regulator.

Surrender of units

Which units are eligible emissions units

4.58              Only ‘eligible emissions units’ can be used for surrender.  [Part 6, clause 122(1)] This phrase is defined to mean carbon units, eligible international emissions units and eligible Australian Carbon Credit Units (ACCUs).  [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘eligible emissions unit’], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘eligible international emissions unit’] ‘Eligible international emissions units’ is defined to have the same meaning as in section 4 of the Australian National Registry of Emissions Units Act 2011 (ANREU Act) (see further below).  [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘eligible international emissions unit’]

Limits on surrender

4.59              In any financial year, units can be surrendered only for that financial year or an earlier financial year.  [Part 6, clause 122(3)]

4.60              Carbon units of the current, later or the immediately preceding vintage years may be surrendered.  [Part 6, clause 122(4)] This in effect allows for ‘banking’ of units. 

4.61              In the fixed charge period, a carbon unit cannot be surrendered unless it has a vintage year of that financial year.  [Part 6, clause 122(6)]

4.62              A carbon unit with a vintage year that is a fixed charge year, which was issued in accordance with Parts 7 or 8, can only be surrendered with respect to that year (see Chapters 5 and 6).  [Part 6, clause 122(7)]

Borrowing limit for flexible charge years

4.63              There is a limit on the number of ‘borrowed’ units (that is, units of the next vintage year) which can be used for surrender.  If surrendered carbon units representing more than 5 per cent of the emissions number are ‘borrowed’, then the excess number of units over the 5 per cent is not regarded as surrendered for the relevant financial year when calculating the unit shortfall and is instead treated as surrendered at the next surrender date.  [Part 6, clause 133(6)]

4.64              In addition, ‘borrowed’ units can only be surrendered within a specified period when the entity’s emissions number is known.  [Part 6, clause 122(5)]

Example 4.5 Calculation of shortfall

On 31 October 2018, PN Corp submits its report under the NGER Act for the financial year 2017-18.  The report indicates that PN Corp’s emissions number is 100,000.  On 15 December 2018, PN Corp transmits a notice to the Regulator specifying the surrender of the following units for the financial year 2017-18:

Vintage of units

Number of units

2015-16

10,000

2016-17

10,000

2017-18

70,000

2018-19

10,000

Total

100,000

The surrender of units with vintages belonging to the current year and previous financial years will be accepted.  However, only 5 per cent of 100,000 units, or 5,000 units, with a 2018-19 vintage may be surrendered for the year 2017-18.  PN Corp will therefore have a unit shortfall of 5,000 for the financial year 2017-18.

Limits on linking with the CFI

4.65              During the fixed charge period, liable entities may surrender eligible ACCUs totalling no more than 5 per cent of their obligation.  There are provisions that ensure that if a liable entity surrenders ACCUs that are in excess of 5 per cent of the liable entity's emissions number or interim emissions number, the excess does not contribute to addressing any unit shortfall.  Excess ACCUs that are surrendered before 30 June are treated as if they are surrendered as part of the 'true up' before 1 February of the following year.  Excess ACCUs that are surrendered after 15 June and before 1 February are treated as if they are surrendered in the corresponding period of the next financial year.  [Part 6, clause 125(7)], [Part 6, clause 128(7)-(9)]

4.66              In the flexible charge period, there will be no limit on the surrender of ACCUs.

Quantitative restrictions on eligible international emissions units

4.67              In the flexible charge period, until 2020, liable entities must meet at least 50 per cent of their annual liability with domestic carbon units.  Chapter 3 sets out in more detail the operation of the quantitative restriction.  [Part 6, clause 133(7)], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘eligible international emissions unit’]

Qualitative restrictions on eligible international emissions units

4.68              Eligible international units cannot be surrendered in the fixed charge period as the fixed charge period is intended to provide certainty over the price for carbon units over the period.  [Part 6, clause 122(8)]  During the flexible price period such units can be surrendered subject to any restrictions.  Any restrictions placed on the acceptance of international units will be to ensure the stability and ongoing credibility of the mechanism, and consistency with Australia’s international objectives and obligations.  Chapter 3 sets out in detail the operation of qualitative restrictions on eligible international emissions units.

How eligible emissions units are surrendered

4.69              A person may surrender eligible emissions units by electronic notice transmitted to the Regulator.  [Part 6, clause 122(1)]

4.70              What constitutes an ‘electronic notice transmitted to the Regulator’ is described in clause 7.  [Part 1, clause 7], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘electronic notice transmitted to the Regulator’] This allows the Regulator to require the use of particular information technology requirements.  [Part 1, clause 8]

4.71              The notice must specify the eligible emissions units being surrendered, the financial year to which the surrender relates and the person’s relevant account number.  [Part 6, clause 122(2)], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘account number’]

When eligible emissions units must be surrendered

4.72              As indicated above, eligible emissions units must be surrendered by 15 June or 1 February.  However, to provide for the remote possibility that entities cannot gain computer access to the Regulator in the period shortly before the deadline, the Regulator is empowered to extend the deadline by legislative instrument.  If an extension is granted, the automatic cancellation of freely allocated units issued for fixed charge years would also be extended.  [Part 6, clause 142]

What happens when a unit is surrendered

4.73              When a carbon unit is surrendered, it is cancelled and the Regulator must remove the entry for the unit from the Registry account of the person who has surrendered it.  [Part 6, clause 122(10)]

4.74              When an eligible ACCU is surrendered, it is cancelled and the Regulator must remove the entry for the unit from the Registry account of the person who has surrendered it.  [Part 6, clause 122(12)]

4.75              When an eligible ACCU is surrendered, it is cancelled and the Regulator must remove the entry for the unit from the Registry account of the person who has surrendered it.  [Part 6, clause 122(12)]

4.76              However, different processes are required concerning eligible international emissions units.  When an eligible international emissions unit is surrendered, the Regulator must remove the unit from the Registry account of the person who has surrendered it.  In addition:

       If any other international emissions unit is surrendered, then the action required of the Regulator will be specified in the regulations.  [Part 6, clause 122(11)]  It is necessary to provide that this action will be specified in the regulations because the concept of an ‘eligible international emissions unit’ provides for units issued under future international agreements and units issued outside Australia under a law of a foreign country.  [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘eligible international emissions unit’], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘foreign country’], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘prescribed international unit’], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘international agreement’] This provision therefore seeks to provide for future recognition of new and additional units without the need to amend the Act.

Surrender charge for eligible international units

4.77              During the first three years of the flexible charge period, there will be a price floor – a minimum carbon price.  The price floor will be implemented through a minimum reserve auction price and a surrender charge for international units.  [Part 6, clause 124] The price floor is described in more detail in Chapter 3.

Relinquishment

When is relinquishment required?

4.78              The situations in which relinquishment of carbon units can be required are discussed in Chapters 5 and 7.  In brief, persons will be required to relinquish units in the following situations:

       in the Jobs and Competitiveness Program, where, for example, units are provided at or before the beginning of each financial year but planned production ceases during a year.  Relinquishment prevents windfall gains from units associated with production that does not take place and reductions in the supply of units that would otherwise be available for auction (see Chapter 5); [Part 7, clause 146], [Part 11, clause 211]

       where a court has ordered relinquishment following conviction under specified provisions of the Criminal Code, including those concerning false or misleading statements in information provided to the Regulator.  In this case, relinquishment is required because the units would not have been issued if fraudulent conduct had not occurred (see Chapter 7).  [See Part 10, clause 208(2)]

How carbon units are relinquished

4.79                  A person who holds carbon units can relinquish them by electronic notice transmitted to the Regulator.  The notice must specify, among other things, the reason for relinquishment.  [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘relinquish’], [Part 11, clause 210(1) and (2)]

What happens to relinquished units

4.80              For a carbon unit for a fixed charge year, if it is relinquished, then it is cancelled and the Regulator must remove it from its owner’s Registry account.  [Part 11, clause 210(3)]

4.81              For a carbon unit for a flexible charge year, if it is relinquished, then it is transferred to the Commonwealth relinquished units account (which is the Commonwealth Registry account designated for this purpose) and property is transferred to the Commonwealth.  [Part 11, clause 210(4)], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘Commonwealth relinquished units account’], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘Commonwealth Registry account’] The Regulator may auction the units (see Chapter 3).  [Part 4, clause 112]

Failure to comply with relinquishment requirements

4.82              The consequences of a failure to comply with a relinquishment requirement are comparable to the consequences of a unit shortfall described above.  The most significant difference is that the liable entity pays a penalty rather than a charge and that the penalty is calculated at double the unit charge (subject to regulations to the contrary in a flexible period year).  [Part 11, clause 212], [Part 11, clause 213], [Part 11, clause 214], [Part 11, clause 215], [Part 11, clause 216]



Outline of chapter

5.1                  Chapter 5 explains the Jobs and Competitiveness Program (the Program).  The Government may make regulations which allocate free carbon units to persons who conduct emissions-intensive trade-exposed activities.  This chapter covers Part 7 and elements of Parts 9 and 11 of the bill.

Context

5.2                  As Australia moves towards a clean energy future, a carbon price may impact on the international competitiveness of its industries which undertake activities that are both emissions-intensive and trade-exposed.  The Program provides significant support for jobs and protects the competitiveness of these emissions-intensive trade-exposed industries from risks for emissions-intensive trade-exposed activities to be located in, or relocated to, foreign countries as a result of different climate change policies applying in Australia compared to foreign countries.  The Program also ensures that industry, local communities and workers have a smooth transition to a clean energy future.

5.3                  The Program is designed to target assistance in as practical and effective a fashion as possible, within a transparent assistance framework.

5.4                  The Program is designed to provide assistance in an economically and environmentally efficient manner.  It accommodates growth in industries conducting emissions-intensive trade-exposed activities by directly linking allocations to the production levels of existing and new entities.  The Program is based on the expectation that all industries should contribute to the national emissions reduction effort and maintains a strong price signal for all entities to pursue abatement opportunities to reduce the pollution intensity of their products.

5.5                  Accordingly, the Program is:

       targeted towards industries that conduct trade-exposed activities and have the most significant exposure to a carbon price;

       provided on an activity basis to ensure that assistance is targeted to the emissions-intensive transformation taking place;

       linked to production levels and provided on the basis that production continues in Australia;

       balanced against the needs of non-assisted sectors and households; and

       consistent with Australia’s international trade obligations.

5.6                  Assistance is designed to preserve the incentives for entities conducting emissions-intensive trade-exposed activities to transition to a clean energy future by:

       providing assistance only for the most emissions-intensive activities carried out by an entity;

       providing assistance on the same basis to all entities, new and existing, conducting a given eligible activity; and

       providing assistance on the basis of historical information on the emissions from these activities, to ensure that entities have an ongoing incentive to reduce their emissions.

5.7                  The linking of assistance to production levels, and not future emissions levels, means that the allocation of free carbon units will maintain the financial incentives for firms to reduce their emissions intensity — that is, the number of emissions generated per unit of output produced.  Entities conducting emissions-intensive trade-exposed activities, like all other entities in the economy, will therefore retain the incentive to pursue abatement opportunities that are cost effective relative to the full carbon price. 

5.8                  Assistance will be provided to entities that conduct emissions-intensive trade-exposed activities through the issuance of free carbon units by the Regulator early in each compliance period. 

5.9                  During the fixed charge period, all of the allocations for indirect emissions and 75 per cent of the allocations for direct emissions will be made early in a compliance year.  The remaining 25 per cent of the allocations for direct emissions will be deferred until early in the following financial year.  This is consistent with the payment and surrender obligations of the mechanism (see Chapter 4).  The Regulations will provide detail on when this deferred payment will take place.

5.10              Assistance will be provided on an activity basis to ensure that it is well targeted and is equitably distributed within and across industries.  The assistance will be provided for the following:

       the direct emissions associated with an activity, that gives rise to an obligation under the mechanism, which can be discharged by surrendering eligible emissions units;

       the emissions associated with the use of steam in an activity;

       the cost increase associated with the indirect emissions from the use of electricity in an activity, which is assessed as resulting from the introduction of the mechanism;

       the cost increase related to the upstream emissions from the extraction, processing and transportation of natural gas and its components, such as methane, used as feedstock and sequestered by an activity.

5.11              Eligibility for assistance will be assessed based on an emissions intensity and trade exposure test:

       Trade-exposure is to be assessed for trade shares (the ratio of the value of imports and exports to the value of domestic production) being greater than 10 per cent in any one of the 2004-05, 2005–06, 2006–07 or 2007–08 financial years, or there being a demonstrated lack of capacity to pass-through costs due to the potential for international competition.

       Emissions-intensity is to be assessed as to whether the industry-wide weighted average emissions intensity of an activity is above a threshold of:

      1,000 tonnes CO2-e per million dollars of revenue; or

      3,000 tonnes CO2-e per million dollars of value added.

5.12              Activity assessments and activity definitions that were completed in the context of the Renewable Energy Target or the 2009-10 CPRS will remain valid and will be specified in the Regulations.

5.13              A Guidance Paper called Assessment of activities for the purposes of emissions-intensive trade-exposed assistance program was published on 18 February 2009.  Any revisions to this Guidance will continue to advise entities on the process and information required by Government to make an informed decision on the eligibility of an activity for Program assistance and the rate of assistance provided to the activity.

5.14              In making its decision on the eligibility of activities and the allocative baselines for eligible activities (that is, the number of free carbon units that will be issued for each unit of production or eligible inputs, as specified by the regulations, of an emissions-intensive trade-exposed activity), the Government will consider, in addition to data supplied by entities, publicly available information on pricing, trade and emissions intensity from Australian and international sources.

5.15              An Expert Advisory Committee is in place and provides advice to the Government on the definition of activities and the assessment of eligibility for the Program.  Decisions taken by the Government on the eligibility of activities were most recently published in March 2011, in an explanatory paper called Establishing the eligibility of emissions-intensive trade-exposed activities.  This paper will be updated and reflect additional activities as they become eligible under the Program. 

5.16              The Program will provide assistance at two different rates, reflecting the need to provide relatively more assistance to relatively more emissions-intensive activities in order to reduce the likelihood of carbon leakage.

5.17              Initial assistance to eligible activities will be set in the regulations at:

       94.5 per cent of the allocative baseline for activities that have an emissions intensity of at least 2,000 tonnes of CO2 e/million dollars of revenue or 6,000 tonnes of CO2 e/million dollars of value added in the specified assessment period; or

       66 per cent of the allocative baseline for activities that have an emissions intensity between 1,000 tonnes CO2 e/million dollars of revenue and 1,999 tonnes of CO2 e/million dollars of revenue, or between 3,000 tonnes of CO2 e/million dollars of value added and 5,999 tonnes of CO2 e/million dollars of value added in the specified assessment period.

5.18              The initial rates of assistance accorded each emissions-intensive trade-exposed activity will be reduced in the Regulations by the ‘carbon productivity contribution’ of 1.3 per cent a year.  This is intended to broadly ensure that entities conducting emissions-intensive trade-exposed activities share in the national improvement of carbon productivity. 

5.19              The Program will deliver carbon units in accordance with an entity’s payment and surrender obligations (see Chapter 4).  However, the units issued for each of the fixed charge years cannot be banked for use in future years.  In recognition that firms receiving assistance are likely to want to use some units to meet increased electricity costs, the units are transferable and the Regulator will operate a buy-back mechanism for these units (see Chapter 3).

5.20              The allocative baselines for each activity will be set in the regulations.  They will take into account historic emissions and production information submitted to the Department about emissions and production levels in 2006-07 and 2007-08.  To maximise abatement incentives, the baselines for allocations will not be updated over time for changes in the emissions intensity of entities conducting emissions-intensive trade-exposed activities. 

5.21              For electricity use baselines, an electricity allocation factor will be set at one unit per megawatt hour (MWh) nationwide for the purpose of the eligibility assessment and when setting allocative baselines.  This factor may be adjusted for existing large electricity supply contracts for entities consuming greater than 2,000 gigawatt hours (GWh) per annum, and where contractual arrangements entered into before 3 June 2007 are still in force (without having been renegotiated or reviewed) by a date to be set by regulations.  In such a situation, these contracts will be considered by the Regulator with a view to determine an entity-specific electricity allocation factor as outlined in the regulations.

5.22              Allocations of assistance to entities conducting emissions-intensive trade-exposed activities will be directly linked to the level of production of individual entities conducting an activity.  In any given year, the number of free carbon units to be issued to an entity will be determined using the previous financial year’s production of the activity by that entity adjusted for any over or under allocation in the previous year, with the following exceptions:

       concerning new entrants and significant expansions, the Regulator will be afforded the discretion to determine an allocation for the expected production in a given year;

       entities operating newly established facilities who will have their allocations limited by regulations in a manner to avoid windfall gains from assistance;

       sub-threshold facilities will have assistance adjusted through regulations such that assistance is not provided for emissions which do not attract carbon costs; and

       LNG projects will receive a supplementary allocation to ensure that they receive an effective rate of assistance at or above 50 per cent.

5.23              To retain the full incentive to invest in emissions reductions technologies, unit allocations will be uncapped for existing facilities.

5.24              If an entity ceases conducting an emissions-intensive trade-exposed activity, it will be required to relinquish carbon units that had been issued to it for production that did not occur. 

5.25              Where an emissions-intensive trade-exposed activity is conducted at a single facility, the entity which has, or would have, direct emissions liability from the facility may apply for assistance.  Where more than one entity has liability or potential liability, there must be a joint application including each of those entities, and that joint application must specify how the entities request that the assistance be allocated.

5.26              The Program will be reviewed by the Productivity Commission in the third year of the mechanism (2014-15) and thereafter consistent with the timing of general mechanism reviews.

5.27              A review of assistance provided to a particular activity could be conducted earlier than 2014-15 if requested by the Government.  Where the Government refers specific activities to the Productivity Commission for priority reviews, priority could be given as follows:

       industry sectors receiving the greatest level of assistance;

       industry sectors experiencing the fastest rates of growth in assistance; or

       industry sectors where there is strong evidence of windfall gains as a result of the assistance. 

5.28              The Productivity Commission reviews will consider:

       the operation of assistance arrangements under the Program; and

       the impact of the Clean Energy Act and associated provisions on emissions-intensive trade-exposed industries; and

       the economic and environmental efficiency of assistance arrangements under the Program. 

5.29              Changes made to regulations concerning the Program will be made in a way which has regard to:

       the aims of the Program, including to provide assistance in an economically and environmentally efficient manner to reduce the risks of carbon leakage from emissions-intensive trade-exposed industries and help these industries transition under a carbon price;

       the most recent reports from the Productivity Commission on matters concerning the Program;

       the principle that changes to regulations that will have a negative effect on recipients of assistance under the Program should not take effect before the later of the following:

      1 July 2017;

      the end of the 3-year notice period that begins when the reduction is announced;  and

       other matters (if any) as the Minister considers relevant.  These matters could, for example, include Australia’s ongoing international trade obligations.  However, the Government’s intention is that the factors listed in the legislation are the primary criteria that determine that assistance is no longer warranted. 

5.30              Changes to regulations that will have a negative effect on recipients of assistance means changes to the assistance rates, beyond the carbon productivity contribution, or other elements of the program set out in the regulations which results in a net decrease in assistance.  The Government has also agreed to implement the approach proposed by the Garnaut Review Update 2011 if the Productivity Commission recommends that it is the most effective and efficient means of preventing carbon leakage and assisting the industry to transition and that it is feasible and data is available for the Government adopt this approach.  This would be subject to the considerations and minimum notice period set out above.

5.31              The Government will publish draft regulations to set up the Program and engage with relevant entities.  As at September 2011, 31 activities were found to be eligible under the criteria and process outlined above.


 

Summary

Introduction

5.32              Part 7, Division 1 provides that the Program recognises the issues concerning the impact that the mechanism may have on the international competitiveness of emissions-intensive trade-exposed activities carried on in Australia. 

5.33              An object of the Program is to provide transitional assistance to entities conducting emissions-intensive trade-exposed activities in a manner that is both economically and environmentally efficient in order to reduce the risk of carbon leakage.

Formulation of the Jobs and Competitiveness Program

5.34              Part 7, Division 2 sets out the core components of the Program.  In particular it provides for:

       the creation of a program in regulations that involves the allocation of free carbon units for activities that are taken to be emissions-intensive trade-exposed activities and are carried on in Australia during a particular financial year;

       a requirement under the Program that those persons who are issued free carbon units relinquish units in specified circumstances.  This is intended to be used to provide for relinquishment of units on the closure of a facility;

       the imposition of reporting and record-keeping requirements for persons issued free carbon units under the Program.  This is intended to be used to ensure that the Regulator is aware of potential closures and whether production levels claimed in assistance applications were actually achieved; and

       comprehensive application and assessment requirements under the Program. 

Compliance

5.35              Part 7, Division 3 requires that persons comply with reporting and record-keeping requirements under the Program.  Failure to comply will incur a civil penalty.

Special information-gathering powers

5.36              Part 7, Division 4 allows the Minister to request from constitutional corporations information relevant to decisions about the formulation of the assistance under the Program.  This information gathering power is limited to the circumstances where an activity is not yet listed as an emissions-intensive trade-exposed activity and a party has requested that the activity be added to the regulations.

Productivity Commission inquiries

5.37              Part 7, Division 5 provides for a series of reviews of the assistance under the Program to be undertaken by the Productivity Commission. 

5.38              Part 7, Division 5 outlines the timing of such reviews, the matters to be considered and the requirements for the Government response to the report.

5.39              These reviews will consider whether an alternative pattern and level of assistance would meet the Program’s objectives, particularly economic and environmental efficiency, more effectively.  Further details of the issues to be taken into account are set out below. 

5.40              During the general reviews the Productivity Commission must consult with the Authority on whether the established pattern of assistance is avoiding carbon leakage and facilitating industry transition, and whether it is supporting emissions reduction objectives.

Aspects of the Jobs and Competitiveness Program outside of Part 7

5.41              Part 9 requires the Regulator to publish information about the Program.  The general enforcement and accountability framework for the Regulator is also relevant to the Program.

5.42              Part 11, Divisions 2 and 3 set up the legal architecture around compliance with the relinquishment requirements which will operate on the closure of a facility.  Accordingly, if a person does not relinquish carbon units as necessary they will be required to pay a penalty, for any units not relinquished, of 200 per cent of the benchmark average auction charge of the previous financial year or another amount specified in regulations.  In the fixed charge period, the penalty charge will be specified for each year.  If this is not paid, a penalty of 20 per cent per annum is payable or another lower rate specified in regulations.

Detailed explanation of provisions

Introduction

Aims and objects

5.43              The aim of Part 7 is to recognise issues concerning the impact of the mechanism on the international competitiveness of emissions-intensive trade-exposed activities carried on in Australia.  [Part 7, clause 143(1)] References to assistance in this chapter are references to assistance under Part 7, unless otherwise indicated.

5.44              Unless the Program is implemented, the costs associated with the mechanism may adversely impact the competitiveness of entities conducting emissions-intensive trade-exposed activities in Australia in the period before broadly comparable emissions reduction policies or carbon constraints are applied in other countries at an industry or economy-wide level.  Entities conducting these activities may be constrained in their ability to pass on the costs of the carbon price, while competitors do not face similar costs which have been imposed through market based or regulatory mechanisms.

5.45              Part 7 allows the delivery of assistance for emissions-intensive trade-exposed activities.  [Part 7, clause 144], [Part 7, clause 143(2)(a)] Carrying out defined activities in Australia creates eligibility for assistance, rather than a firm’s historic or future emissions.

5.46              The Government provides assistance to reduce the risks for emissions-intensive trade-exposed activities to be located in, or relocated to, foreign countries as a result of different climate change policies applying in Australia compared to foreign countries.  [Part 7, clause 143(2)(b)], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘foreign country’] This risk exists for both current businesses and new investments in the future. The Government also provides assistance to give transitional support to entities undertaking such activities when they are carried out in Australia.  [Part 7, clause 143(2)(c)] Given the significant differences between the emissions profiles of industries, the impact of the carbon price will be greater for some than for others.  Transitional assistance is provided through the administrative allocation of free carbon units under the Program to the most emissions-intensive and trade-exposed of Australia’s industries.

5.47              Assistance will be given in a way that ensures that the level of assistance for emissions-intensive trade-exposed activities is both economically and environmentally efficient.  [Part 7, clause 143(2)(d)]

5.48              The objects of Part 7 recognise that circumstances may change such that assistance may no longer be warranted.  In particular, it outlines two important considerations in determining where this may be the case:

       where comparable or more stringent measures  to reduce emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases have been implemented for the markets in which entities conducting emissions-intensive trade-exposed activities in Australia compete; and [Part 7, clause 143(2)(e)]

       where other countries responsible for a substantial majority of global emissions have implemented comparable measures to reduce those emissions.  [Part 7, clause 143(2)(f)]

5.49              The Government will determine whether the assistance is no longer warranted after considering advice from the Productivity Commission review of the assistance under the Program. 

5.50              Measures to reduce emissions do not necessarily need to consist of a cap on emissions, and other approaches to reduce emissions are also intended to be considered in the analysis.  It will be important to consider whether all relevant market-based and regulatory measures, taken together, impose broadly comparable carbon constraints as those in Australia, taking into account assistance arrangements in both Australia and in these competitor countries.

5.51              Other factors may also come into play which renders the assistance unwarranted in terms of its aim and primary objective of reducing carbon leakage and providing transitional assistance.  [Part 7, clause 143(2)(g)] However, the Government’s intention is that the factors listed in the legislation are the primary criteria that determine that assistance is no longer warranted.

Formulation of the Jobs and Competitiveness Program

5.52              Part 7, Division 2 lets the Government set up the Program in regulations.  [Part 7, clause 145], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘Jobs and Competitiveness Program’] This approach reflects the wide range of activities covered by the Program, the extensive consultation being undertaken as part of its development and the need to ensure that the treatment of each activity is appropriately geared to its specific circumstances. 

5.53              The technical aspects of precisely defining the range of emissions-intensive trade-exposed activities, the eligibility criteria and relevant production units, and the need for flexibility to make changes and to include new activities over time, make it appropriate to set out the detail of the Program’s operation and application in regulations, within the broad framework of Part 7.  The regulations may be disallowed if either House of Parliament passes a resolution within 15 sitting days of the regulations being tabled. 

5.54              After the Government has assessed detail on emissions, electricity use, revenue and/or value added for a given activity, the regulations can provide a relatively simple allocation methodology per unit of production which provides investment certainty, minimises ongoing compliance costs and reduces the risk of assistance decisions being subject to lengthy appeal and review processes which may divert resources.

Creating the Program

5.55              The Program will allow for the issue of free carbon units for defined emissions-intensive trade-exposed activities.  [Part 7, clause 145(1)(a)]

5.56              Such activities must be carried on in Australia during an eligible financial year.  [Part 7, clause 145(1)(b)] For this purpose, Australia includes external territories, the exclusive economic zone, the continental shelf and the Joint Petroleum Development Area.[30]  [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘Australia’], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘Joint Petroleum Development Area’] Assistance may be delivered before an activity is carried on so long as the activity is actually carried out in the relevant eligible financial year.

5.57              While the eligibility of activities will be determined by the Government in decisions on whether or not to list activities in the regulations, the individual eligibility requirements for the assistance will be specified in the Program.  [Part 7, clause 145(2)(a)]

5.58              A Registry account is a prerequisite to receiving assistance.  [Part 7, clause 145(2)(b)] Without a Registry account, it would not be possible for the Regulator to issue the free carbon units.  Otherwise it is intended that eligibility will essentially rest upon whether a defined emissions-intensive trade-exposed activity is being carried out, what relevant levels of production have been achieved and that the person applying is the one ordinarily liable for the emissions from the relevant activity under the mechanism. 

5.59              Coal mining is not to be defined as an eligible emissions-intensive trade-exposed activity.  [Part 7, clause 145(3)] The Government has outlined its intention to provide a separate program of transitional assistance to support emissions-intensive coal mines.[31] 

5.60              The Minister must take all reasonable steps to establish the Program in regulations before 1 March 2012.  [Part 7, clause 145(4)] Activities found eligible after this point will be added to the Program through amendments to the regulations.

5.61              Reviews of the assistance under the Program will play an important role in advising the Government on the consistency of the assistance with these aims and objects and the likelihood of the assistance being unwarranted because of international developments.  The Minister, in making a recommendation to the Governor-General about changes to the regulations, will have regard to:

       the aims of the Program, including to provide assistance in an economically and environmentally efficient manner to reduce the risks of carbon leakage from emissions-intensive trade-exposed industries and help these industries transition under a carbon price;

       the most recent reports from the Productivity Commission on matters concerning the Program;

       the principle that changes to regulations that will have a negative effect on recipients of assistance under the Program should not take effect before the later of the following:

      1 July 2017;

      the end of the 3-year notice period that begins when the reduction is announced;  and

       other matters (if any) as the Minister considers relevant.  These matters could, for example, include Australia’s international trade obligations.  However, the Government’s intention is that the factors listed in the legislation are the primary criteria that determine that assistance is no longer warranted.  [Part 7, clause 145(5)]

5.62              Changes to regulations that will have a negative effect on recipients of assistance means changes to the assistance rates, beyond the carbon productivity contribution or other elements of the Program set out in the regulations, which results in a net decrease in assistance. 

Relinquishment requirement

5.63              The Program may provide for the relinquishment of free carbon units.  [Part 7, clause 146] This is intended to be utilised for the closure of a facility.  Accordingly, where free carbon units are issued early in a financial year attributable to production that is to take place in that year, and production ceases during the year (other than for maintenance or similar temporary closures), units attributable to the production which did not take place will be required to be relinquished. 

5.64              Such a requirement may be defined about events, circumstances or a decision of the Regulator according to criteria in the Program.  [Part 7, clause 146(1)(b)] This provision will ensure that the assistance is contingent upon continued production by the activity and will avoid the potential for an entity to receive a windfall gain from being issued free carbon units for production which is then closed or moved offshore.

5.65              Relinquishment requirements only apply to persons issued units under the Program [Part 7, clause 146(1)(a)] and cannot exceed the number of units issued to the person under the Program.  [Part 7, clause 146(2)]

5.66              The relinquishment of units to comply with the Program can be done by submitting an electronic notice to the Regulator.  [Part 11, clause 210] The relinquishment process is described in Chapter 4. 

Reporting requirements

5.67              The Program can include reporting requirements on persons issued units under it, which will allow the Regulator to adequately monitor situations where a closure may have occurred and be alerted to situations where it may need to trigger a relinquishment requirement.  [Part 7, clause 147]

Record-keeping requirements

5.68              The Program can include record-keeping requirements on persons issued units under it.  [Part 7, clause 148] This will allow the Regulator to monitor any closure of a facility and ensure that the production records which determined assistance levels are kept for subsequent validation or investigation.  These records are needed because production levels will be the central factor which determines the levels of assistance and these levels will not be collected and reported under the NGER Act. 

5.69              Part 14, also gives power to impose record-keeping requirements (see Chapter 7). However, it is intended that these requirements will relate to the broader carbon price mechanism. The record-keeping obligations for the Program will not duplicate other reporting mechanisms or significantly increase the regulatory burden on business.

Other matters and ancillary or incidental provisions

5.70              Other aspects of the Program will be in the regulations.  [Part 7, clause 149], [Part 7, clause 150] In particular, the regulations can provide for the form and content of applications for assistance. 

5.71              Given the value of the free carbon units to be issued, it will be important for the Regulator to have enough verified information about relevant production levels to allow it to determine how many free carbon units to issue as assistance to a particular person in a particular year.  [Part 7, clause 149(1)-(3)]

5.72              Verification could include that a relevant company officer verify the information by statutory declaration or that the information is accompanied by particular documents or reports, such as an assurance report as to whether the level of production was actually undertaken in the previous financial year or engineering reports to demonstrate that a particular activity is in fact conducted.   

5.73              The regulations may prescribe in full the process and procedural requirements for the Regulator to deal with applications.  It is anticipated that applications will be made between 1 July and 31 October of each year and assessed by the Regulator on a case-by-case basis.  Entities will be able to apply for an extension of this timeline to allow them until 31 December to apply.  The Regulator will be able to issue units to applicants as soon as it is satisfied about each application.

5.74              The Regulator may also issue guidelines to assist entities in including information in their applications for assistance under the Program, such as how production should be measured, and other information that would assist the Regulator in assessing an application for assistance.  [Part 7, clause 149(4)]

5.75              The Program can also include ancillary or incidental provisions to facilitate its operation.  [Part 7, clause 150]

5.76              It is also intended that the Program will, where necessary, adopt various industry standards and confer administrative decision making functions on the Regulator.  [Part 23, clause 309], [Part 23, clause 310]

Compliance with reporting and record-keeping requirements under the Jobs and Competitiveness Program

Compliance with record-keeping and reporting requirements

5.77              There is a direct obligation on persons under the Program to comply with any record-keeping or reporting requirements.  A person under such an obligation, along with others involved, who contravenes  reporting or record-keeping requirements is liable for their behaviour.  [Part 7, clause 151] This is a civil penalty provision (see Chapter 7).  [Part 7, clause 151(4)]

Special information-gathering powers

5.78              The simplicity, effectiveness, fairness and timely implementation of the Program will be greatly helped when the Government has the verified detailed information it needs to decide whether an activity is covered by the Program. 

5.79              The Government has received verified information about a number of activities, which is sufficient for the Government to make decisions on them.  There are a number of potential emissions-intensive trade-exposed activities that are yet to be formally assessed. 

5.80              It is important that all participants in an industry that may have information that may materially impact an assessment have provided that information to the Government.  This ensures that historical information can be the primary input into the decision-making process.  Good quality historical information will reduce the need for detailed comparison of international information as part of decisions on eligibility and baselines. 

5.81              Division 4 deals with situations where an entity has come forward and requested an assessment of an emissions-intensive trade-exposed activity and the Government cannot decide whether to include that activity in the regulations without formally requesting information from other companies with information relevant to the decision. 

5.82              If a person has indicated to the Government that an activity, which is not listed in the regulations as being covered by the Program, may be or should be covered by it, then the Minister may issue notices to a constitutional corporation to provide information and verify reports relevant to the activity.  [Part 7, clause 152], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘constitutional corporation’] It is intended that this power would be exercised as a last resort where a potential recipient of assistance is unwilling to provide the necessary information.

5.83              If only information is requested, then the Minister must give at least 30 days to a corporation to comply with the notice.  If a report is also requested to accompany that information, then the Minister must give 60 days to comply with the notice.  [Part 7, clause 152(5)], [Part 7, clause 152(3)]

5.84              If a corporation refuses or fails to comply with a notice, then it may be ineligible for assistance under the Program for the first two eligible financial years which begin after the date of the notice.  The corporation will be ineligible for assistance if they were capable of complying with the notice and the Minister informs the Regulator that its non-compliance was significant.  [Part 7, clause 153] This consequence is proportionate, given the potential for the withholding of such information to result in windfall gains for a particular entity over the course of the Program. 

5.85              The Minister may also disclose this information to the Regulator to assist it in the exercise of its functions and powers.  [Part 7, clause 154]

Compliance with relinquishment requirements

5.86              A person who does not relinquish carbon units as required under the Program will be subject to an administrative penalty (see Chapter 7).  [Part 11, clause 212]

Public information on the Jobs and Competitiveness Program

5.87              The Regulator must inform the public about carbon units issued under the Program (see also Chapter 9). [Part 9, clause 198], [Part 9, clause 199] This will inform the market as to how many units are available for auctioning and will provide public accountability for the application of the assistance for emissions-intensive trade-exposed activities. 

5.88              In particular, the Regulator must publish on its website:

       a notice when carbon units are issued to a person under the Program which includes the number of units issued to that person and the activity for which they were issued; [Part 9, clause 198(1)]

        the total number of carbon units issued during a particular quarter for each activity; and [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘quarter’], [Part 9, clause 199]

       the total number of carbon units claimed under the Program but for which no decision has been made, so as to indicate to the market the potential number of units which may not be available for auctioning.  [Part 9, clause 199(c)]

Administration, enforcement and monitoring of the Program

5.89              The Regulator will run the Program, in keeping with governance arrangements in the Regulator bill.  These include the secrecy provisions to protect confidential information submitted concerning the Program, subject to disclosure in specified circumstances. 

5.90              The Regulator’s decisions on eligibility and delivery of carbon units under the Program will be subject to a review procedure, including merits review in the Administrative Appeals Tribunal (see Chapter 8).

5.91              The Regulator will be able to draw upon its investigation and enforcement powers in Parts 13 to 21 to enforce the requirements of the Program.  This will support the application requirements to ensure that the Regulator has clear, verified and comprehensive information to make decisions under the Program. 

Productivity Commission reviews

5.92              Part 8, Division 5 covers the Productivity Commission’s role in conducting scheduled reviews of the assistance under the Program.

5.93              The Government will ask the Productivity Commission to conduct reviews of the Program and advise the Government on whether the Program is meeting the aims and objectives of the Program. 

5.94              The first review by the Productivity Commission (the ‘first scheduled review’) will be conducted in the 2014-15 financial year.  [Part 7, clause 155(1)(a)] Subsequent reviews will be consistent in timing with general mechanism reviews.  [Part 7, clause 155(1)(b) – (e)]

5.95              In accordance with the Productivity Commission Act 1998 (PC Act), the Minister responsible for the Productivity Commission, currently the Assistant Treasurer (referred to in the bill as the Productivity Minister) must, during the reviews mentioned above, refer matters about the operation of the assistance under the Program, the impact of the Act and associated provisions on emissions-intensive trade-exposed industries and the economic and environmental efficiency of the assistance to the Productivity Commission for enquiry.  [Part 7, clause 155(2)(a) to (c)], [Part 1, clause 5, definition of ‘Productivity Minister’] This does not limit the Productivity Minister’s powers under the PC Act.  [Part 7, clause 158]

5.96              The Productivity Minister must specify the review period to which each inquiry applies which includes the timeframe within which the Productivity Commission must submit its report.  [Part 7, clause 155 (3)]

5.97              Under the PC Act, each matter the Productivity Commission review covers must relate to industry, industry development and productivity.  [Part 7, clause 155(4)]

5.98              The Productivity Commission must have regard to, but is not limited to, the following matters in conducting each review of the Program: [Part 7, clause 156]

       the aims and objects of the Program and the objects of the Act;

       the feasibility, and data availability, of amending the emissions-intensive trade-exposed assessment framework to one based on an assessment of the estimated expected global uplift of prices of individual emissions-intensive trade-exposed products if other countries had implemented a carbon price equivalent to that applied in Australia, as proposed by the Garnaut Review Update 2011.  This review will consider whether it is the most effective and efficient means of preventing carbon leakage and assisting the industry to transition and whether the Government should adopt this approach;

       whether emissions-intensive trade-exposed activities are making progress towards best practice energy and emissions efficiency for the industrial sector to which those activities relate;

       whether additional activities should be added to the Program on account of commodity price movements or other relevant matters;

       whether windfall gains are being conferred on entities carrying out emissions-intensive trade-exposed activities;

       the effect of existing facilities having no cap on unit allocations;

       the growth in the emissions-intensive trade-exposed sector and implications for total free unit allocations under an emissions cap;

       whether the assistance under the Program is supporting Australia’s emissions reduction objectives including the medium-term and long-term targets and other targets that are adopted;

       the existence of broadly comparable carbon constraints applying internationally;

       the appropriateness of the LNG supplementary allocation policy;

       the impact of carbon pricing on the competitiveness of emissions-intensive trade-exposed industries, including an analysis of carbon cost pass-through, the level of abatement achieved and the effect of the carbon productivity contribution on emissions-intensive trade-exposed activities over time, and whether the carbon productivity contribution should be changed for a specific industry; and

       whether less than 70 per cent of relevant competitors in each industry have introduced comparable carbon constraints, taking into account all mitigation policies and relevant assistance policies, and hence whether the application of the carbon productivity contribution rate for a specific industry should pause when the assistance rate for a particular activity reaches 90 per cent for highly emission-intensive activities, or 60 per cent for moderately emissions-intensive activities. 

5.99              In responding to the Productivity Commission’s recommendations, the Government may have regard to advice from the Regulator, particularly concerning the implementation of any recommended