英文摘要: | Effective mitigation of climate change requires investment flows to be redirected from high- to low-carbon technologies. However, especially in developing countries, low-carbon investments often suffer from high risks. More research is needed to address these risks and allow sound policy decisions to be made.
Climate policy has to address a global investment challenge. The International Energy Agency estimates that in the energy sector alone, infrastructure investments of US$37 trillion will be needed by 20351 to meet the rising global energy demand. To achieve an atmospheric CO2 concentration below 450 parts per million, these investment flows have to be redirected from high-carbon to low-carbon technologies and topped up by a further US$17 trillion1. This can realistically be achieved only by successfully mobilizing private capital2. Consequently, climate policy needs to create attractive conditions for private low-carbon investments, especially in countries not belonging to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development where the lion's share of investments are needed1. As the private sector makes investment decisions based on the risk–return profile of investment opportunities3, there are two levers for climate policy: first, increase the returns of low-carbon investments (or decrease those of high-carbon investments); second, decrease the downside risk of low-carbon investments, also called de-risking. Although existing literature shows the importance of risk in determining private investments3 — especially in developing countries where investment risks are typically higher than in developed countries4, 5 — hitherto most climate policy instruments, such as the Kyoto Protocol's Clean Development Mechanism, have focused on the return lever. In contrast, future climate policy might incorporate both levers through Nationally Appropriate Mitigation Actions6 and activities of the Green Climate Fund7. However, debate remains about how the underlying public instruments should be designed and to what extent resources should be devoted to one or the other lever6, 8. Further research on low-carbon investment risks and de-risking is needed. Here, I focus on the role of risk in low-carbon investments, explain the concept of de-risking and propose five steps for future research.
Downside risk is the combination of the likelihood of the occurrence of a negative event and its associated financial impact9. Examples of the many potential negative events that may affect fixed asset investments and thereby drive risks include construction delays owing to complicated permitting processes, loss of assets owing to expropriation or default in payment by the customer. The decisions of investors are influenced by the likelihood and impact of such events. The perception of risk is then reflected in the financing costs or cost of capital3: with higher investment risks, a bank raises the interest rate (cost of debt) and an equity investor raises the return expectation (cost of equity). This is true for both high- and low-carbon investments. However, low-carbon technologies are much more capital-intensive than their high-carbon alternatives, whose costs are mainly dictated by the cost of fuels. Therefore, investment risks and the related financing costs are more significant for low-carbon projects. Figure 1a depicts the typical power generation cost of five renewable and three fossil-fuel-based technologies. For each technology, the left bar shows the life-cycle cost assuming low financing costs (in an industrialized country), whereas the right bar assumes higher financing costs (typical in developing countries). A clear pattern emerges: the life-cycle costs of capital-intensive renewable energy technologies are much more sensitive to the increase in financing costs (+31% to +46%) than those of technologies dominated by fuel cost (−3% to +17%), as shown in Fig. 1a. Higher investment risks thereby decrease the competitiveness of renewables vis à vis fossil-fuel-based technologies. This is also reflected in the marginal abatement costs depicted in Fig. 1b, which strongly increase with higher risks. In particular, competitive low-carbon technologies whose abatement costs are low (for example, wind, small hydro and biogas), are strongly affected by higher risks when compared with a fossil fuel baseline (experiencing abatement cost increases of up to 330%).
- IEA World Energy Outlook 2012 (International Energy Agency, 2012).
- Buchner, B., Falconer, A., Hervé-Mignucci, M. & Trabacchi, C. The Landscape of Climate Finance 2012 (Climate Policy Initiative, 2012).
- Brealey, R. A. & Myers, S. C. Principles of Corporate Finance 6th edn (McGraw-Hill, 2000).
- MIGA World Investment and Political Risk 2012 (World Bank Group, 2012).
- Schneider, F. & Frey, B. S. World Dev. 13, 161–175 (1985).
- Hoehne, N. Nature Clim. Change 1, 31–33 (2011).
- Farrukh, I. K. & Dustin, S. S. Nature Clim. Change 3, 692–694 (2013).
- Chatham House Private Sector Consultation to Support the Work of the Transitional Committee for the Design of the Green Climate Fund (Chatham House, 2011).
- International Standardisation Organisation ISO Guide 73, Risk Management - Vocabulary (International Standardization Organization, 2009).
- Deutsche Bank Climate Change Advisors Get FiT Plus - De-Risking Clean Energy Business Models in a Developing Country Context (DB Climate Change Advisors, 2011).
- Waissbein, O., Glemarec, Y., Bayraktar, H. & Schmidt, T. S. Derisking Renewable Energy Investment (United Nations Development Programme, 2013).
- IRENA Renewable Power Generation Costs in 2012: An Overview (International Renewable Energy Agency, 2013).
- UNFCCC Draft Revision to the Guidelines on the Assessment of Investment Analysis (United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, 2010).
- Komendantova, N., Patt, A., Barras, L. & Battaglini, A. Energ. Policy 40, 103–109 (2012).
- Shrimali, G., Nelson, D., Goel, S., Konda, C. & Kumar, R. Energ. Policy 62, 28–43 (2013).
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I thank V. Hoffmann, J. Huenteler, C. Niebuhr, C. Bening and further members of SusTec, as well as O. Waissbein and D. Goldblatt for their comments.
Affiliations
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Tobias S. Schmidt is at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zürich (ETH Zürich), Department of Management, Technology, and Economics, Group for Sustainability and Technology (SusTec), Weinbergstrasse 56, 8092 Zürich, Switzerland and the Precourt Energy Efficiency Center, Stanford University, 473 Via Ortega, Stanford, California 94305, USA
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