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Abstract
We analyse the long-term efficiency of the emissions target and of the
provisions to reduce carbon leakage in the Australian Government's Carbon Pollution
Reduction Scheme, as proposed in March 2009, and the nature and likely cause of
changes to these features in the previous year. The target range of 5-15% cuts in
national emission entitlements during 2000-2020 was weak, in that on balance it is too
low to minimise Australia's long-term mitigation costs. The free allocation of output-linked,
tradable emission permits to Emissions-Intensive, Trade-Exposed (EITE)
sectors was much higher than proposed earlier, or shown to be needed to deal with
carbon leakage. It plausibly means that EITE emissions can rise by 13% during 2010-
2020, while non-EITE sectors must cut emissions by 34-51% (or make equivalent
permit imports) to meet the national targets proposed, far from a cost-effective
outcome. The weak targets and excessive EITE assistance illustrate the efficiency-damaging
power of collective action by the 'carbon lobby'. Resisting this requires new
national or international institutions to assess lobby claims impartially, and more
government publicity about the true economic importance of carbon-intensive sectors.