Rio Tinto ETS Submission - Key Points
RIO TINTO ALCAN (NEW ZEALAND) LTD
Finance & Expenditure
Select Committee
Climate Change (Emissions Trading &
Renewable Preference) Bill
Monday 12May 2008
Key Points
Company Representatives
Xiaoling Liu,
President of Primary Metal, Asia/Pacific Region, Rio Tinto
Alcan Ltd
Paul Hemburrow, General Manager, New
Zealand Aluminium Smelters Ltd
Ray Deacon, Manager,
Regulatory and Government Affairs, Rio Tinto Alcan New
Zealand Ltd
Rio Tinto Globally
World’s third
largest minerals company
World’s largest producer
of aluminium
Aluminium has a future in a carbon
constrained world due to its light weight and
recyclability
Aluminium is a global commodity, with
price set through the London Metal Exchange
New
Zealand Aluminium Smelters Ltd is therefore a price taker
– extra costs cannot be passed onto customers
Aluminium produced at more than 200 competing smelters
around the world – more than half in non-Annex B
countries
Until there is a global price for carbon
emissions, the price of aluminium will not reflect the
additional costs imposed in any particular country,
including New Zealand
Rio Tinto will continue to
support the New Zealand operation for as long as it is a
cost-competitive location
The Bill in its current
form would mean New Zealand would not remain a
cost-competitive location
Rio Tinto / NZAS in New
Zealand
Single aluminium manufacturing site in Tiwai
Point, near Bluff
20% of Southland economy,
sustaining more than 2,600 New Zealand jobs
Directly
employs more than 900 staff and contractors
Wages and
salaries in 2007 amounted to $78m
Export earnings are
more than NZ$1 billion a year, roughly the same as the New
Zealand seafood export industry and larger than the New
Zealand wool or wine industries
World’s
highest-purity aluminium
Nearly half of the world’s
hard drives and capacitors in any brand of PC or LCD screen
contain aluminium from Tiwai Point
The wings of the
Airbus A380 are made from Tiwai Point aluminium because it
makes the aircraft safer and more fuel-efficient
Since 1990, production has increased by 27% while total site
emissions are down 42%
Following recent negotiations
with Meridian, the smelter should remain viable in New
Zealand for the foreseeable future, all things remaining
equal
Bill Threatens Commercial Viability
The Bill
in its current form will significantly alter the smelter’s
cost structure, threatening its continued viability until
the international price of aluminium reflects a global
carbon price comparable with that in New Zealand
The
Bill, if passed, would therefore likely put the smelter on a
path to closure
Closure of Smelter would Harm Global
Environment through Carbon Leakage
Aluminium
production is expanding in non-Annex B countries, often with
electricity generated from coal or gas
Lost
production from New Zealand would therefore almost certainly
be made up by increased production in these countries,
resulting in an increase in global carbon emissions
Three
Key Changes Necessary to Retain Viability
1. Revisiting
Mandatory Phase Out of Industry Allocation
o The
Government has recognised that the Bill risks New Zealand
losing manufacturers that are relatively emissions intensive
and in competition with firms in non-Annex B countries that
do not yet face a carbon price
o The industry allocation
addresses this risk but is to be phased out against an
arbitrary timeline, independent from when non-Annex B
countries impose a carbon price on competitors
o We
recommend that the mandatory phase-out of the industry
allocation should be replaced by a requirement for regular
reviews of the ETS
o The transitional industry allocation
should be discontinued for a particular New Zealand industry
once the international price for their commodities includes
a comparable price for carbon.
2. Industry Allocation
Should Be Based On the Emissions-Efficiency of
Production
o The Bill proposes that the pool of NZUs to
be allocated be fixed at 90% of 2005 emissions in the
stationary energy and industrial process sectors
o This
is arbitrary
o We recommend an approach based on the
emissions-efficiency of production so that we are not
penalised for expanding production at the expense of less
emissions-efficient manufacturers elsewhere
o A rational
climate change policy would encourage us to displace less
emissions-efficient producers because it would increase New
Zealand’s exports while reducing global emissions
3.
Industry Allocation Should Be Applied To Transport Fuels If
Used For Stationary Energy Purposes
o Under the Bill, if
a trade-exposed firm utilises coal or gas in a stationary
energy application then they are eligible for an industry
allocation of some NZUs to partially offset the increased
cost of these fuel sources
o However, should a trade-exposed firm utilise a liquid fuel in a stationary energy application, there is no industry allocation of NZUs to offset the increased cost
o Under the Bill, NZAS would receive no industry allocation to cover our consumption of heavy fuel oil
o We recommend an amendment so that all fuels used in stationary energy applications are treated the same way.
Rio Tinto wants to remain committed to New Zealand.
These three changes are crucial for that to be
possible.
They are crucial for the nearly 1,000 people
that we employ.
If the smelter were to close, we would
seek to redeploy the most skilled of those people across our
global network and their skills would be lost to New
Zealand.
ENDS