Timeline clarifies CRC rules
Companies should act now in preparation for new carbon management obligations or risk facing heavy fines
Companies should act now in preparation for new carbon management obligations or risk facing heavy fines
Ahead of receiving Royal Assent this November, and following our coverage
last month, the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) and
the Carbon Trust have published a schedule for companies that must comply with
the Carbon Reduction Commitment (CRC). The CRC is part of the climate change
bill which has been marred by complexity and red tape.
CRC will make carbon management mandatory for UK companies spending more than
£500,000 per year on energy bills. However, according to research outfit
Verdantix, 10% of those will fail to comply because of insufficient energy
management and inadequate planning.
Pay up-front
The CRC loosely means companies will be required to pay for emissions before
actually emitting anything and, according to how successful they are in making
reductions, will be entered into a league table so that it will be easy to
compare affected companies’ emissions.
Companies that emit the least carbon will receive the highest level of rebate
on their allowances from the government, while those making the most emissions
will receive the smallest or perhaps none.
Verdantix has drawn up a recommended timetable for FDs to follow in preparing
for compliance with the CRC based on schedules published by Defra, Carbon Trust
and the Environment Agency:
FDs could be forgiven for holding back on readying their companies to comply
ahead of Royal Assent, but Verdantix has warned that swift action is required to
avoid compliance issues. “Finance directors will be starting from scratch and
will need time to prepare,” said David Metcalf, director at Verdantix. “This is
a new policy and the worst thing you could do is wait for Royal Assent.”
The Environment Agency has said it will fine any organisation that does not
have a CRC account used to pay for emissions allowances. Fines would continue
and be heavier for companies that then did not have their accounts implemented
by the sale of the first set of allowances in April 2011. There will also be
fines for failure to report emissions by July 2011. A fine per tonne of CO2
emitted until August 2011 would be levied if a company had not reported by that
date.
Defra and the Carbon Trust have said that companies can expect to receive
fines of £25 per tonne of CO2 for under-reporting in the first year of the CRC
and £70 per tonne for the following years starting 2013.
Companies could also lose their league table rebate and be forced to buy
emissions allowances from companies operating under the Emissions Trading Scheme
rather than the CRC which would probably be more expensive.
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