Zurich / Basel, February 13, 2007
Responding to climate change
Another unusually mild winter in many
parts of the Northern Hemisphere,
coupled with a recent spate of
prominent environmental studies and
documentaries, has kept the issue of
climate change at the forefront of the
international agenda. Societal and
governmental pressure to cut carbon
dioxide emissions is high as recently
evidenced by Californias new law that
requires industry located in the state
to cut greenhouse gas emissions to
1990 levels by 2020.
Worldwide concern also appears to be
leading to the creation of a global
emissions allowances market. California,
through the new legislation, has
established an emissions permit
trading program similar to the
European Emissions Trading Scheme
(EU ETS), which has been in place since
February 2005. Both programs follow
the cap and trade system that allows
relatively clean businesses to sell
unused emissions permits (allowances
certifi cates) to companies that need
them, using market forces to reduce
pollution cost effectively and flexibly.
In response to the burgeoning cap
and trade market, UBS launched its
fi rst commodity-based index for global
markets of emissions allowances. At
its inception in October 2006, the UBS
World Emissions Index (UBS-WEMI)
covered several European emissions
programs all part of the EU ETS. In
the future, additional emissions
programs will continue to be monitored
for potential inclusion in the
index.
The UBS-WEMI index has been created
as a liquid and international benchmark
of tradable derivative instruments
referencing emissions allowances. It is
composed as an open basket of futures
contracts on EU ETS carbon dioxide
(CO2), currently weighted between two
European trading platforms the
European Climate Exchange and the
Nordic Power Exchange. Their weights
are allocated based on the program
size and liquidity of the underlying
emissions programs.
In a report released this past September
by the Carbon Disclosure Project
(CDP), a group of institutional
investors who survey the implications
of corporate greenhouse gas emissions,
UBS was rated Best in Class
its approach to climate change. UBS
was also included in the CDP Climate
Leadership Index as one of 50 FT500
companies showing distinction in its
response to greenhouse gas emissions.
Moreover, UBS has been a part of the
Dow Jones Sustainability Indices (DJSI)
since their inception in 1999.