Carbon price drop requires decisive action
09 December 2011
Lately, headlines about the carbon market have been alarming:
“EU carbon price falls!” “CO2 prices drop!” and “Carbon price
crashes the record!” Carbon prices are the lowest since the financial crisis of
2009. For the climate, the crucial question is not, however, how many
percentage points the carbon price has changed in the last weeks. The EU
ensuring it doesn’t miss out on a cost-efficient decarbonisation trajectory for
2050 is much more important for the climate.
It does not really matter if carbon prices are at 5, 10 or 12 euros per tonne. The fact is, the EU’s carbon market does not currently have enough ambition to avoid the EU locking itself into an unsustainable energy future. . With an overabundance of permits, coming from low demand and oversupply, there is not a strong enough price signal to help deter high-carbon investments. Without more scarcity of permits the EU will slip away from an economically viable emission reduction trajectory because prices would be too low to cost-effectively achieve 80 to 95% emission cuts by 2020, as agreed by the EU leaders in 2009.
Some Member States may think that avoiding
lock-in to a high-carbon future is not a good enough reason to strengthen the
EU ETS. However, they may be convinced by a vision of their auctioning revenues
shrinking. Without engineering the carbon
market, the governments’ coffers are expected to be much lighter. Assuming a carbon
price of €10/tonne in 2013 growing to €13/tonne by 2020, the EU-27 auctioning
revenues would be almost €100 billion less compared to income that Member States
would receive from selling allowances under a tighter cap, with an estimated
carbon price of €24/tonne in 2013 and €29/tonne in 2020.
Reinforcing the carbon price requires decisive, swift and focused action. Member States must remove the surplus of permits and restore carbon prices to guarantee that the EU ETS will remain an effective pillar of EU climate policy. Otherwise we risk losing not only billions of euros from auctioning revenues in the upcoming EU ETS trading period, but also billions more later on after missing the most cost-efficient pathway to low-carbon economy.
