RUS | ENG | All
Enter the email or login, that you used for registration.
If you do not remember your password, simply leave this field blank and you will receive a new, along with a link to activate.

Not registered yet?
Welcome!

2019-12-11 10:20:00

EUROPE'S CARBON TAX

EUROPE'S CARBON TAX

REUTERS - DECEMBER 10, 2019 - The European Commission plans a carbon border tax aimed at shielding European steel producers and other energy-intensive industries against cheaper imports from countries with less strict climate policies.

The EU executive's president Ursula von der Leyen, who took office on Dec. 1, is due to unveil on Wednesday a first outline of her "Green Deal", a package of regulations meant to drastically reduce carbon emissions of the 28-nation bloc.

The package will include a proposed "carbon border adjustment mechanism" for selected sectors to be introduced by 2021, according to a leaked Commission document, although design and feasibility details are still being worked out.

The plan could initially be tested on industries including steel, cement and aluminum, a second EU document said.

The proposal, however, is likely to face legal, economic and political constraints as outlined below.

IMPORT TAX

Under this option, EU importers of steel, aluminum and other products with high carbon footprints would have to buy carbon allowances, as EU producers do under the EU Emissions Trading System.

This would effectively introduce an import tax and raise the price of imported goods, boosting the competitiveness of metals and other goods produced in the EU.

The aim would be to counter "carbon leakage" whereby EU industries are penalized by cheaper imports from countries that apply less strict rules to tackle climate change.

However, such a move risks breaching World Trade Organization (WTO) rules, which require equal treatment of similar products and no discrimination between domestic and foreign producers.

EU-WIDE CARBON TAX

Compliance with WTO rules could be easier if the import levy was matched by a carbon tax on all goods, including those produced in the EU.

Under this option, the carbon leakage issue could be addressed because foreign producers would pay a higher levy if they pollute more than other producers.

But EU producers would then face problems, as the prices of their exports would rise, making them less competitive abroad. That could have a sizeable impact on some sectors. EU steelmakers, for instance, export more than 10% of production.

An EU-wide tax would also need unanimous backing by all EU member states, contrary to most other EU decisions that are decided by a majority. Past attempts to introduce levies across the bloc have failed as governments are loath to transfer tax-raising powers to Brussels.

ETS REFORM

Either option would require a reform of the EU Emissions Trading System (ETS), which currently grants favorable treatment to energy-intensive industries that struggle to compete with imports from countries with more lax climate rules.

Under EU regulations, steel, mining and cement are among EU sectors that benefit from free carbon allowances until 2030, because they are deemed at risk of carbon leakage.

With a new carbon tax, those exemptions would need to be scrapped. EU producers fear they could lose the existing financial support in exchange for a tax on competitors that could be challenged at the WTO and could also cause retaliation from the United States and other trading partners.

SEQUENCE

The Commission has signaled that a carbon tax would be introduced as part of a broader review of the ETS, but it is unclear whether the two reforms would proceed simultaneously.

Some EU officials have said the carbon tax would come only after the overhaul of the Emissions Trading System, which is meant to increase the carbon price, now fluctuating at around 25 euros ($27.5) per tonne. That price hike would be reached by cutting free allowances and expanding the ETS's scope.

The Commission will propose including the shipping industry in the ETS and reducing free allowances for airlines by June 2021, an internal document shows.

A draft list of planned action does not include scrapping the existing favorable treatment offered to other energy-intensive industries.

-----

 


Earlier:

EUROPE'S CARBON TAX
2019, December, 9, 13:05:00
NUCLEAR POWER FOR CLIMATE
recent reports from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the International Energy Agency (IEA), and the World Energy Council have all highlighted nuclear power's role in the energy transition;
EUROPE'S CARBON TAX
2019, December, 9, 13:00:00
NUCLEAR POWER FOR CO2 CUTTING
A new report by researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology examined various scenarios for the decarbonization of the nation’s electricity sector. The MIT researcher’s simulations showed that availability of nuclear powered generation would help reduce the needed carbon price by up to 67 percent (to less than $40 per ton) in meeting a 90-percent reduction target (below 2005 levels) by 2050.
EUROPE'S CARBON TAX
2019, December, 4, 12:37:00
TO REDUCE EMISSIONS BY 7.6%
To limit global temperature rise to the necessary 1.5 degrees by the end of this century, we must reduce emissions by 45 per cent from 2010 levels by 2030, and we must achieve climate neutrality by 2050.
UN: CLIMATE CHANGES, IMPACTS
2019, November, 27, 12:10:00
UN: CLIMATE CHANGES, IMPACTS
Even if countries meet commitments made under the 2015 Paris Agreement, the world is heading for a 3.2 degrees Celsius global temperature rise over pre-industrial levels, leading to even wider-ranging and more destructive climate impacts, warns a report from the UN Environment Programme,
EUROPE'S CARBON TAX
2019, November, 27, 12:05:00
GREENHOUSE GAS CONCENTRATIONS UP
Levels of heat-trapping greenhouse gases in the atmosphere have reached another new record high, according to the World Meteorological Organization. This continuing long-term trend means that future generations will be confronted with increasingly severe impacts of climate change, including rising temperatures, more extreme weather, water stress, sea level rise and disruption to marine and land ecosystems.
EUROPE'S CARBON TAX
2019, November, 25, 12:40:00
CLIMATE: POSSIBILITIES FOR RESILIENCE
According to the Environmental and Energy Study Institute (EESI), it is much more expensive to rebuild homes than to initially build them right.
All Publications »
Tags: CARBON, EUROPE, CLIMATE, CO2, TAX