Global carbon trading turnover at record $214 billion last year:
research
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[January 25, 2020]
LONDON (Reuters) - The turnover in
global emissions trading hit a record high last year of $214 billion as
prices rose on current or expected stricter regulation, research by
Refinitiv showed on Friday.
The turnover was up 34% from a year earlier and marked a third
consecutive year of growth.
The world's largest carbon market, the EU's Emissions Trading System (ETS),
makes up of almost 80% of traded volume. The average price of carbon
permits in the scheme rose by $10 last year to $28 a tonne.
The main reason for the increase in prices was a mechanism which came
into effect in January last year, designed to withhold a significant
amount of permits and tighten supply.
The European Commission's "green deal" policy package, which was
announced in December, will commit the European Union to achieve climate
neutrality, emitting no more greenhouse gases beyond what can be
absorbed, by 2050.
The Commission also intends to propose more ambitious targets to cut
emissions by 2030 by the middle of this year.
Both of these moves also lent support to EU carbon prices, Refinitiv
said.
Emissions trading schemes, or carbon markets, are market-based tools to
limit greenhouse gas emissions. They put a cap on the amount countries
or companies can emit and if they exceed the limit they can buy permits
from others.
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The Allianz Tower, the Libeskind Tower and the Generali Tower are
pictured amidst dense fog and smog in Milan, Italy, January 8, 2020.
REUTERS/Flavio Lo Scalzo/File Photo
While a global carbon market remains elusive, 46 nations and over 30
cities, states and regions now have a price on carbon dioxide
emissions (CO2), covering just over 20% annual global greenhouse gas
emissions, according to World Bank data.
The two regional carbon markets in North America - the Western
Climate Initiative and the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative - saw
turnover surge by 74% to $24 billion last year, due to expectations
of tighter supply in 2021, Refinitiv said.
The world's biggest emitter, China, will start a national emissions
trading scheme this year. Meanwhile, the country's eight pilot
schemes had turnover of $301 million, up 40% from last year.
(Reporting by Nina Chestney; editing by David Evans)
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