A new report by the Global Financial Markets Association (GFMA) and Boston Consulting Group (BCG) titled, “Unlocking the Potential of Carbon Markets to Achieve Global Net Zero”, finds that close to 80% of greenhouse gas emissions are not covered by regulated carbon pricing today.
In order to meet the Paris Agreement
goals, price levels need to increase to an estimated $50-150/tonne
average by 2030 from the current global average of <$5/tonne.
To do this, the report highlights the role and importance of both
compliance and voluntary carbon markets (a description of which can be
found in the below graphic) to the low-carbon transition.
Steve Ashley, Nomura Head of Wholesale Division and Chairman of GFMA, said: “Effective
carbon pricing in the economy is one of the strongest tools to drive
changed outcomes, treating GHG emissions as a time limited resource.
Compliance and voluntary carbon markets can play a significant and
complementary role and rapid action is required across policymakers,
regulators, banks and capital markets participants to ensure the right
incentives to economic decision making.”
Kenneth E. Bentsen, Jr., CEO of GFMA and president and CEO of SIFMA, said: “Greenhouse
gas emissions have increased by 50% over the last 30 years, with the
world having warmed by approximately 1°C and an increase of 1.5°C
expected within the next few decades. To limit a further temperature
rise, a rapid scaling of carbon markets is required in order to mobilize
an estimated $100—150+ trillion investment needed across sectors and
regions[1].”
Roy Choudhury, Managing Director and Partner at BCG, said:
“With a 300–500 Gt of total carbon budget left, the next three decades
must see a swift decline in emissions down from the current ~50 GtCO2e
per annum to a global Net Zero on GHG emissions. Levers will need to be
pulled, including a rapid scaling of carbon markets, both in geographic
and sectoral coverage, and in ambition/rate of decarbonization.”
The report identifies key data and recommendations for policymakers,
market participants, and other key stakeholders to scale deep and liquid
carbon markets for improved global and regional pricing effectiveness
to significantly accelerate carbon reduction.
The report also highlights the current challenges which the public
and private sector need to overcome in order to prioritize the urgent
action required to scale carbon markets in the near-term. These
challenges include:
- Further scaling and enhancement of regulated policy-driven carbon pricing mechanisms such as Emissions Trading Systems (ETSs).
Despite almost 200 countries having
signed the Paris Agreement, the operationalization of this 1.5°C
ambition into policy measures, such as ETS initiatives, is insufficient
in terms of geographic scope, sectoral coverage, and decarbonization
rates. Close to 80% of global greenhouse gas emissions are still not
covered by regulated carbon pricing today. Price levels also need to
capture true cost of emissions, from the current global average of
<$5/tCO2 to an estimated $50–150/tCO2 average by 2030. Conservative
estimates suggest a need to scale ETSs from ~$170 bn today to $1 tn+ in
absolute size before 2030 to achieve the 1.5°C ambition.
- Developing clear role of the Voluntary Carbon Markets
(1) as a transitionary mechanism, until regulated mechanisms take over and ultimately scale down with reducing emissions,
(2) as a long-term global marketplace for carbon removals for neutralizing residual emissions and pursuing negative emissions, and
(3) as a complementary mechanism for
entities to compensate for their emissions while they pursue
decarbonization in their value chains.
To strengthen trust in the voluntary
carbon markets, and to enable it to grow from the current scale of
<0.5% global emissions, it is critical to develop stringent and
transparent baselining and Measurement, Reporting and Verification (MRV)
standards to ensure verifiable “additional” emissions reductions; a
regular process to make standards increasingly stringent to ensure that
VCM projects maintain additionality.
- Encouraging greater interoperability driven by the public sector
The interoperability between carbon
markets is insufficient to meet the demands of investment required to
address climate risks. Greater interoperability needs to be driven:
(1) between ETSs where rates of decarbonization are aligned, and
(2) between ETSs and the voluntary carbon
markets through tightly controlled mechanisms—stringent MRV and limits
on eligibility and quantity to ensure additionality—would serve to grow
the carbon markets and drive additional co-benefits regionally and
globally.
At present carbon markets are very
fragmented, which holds back the necessary market growth to meet the G7
and Paris Agreement objectives.
Unlocking the Potential of Carbon Markets to Achieve Global Net Zero
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