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Global climate goal could be in peril without carbon price reform

This article is 2 years old

Investors managing US$10.6 trillion (RM46.69 trillion) yesterday said an overhaul of international carbon pricing policies was necessary to prevent the world from missing a goal to limit climate change.

As part of a global effort to cap global warming at 1.5 degrees Celsius above the pre-industrial average, more governments are seeking to place a price on carbon to lower emissions by increasing the cost of producing them.

But less than 25 percent of global emissions are covered by a carbon price as its level varies greatly between regions and is mostly too low to effect change.

In a paper released ahead of a G7 Leaders Summit in Berlin that begins on Sunday, the Net-Zero Asset Owner Alliance (NZAOA) laid out five principles to underpin a redesign of government policies and encourage a shift from high-emission activities.

It said policymakers could introduce legally-binding carbon prices that are set in line with the science of climate change.

A report by the High-Level Commission on Carbon Prices found carbon prices needed to be in the US$50-US$100 per tonne range by 2030 to keep global heating below two degrees Celsius.

Need to work for low carbon use

To protect those in disadvantaged communities affected by the transition, governments should design carbon pricing policies that reduce the impact, including through retraining, lump-sum transfers or lower income taxes, the NZAOA said.

Governments must also provide a more predictable price signal to help businesses plan for the transition to a low-carbon economy, such as by establishing price corridors that show the direction of travel over time.

Carbon emissions and global warming

To protect domestic heavy emitters as they transition, and prevent carbon leakage, whereby industry moves to jurisdictions where they are not penalised for polluting, governments could use carbon border adjustment mechanisms, as has been proposed by the European Union.

They added that greater international cooperation could be forged through "climate clubs" of countries working together on the issue.

"The Alliance believes governments should implement carbon pricing in line with the principles... providing a basis for an economy-wide alignment to the Paris Agreement goals," the group said in a white paper.

The 2015 Paris climate agreement seeks to limit global warming to well below two degrees and ideally 1.5 degrees Celsius.

- Reuters