China officially launches its carbon market

China launched the world’s largest carbon market on Friday July 16 to help reduce polluting emissions from the Asian giant, the world’s largest emitter of greenhouse gases. The country is also the one that invests the most in new energies and Beijing has promised to achieve carbon neutrality in 2060.

Trading began at 9:30 a.m. local time at the Shanghai Energy and Environment Exchange, the official China New News Agency said in a brief statement. This carbon market allows for the first time provincial authorities to set quotas for thermal power plants and allows companies to buy rights to pollute from others with a lower carbon footprint.

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The first transaction set at 52.78 yuan ($ 6.80) per tonne of carbon. A very low price compared to those charged last year in the European Union (around 36 dollars) and in California (17 dollars).

Efficiency that remains to be proven

Concretely, the authorities issue a certificate for each tonne of carbon dioxide (or other greenhouse gases) that a company is authorized to emit. In the event of non-compliance, the latter must pay fines. For the sake of transparency, companies will have to make their pollution data public and have them verified by third parties.

This carbon market currently only concerns the electricity sector, whose power plants in China still operate largely on coal, one of the most harmful energies for the environment. And for some analysts, fines for non-compliance are not enough of a deterrent. Another point: the polluting permits are distributed free of charge instead of being auctioned. As a result, there is less incentive for companies to reduce their emissions quickly.

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President Xi Jinping drew applause at the end of 2020 by announcing that his country would begin to reduce its polluting emissions before 2030 and achieve carbon neutrality by 2060 – that is, to absorb as much as d ’emit. But in its current form, “The carbon market is not going to play a big role in achieving these goals”, warns Lauri Myllyvirta of the Clean Air and Energy Research Center (CREA).

The World with AFP