A Higher Costs for Polluters Coming to U.K. After Brexit

Jun 3, 2020

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(Bloomberg) --

The U.K. government’s plan to create its own carbon market after it leaves the European Union will likely make it more expensive to burn fossil fuels in the country than ever before.

The proposed emissions trading scheme is a small part of overall Brexit planning, but its success could play a critical part in Britain’s ambition to reach net-zero carbon emissions by 2050.

The EU’s ETS operates as a cap-and-trade system, with a value of around 34 billion euros ($38 billion) last year, that provides a market incentive to heavy polluters to reduce carbon emissions.

Much of the U.K.’s plans mirror the EU’s auction-based system, but with a few tweaks. About 1,000 U.K. power plants, factories and airlines covered by the EU market will be part of the new program.

“It’s quite bullish in the ambition there,” said Richard Howard, research director at Aurora Energy Research. “It’s already signaling that this market will be tightened and consequently actors within the market will either have to pay a higher price and/or take stronger steps to decarbonize activities.”

Ultimately, the carbon price could go as high as 100 pounds per ton of carbon dioxide in the final years of the push to net zero, Howard said.

The EU carbon price has never been above 31 euros a ton since the market started trading in 2005. The contract traded as high as 22.11 euros a ton on Tuesday.

The European market has weathered years of low prices amid a flood of permits, which prevented the contracts from reaching levels that punished polluters for burning fossil fuels.

While there is still a possibility that the country will make an agreement to stay linked with the EU market should negotiations fail, the plan helps prepare the U.K. to be ready if it leaves the bloc without a deal.

“There’s obviously clearly a chance that the U.K. leaves the EU without a formal agreement, which would make a linked scheme impossible,” said Joshua Buckland, director at London-based consultancy Flint Global. “This is preparing for any eventuality.”

Now the government has seven months to prepare a whole new system. That requires setting up a registry, auditing emissions and preparing businesses for the new process.

The government said it’ll bring legislation in 2020 so that the U.K. ETS can launch in January 2021.

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.