CARBON MARKET: ENVIRONMENT

NEWS:  What is China’s carbon market and how does it work?

WHAT’S IN THE NEWS?

China's carbon market consists of a mandatory emission trading system (ETS) and a voluntary greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions reduction trading market

China’s Carbon Market Structure

  • Mandatory ETS: Launched in July 2021, covering over 2,000 power generation sector emitters.
  • Voluntary Market (CCER): Allows offsetting 5% of emissions with voluntary credits; relaunched in 2023.

ETS Expansion

  • ETS will include eight sectors: power, steel, building materials, non-ferrous metals, petrochemicals, chemicals, paper, civil aviation (75% of China’s total emissions).
  • Firms get certified emission allowances (CEAs) based on government-set carbon intensity benchmarks.
  • Surplus CEAs can be sold; firms exceeding quotas must buy more.

Carbon Pricing

  • China’s ETS carbon prices are lower than international markets but rise with reduced quota allocations.

CCER Market

  • Voluntary system relaunched in 2023, increasing demand and liquidity as more sectors enter ETS.

Global Carbon Markets

  • Originated under the Kyoto Protocol (2000), offering emissions trading, joint implementation, and Clean Development Mechanism (CDM).
  • Under the Paris Agreement, Article 6 provisions:
  • 6.2: Bilateral emissions reduction transfers.
  • 6.4: Broader carbon markets for trading reductions.
  • 6.8: Non-market approaches for achieving targets.

Source:  https://indianexpress.com/article/explained/explained-climate/china-carbon-market-9567534/