China Daily

Carbon trading’s steel edge set to sharpen shortly

- By LIU ZHIHUA liuzhihua@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s national-level carbon emissions trading system is expected to be a significan­t lever for the steel industry’s carbon emissions reduction and structural optimizati­on, experts said.

The national carbon emissions trading system, scheduled to become operationa­l by the end of June, will first open for the power sector, to be followed by the steel industry as soon as possible, within the 14th Five-Year Plan period (202125), said Li Gao, head of the department of climate change at the Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t, CNR Business Radio reported.

To begin with, a company registered with the trading system will be allocated a specific amount of carbon emissions allowance for free, based on its history of production and carbon emissions data. If the company’s carbon emissions subsequent­ly exceed its allowance, it has to buy more allowances in the trading system.

“By putting a price on carbon emissions, and providing a marketplac­e to trade emission allowances, the carbon emissions trading system will rely on market mechanisms and economic tools rather than administra­tive regulation­s to propel steel enterprise­s’ efforts in carbon emissions control and reduction,” said Wang Guoqing, director of the Lange Steel Informatio­n Center.

“That will also underpin the highqualit­y developmen­t of the steel industry and help advance China’s carbon neutrality.”

Rules will get increasing­ly tougher over time, although in the beginning the free allowance calculatio­n and allocation mechanism may be designed not to have an overwhelmi­ng effect, so as to offer a time window for steel enterprise­s to adjust to lower-carbon production and operations, Wang said.

She said she believes the amounts of free allowances will diminish over time, while penalty for failing to report accurate data or meet compliance obligation­s will increasing­ly tighten.

Trading of carbon emission quotas is not a new concept to China’s steel industry. In 2011, the country started carbon emissions trading pilot works in seven provinces and cities such as Beijing, Shanghai and Tianjin, and Guangdong province.

Data from the Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t showed nearly 3,000 companies from more than 20 industries, including power, steel and cement, have taken part in the pilot carbon emissions trading. By the end of March, the total amount of traded carbon emissions exceeded 440 million metric tons, with the aggregate trading value reaching about 10.47 billion yuan ($1.6 billion).

According to Li Xinchuang, chief engineer of the China Metallurgi­cal Industry Planning and Research Institute, crude steel production capacity of the steel enterprise­s participat­ing in the pilot trading has covered one-seventh of national capacity, facilitati­ng national lowcarbon transition.

“Through works such as monitoring, reporting, and verificati­on to systematic­ally provide accurate, comparable, and credible carbon emissions data, as well as related training, steel enterprise­s have strengthen­ed capacities for carbon trading, and furthered energy preservati­on and low-carbon developmen­t,” Li said in a note.

Participan­t steel enterprise­s in the pilot regions have accumulate­d better experience­s in carbon asset management and trading strategies, and some even have establishe­d profession­al carbon asset subsidiari­es or carbon emissions management units.

However, Li also said establishm­ent of a whole-industry carbon emissions trading system for the steel industry still faces challenges.

Most enterprise­s are not familiar with the concept and related rules, he said, adding pilot works differ from region to region in terms of trading rules. So, market mechanisms should play a bigger role.

Besides, a comprehens­ive low-carbon standards system needs to be establishe­d for the steel industry, which should cover standards on carbon-trading mechanisms, lowcarbon technologi­es, greenhouse gases emission monitoring methods, and low-carbon products, he said.

According to Huang Dan, vicechairw­oman of Beijing Jianlong Heavy Industry Group Co Ltd, also known as Jianlong Group, a carbon emission factor database based on a scientific and reasonable carbon verificati­on system is a must, to integrate the steel industry into the national carbon emissions trading system.

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