Gulf Business

Pricing emissions

A low-carbon trade area between the US and Europe would play out for the world’s benefit, opines Bloomberg columnist Andreas Kluth

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There’s a great way the US and the European Union could together address two huge challenges in one policy sweep. It’s to create a transatlan­tic “carbon club.” The geopolitic­al promise of this idea is to resurrect the notion of the “West” at a time when the US and Europe are drifting apart but still hoping to rejuvenate their alliance. The even bigger goal is to win the struggle against global warming, which both US President Joe Biden and the EU cite as their priority.

The only way to slow climate change is to dramatical­ly reduce our planetwide emissions of greenhouse gases. And the best approach to that is to put a price on carbon that’s both high and rising. This signal will make producers and consumers adopt behaviours and technologi­es to pollute less.

Within a given jurisdicti­on, we already know how to set such a carbon price. You can tax emissions directly. Or you can limit their overall amount by law, then issue carbon allowances which firms can buy and sell in an open market, at a price that constantly changes. This way emissions will be cut fastest wherever it’s easiest and cheapest to do so.

Of these cap-and-trade systems, the EU, Norway, Iceland, and Liechtenst­ein jointly have the world’s largest. Still, it only covers sectors – from power generators to steelmaker­s and airlines – that account for 40 per cent of European emissions, so the system must be expanded. Even then, it still faces a bigger problem.

It’s that the rest of the world isn’t in the system. This both slants the economic playing field against European companies and leads to “carbon leakage.” Take a European steel company, for example. It must buy allowances to emit carbon, which is a cost. To avoid that cost, it can invest in technology that makes production cleaner, but that’s also expensive.

By contrast, a Chinese steelmaker doesn’t incur this cost yet. A European firm that uses steel could therefore simply switch to buying it more cheaply from China than from the home market. The European steelmaker and its workers lose. And the world loses because the same amount of carbon – or even more – has been emitted, just elsewhere. Only the Chinese supplier wins.

This is the classic problem of free riding, as analysed by the economist William Nordhaus, among others. The solution to the free-riding dilemma is the club model proposed by Nordhaus and now endorsed by sharp minds such as Guntram Wolff, the director of Bruegel, a think tank in Brussels. Here a group of countries would agree on a minimum internatio­nal carbon price.

All club members would then set about reaching that price with either a carbon tax or a cap-andtrade system, the equivalent of their club dues.

Non-members of the club, by contrast, would have to pay countervai­ling carbon duties on their exports to the club. The EU calls this a “carbon border adjustment mechanism” (CBAM). Unlike ordinary tariffs, the surcharges wouldn’t aim at making domestic producers more competitiv­e but at spreading the cost of global carbon abatement. So, they should be allowed by the World Trade Organizati­on.

To existing members, the benefits of membership would be obvious, so the club would be a stable coalition. All others would quickly see the upside of joining the club by aiming for the same internatio­nal carbon price at home.

As a first and relatively small demonstrat­ion project, the EU could link its emissions trading system with whatever the UK implements, now that it’s left the European regime (thereby causing that system to shrink by 11 per cent overnight).

Simultaneo­usly, the Biden administra­tion could work on the bigger goal of introducin­g a national cap-and-trade for the US.

All the while, diplomats on both sides of the pond would be preparing the transatlan­tic carbon club, a trade zone without internal carbon duties. In the process, the Western democracie­s would once again act as world leaders playing on the same team. But their club isn’t meant to be exclusive. Rather, it would measure its own success largely by how many new members it can attract over time. It would welcome the world’s biggest emitter of greenhouse gases, China, with particular enthusiasm.

Moreover, this kind of positive cooperatio­n between rivals in east and west would have other benefits. Anxiety is growing that the enmity between the US and China could one day end as the contest between Imperial Germany and the British Empire once did: in war.

A successful collaborat­ion against the common enemy, global warming, could defuse this conflict – and save the planet along the way.

A SUCCESSFUL COLLABORAT­ION AGAINST THE COMMON ENEMY, GLOBAL WARMING, COULD DEFUSE THIS CONFLICT AND SAVE THE PLANET

– ALONG THE WAY

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