Money Week

Profit from the price of pollution

Carbon-emission allowances are still an esoteric market, but one that looks set to grow

- David Stevenson Investment columnist

Most economists seem to believe that economywid­e carbon pricing – such as the EU’s Emissions Trading System (ETS) – will be needed to shift our energy use to renewable sources and tackle climate change. If the scope of schemes like these continues to grow, it will push up the price of carbon-emission allowances – thereby helping to bring about change, but also creating an opportunit­y for investors.

So it’s notable that the first UK-listed exchange traded product to give investors access to this market arrived at the end of August. The WisdomTree Carbon ETP (LSE: CARB)

tracks the ICE Carbon Emission Allowances (EUA) futures contract, which is the most liquid exchange-traded carbon futures contract globally. To understand what’s going on with this unusual product, let’s see how carbon pricing works.

How carbon pricing works

In simple terms, there are two ways of pricing carbon emissions. The first is a straight tax per tonne of emissions. The second involves an emissions trading system that allows existing industries a certain amount of emissions, which can be traded if the industry doesn’t use its allowance. A few state government­s in North America have adopted simple carbon taxes, but the most advanced regime is Europe’s ETS. Total EU carbon emission allowances from trading activities were valued at over €201bn in 2020, equivalent to 8,096 million tonnes of carbon dioxide, an increase of 19% from a year earlier, according to WisdomTree.

ETS has a ratchet effect – over time the emissions allowed decline, forcing the industries to change their processes or pay what is in effect an excess carbon charge. Higher prices for allowances mean it gets more expensive for companies to cover their carbon footprint and incentivis­es them to invest in pollution-abatement technology. As Europe becomes greener at the policy level, the ratchet effect is intensifyi­ng. The existing target was a 40% reduction in carbon dioxide emissions by 2030 (from 1990 levels), but that’s now being raised to 55% for the 27 remaining EU countries by 2030, with a plan to eliminate net emissions by 2050. The emissions cap is being reduced at 2.2% per year between 2021 and 2030 and the 55% cap could raise that rate of reduction to 4.2% in 2024.

These pressures have already led to ETS carbon prices rising, but there’s also another factor at work: financial interest.

Big institutio­ns (and hedge funds) are waking up and buying into the ETS market. The combinatio­n of policy pressures and increased investor participat­ion should be a positive for carbon prices, reckon analysts at Morgan Stanley. They have raised their mediumterm forecasts to €48 per tonne for the end of 2021, and to €58, €65 and €74 for 2022, 2023 and 2024 respective­ly.

A volatile market

That’s the bull case. What of the risks? ETS has produced hugely volatile carbon prices over the last decade. Most commentato­rs reckon that too many free emissions were issued at the beginning of the scheme, resulting in a price crash in the early years. Sceptics also think that a higher EU carbon price might not achieve the desired objective – it could incentivis­e carbon-intensive industries such as steel to shift production to countries that don’t have carbon pricing. Some argue instead for a carbon border tax (which may be hard to implement under current global trade rules).

So it’s by no means certain that the EU’s approach will work, while the rising financial interest might result in a short-term overshoot in prices. Still, I’d counsel against too much pessimism. Pricing will remain volatile but this seems to be a genuinely diversifie­d, non-correlated asset class that doesn’t really move around very much depending on the economic cycle. I’d also suggest that the direction of travel – upwards to possibly €100 per tonne by the middle of this decade – is obvious.

 ??  ?? Big emitters will have to pay higher prices or invest in cleaner technology
Big emitters will have to pay higher prices or invest in cleaner technology
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