To tackle climate change, CO2 emissions need to be cut. Pricing carbon is one of the most effective and lowest-cost ways of inducing such cuts. This report presents the first full analysis of the use of carbon pricing on energy in 41 OECD and G20 economies, covering 80% of global energy use and of CO2 emissions. The analysis takes a comprehensive view of carbon prices, including specific taxes on energy use, carbon taxes and tradable emission permit prices. It shows the entire distribution of effective carbon rates by country and the composition of effective carbon rates by six economic sectors within each country. Carbon prices are seen to be often very low, but some countries price significant shares of their carbon emissions. The ‘carbon pricing gap’, a synthetic indicator showing the extent to which effective carbon rates fall short of pricing emissions at EUR 30 per tonne, the low-end estimate of the cost of carbon used in this study, sheds light on potential ways of strengthening carbon pricing.
Effective Carbon Rates
Pricing CO2 through Taxes and Emissions Trading Systems
Report
Share
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Abstract
In the same series
-
18 September 201892 Pages
Related publications
-
Working paper
The forest will echo your call
23 December 202543 Pages -
Working paper
Addressing competitiveness, efficiency and equity concerns
14 August 202540 Pages -
Working paper
Possible actions to enhance integrity
25 June 202568 Pages -
1 April 202547 Pages
-
17 March 20256 Pages