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Important Editorial Summary for UPSC Exam

4 Apr
2023

Time to put a price on carbon emissions (GS Paper 3, Environment)

Time to put a price on carbon emissions (GS Paper 3, Environment)

Context:

  • India can take the lead, as president of the G-20, in carbon pricing, which will open unexpected avenues of decarbonisation.

 

Details:

  • In the absence of a price for the use of natural resources such as air and forests, environmental destruction has been part of every country’s recipe for boosting GDP growth. But the consequence of this approach has been the relentless emission of carbon, causing runaway climate change.
  • It is time, starting with the biggest economies of the G-20, to agree on valuing nature, including by pricing carbon effluents.

 

Three ways of pricing carbon are:

  1. The establishment of a carbon tax domestically, as in Korea and Singapore;
  2. The use of an emissions trading system (ETS), as in the European Union (EU) and China; and
  3. The application of an import tariff on the carbon content, as the EU is proposing.

 

Carbon pricing & benefits:

  • Some 46 countries price carbon, although covering only 30% of global greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, and at an average price of only $6 a ton of carbon, a fraction of the estimated harm from the pollution.
  • The International Monetary Fund has proposed price floors of $75, $50, and $25 a ton of carbon for the United States, China, and India, respectively. It believes this could help achieve a 23% reduction in global emissions by 2030.
  • The economy-wide benefits of carbon pricing in terms of damages avoided (plus revenue generation) generally outweighed the cost it imposed on individual industries in the EU, British Columbia, Canada, and Sweden.
  •  A key dynamic is that carbon pricing, by signalling a price for cleaner air, makes investment in renewable energy such as solar and wind, which has huge prospects in India, more attractive.

 

Why Carbon tax for India?

  • Among the three ways of pricing, India could find a carbon tax appealing as it can directly discourage fossil fuels, while raising revenues which can be invested in cleaner sources of energy or used to protect vulnerable consumers. It could replace the more inefficient scheme of petroleum taxes which are not directly aimed at emissions.
  • By the way, Saudi Arabia and Russia are at the low end of gasoline prices (including taxes and subsidies), China and India in the mid-range, and Germany and France at the high end.
  • In most countries, including India, fiscal policy has set in place the basic structures needed to implement a carbon tax. For example, they can be woven into road-fuel taxes, which are established in most places, and extended to industry and agriculture.
  • Policymakers have to choose the tax rate, which varies widely from Japan’s $2.65 a ton of CO2 to Denmark’s $165 a ton set for 2030.

 

Impact:

  • India could start with the IMF figure of $25 a ton. The main obstacle is the argument by industrial firms about losing their competitive advantage to exporters from countries with a lower carbon price. It would stand to reason, therefore, for all high, middle and low-income countries to set the same rate within each bracket.
  • It might also make sense to allow companies to use high-quality international carbon credits to offset up to a certain percentage of their taxable emissions.
  • The EU excludes transport, where higher costs would have been passed on to consumers directly, Singapore provides vouchers for consumers hit by utility price rise, and California uses proceeds from the sales of carbon permits partly to subsidise purchases of electric cars.
  • Some make a case for exempting “emission intensive trade exposed” enterprises from the carbon tax, but output-based rebates would be superior ways of doing the same.

 

Communicating the idea:

  • All said, any type of carbon pricing faces stiff political opposition. When a new, conservative government took office, Australia repealed the 2012 tax just two years after it was instituted.
  • Recent months have revealed the political pressures on decarbonisation: soaring energy prices led the EU to sell millions of emission permits, causing a 10% drop in carbon prices.
  • Sweden may have handled some of these political constraints as well as any by presenting the carbon tax as part of a bigger fiscal package that lowers other taxes and includes new social safety nets.
  •  Communicating the idea of wins at the societal level, even in the presence of some individual producers’ losses, is vital.

 

Way Forward:

  • A high enough carbon tax across China, the U.S., India, Russia, and Japan alone (more than 60% of global effluents), with complementary actions, could have a notable effect on global effluents and warming.
  • It could also pave the way to seeing decarbonisation as a winning development formula. As carbon pricing gains acceptance, the first movers will be the most competitive.
  • India, as president at the G-20 summit this September, can play a lead role by tabling global carbon pricing in the existential fight against climate change.