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Energy, Climate change, Environment
Climate Action
 

About the EU ETS

Video explainer: What are the EU ETS, ETS2 and the Social Climate Fund?

What is the EU ETS?

The EU Emissions Trading System (EU ETS) in a nutshell:
  • requires polluters to pay for their greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions;
  • launched in 2005, it is the world’s first carbon market and among the largest ones globally;
  • helps bring overall EU emissions down while generating revenues to finance the green transition;
  • covers emissions from the electricity and heat generation, industrial manufacturing and aviation sectors - which account for roughly 40% of total GHG emissions in the EU;
  • started covering emissions from maritime transport in 2024;
  • operates in all EU countries plus Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway, and is linked to the Swiss ETS (since 2020).

How does the EU ETS work?

The EU ETS is based on a “cap and trade” principle. Thecap refers to the limit set on the total amount of GHG that can be emitted by installations and operators covered under thescope of the system. This cap is reduced annually in line with theEU’s climate target, ensuring that overall EU emissions decrease over time. By 2023, the EU ETS has helped bring down emissions from European power and industry plants by approximately 47%, compared to 2005 levels.

The EU ETS cap is expressed in emission allowances with one allowance giving right to emit one tonne of CO2 eq (i.e., carbon dioxide equivalent). Allowances are sold inauctions and may be traded. As the cap decreases, so does the supply of allowances to the EU carbon market.

Under the system, companies mustmonitor and report their emissions on a yearly basis and surrender enough allowances to fully account for their annual emissions. If these requirements are not met, heavy fines are imposed.

While allowances are predominantly sold in auctions, companiesreceive some allowances for free. Companies may also trade allowances among themselves as needed. If an installation or operator reduces emissions, the company can either sell the spare allowances and/or keep them to use in the future. All these operations are recorded in theUnion Registry.

The price of allowances is determined by the EU carbon market, which is subject to a robust set ofoversight rules. The declining EU ETS cap informs companies about the long-term scarcity of allowances on the market, while ensuring they have market value. The carbon price, in turn, provides an incentive for companies to reduce emissions cost-effectively. This price also determines the revenue generated from the sale of allowances. Since 2013, the EU ETS has raised over EUR 175 billion.

The EU ETS revenue primarily flows to national budgets and Member States must use it to support investments in renewable energy, energy efficiency improvements and low-carbon technologies that help reduce emissions and, with this, companies’ carbon costs. Furthermore, a share of the EU ETS revenue supports low-carbon innovation and the EU’s energy transition via theInnovation Fund and theModernisation Fund.

EU ETS legislative framework

Launched in 2005, the EU ETS operates in trading phases. The system is now in its fourth trading phase (2021-2030).

The legislative framework of the EU ETS is spelled out in theETS Directive. Over the years, the Directive has undergoneseveral revisions to align the system with the overarching EU climate targets.

The ETS Directive for the fourth trading phase was first revised in 2018, in line with theEU’s 2030 climate and energy framework, established in 2014. With the launch of theEuropean Green Deal and more ambitious climate targets under theEuropean Climate Law, the Directive was revised further in 2023.

On 14 July 2021, the European Commission presented ‘Fit for 55’ – a set of proposals aimed at reforming EU climate and energy policy, including the EU ETS, to implement the Green Deal. The European Parliament and the Council of the EU approved all ETS-related proposals by June 2023. They are now law.

Under the ‘Fit for 55’ package, the following reforms concerned the ETS Directive or related legislation:

  1. Reform increasing the ambition of the EU ETS – adopted on 10 May 2023.
  2. Reform strengthening the Market Stability Reserve – adopted on 19 April 2023.
  3. Reform of the EU ETS concerning aviation – adopted on18 Januaryand10 May 2023.
  4. Reform of the rules of the monitoring, reporting and verification of emissions from maritime transport – adopted on 16 May 2023.
  5. Reform establishing the Social Climate Fund to complement the new emissions trading system for buildings, road transport and small emitting industry– adopted on 10 May 2023.
  6. Reform establishing a Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism – adopted on 10 May 2023.

Our climate ambition for 2030

Under theEuropean Climate Law, EU Member States committed to becoming climate-neutral by 2050. As a first milestone, the EU aims to reduce its net emissions by at least 55% by 2030, compared to 1990 levels. The EU ETS plays a crucial role in achieving this goal cost-effectively, and the 2023 revision of the ETS Directive aligned the system with this target.

Key changes agreed in the 2023 revision of the ETS Directive:

  • The cap has been tightened to bring emissions down by 62% by 2030, compared to 2005 levels. This covers emissions frommaritime transport, which have been included in the EU ETS from 2024.
  • Free allocation of allowances to companies has been scaled down, in line with the tighter cap, and made conditional on the companies’ decarbonisation efforts. For theaviation sector, free allocation will be removed as of 2026.
  • TheMarket Stability Reserve has been revised to foster balance in the reformed EU carbon market.
  • More resources have been mobilised to support people and businesses in the green transition. Member States have committed to using all EU ETS revenues (or financial equivalent) towards climate action and a just, green transition. The Innovation Fund and Modernisation Fund budgets have been increased accordingly.
  • A new emissions trading system, calledETS2, has been created to cover emissions from buildings, road transport and additional sectors. The new system will become operational in 2027 and complementother European Green Deal policies in these sectors.

TheSocial Climate Fund (SCF) has been created to address the social impact of carbon pricing in the sectors covered by ETS2, making sure vulnerable citizens are not left behind in the green transition. The SCF will mobilise EUR 86.7 billion from the ETS2 revenue in the 2026-2032 period.

The EU ETS Timeline

  1. 1997
    Kyoto Protocol

    The 1997Kyoto Protocol set for the first time legally-binding emissions reduction targets, or caps, for 37 industrialised countries. This led to the need for policy instruments to meet these targets.

  2. March 2000
    Commission green paper

    In March 2000, the European Commission presented agreen paper with some first ideas on the design of the EU ETS. It served as a basis for numerous stakeholder discussions that further helped shape the system.

  3. 2003
    Adoption of EU ETS Directive

    TheEU ETS Directive was adopted in 2003.

  4. 2005
    Launch of EU ETS
  5. 2005-2007
    Phase 1

    This was a 3-year pilot of ‘learning by doing’ to prepare for phase 2, when the EU ETS would need to function effectively to help the EU meet its Kyoto targets.

    Key features of phase 1:

    • Covered onlyCO2 emissions frompower generators andenergy-intensive industries
    • Almost all allowances were given to businessesfor free
    • The penalty for non-compliance was€40 per tonne

    Phase 1 succeeded in establishing

    • aprice for carbon
    • freetrade in emission allowances across the EU
    • theinfrastructure needed to monitor, report and verify emissions from the businesses covered.

    In the absence of reliable emissions data, phase 1 caps were set on the basis of estimates. As a result, the total amount ofallowances issued exceeded emissions and, with supply significantly exceeding demand, in 2007 the price of allowances fell to zero (phase 1 allowances could not be banked for use in phase 2).

  6. 2008-2012
    Phase 2

    Phase 2 coincided with the first commitment period of the Kyoto Protocol, where the countries in the EU ETS had concrete emissions reduction targets to meet.

    Key features of phase 2:

    • Lower cap on allowances (some 6.5% lower compared to 2005)
    • 3 new countries joined – Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway
    • Nitrous oxide emissions from the production of nitric acid included by a number of countries
    • The proportion offree allocation fell slightly to around90%
    • Several countriesheld auctions
    • The penalty for non-compliance was increased to€100 per tonne
    • Businesses were allowed to buyinternational credits totalling around 1.4 billion tonnes of CO2-equivalent
    • Union registry replaced national registries and the European Union Transaction Log (EUTL) replaced the Community Independent Transaction Log (CITL)
    • Theaviation sector was brought into the EU ETS on 1 January 2012 (but application for flights to and from non-European countries wassuspended for 2012)

    Because verified annual emissions data from the pilot phase was now available, thecap on allowances was reduced in phase 2, based on actual emissions. However, the 2008 economic crisis led to emissions reductions that were greater than expected. This led to a largesurplus of allowances and credits, which weighed heavily on the carbon price throughout phase 2.

  7. 2013-2020
    Phase 3

    The reform of the ETS framework for phase 3 (2013-2020) changed the system considerably compared to phases 1 and 2.

    The main changes included:

    • a single, EU-wide cap on emissions in place of the previous system of national caps;
    • auctioning as the default method for allocating allowances (instead of free allocation);
    • harmonised allocation rules applying to the allowances still given away for free;
    • more sectors and gases included;
    • 300 million allowances set aside in the New Entrants Reserve to fund the deployment of innovative, renewable energy technologies and carbon capture and storage through the NER 300 programme.

Learn more

For more information about the EU ETS and its annual performance, see the European Commission’s annual Carbon Market Report as well as other relevant documentation below.

Documentation

Click on the + signs for more information.

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