Comment by Dr. Danial Sturge, Carbon Policy Practice Manager at Energy Systems Catapult. 

Kicking off the summer, the UK Government and devolved administrations published their long awaited response to last year’s ‘Developing the UK Emissions Trading Scheme (UK ETS)’ consultation. For those of us who spend a considerable amount of time thinking about carbon pricing and carbon markets, this much anticipated document not only lays out where the UK ETS is heading for the remainder of this decade, but what its role might be out to 2050.

The consultation, which was published over a year ago was more representative of a nesting doll of consultations and calls for evidence all wrapped up into one document; covering a wide range of areas including:

Our response covered many of these areas, but we also went beyond and made recommendations around heat and buildings and economy-wide enablers.

The government’s latest position

So, what did the government’s response consist of? The government, unsurprisingly, was clear that the decisions made balance the impacts that recent events (cost of energy and cost-of-living) posed to businesses. With that, the following decisions were made:

The decisions laid out in the government’s response are a welcome step forward, and with careful design, the scheme can continue to evolve to provide long-term market confidence. An outcome that will see investors more likely to support innovation in low/zero/negative carbon technologies, business models, and consumer propositions.

But as with all policy, the devil is in the detail. For example, we recommended that a separate GGR marketplace – for both nature-based and engineered GGRs – be set up and linked to the UK ETS, instead of direct integration into the carbon market. Our reasoning for this was to ensure that sectors that sit outside of the UK ETS (e.g., agriculture and international aviation) also have access to negative emissions. Government has yet to lay out a timeline on when GGRs will be integrated but will be consulting again later in 2023.

The long-term strategy for UK ETS

The interesting bit of the response for me was the discussion around a longer-term pathway for UK ETS development. In the run up to the original consultation, there were rumours floating in the media of extending the UK ETS to heating and transport fuels, much like the European Union is doing. Rather unsurprisingly given the cost-of-living crisis that was just beginning at the time, this did not make it into the published consultation.

Since then, we have had the Independent Review of Net Zero and government has accepted the review’s recommendation that it should develop a long-term pathway for the UK ETS, including:

Much of this work is already underway, and government has committed to publishing its long-term pathway for the UK ETS by the end of 2023.

In our consultation response last year, we proposed that the UK ETS should eventually be extended to include all material sources of emissions across the economy. The strategy for extending the scope of emissions trading will need to be adapted to reflect the unique challenges and opportunities of individual sectors and to facilitate innovation that helps these sectors decarbonise.

We at Energy Systems Catapult are working with the Grantham Research Institute at the London School of Economics to explore extending the UK ETS to heating and transport fuels, building on our work from last year. Separately, and highly relevant to ensuring robust MRV for GGRs, we have just kicked off a two-year project, as part of the Cross-Catapult Carbon Accounting programme, to develop options for operationalising a Carbon Regulator – providing regulatory oversight for carbon accounting and MRV.

If you are interested in working with us on either of these projects, please get in contact.

Net Zero Carbon Policy

An Energy Systems Catapult thought leadership project, focusing on how the UK can develop an innovation-friendly, economy-wide framework for Net Zero.

Click here for more

Want to know more?

Find out more about how Energy Systems Catapult can help you and your teams