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British carbon prices increase after news of EU-Linkage Deal

British carbon prices increase after news of EU-Linkage Deal

As part of a broader reset in their relations, Britain and the European Union said Monday that they would work to link their respective carbon markets. This will lead to a 6% increase in British carbon prices.

As part of a larger effort to reduce emissions and achieve climate targets, the EU and UK both charge power plants and industrial entities per metric ton they emit. A UK government statement stated that "Closer cooperation on emissions will improve the UK’s energy security by linking our respective Emissions Trading Systems and prevent businesses from being hit with the EU’s carbon tax which is due to be implemented next year."

From 2026, the EU's Carbon Border Adjustment mechanism will impose an emission fee on steel, aluminium and cement imports into the EU, as well as electricity, hydrogen, fertilisers and fertilizers.

Britain plans to launch their own CBAM in 2027.

If both sides prioritise negotiations, then the timeline could be accelerated. Analysts at Veyt say that aligning systems to the UK's Carbon Border adjustment Mechanism (currently planned for 2027) could be ambitious.

By 12.19 GMT, the benchmark UK allowance contract had risen 6% to 51.22 pounds (68.52 dollars) per ton.

The prices in the UK is lower than in the EU.

Analysts predicted that linking the systems would push UK prices closer to those in the EU. This could result in higher carbon costs in the UK for businesses, but they will save money in the long run because they won't have to pay the import levies.

Frontier Economics' report, commissioned from several energy companies, stated that linking the two carbon market would reduce trade frictions and improve trading liquidity, as well as increase price stability, leading to an estimated 770 million pounds in savings between 2026-2030.

The benchmark EU carbon trades at around 70.00 euros (78.86 dollars) per ton. (1 pound = 0.7475 pounds; 1 euro = 0.8876 euros). (Reporting and editing by Susanna Twidale; Editing by Louise Heavens David Goodman, Barbara Lewis.

(source: Reuters)