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EU weighs options to support the industry in carbon market revamp

EU supports green transition in industries

Senior EU official: Various options being reviewed

The EU carbon market is undergoing a major overhaul.

By Kate Abnett

The head of the Commission’s climate department stated late on Wednesday that the European Commission is looking into various ways to help industries as part of a upcoming overhaul of EU carbon markets to prevent them from moving to areas where pollution standards are lower.

Brussels is working on a new design for the European Union's carbon market. This is the bloc's main climate change policy. It forces industries and power plants to purchase permits when emitting planet-warming carbon dioxide.

After the summer, the Commission's revision proposal will determine whether the EU's current system of granting free CO2 permits to industries to help them compete against foreign firms who don't pay for their pollution continues.

Kurt Vandenberghe told reporters at an event in Brussels that the climate department of the Commission is examining all options to prevent carbon leakage.

Carbon leakage is the risk of industries moving outside Europe in order to avoid strict climate regulations.

Vandenberghe responded to a report published in the German newspaper Handelsblatt this week which stated that the EU was planning to extend free permits to industries for many years. The article cited unnamed EU officials.

Vandenberghe stated, "We never said that." "We're looking at every option."

The EU carbon market was launched in 2005 and is designed to meet the EU 2030 emission-cutting targets. The EU carbon market will be redesigned to meet the EU's 2030 emissions-cutting target.

Vandenberghe, speaking of the carbon markets, said: "It's not ready for 2040. So, we have to revise this." "So we need to reconsider how to get to 2040 in a cost-efficient manner... so that it can drive investment and innovation." (Reporting and editing by PhilippaFletcher; Kate Abnett)

(source: Reuters)