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Business groups and industry call for Britain and the EU's carbon markets to be linked

Over 50 business groups and companies from across Europe have called for Britain and the EU at a upcoming summit to begin talks on linking their carbon market, which will they claim help reduce costs for consumers.

When leaders meet on the 19th of May, Britain will seek enhanced cooperation in security, law enforcement, and removing trade barriers between the EU.

As part of a larger effort to reduce emissions and achieve climate targets, the EU and UK Emission Trading Systems charge power plants and industrial entities per ton of CO2 they emit.

The letter, signed by Equinor Orsted RWE and other companies, said that the EU-UK ETS linkage will create price convergence, while avoiding distortions in competition, preventing carbon leakage, and reducing costs to both EU and UK customers.

By linking the two schemes, Britain could also avoid the penalties under the European Carbon Border Adjustment Method, which will impose a fee on the importation of steel, aluminum, fertilisers and electricity to the EU from 2026.

Energy groups have warned that the CBAM design could lead to an increase in the cost of exporting clean, renewable energy from Britain to Europe. This would also add to the already high EU electricity prices.

The UK scheme currently trades at around 48 pounds per metric ton less than the EU where the benchmark contract is around 66 euros.

Analysts say that linking the two systems will likely cause UK prices to rise in order to match those of the EU, which could increase carbon costs for UK companies on the short-term. They say that in the long term, it will be cheaper because the import levies will no longer apply. (1 pound = 0.7484 pounds; 1 euro = 0.8799 Euros) (Reporting by Susanna Twidale, Editing by Elaine Hardcastle).

(source: Reuters)