Pricing Greenhouse Gas Emissions
Turning Climate Targets into Climate Action
Accelerating the transition to net zero greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions is urgently required to contain the risks of climate change. As countries seek to reduce GHG emissions, they can employ or reform a wide range of policy instruments. This report tracks how explicit carbon prices, energy taxes and subsidies have evolved between 2018 and 2021. This is an important subset of the policy instruments available to governments. All instruments considered in this report either directly change the cost of emitting GHG or change electricity prices. Reforming these instruments could help to meet climate targets, lead to cleaner air and water, and improve public finances. The report covers 71 countries, which together account for approximately 80% of global GHG emissions and energy use. Explicit carbon prices, as well as energy taxes and subsidies are detailed by country, sector, product and instrument. The use of a common methodology ensures comparability across countries. Summary indicators facilitate cross-country comparisons and allow policy makers and the public to keep track of progress made and identify opportunities for reform.
Also available in: French
Foreword
Containing the risks of climate change requires accelerating the transition to net zero greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. Countries can employ or reform a wide range of policy instruments to cut GHG emissions, including price-based instruments. This report tracks how carbon taxes, tradeable emission permit prices, energy taxes and subsidies – together an important subset of price-based instruments – have evolved between 2018 and 2021.
Also available in: French
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