EU considers including emissions removal credits in carbon market

The European Union is currently exploring the possibility of incorporating emissions removal credits into its existing carbon market framework. This move, as outlined by a European Commission official on Wednesday, has the potential to reintroduce carbon credits into the market in the coming years.

The consideration reflects the EU’s ongoing commitment to enhancing its carbon market mechanisms and achieving ambitious climate targets. By exploring the inclusion of emissions removal credits, such as those generated through carbon capture and storage (CCS) or afforestation projects, the EU aims to broaden the scope of its carbon market and incentivize additional actions to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions.

This development underscores the EU’s proactive approach to addressing climate change and fostering innovation in carbon reduction efforts. As discussions progress, stakeholders will closely monitor the potential implications of integrating emissions removal credits into the EU carbon market, recognizing the significance of this decision in shaping future climate policy and fostering a transition to a low-carbon economy.

The EU’s carbon market is the bloc’s main policy for reducing planet-warming greenhouse gas emissions, which it does by requiring power plants and factories to buy a permit covering each tonne of carbon dioxide they emit.
Ruben Vermeeren, deputy head of the European Commission’s EU carbon market unit, said Brussels was assessing whether carbon removal credits should be brought into the scheme in future years.
This is something we are starting to look at right now,” he told a conference organised by the International Emissions Trading Association in Florence, Italy.
The Commission has until 2026 to decide whether to propose rules adding removal credits to the market. Such credits represent the removal of carbon emissions, and can be generated by projects like planting new CO2-absorbing forests, or building technologies to extract CO2 from the atmosphere.
Vermeeren said the options included adding removals to the existing carbon market, or forming a separate EU market for removal credits.
Many companies “offset” their own greenhouse gas emissions by buying carbon credits, which represent the avoidance or removal of emissions. Unlike the EU’s carbon market, which is obligatory for industries in Europe, companies’ use of offset credits is voluntary.
Scientists have said removing billions of tons of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere annually, by using nature or technology, will be necessary to limit global warming. But critics warn a reliance on removal credits could slow country and company efforts to cut their outright emissions.
The EU has banned international carbon offsets from its emissions market since 2020, owing to concerns about cheap international credits with low environmental standards.
It has since taken a strict stance on the use of carbon credits, which cannot be counted towards meeting the EU’s 2030 emissions-cutting target.
Vermeeren said potential benefits of adding removals to the EU carbon market include that it would provide a way for industries to address the final emissions they cannot eliminate. But he warned of the risk that promoting the use of offsets could deter companies from actually reducing their emissions.
Offsets cannot replace mitigation,” he said.

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