EU a step closer to linking Emissions Trading System

Pollution

(BRUSSELS) – The European Union moved a step closer Wednesday to linking the EU’s Emissions Trading System (EU ETS) with the Swiss emissions trading system, which would be the first time it has linked its ETS.

The Commission adopted two proposals to finalise an agreement with Switzerland on linking the EU ETS with the Swiss emissions trading system.

Linking the European system with other systems expands opportunities for emissions reductions and reduces costs, says the Commission. Once the agreement with Switzerland takes effect, participants in the EU ETS will be able to use units from the Swiss system for compliance, and vice versa.

“After much hard work on both sides, I am proud of the progress we have made with our Swiss colleagues,” said Climate Action and Energy Commissioner Miguel Arias Canete: “As the world’s largest cap and trade system, we have always aimed to promote the growth of the international carbon market.”

Negotiations between the Commission and Switzerland opened in 2010. A linking agreement was initialled in January 2016 but the signature and conclusion of the agreement were put on hold following the Swiss referendum.

Following high-level contacts and a change in Swiss legislation, a meeting between Commission chief Jean-Claude Juncker and Swiss President Doris Leuthard in April opened the path for today’s decisions.

The Commission’s proposal for the signature of the agreement and a proposal for its conclusion (ratification) are now set to be discussed by the EU’s Council of Ministers. The Council will require the consent of the European Parliament in order to conclude the agreement.

Subject to final conclusion, the agreement could be signed before the end of the year. The entry into force would take place at the start of the year that follows ratification by both sides.

The EU ETS is seen as a key tool to tackle climate change with a view to reducing greenhouse gas emissions. It is the world’s first major carbon market and its biggest one.

In October 2014, the European Council agreed on the 2030 climate and energy policy framework for the EU setting an ambitious economy-wide domestic target of at least 40% greenhouse gas emission reduction for 2030.

International carbon market

Proposal for a Council Decision on the conclusion, on behalf of the European Union, of an Agreement, between the European Union and the Swiss Confederation on the Linking of their Greenhouse gas Emissions Trading Systems

Proposal for a Council Decision on the signing, on behalf of the European Union, of an Agreement, between the European Union and the Swiss Confederation on the Linking of their Greenhouse gas Emissions Trading Systems

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