Proposal for an International Carbon Price Floor Among Large Emitters
June 18, 2021
Summary
Countries are increasingly committing to midcentury ‘net-zero’ emissions targets under the Paris Agreement, but limiting global warming to 1.5 to 2°C requires cutting emissions by a quarter to a half in this decade. Making sufficient progress to stabilizing the climate therefore requires ratcheting up near-term mitigation action but doing so among 195 parties simultaneously is proving challenging. Reinforcing the Paris Agreement with an international carbon price floor (ICPF) could jump-start emissions reductions through substantive policy action, while circumventing emerging pressure for border carbon adjustments. The ICPF has two elements: (1) a small number of key large-emitting countries, and (2) the minimum carbon price each commits to implement. The arrangement can be pragmatically designed to accommodate equity considerations and emissions-equivalent alternatives to carbon pricing. The paper discusses the rationale for an ICPF, considers design issues, compares it with alternative global regimes, and quantifies its impacts.
Subject: Carbon tax, Climate change, Environment, Greenhouse gas emissions, Taxes
Keywords: alternatives to carbon pricing, Carbon tax, Climate change, Climate change, design issues, emissions target, emissions-equivalent alternative, equity consideration, Global, Greenhouse gas emissions, IMF staff climate note, international carbon price floor, large emitters, mitigation, Paris Agreement
Pages:
18
Volume:
2021
DOI:
Issue:
001
Series:
Staff Climate Note No 2021/001
Stock No:
CLNEA2021001
ISBN:
9781513583204
ISSN:
2789-0600







