Callaway Climate Insights

Callaway Climate Insights

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Callaway Climate Insights
As Europe energy markets steady, a new call for a global carbon price
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As Europe energy markets steady, a new call for a global carbon price

Welcome to Callaway Climate Insights. Especially to our new subscribers in 2023. Pleases enjoy and share with your colleagues.

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David Callaway
Jan 24, 2023
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Callaway Climate Insights
Callaway Climate Insights
As Europe energy markets steady, a new call for a global carbon price
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In today’s issue:

— Can a global carbon price stave off a trade war over energy? The WTO thinks so
— Doomsday clock lurches closer to midnight on Russian nuclear fears
— Are there enough renewables jobs to absorb the great tech layoff wave of 2023?
— Why your next office could be a vertical solar farm
— Guess how many waterlogged Californians have flood insurance? Guess again.
António Guterres, UN Secretary-General (center), traveled Sunday through Santo Antão, where, after five years of intense drought, several development projects supported by the UN are helping transform the agricultural sector of this westernmost island of Cabo Verde, off the coast of Africa. Photo: UN/Mark Garten.

Late last week in Davos, as most elite attendees had already made off to the slopes or fondue joints, World Trade Organization chief Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala of Nigeria took the stage with a new call for an idea that had been on the back burner ever since Russia invaded Ukraine last year — a global carbon price.

Arguing that uniting the more than 70 current carbon pricing schemes around the world into one global price would cut emissions by more than 3.6% worldwide, Okonjo-Iweala re-floated the idea at a time when tensions are high between the U.S. and Europe over carbon prices. The U.S. is unhappy with Europe’s plan for carbon border tariffs while Europe is uneasy with the subsidies Biden climate plan offers to U.S. electric vehicle makers.

Most climate observers doubt that governments will ever be able to agree on a global price and that ultimately a preferred price will emerge from the many exchanges now trading carbon offsets. The price of carbon has been little changed around €85 ($92) for most of the past year, with the exception of a brief spike in this past August on the European Trading System (ETS).

With gas prices falling, and more carbon allowances coming to market as part of Europe’s plan to wean itself off Russian fossil fuels, there is little appetite for higher prices right now. The WTO’s call for a global price was a timely reminder that there are still ways governments can work together to help reduce global emissions, but like many ideas in Davos it is destined — this time at least — to be lost in the mountain air.

Plus, please join me tomorrow, Wednesday, Jan. 25, at 11 a.m. Eastern as I host a panel on the rise of the chief sustainability officer and what it means for boardrooms and talent teams. The panel is sponsored by BoardEx, the relationship mapping company owned by Altrata. Get more information and register for the event here.

More insights below . . . .

Don’t forget to contact me directly if you have suggestions or ideas at dcallaway@callawayclimateinsights.com.

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