Back to homeScienceArchive

Science | Europe

The Specific Carbon Market Trick European Companies Are Using to Avoid Emission Costs

| 1 min read| By EuroBulletin24 briefing
Science editorial placeholder
EuroBulletin24 editorial graphic

European companies are gaming the EU Emissions Trading System in specific legal ways that reduce the climate policy's effectiveness. Here is exactly how it works.

The EU Emissions Trading System is, in design, the most comprehensive carbon pricing mechanism ever implemented. In practice, it contains specific structural features that sophisticated industrial companies exploit to minimise their compliance costs in ways that technically comply with the rules while substantially reducing the system's climate impact.

The most consequential exploitation involves 'carbon leakage prevention' free permits — allocations given to energy-intensive industries to prevent them from relocating to less regulated jurisdictions. These free permits are calculated based on production benchmarks: a facility that produces a certain amount of steel receives a certain number of free permits based on the average carbon intensity of the most efficient producers in that sector.

The exploitation works through two mechanisms. First, facilities that have already made the efficiency investments that justify the benchmark level receive free permits whose value matches their actual costs — the intended outcome. Facilities that are less efficient than the benchmark receive free permits whose value exceeds their actual carbon cost — a windfall. Second, some companies in sectors eligible for leakage protection have restructured their operations to maximise permit allocation while minimising actual production, essentially earning carbon credit revenue without producing the goods whose production the permits were designed to compensate.

The EU Commission's analysis of the permit system found that between 2012-2022, industrial sectors collectively received free permits worth approximately €160 billion more than the permits they actually needed — a transfer of value from the carbon market mechanism to industrial incumbents that represents the most significant structural subsidy in European climate policy.

The policy correction — the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism and the phased elimination of free permits — is moving in the right direction. The pace of correction is slow enough that significant gaming value remains available for several more years, and the industries most capable of gaming the system are the same industries with the most political resources to resist the correction.

#carbon-market#eu-ets#companies#loophole#emissions#climate
More in ScienceBrowse full archive

Comments

0 comments
Checking account...
480 characters left
Loading comments...

Related coverage

Science
April 2026 Was the Hottest March Ever for the US Lower 48 — And El Niño Is Making It Worse
Federal data shows that March 2026 was the hottest March on record for the Lower 48 United States, by the largest margin...
Science
AI Chatbots and Mental Health: A New Medical Study Says Doctors Need to Start Asking Their Patients a New Question
## The Question That Doctors Aren't Asking When a patient comes to a doctor or psychiatrist for a mental health assessme...
Science
The Artemis II Crew Said They Are 'Bonded Forever' — Their First Full Interview After Coming Home Reveals Everything
## Four Astronauts Who Went to the Moon and Came Back Changed Ten days in a pressurized capsule traveling 252,760 miles ...
Science
The Artemis II Crew Said 'Bonded Forever' — Here Is Their Full First Interview After Coming Home
The Artemis II crew spoke publicly for the first time since returning from the Moon. Here is every significant thing the...
Science
Artemis II Splashed Down 'Textbook' Perfect — Here Is the Complete Story of What Those 13 Minutes Were Like
At 8:07 PM Eastern on April 10, 2026, Artemis II splashed down 'textbook perfect' in the Pacific Ocean. Here is the comp...
Science
The Orion Capsule's 695,000-Mile Journey: A Timeline of Everything That Happened
Artemis II's Orion traveled 695,081 miles in 10 days. Here is the complete day-by-day timeline of the mission — every re...

More stories

Entertainment
Sylvester Stallone Is Getting a Biopic and the Rocky Director Is Making It — Here Is Everything About 'I Play Rocky'
Technology
Reese Witherspoon Says It's Time for Women to Embrace AI and She Wants to Learn With You — Here Is Her Vision
Entertainment
Tom Cruise's New Film 'Digger' Made CinemaCon 2026 Stop — Here Is What the Grand Entrance Revealed
Entertainment
Karol G's Coachella Weekend 2 Set Made History Twice in the Same Evening — Here Is What Happened
World
The US Just Sent a Diplomatic Delegation to Cuba for the First Time in Years — Here Is What Changed
Entertainment
Zendaya Is 'Disappearing' From Public Life After 2026 — Here Is What's Actually Happening
Entertainment
Michael B. Jordan Is Starring in 'The Thomas Crown Affair' Remake — Here Is Why This Casting Is Perfect
Entertainment
Demi Moore Just Joined Charlize Theron and Julia Garner in a New Amazon MGM Thriller — Here Is Everything About 'Tyrant'
World
Chicago O'Hare Is Cutting 2026 Summer Flights — Here Is Why This Affects Every American Traveler
Military
Ukraine's Long-Range Strikes Into Russia Are Prompting New Threats Against Europe — What's Happening
Entertainment
Henry Cavill's Highlander Reboot Showed First Footage at CinemaCon — Here Is Every Detail
Sports
Azzi Fudd Was the #1 WNBA Draft Pick and She Is Reuniting With Paige Bueckers — Here Is What It Means for the League