Scaling up Climate Mitigation Policy in Germany

20.500.12592/109r2b

Scaling up Climate Mitigation Policy in Germany

27 Sep 2021

Germany has set national greenhouse emissions targets of a 65 percent reduction below 1990 levels by 2030 and net zero emissions by 2045, along with various sectoral emissions goals. To achieve these targets, the government has introduced multi-pronged policy measures, including a national emissions trading system (ETS), which complements the ETS at the EU level. This paper shows the substantial variation in the price responsiveness of emissions across sectors and thus prices implied by sectoral targets. It proposes the following measures to help Germany meet emissions targets with greater certainty and cost effectiveness: (i) further strengthening carbon pricing, for example through automatically rising price floors for the national ETS after 2026; (ii) harmonizing carbon pricing to reduce cross-sector differences in marginal abatement costs; and (iii) introducing feebates (revenue neutral taxsubsidy schemes) to reinforce incentives at the sectoral level. The paper also studies the distributional impact of higher carbon pricing and suggests that reducing social security contributions can mitigate the regressive direct impact of higher carbon pricing on lowerincome households. Concerns with carbon leakages and firms’ competitiveness are best addressed through agreeing on an international carbon price floor.

Authors

Simon Black, Ruo Chen, Aiko Mineshima, Victor Mylonas, Ian W.H. Parry, Dinar Prihardini

Frequency
regular
ISBN
9781513594958
ISSN
1018-5941
Pages
36
Published in
United States of America
Series
Working Paper No. 2021/241
StockNumber
WPIEA2021241