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Explainer: What Is a Carbon Tax, Pros and Cons, and Implementation Around the World

Explainer: What Is a Carbon Tax, Pros and Cons, and Implementation Around the World

With climate threats intensifying, carbon taxes have rapidly gained global momentum. This comprehensive article examines if appropriately robust carbon prices can incentivise the pace and scale of emission reductions now essential across transport, energy, industry, and agriculture. It explores real-world implementations of a carbon tax, future projection modelling, economic debates, social impact concerns, and policy complementary measures around regulations, green investments and support programs needed to address critical limitations and spur equitable low-carbon transitions across advanced and emerging economies this decade.

The Pressing Need for Decarbonisation

Climate change is one of the most pressing issues facing humanity today. The overwhelming scientific consensus is that warming trends over the past century are extremely likely due to human activities that have increased atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) and other greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. Major contributors to these emissions are the burning of fossil fuels like coal, oil, and gas across transportation, electricity generation, industrial processes, agriculture, and more. As the world continues to emit GHGs at ever-increasing rates, their accumulation in the atmosphere is pushing up temperatures, significantly disrupting global climate patterns, and posing catastrophic threats to ecosystems, economies, and communities globally.

One policy solution acquiring momentum to tackle climate change is implementing a carbon tax. 

At a basic level, a carbon tax directly and accurately puts a price on carbon emissions released from the burning of fossil fuels. This pricing aims to incorporate the costs of pollution and climate damage into market prices, incentivising reduced emissions, and driving the adoption of clean energy alternatives across economic sectors. Key aspects of carbon taxes, including their purpose, design, effectiveness, reception, and implementation across different countries, will be explored throughout this article. With growing climate change impacts and recognition that carbon pricing is essential to achieve broad decarbonisation globally, momentum is building for the widespread establishment of carbon tax schemes in various countries over the next decade. Their role in stabilising global temperatures and enabling an equitable, sustainable future will also be discussed.

What Is a Carbon Tax and How Does it Work?

A carbon tax is a government-imposed pricing mechanism that places a fee or tax on GHG emissions from burning planet-warming fuels including oil, gas, and coal. The tax is measured per ton of carbon dioxide equivalent emissions released and needs to be paid by the burning entity. 

By attaching a monetary cost directly proportional to the amount of emissions, a carbon price provides a concrete incentive for households, businesses, and other entities to seek lower emissions alternatives and pursue energy efficiency gains to avoid paying higher taxes. It aims to reveal and incorporate the economic and social costs of carbon pollution created by various fuels and activities into their market prices.

The core principle behind an effective carbon tax is that it sets a stable, rising price trajectory high enough to drive meaningful emissions reductions and the scaling of clean technologies over time. To enable the necessary transition away from a high emissions economy, tax levels would need to reach US$100-200 per ton of CO2 equivalent (CO2e) in the next decades.

A carbon tax is an upstream approach focused on taxing major fossil fuel suppliers and distributors higher up in the supply chain. This allows costs to be passed downstream through oil companies to consumers at fuel pumps, on utility bills and implicitly in prices of goods and services across the economy. In terms of specific targets for taxation, major sources would include transportation and heating fuels like gasoline, diesel, natural gas, propane, as well as coal and natural gas used in electricity generation. 

Once implemented, policymakers have flexibility in whether to make the tax revenue neutral or let it raise new government funds. Revenue raised can be returned through equal per capita rebates to citizens, used to offset other taxes or fund green infrastructure projects, clean research, development and demonstration (RD&D) incentives, worker retraining programs, and vulnerable community resilience funds to address socioeconomic impacts. The key design aim is to establish stable, rising carbon prices at sufficient levels using models consistent with national policy priorities and regulatory environments.

You might also like: How India’s Carbon Tax Implementation Could Set a Precedent for G20 Countries

Benefits and Arguments for Carbon Taxes

1. Reduce Carbon Emissions

The core purpose of a carbon tax is to provide market signals strong enough to result in reduced GHG emissions across large sections of the economy. By attaching a significant price to pollution, it incentivises shifts towards less carbon intensive fuels, deployment of energy efficiency measures, and investment in clean alternatives across sectors like electricity, transportation, and manufacturing. Estimates of emissions reduction potential from a broad-based tax in the range of $50 per ton could be over 20%.

2. Mitigate Climate Change

The decrease in national and global carbon emissions caused by carbon taxes will lead to lower overall CO2 concentrations, intensifying warming trends and climate disruptions. According to an Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) 2023 report, global adoption of differentiated carbon prices by 2030 could reduce emissions significantly compared to the baseline scenario, although additional measures and cooperation are required to limit warming to well below 2C by 2100, as agreed in the Paris Agreement.

3. Encourage Clean Energy Adoption

Fossil fuel taxation is a key policy instrument to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and promote shifts to renewable energy and other low-carbon solutions. However, fossil fuel taxation alone may not be enough to achieve the Paris Agreement goals, and it may face political and social obstacles. Therefore, fossil fuel taxation should be part of a broader policy package that includes other measures to address market failures, behavioural barriers, and distributional impacts, and that ensures transparency, fairness, and participation in the policy process.

4. Fund Green Initiatives

Revenues from carbon taxes provide a sizeable funding pool that governments can utilise for investments in clean technology R&D, mass public transit upgrades, sustainable infrastructure projects, environmental restoration efforts, and resilience funds for vulnerable groups. Alternatively, revenues can enable cuts on taxes for income, capital acquisitions or employment.

5. Market-Based Approach

Rather than impose rigid regulations or emission limits, a carbon tax provides price signals and lets market dynamics determine the most efficient paths and technologies to reduce emissions across diverse economic sectors. Businesses can build solutions tailored to their operations, innovations, and investment roadmaps.

6. Revenue Neutral Options

To address concerns about increasing taxes and expanding government revenue, some carbon tax laws, such as Canada’s Greenhouse Gas Pollution Pricing Act, require that all direct proceeds from the carbon pricing system be returned to the source jurisdiction. The provincial and territorial governments can decide how to use the returned revenues, such as providing rebates, cutting other taxes, or investing in green initiatives. The carbon pricing system consists of a charge on fuel and a performance-based system for large industrial emitters.

7. Administrative Efficiency

A carbon tax builds on existing fuel taxation systems, minimising new administrative bureaucracy. Costs of revenue collection and implementation are very low relative to emissions trading programs or green subsidy management.

Criticisms and Arguments Against Carbon Taxes

1. Regressive Nature

A flat, uniform carbon tax can disproportionately impact lower income groups who spend a higher share of earnings on energy bills and basic goods carrying embedded carbon costs. Effects can be mitigated through partial exemptions or per capita dividends from revenue, but regressivity arguments persist.

2. Uncertainty Around Emissions Impact

Projecting precise emissions reductions from any given tax level involves estimating complex, interconnected behavioural changes across millions of energy consumers. Model forecast studies to guide rate setting have limitations. Critics argue funds could be better utilised directly in green infrastructure as opposed to tax hoping for certain emission cuts.

3. Lack of Support

In regions with influential fossil fuel lobbies or high use of coal, oil, and gas, major political and public opposition hinders carbon tax proposals. Lawsuits, repeal of laws, election defeats for supporters and widespread protests against fuel taxes show the difficulty of stakeholder alignment.

4. Risks Competitiveness & Leakage

Major energy using industries often oppose carbon taxes, arguing they raise costs and undermine competitiveness, especially if nearby regions lack similar policies. Manufacturing could shift abroad, raising “carbon leakage” concerns. Border carbon adjustments on trade flows are complex to implement.

5. Complex Policy Design

Choosing appropriate, adjustable tax levels, matching policy priorities and economic diversity is very complex across emissions-intensive sectors. Cost uncertainty creates opposition, and exemptions degrade efficacy. Calibration requires balancing numerous stakeholders and objectives.

6. Other Policies Could Be More Effective

Some economists argue direct spending on mass electric vehicle (EV) adoption, renewable energy investments, infrastructure upgrades and resilience funds can achieve greater short-term emission cuts rapidly rather than hoping price signals incentivise consumers and businesses fast enough.

You might also like: The EU Border Carbon Adjustment, Explained

Implementations Around the World

Early Adopters – Small northern European nations like Finland, Sweden and Norway adopted carbon taxes in the 1990s, which now range from $70 to $168 per ton of CO2 on a range of fossil fuels. Revenues support national sustainability programs.

Canada has implemented carbon pricing systems most aligned to carbon tax principles with their Greenhouse Gas Pollution Pricing Act, charging an economy-wide tax beginning at CAD$40 (US$30) in 2019, rising to CAD$170 (US$128) by 2030. All revenues return to the provinces and residents through rebates.

The United Kingdom participates in the EU emissions trading scheme for large emitters and maintains a domestic Climate Change Levy on industry fuels plus higher rates for building fuels to drive efficiency. The impact is affected by rates and relatively limited targeting.

The European Union’ Emissions Trading Scheme (EU ETS) is the largest multi-country carbon pricing system covering electricity, manufacturing, and intra-EU air travel. Companies buy monthly carbon allowances at variable auction clearing prices, effectively creating a traded carbon price currently around 90 euro (US$99) per ton. The impact is limited by volatility and wide exemptions. China is launching a similar national market.

Singapore enacted Southeast Asia’s first carbon tax in 2019 on emissions intensive facilities at a rate rising to US$50/ton CO2e by 2030. Revenues play a crucial role in funding industry decarbonisation incentives. South Africa has legislated a carbon tax on scope 1 emitters from mid-2019 at roughly US$8.5/ton rising annually. Revenues help industry compliance and mitigation programs.

You might also like: Explainer: What Is an Emissions Trading Scheme and How Does It Work?

The Future of Carbon Taxes

Carbon pricing mechanisms are projected to play a crucial role in achieving broad decarbonisation of the global economy this century in line with targets set under the UN Paris Agreement and updated Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs). 

According to the World Bank, over 65 carbon pricing initiatives have been implemented or are scheduled, covering nearly 22% of global emissions. These policy landscapes are becoming key drivers, enabling clean energy investments by adding tangible costs to legacy technologies and assets. With most major emitters having announced or considering carbon pricing schemes this decade, the total value of taxes and traded carbon markets could appreciate significantly, facilitating greener public and private expenditures worldwide.

To achieve Paris-aligned warming limits, the High Level Commission on Carbon Prices estimated explicit carbon prices in the range of $50-100/ton CO2e are needed by 2030 across all major economies, rising to $160 and above by 2050. With most schemes currently pricing carbon from $10-60 per ton, there are calls for prices to double or triple over the next decade, providing economic signals strong enough to match decarbonisation aspirations. Integrating carbon taxes and trading instruments with clean energy standards, efficiency incentives, infrastructure upgrades, and managed coal, oil and gas declines can maximise impact.

Carbon Tracker forecasts that rising carbon prices, along with the increasing affordability and efficiency of batteries, solar power, electric vehicles and other low-carbon technologies, could limit global warming to less than 2C by making fossil fuels less competitive, even without new climate legislation. However, to ensure a fair and smooth transition that follows the best available science, carbon taxes need to be a central element of comprehensive policy plans in this decade.

Conclusion

Well-designed national carbon taxes that directly price emissions could prove essential market-based policy levers enabling the urgent economy-wide transition to net zero now demanded by climate science. However, complementary measures tackling social impacts, green investments, regulatory standards and international cooperation remain vital to address criticisms, spur urgent adoption across lagging nations, incentivize innovations, and facilitate decarbonization timeframes at the pace and scale climate stabilization requires. 

With no silver bullet solutions, there is a call for ambitious, equitable policy packages where rising carbon prices play a central role driving low-carbon shifts across several industries on the pathway to global carbon neutrality.

You might also like: Achieving Net Zero: Where Are We Today?

About the Author

Mitota P. Omolere

Mitota is an Environment, Health, and Safety (EHS) Specialist passionate about sustainability. With a first degree in Industrial Safety and Environmental Technology, he has over 4 years of experience implementing EHS and quality management systems across industries. He Loves to volunteer for youth-led sustainability initiatives. With interests in Environmental sustainability, climate change, Energy, health, and safety, he actively writes on these topics to share insights.

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