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Trade in GHG permits and credits up
45%
 London, 16 August: Volumes in
the world's carbon markets were up 45% year-on-year to 1.2
billion tonnes in the first six months of 2007, according to
research from Point Carbon.
Carbon allowances and permits worth €15.8 billion ($21.2
billion) were traded in the first six months of 2007 compared
with €22.5 billion in all of 2006, an increase of 41% in
annualised terms, according to the Oslo-based analyst company.
The European Union's Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS) saw
two-thirds of the traded volume, with the equivalent of 775
million tonnes (Mt) of carbon dioxide (CO2e) changing hands at
a financial value of €11.5 billion.
The EU ETS, the world's first international emissions
trading scheme, which was launched in January 2005 to help the
EU meet its targets under the Kyoto Protocol, requires
companies to emit less CO2 than their target or buy carbon
permits to make up any shortfall.
The EU ETS covers more than 10,000 power stations and other
stationary sources of greenhouse gas emission in the EU's 27
member states.
Most of the growth in trading was in forward contracts for
the second phase of the scheme, which runs from 2008 to 2012.
In the UN-administered Clean Development Mechanism (CDM),
involving projects in developing countries that limit or
reduce GHG emissions, 372Mt CO2e was traded, to the value of
€4.1 billion. The secondary market in issued CDM credits
doubled from 40Mt and €571 million in all of 2006 to 80Mt and
€1.3 billion in the first half of 2007.
"We're seeing a spectacular growth in the carbon market.
This is good news because CO2 trading is an essential tool in
the fight against human-induced climate change," said Endre
Tvinnereim, senior analyst at Point Carbon. "The EU ETS and
CDM have almost the same market share as last year, but the
strong growth in the secondary CDM market and in the EU ETS
Phase II have made the market much more dynamic." |