India pioneers pragmatic carbon pricing with CCTS and rate‑based ETS 🌱

New Delhi, June 23, 2025 – India is emerging as a global leader in carbon pricing innovation with the roll‑out of its Carbon Credit Trading Scheme (CCTS) and parallel plans for a rate‑based Emissions Trading System (ETS). These twin initiatives mark a major shift towards market‑driven decarbonization—balancing ambition with industrial realities.✅ What’s the Carbon Credit Trading Scheme (CCTS)? • Launched in June 2023 under the amended Energy Conservation Act (2022), the CCTS introduces a compliance‑based, intensity‑driven “baseline‑and‑credit” carbon market . • Targets apply to 282 facilities in four high‑emitting sectors—cement, aluminium, chlor‑alkali, pulp & paper—for the 2025–26 and 2026–27 compliance years, using 2023‑24 as baseline . • Participants reducing emissions below their targets earn credits; those above must purchase credits or pay a penalty at twice the average credit price . • These are India’s first legally binding industrial CO₂ intensity benchmarks, with phased ambitions of ~2–3 % cuts in 2025–26 and ~3.3–7.5 % in 2026–27 .⚖️ Why rate‑based ETS? • While CCTS imposes intensity targets per product unit, the ETS will set absolute emission caps and allow trading of allowances—akin to the EU and South Korea models . • It’s designed to complement the intensity‑based scheme by covering other sectors and providing flexibility through market pricing—pulling in lessons from established global systems .🤝 Institutional backbone • Bureau of Energy Efficiency (BEE) oversees implementation: data, registry, issuing Carbon Credit Certificates (CCCs), and market infrastructure . • Ministries of Power and Environment steer policy, while a steering committee advises on targets, linking frameworks, and international coordination .📈 Early momentum & market design • A March 2025 report from the Environmental Defense Fund highlights that intensity‑based carbon markets can reduce emissions by 7–15 % while promoting business competitiveness, innovation, and cost-savings . • Wood Mackenzie’s latest report notes India’s six approved methodologies for voluntary offsets may boost credit quality and integration into global carbon markets .⚠️ Challenges ahead • The voluntary offset component risks undermining credibility without robust MRV (monitoring, reporting, verification) and enforcement systems . • MSMEs face hurdles in joining due to compliance costs and technical complexity . • Market mechanisms like price floors, stability reserves, and linking protocols will be critical to prevent volatility and ensure long-term viability .🌐 Global leadership & export resilience • As the EU’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism looms, India’s carbon pricing strategy enhances its export competitiveness, signaling readiness for global low-carbon trade dynamics . • Analysts affirm that these pioneering moves position India as a climate leader in the Global South, with potential for the largest carbon market by 2030 .

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