Executive summary
- Free allocation has resulted in significant windfall profits for corporations. Windfall profits occur when industrial companies are over-subsidised for their pollution. Energy-intensive companies in the UK made over €3 billion from the EU ETS during 2008-2014. The corporations in the UK that were able to make the most profits from the EU’s carbon market are Tata Steel (€870 million), Lafarge (€160 million), Hanson Cement (€125 million) and Total (€120 million).
- European taxpayers are picking up the bill as governments forego income and lose out on revenues from auctioning these pollution permits. As a result of free allocation, less money is available for investments in the climate friendly transition of the European economy. In the 2008-2014 period, the UK government has given out 1.3 billion free pollution permits and has thereby missed out on at least €16.3 billion in auctioning revenues.
In the coming months, European policymakers will revise the current EU ETS rules for the post-2020 period. The policy brief concludes with recommendations how to change the current carbon leakage rules to ensure that further windfall profits are avoided.
Read national factsheet here
Read full CE Delft report here