(CPLC, 1 November 2021) — Leaders from the worlds of politics, business, academia, and civil society, have called for negotiators at COP26 to urgently shift policy to put a true price on carbon emissions. In an open letter coordinated by the Carbon Pricing Leadership Coalition (CPLC), an initiative overseen by the World Bank, senior figures warned carbon pricing has too often been praised as an idea but ignored as a policy.
Leading signatories were CPLC co-chairs, Juan Carlos Jobet, the Chilean Minister for Energy and Mining, and Lord Barker of Battle, Executive Chairman of En+ Group. They were joined by Steven Guilbeault, Minister of Environment and Climate Change, Government of Canada, Professor Dr. Barbara Baarsma, CEO of Rabo Carbon Bank, Dimitri de Vreeze, Co-CEO of Royal DSM, Mauricio Cárdenas, Visiting Senior Research Fellow at the Center on Global Energy Policy, Columbia University, Michael Green Executive Director of Climate Xchange, Mike Haigh, Executive Chair of Mott MacDonald and Thomas-Olivier Léautier, Director of the Group University, Chief economist, Électricité de France.
Also supporting the letter was a cross-section of the world’s leading companies, universities, civil society organisations, and business coalitions. The group urged governments to think creatively about how carbon pricing could be implemented to ensure a just transition to a low carbon economy, and to be smart about anticipating potential adverse effects.
Lord Barker of Battle, Co-Chair of the Carbon Pricing Leadership Coalition and Executive Chairman of En+ Group, said:
“It is time to stop talking about carbon pricing and start making it happen. The global support is unequivocal, the logic sound—it is only political will that is lagging.
For too long, emissions have been treated as somebody else’s problem, skewing our economy against its future interests. A fair and accurate carbon price will ensure polluters pay today for the damage they cause tomorrow and reward the innovators creating a better future for people and planet.”
Juan Carlos Jobet, Co-Chair of the Carbon Pricing Leadership Coalition and Minister of Energy for Chile, said:
“There will be very little chance for success in combating climate change if countries and companies do not collaborate with each other. The most cost-efficient way to do it is through carbon pricing.
A well-designed instrument, complementary to other low carbon policies, can drive emissions and technology costs down –effectively and flexibly-- by providing the right price signals to the private sector. In this way, the costs of carbon can be properly internalized, and companies can share those costs more equally”.
The Carbon Pricing Leadership Coalition (CPLC) is a voluntary initiative that catalyses action towards the successful implementation of carbon pricing around the world. The CPLC brings together leaders from government, business, civil society and academia to support carbon pricing, share experiences and enhance the global, regional, national and sub-national understanding of carbon pricing implementation. The CPLC Secretariat is administered by The World Bank Group.
Image courtesy CPLC.
The CPLC Letter issued to world leaders at COP26
As ministers and business leaders from across the world, we support the imperative of a successful and ambitious outcome for COP26 in Glasgow.
However, that must mean much more than a worthy communiqué full of vague pledges. We need action. Glasgow must unlock the finance and investment to fire up a truly global green economy and start a shift in policy that puts a true price on carbon pollution. It will help clean technologies to compete with fossil fuels, promote emission reductions where it is most efficient and generate revenue assisting the most vulnerable.
Carbon pricing in the past has too often been praised as an idea but ignored as a policy because it can result in unintended consequences. But if we are smart, realistic and inclusive, any government can deal with those issues head on. And we have to.
A “just transition” is the only way the world can reach net zero with confidence. The poorest should not have to shoulder any further burdens because of a lack of imagination on the part of policy makers. So let’s think creatively about carbon pricing.
The Carbon Pricing Leadership Coalition (CPLC) Taskforce has published a report showing clearly what net zero is and suggesting credible pathways to get there.
It needs to be acted on. The time for a real price on carbon is now.
Yours faithfully,
The Rt Hon Lord Barker of Battle
Co-Chair High-Level Assembly of the Carbon Pricing Leadership Coalition
Executive Chairman En+ Group
Juan Carlos Jobet
Co-Chair High-Level Assembly of the Carbon Pricing Leadership Coalition
Minister of Energy
Minister of Mining
Chile
The letter was endorsed by 38 partners of the World Bank’s Carbon Pricing Leadership Coalition (CPLC): ACCIONA; ACT Financial Solutions; ALLCOT Group; Bearfeldt; CDP; Centre for Climate Change Engagement, University of Cambridge; Climate Focus; Confederation of Danish Industry; COPENOR; Dalmia Cement; Dimitri de Vreeze, Co-CEO, Royal DSM; EDF; Energias de Portugal (EDP); Global Green Growth Institute (GGGI); Government of Quebec; Government of Trinidad and Tobago; Iberdrola; Mahindra Group; Mauricio Cárdenas; Visiting Senior Research Fellow Center on Global Energy Policy, Columbia University; Michael Green, Executive Director Climate Xchange; Mike Haigh, Executive Chair, Mott MacDonald; National Business Initiative (NBI); NaxRo; Professor Dr. Barbara Baarsma, CEO Rabo Carbon Bank; Royal Philips; Saint-Gobain; South Pole; Steven Guilbeault, Minister of Environment and Climate Change, Government of Canada; Stockholm Environment Institute; Swedish Bioenergy Association; The George Washington University; The Haga Initiative; The Nature Conservancy (TNC); Thomas-Olivier Léautier, Director of the Group University, Chief economist, Électricité de France; Unilever; University of the South Pacific; World Business Council for Sustainable Development (WBCSD); and Zero Carbon Campaign.