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Le système d'échange de quotas d’émission actuellement en place dans l'UE comporte des lacunes fondamentales, écrit Simon Tilford, économiste en chef au Centre pour la réfome européenne (CER)
The October paper argues that this is because the EU emissions trading scheme (EU-ETS) "lacks a strong and independent authority to allocate emissions caps to the member states", as well as administer the short timeframes required by the EU-ETS.
Although the EU is proud of having set ambitious targets to limit greenhouse gas emissions, "the hard part will be putting in place policies to meet them", Tilford argues.
To this end, the author proposes establishing new and independent institutions to run and oversee the market:
Tilford also suggests:
His paper argues that the EU "will miss a big opportunity if it fails to address the institutional flaws that threaten to hold back" its carbon market.
Tilford highlights "real grounds for optimism that the US will establish a federal emissions trading scheme within the next three years", and claims these rapid developments are "largely unnoticed in Europe".
He concludes that the EU should link its scheme with a future US one, and that failure to do so "would set back the drive to establish a global carbon market".