🛢💸 The real deal about Carbon Pricing: Difference between revisions

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source 2: https://www.nature.com/articles/nclimate1332</ref> Glen P. Peters, a Norwegian scientist who participated to the later study, considers that in some ways the financial crisis was a missed opportunity to curb future emissions worldwide… A potential next question to open the scope of this carbon pricing series will be: “Will the 2020 crisis caused by COVID19 put some governments on good tracks to Paris pledges, or is it a short minor break on carbon emissions?”  
source 2: https://www.nature.com/articles/nclimate1332</ref> Glen P. Peters, a Norwegian scientist who participated to the later study, considers that in some ways the financial crisis was a missed opportunity to curb future emissions worldwide… A potential next question to open the scope of this carbon pricing series will be: “Will the 2020 crisis caused by COVID19 put some governments on good tracks to Paris pledges, or is it a short minor break on carbon emissions?”  


====Further ====
====The Carbon capture and storage hoax====
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Despite being not correlated with a drop in GHG emissions, some see the rise of the EU ETS carbon price since 2018 with hope (see [https://ember-climate.org/data/carbon-price-viewer/ Ember carbon price viewer].) Politics are not at all on the way to purely and simply force Carbon capture and storage (CCS) techniques to be built on all carbon intensive industries — from concrete plant to fossil power plants. Still, soft mechanisms like the ETS market, are supposed to play this role without interfering too much with “business as usual”. Nevertheless, economical models show that only
Despite being not correlated with a drop of GHG emissions worldwide, some see the rise of the EU ETS carbon price since 2018 with hope (see [https://ember-climate.org/data/carbon-price-viewer/ Ember carbon price viewer].) Politics are not at all on the way to purely and simply force Carbon capture and storage (CCS) technics to be installed on all carbon intensive industries — from concrete plants to electric power plants burning fossil fuels. Still, <i>soft</i> mechanisms like the ETS market are supposed to play this role without interfering too much with “business as usual”. But economical models show that only a rise of the tonne of CO2 above 50€ could possibly force those industries to .
 
CCS have become a great way for fossil industries to reassure their investors, with a “fallback solution” in case if States eventually decided to adopt <i>hard</i> mechanisms to make emissions drop mandatory (be it fines or taxes). The problem is that most predictive models and commitments for a way toward less than +2°C are calling massively on the use of CCS technics to


== Notes ==
== Notes ==