The Carbon Allowance Tale - Part 2: Adjustments towards a free market
New mechanisms helped the EU ETS become a more sophisticated scheme, driven by demand and supply.
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The EU emissions trading scheme (EU ETS) has evolved to be a massive liquid trading marketplace. It welcomes a variety of participants with different investment horizons and strategies.
The EU emissions trading scheme (EU ETS) has evolved to be a massive liquid trading marketplace. It welcomes a variety of participants with different investment horizons and strategies.
The most significant activity in the EU ETS happens in the secondary market, where carbon allowances are traded after their initial issuance by regulators.
From 2005 to 2018, the EU ETS had limiting rules on who could purchase and trade EU Allowances (EUAs). Only industries and power producers with compliance obligations were allowed to participate. This policy ensured that only entities directly responsible for decarbonization efforts were involved in trading allowances, keeping the scheme's focus as a policy tool.
In 2018, the introduction of the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive II (MiFID II) brought significant changes to the EU ETS. By classifying carbon allowances as financial instruments under European law, MiFID II expanded the pool of market participants. The directive aimed to improve transparency, market efficiency, and investor protection, leading to the inclusion of:
This expansion made the market more liquid and sophisticated, leading to an improved trading environment.
The primary market accounts for a small share of trades in the EU ETS. In 2023, each daily auction typically saw around 20 bidders, with about 15 winning bids per auction, and approximately 2.4 million allowances issued daily.
To participate in the daily EU ETS auctions, eligible bidders include:
Before 2024, individual investors could only participate in the EU ETS indirectly by buying market price trackers like ETFs, which offered exposure to EU ETS futures but did not allow for purchasing physical spot EUAs. Starting in 2024, individual investors can now directly buy carbon allowances through Homaio's investing platform. Market participation is expanding due to this new type of demand, and its variety is also increasing thanks to the buy-and-hold investment strategy of these investors.