4.7 Article

Could carbon emission control firms achieve an effective financing in the carbon market? A case study of China's emission trading scheme

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION
Volume 314, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jclepro.2021.128004

Keywords

China'S carbon market; Financing mechanism; Financing effect; Governance; Measuring tool

Funding

  1. Major Program of the National Natural Science Foundation of China [71991474]
  2. Foundation for Innovative Research Groups of the National Natural-Science Foundation of China [71721001]
  3. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2021T140758]
  4. Humanities and Social Science Project of the Ministry of Education of China [20YJC630123]
  5. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [3072021CFW0912, 3072021CFW0910]

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This paper proposes a new prediction method incorporating a set of measuring models applicable to the financing efficiency of China's carbon market to quantify such market's maturity, trading risk coefficient, and financing income. The empirical findings suggest that China's emissions trading scheme pilots can be divided into growth-oriented, balance-oriented, and risk-oriented markets, with different financing effects explained by the maturity level and quota price volatility of the carbon market. Expanding the coverage of quota trading parties, stabilizing carbon price, and promoting carbon asset management are key factors in improving the financing efficiency of carbon market.
This paper proposes a new prediction method incorporating a set of measuring models applicable to the financing efficiency of China's carbon market to quantify such market's maturity, trading risk coefficient, and financing income. Our theoretical analysis indicates that the price of carbon emission quota essentially affects the financing efficiency of carbon market. While a robust safeguard measure to obtain a respectable income from carbon market financing is the long-term average quota price exceeding the initial quota price. Empirical findings derived from China's emissions trading scheme pilots reveal that these pilots can be divided into the growthoriented market (i.e. Guangdong whose financing capacity is always significant), the balance-oriented market (i.e. Shanghai and Hubei whose quota pricing mechanisms and the financing level of carbon markets both maturely develop), and the risk-oriented market (i.e. Beijing whose quota price runs at a high-level with an intense financing income volatility). It is therefore achieved that carbon market's maturity level and quota price volatility are both robustly explicable for different financing effects among these pilots. Our key findings show that expanding the coverage of quota trading parties, stabilizing carbon price, and promoting carbon asset management help to improve the financing efficiency of carbon market.

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