59 Comments

Well in Sweden the ruling party (including the Greens) had carbon credits with a potential value for the Swedish taxpayers of 10 billion Eur.

They decided not to put them on the market thereby further shrinking the number of availsble carbon credits. The thought that was beneficial for the climate. Result = electricity prices rose for Swedish citizens, thereby being robbed twice.

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Any change in your thesis given recent sell off?

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What could be a possible solution to this problem?

Would it be possible for the EU to say that the emission credits need to be use within two years or they will expire and be auction off again?

This could remove the incentive to hold them. There would be one day every year in which someone needs to buy the credits they need to avoid the 110€ penalty and someone else would need to sell their two years old credits before they get voided.

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Jan 19, 2022·edited Jan 19, 2022

Thanks for the great post - keep on scratching and pecking! 🐔

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Wonder how long this will take to come to a manufacturing plant near you.

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What I think I understood (from this article and Lawson's discussion with Chris Dark) is that there is a deficit of allowances by about 24%. Allowances are to be purchased by carbon emitters by April 30, 2022 or face an additional 110 Euro penalty. The allowance deficit should result in a squeeze where emitters are theoretically forced to purchase at any price, pushing the price up to levels which will require political intervention, all by April 30, 2022.

Is my understanding of Lawson's theory off base?

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thanks

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"...as Lawson describes, there appears to be a significant flaw in the design of the EU ETS: emitters are net short and the free float is shrinking."

Quite a good succinct way to put it.

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Great wotk

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Great stuff as always. It looks like the real game here is trying to figure out when The Narrative collides with Reality - then the Ruling Class steps in and the ripcord gets pulled.

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The price of carbon credits has risen from €20 in 2019 to €85. The fine from EU is €110 per ton of emissions. Logically the carbon credits are valuable as long as they’re below €110 threshold. There’s not much upside left “compared to the price increase from 2019 to 2021”.

In the article and podcast it was mentioned that it’s just the tip of the iceberg. Am I missing something though? 🤔

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Is it conceivable that carbon prices becomes so high, causing domestic instability/political crises in some EU countries that either results in the countries breaking out from the EU or the EU diluting or scraping the entire ETS altogether?

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Thanks for the interesting article.

It seems almost every developed region has backed themselves into an escape proof trap of their own design.

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Great article, an eye opener for the average person!

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any idea on which vehicle to play for retail investors on this?

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