The transition to a cleaner future will require both government action and the right incentives for the private sector. At the center should be a strong public policy that puts a price on carbon pollution.
Sweden: Decoupling GDP Growth From CO2 Emissions Is Possible
With the highest level of CO2 tax worldwide, Sweden provides strong evidence that decoupling GDP growth from CO2 emissions is possible and that CO2 tax is an efficient way of achieving a decrease in CO2 emission with fossil origin, write Sweden's Finance Minister Magdalena Andersson and Minister for International Development Cooperation Isabella Lövin.
Carbon Pricing Panel – Setting a Transformational Vision for 2020 and beyond
Cities Can Lead on Climate Change to Build a More Resilient Future
British Columbia’s Carbon Tax Shift: An Environmental and Economic Success
Tokyo, an Urban Carbon Cap-and-Trade Pioneer, Supports Putting a Price on Carbon
The IPCC’s Fifth Assessment Report firmly centered on the reality of human-driven climate change. If we don’t take immediate and tangible steps to reduce the consequences of these actions, we will face an environmental crisis that will have a major impact on mankind’s existence. Here in Tokyo, we are extremely concerned about this danger, as it poses a huge threat to our goal of becoming a sustainable and environmentally-friendly city.
Why Investors Support a Price on Carbon
The British economist Lord Nicholas Stern has labelled climate change “the greatest market failure the world has ever seen.” Failing to put a price on carbon emissions leaves the market with no way to address the harm created by these emissions. And with no cost attached to a harmful activity, participants in the market have no incentive to pursue less harmful alternatives. Thankfully, this is changing.