Calif. cap-and-trade auction sees prices drop for first time in years

By Blanca Begert | 06/03/2024 06:38 AM EDT

Observers suggest market uncertainty as regulators eye amendments to the program.

Prices for California carbon emissions permits dropped nearly $5 per ton last week, the first price drop in nearly two years, according to state results announced Thursday.

Last week’s quarterly sale of permits that high-emitting businesses need to cover their operations in California saw prices settle at $37.02 per ton of carbon, close to $5 below the February 2024 price of $41.76.

The reason for this quarter’s price drop, after progressive increases at auctions since November 2022, wasn’t immediately apparent. Experts said the lower price could be a sign of market uncertainty as the California Air Resources Board moves into a rulemaking on amendments to the cap-and-trade program that would increase the program’s stringency and raise credit prices by reducing the pool of allowances.

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CARB has been hosting workshops on potential amendments since last summer, when observers suggested that projected increases in credit prices as a result of program changes drove a run on credits that caused prices to spike.

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