34.4 C
Lagos
Tuesday, March 10, 2026

100 European businesses urge EU leaders to back carbon market

- Advertisement -

More than 100 companies have called on leaders of the European Union (EU) to reaffirm support for the bloc’s carbon-pricing mechanism.

The EU Emissions Trading System (ETS), ahead of a summit next week, made the call on Tuesday, March 10, 2026.

In a letter published Tuesday, the businesses said Europe’s security and economic resilience depend on strengthening its clean energy transition.

Ursula von der Leyen
Ursula von der Leyen, President of the European Commission

“In the current geopolitical context, Europe’s security and sovereignty hinge on building a more competitive and resilient economy,” the companies wrote.

They argued this can be achieved by reducing dependence on volatile fossil fuel imports and instead leveraging Europe’s clean energy potential, skilled workforce and strong innovation sector.

The signatories include industrial companies such as Salzgitter AG and Volvo Cars, energy firms including Vattenfall and EDF, as well as clean-technology companies and investors.

Under the EU’s carbon market, companies in sectors such as electricity generation, industrial manufacturing and aviation must purchase allowances to cover their greenhouse gas emissions.

The system currently regulates around 40 per cent of the bloc’s total emissions.

However, as European industries grapple with comparatively high energy prices, several EU member states argued that the combined burden of energy costs and emissions allowances were putting pressure on key industrial sectors.

The companies behind the letter warned that weakening or suspending the ETS would not solve Europe’s competitiveness challenges.

“Weakening or suspending the ETS instead of fixing the root causes of Europe’s ailing competitiveness would be a serious misdiagnosis of the problem,” the letter said.

Introduced more than two decades ago, the ETS is widely regarded as the cornerstone of the EU’s climate policy and decarbonisation framework.

The companies said undermining the system would reduce investment certainty and threaten Europe’s industrial future.

A planned assessment by the European Commission is expected to examine how more revenue generated by the ETS could be directed toward further reducing emissions in the industrial sector.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Latest news

- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you

×