How can carbon pricing help achieve Scotland’s 2045 targets?
Item Status
RESTRICTED ACCESS
Embargo End Date
2026-07-31
Date
Abstract
In Scotland, the buildings and transport sectors have not seen reductions in carbon emissions at the same rate as other sectors. Using the UK’s 7th carbon budget as a baseline, we model two carbon tax levels (£25/tCO₂ and £75/tCO₂) and two cap-and-trade system scenarios (with and without a soft price cap) in the period 2027 – 2045, with both partial and full cost passthrough to consumers. . The highest anticipated emissions reduction is in the higher £75 carbon tax scenario where costs are fully passed on to customers. The lowest emissions abatements were in the lower £25 carbon tax scenario, where costs are partially passed on. Our modelled ETS prices generate less emissions abatement than steadier price signals under a carbon tax. The model shows that most additional emissions reductions occur in the buildings sector. Costs are more significant for lower-income households. The disproportionate impact on low-income consumers can be alleviated through revenue recycling.
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