“EU climate policies and justice: socio-economic impacts and pathways to equity” is the panel that SPES Consortium member EUI organised during the COP 29 in Baku on November 15th at the ILO Pavilion. The panel tried to answer to the following questions: how can we lessen the potential unequal effects of climate policies within the EU? And how can we enhance European climate policies and international cooperation to reduce inequalities?
The European Union is pushing forward its climate policies included in the European Green Deal (EGD), such as the Emissions Trading System (ETS), the ETS 2, and the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM), leading the charge to cut emissions and combat carbon leakage.
Yet, these initiatives pose challenges: the ETS and the ETS 2 may result in uneven socio-economic impacts among and within Member States, and the CBAM brings up fairness concerns in global climate policies. Indeed, the EGD could lead to job losses in high-carbon industries, disproportionately impacting vulnerable workers, communities and regions reliant on these sectors for employment. Without a properly designed redistribution mechanism, carbon taxes will also disproportionately impact low-income households as they spend a higher percentage of their income on energy. Similarly, when it comes to transport, low-income households will find it difficult to cover higher transport costs, pushing people into further poverty and social exclusion if fairness considerations are not embedded in support policies.
Key policy discussions are needed on the social impacts of ETS/ETS2. These include the scope and funding of the Social Climate Fund, the Just Transition Mechanism and the Just Transition Fund, the lack of binding legislation on a just transition, and the need for additional policy and funding instruments to address existing gaps. At the same time, the implementation of CBAM must safeguard a fair transition for Global South countries affected by the EU carbon pricing. It must tackle economic inequalities and ease the burden on these countries, while encouraging global climate action and keeping EU industries
competitive.
To ensure a concrete Just Transition across Europe and the world, advanced economies must address these issues.
Chair and scene setting
Simone Borghesi – EUI and University of Siena
Panelist
Moustapha Kamal Gueye – ILO
Frank Siebern-Thomas – DG EMPL European Commission
Asia Guerreschi – University of Ferrara
Bas van Ruijven – IIASA
To read more on Emissions trading Systems and Sustainable Energy Futures here a list of recent SPES publications: