Nature and Biodiversity

How carbon pricing accelerates innovation

Vapour pours from a steel mill chimney in the industrial town of Port Kembla, about 80 km (50 miles) south of Sydney July 7, 2011. Australia unveiled plans on July 10, 2011 to slap a carbon tax of A$23 a tonne on its 500 worst polluters from 2012, sweetened by tax cuts for voters fearing higher power bills, and paved the way to adopt the largest emissions-trading scheme outside Europe. Picture taken July 7, 2011.        REUTERS/Tim Wimborne   (AUSTRALIA - Tags: BUSINESS POLITICS ENVIRONMENT) - GM1E77A0WOC01

Carbon pricing creates stronger incentives to invest in innovation for an eco-friendly future. Image: REUTERS/Tim Wimborne

Dimitri de Vreeze
Chief Executive Officer, dsm-firmenich

As the world mobilizes to keep global warming below 2°C, the pace of innovation is heating up to deliver on that promise. Carbon pricing is playing a major role.

Consider this. Two years ago, China announced that it would create the world’s largest carbon market in 2017. Following that announcement, global solar energy capacity doubled year over year, much of it in China.

The solar sector has seen an innovation streak, from energy storage to solar panel coatings. Today solar panels are almost twice as efficient as they were five years ago. China is not alone. More US workers are employed by clean energy than the fossil fuels industry by a factor of 5:1.

The energy sector isn’t the only one undergoing a major transformation. Everything from cars to food to carpet is ready for a re-design from the ground up.

“There’s only so much we can do with products, services and systems based on the ‘take, make, dispose’ model,” explains Ellen MacArthur, CEO of the Ellen MacArthur Foundation which advocates for a circular economy. “By re-thinking and re-designing, we can accelerate the transition to a new model that doesn’t just ’eke out resources a bit longer.”

Making a low-carbon economy based on smart design can mitigate climate change and achieve other important targets like many of the UN Sustainable Development Goals. And business leaders are taking note. It’s not only about human survival on this planet; it’s a big economic opportunity.

Carbon pricing is one of the tools spurring the tech boom. Don’t think of it as the dusty cap and trade system that has languished in Europe in recent years and was practically dead on arrival the US. Today carbon pricing is driven by corporations and, increasingly, the financial community. Almost 1400 companies are betting it will be the tool of choice for policymakers around the world and they aren’t waiting for governments to see what happens.

CEOs today are creating financial schemes within their own companies – setting a theoretical carbon price, say €40 per ton, and then conducting business as if that price was real. For example, an industrial company may look at an acquisition and consider how much a new asset like a coal-fired factory would cost based on the carbon footprint. Still a good deal? Maybe not.

Whether companies set carbon prices themselves or governments do it for them, it creates a stronger business incentive to invest in low-carbon technology and innovation for an eco-friendly future. When the price of carbon on the EU market reached about €30/ ton, it proved effective. Companies reacted by filing 30% more patents in the areas of renewable energy, energy storage, energy efficiency and carbon sequestration. Now with countries like China, Canada and Mexico set to launch domestic carbon markets in 2017 and 2018, innovation should once again take off and not just in the renewables space.

Image: Sightline Institute

The transportation sector is a good example. Ten years ago, your car was made mostly of steel. Today it’s made from aluminum and feather-light plastic, which reduces weight for a boost in energy efficiency and less emissions. In the US cars drive on a mixture of gasoline and up to 10% biofuel thanks to a government mandate. Electric models are the next step.

Volvo announced that 14 months from now it will sell only hybrid and electric vehicles. Tesla’s market cap is already comparable to Ford’s. Several countries, including India, announced they will outlaw diesel and petrol cars over the next two decades.

A new generation of electric vehicles means your car will be powered by technology more like a mobile phone than the original model T. Chemists and materials scientists will be busy making better battery technologies and special high-end, conductive plastics for every little connector and chip.

For Royal DSM, the health, nutrition and materials company that I represent, this is a particularly interesting area. For more than 25 years we have worked with the automotive industry to design better, smarter, safer, lighter – and increasingly greener components.

Industry has a lot at stake. We simultaneously bear witness to and drive change across many sectors. That’s why it’s important that we get this new low carbon economy right and that’s why the public sector is increasingly giving the business community a seat at the table.

In less than two weeks world leaders gather at COP 23 in Bonn to create more action plans around climate change mitigation. DSM will be there to share our experience with carbon pricing — we apply a price of €50/tonne — and exchange ideas on new technologies for nutrition, climate and the circular economy. Automotive is just the beginning. From agriculture and the food we eat, to construction materials and the places we call home, the world is changing fast. With effective policies and rapid innovation, we can change faster than the climate does.

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