Blog
Carbon Market
How does a cap-and-trade scheme work?

How does a cap-and-trade scheme work?

Cap and trade schemes incentivize industries to cut carbon emissions through market mechanisms, establishing a carbon budget and issuing tradable carbon allowances. This system creates a financial incentive for reducing emissions and decarbonizing, with the price of allowances determined by supply and demand, encouraging investment in cleaner technologies.

The objective is straightforward: decarbonization. However, there are many ways to achieve it. Cap and trade schemes apply the free market laws of demand and supply - they incentivize industries to cut carbon emissions in the most optimal way they find feasible for their operations.

Setting the cap

It all starts with science

The foundation of any cap and trade scheme begins with scientific research. Scientists first determine the viable levels of global temperatures for Earth to remain inhabitable for human life. First, they quantify the impact of carbon emissions on global temperature rise. Then, they can establish how much carbon dioxide can be emitted over a specific period without exceeding these predetermined temperature thresholds.

Determining the carbon budget

With this information in hand, scientists can calculate a total carbon budget for a certain region. This budget represents the maximum amount of CO2 that can be released while still staying within safe temperature limits. Regulators then take this overall carbon budget and divide it into annual endowment, determining the maximum amount of CO2 that an economy can emit each year.

The division into annual budgets allows for better control and monitoring of carbon emissions over time. Industries are expected to gradually reduce their emissions to stay within these annual limits, making the transition to a low-carbon economy more manageable. The goal is to decarbonize progressively rather than forcing industries to stop emitting CO2 too abruptly, which could jeopardize economic stability.

[[cta-nl]]

Managing the budget wisely

The "cap" in a cap and trade system is the total limit on CO2 emissions set by regulators. This cap makes sure that the overall carbon budget is not exceeded. On top of this, regulators can monitor and control how much carbon is emitted each year, in other words, how the overall budget is consumed over time.

Executing the trade 

Creating financial incentives

It is not free to have the possibility to consume a part of the overall cap. The "trade" aspect of the cap and trade scheme means that there is a financial incentive for industries to reduce their emissions. Cap and trade schemes motivate industries to invest in greener technologies, the purpose being to still be able to afford producing similar volumes without being burdened by the cost of carbon. This is achieved by matching the carbon cap with tradable assets: here come carbon allowances.

Carbon allowances: a tradable commodity

In a cap and trade system, each tonne of CO2 from the carbon budget is linked to a tradable financial contract, a carbon allowance. For an industry to emit one tonne of CO2 (hence to have the possibility to consume a part of the overall carbon budget), it purchases one carbon allowance. This creates a direct cost for emitting carbon, incentivizing industries to find ways to reduce their emissions.

[[cta-discover]]

The trading mechanism

Beyond simply paying for the right to emit CO2, industries can also trade these carbon allowances. This is where the trading aspect comes into play. By creating a marketplace for carbon allowances, a price is established through the forces of supply and demand. Industries that can reduce their emissions more efficiently can sell their excess allowances to others, creating a financial incentive for continuous improvement in emission reduction.

Decarbonize thanks to the free market price discovery 

The price of carbon allowances is determined by market dynamics. As the cap on emissions is gradually lowered, the scarcity of carbon allowances increases, driving up their price. This price signal encourages industries to invest in cleaner technologies and reduce their carbon footprint.

Partagez cet article via :

Pour aller plus loin

Carbon Market

Can EUAs disappear? 5 reasons the carbon market is here to stay

We are often asked: what if Europe decided to stop the carbon market? Here are 5 reasons why this scenario, while theoretically possible, is in practice highly unlikely.

June 18, 2026

Carbon Market

The Carbon Market Under Political Stress: Temporary Volatility or Paradigm Shift?

As European Union Allowance (EUA) prices recently tested a floor around €70, the market appears to be factoring in an unprecedented "political risk premium." Between Italy’s calls for suspension and Germany’s budgetary debates, are the fundamentals of the world's largest carbon market truly under threat? An analysis of the forces at play as the 2026 legislative review approaches.

June 18, 2026

Carbon Market

CBAM: Europe sets its first carbon border price at €75.36/tCO₂

On 7 April 2026, Europe reached an unprecedented milestone in the history of global climate policy: the European Commission published the first official price under the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM), set at €75.36 per tonne of CO₂. It is the world's first operational carbon border price.

April 10, 2026

Et si votre épargne finançait la transition climatique ?

Homaio est la première plateforme qui vous permet d'investir dans les quotas carbone européens (EUA) et britanniques (UKA).

Diversifiez : intégrez les actifs climat à votre patrimoine.

Découvrez Homaio

Finally access investments that combine
financial
 and
environmental
 performance

Et si votre épargne finançait la transition climatique ?

Homaio est la première plateforme qui vous permet d'investir dans les quotas carbone européens (EUA) et britanniques (UKA).

Guide gratuit

Et si votre épargne finançait la transition climatique ?

Homaio est la première plateforme qui vous permet d'investir dans les quotas carbone européens (EUA) et britanniques (UKA).

Guide gratuit
Newsletter

The Homing Bird

5 minutes par semaine pour devenir incollable sur la finance climat.

Simulez votre rendement en 2 clics

Découvrez la plue-value que vous auriez pu effectuer si vous aviez investi dans un de nos actifs il y a 1, 5, 10 ans.

Échangez avec un expert

Besoin d’aide ou de plus d’informations ? 
Prenez rendez-vous avec notre expert, il sera ravis de vous accompagner !