Mutual Funds Commodities Research Tax Planning IPO Our Team Contact Us  
Google
Web www.equitybulls.com
Research

| More

Kotak Institutional Equities - ESG, Global carbon pricing trends 2023: Needs more ambition

Posted On: 2024-06-13 11:33:38 (Time Zone: IST)


Amid the energy crisis and economic stagnation, 2023 was a year of gradual progress in the uptake of global carbon pricing instruments (CPI). Multi-dimensional efforts are being undertaken worldwide to promote these instruments' uptake and improve prices to meet the 2°C goal, especially in mid-income countries. The final bill for the rollout of the Indian carbon market is approved, and the finer details are awaited. We believe that companies enabling/transitioning to a lower carbon footprint will benefit from this.

Coverage of CPIs continues to rise but needs more ambition

CPIs continued to inch up to 75 in FY2024 (FY2023: 73), covering 24% of global GHG emissions (FY2023: 23%) (see Exhibits 1-2). This is further expected to increase in the near term by 4.5%, with: (1) large middle-income countries such as Brazil, India and Turkey making notable strides toward CPI implementation (see Exhibit 3); (2) the progress of sector-specific multilateral initiatives for international aviation and shipping; and (3) the implementation of the EU Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM; see Exhibit 4). However, its uptake needs more ambition and larger scale of action to achieve the COP26 goal of covering 60% of global GHG emissions by 2030. CPIs remain instrumental in reaching the global climate goal. Globally, 88 countries have so far committed to achieving the net-zero target, while 54 countries are considering this step (see Exhibits 5-6).

Higher CPI prices needed to meet 2°C goal

CPI revenues increased in CY2023 to US$104 bn (CY2022: US$95 bn), driven by high allowance prices and a temporary shift in some German ETS revenues from 2022 to 2023 (see Exhibit 7). CPI prices saw mixed developments as most instruments witnessed price increases in nominal terms; however, ten ETSs, covering ~5% of global emissions, saw price declines. This included significant price declines in large, long-standing ETSs in the EU, New Zealand, Korea and the UK (see Exhibit 8), which may lead to a decline in global carbon pricing revenues in 2024. CPI prices need to increase significantly to meet the 2°C goal (see Exhibit 9). Currently, less than 1% of GHG emissions are covered by the minimum recommended price range of USD63 per t/Co2e.

Weak demand from voluntary markets drags carbon credit issuances

Carbon credit issuance volumes fell for the second-consecutive year by ~9% yoy, mainly driven by: 1) a delay in the issuance applications due to the associated costs, resulting from a lackluster market demand environment and prices; and 2) a potential shift in investment/demand away from traditional projects (see Exhibit 10). Currently, voluntary carbon markets (VCM) account for ~90% of the total demand for carbon credits (see Exhibit 11). However, lingering credibility concerns in VCM underscore the pressing need for creating a minimum global benchmark for high-quality carbon credits. In order to address this, the Integrity Council for the Voluntary Carbon Market (ICVCM) has finalized its Core Carbon Principles (CCPs) and initiated assessments of crediting programs and methodologies covering 850 mn credits via its assessment framework. The first CCP-labeled credits expected to hit the market by 3QCY24.

New demand from compliance markets to provide some support

Compliance carbon markets (CCM) are also building up new demand for the future by: 1) 11 new jurisdictions, including India, currently considering carbon crediting mechanisms (see Exhibit 12) and 2) the launch of multilateral initiatives such as CBAM, CORSIA and IMO (see Exhibits 13). We note that India has already approved The Energy Conservation (Amendment) Bill, 2022, which empowers the government to roll out the Indian Carbon Market (ICM). The with finer details on its rules and regulations are expected to be announced soon.

Capital goods companies in renewable and energy efficiency space to benefit from roll out of ICM

The implementation of ICM will incentivize the low-carbon action by internalizing the cost of GHG emissions. Renewable energy and improving the energy efficiency of industries and buildings are the big themes in reducing GHG emissions. Capital goods companies such as ABB, Siemens, Thermax, L&T, Cummins, KEC and KPTL present in the renewable and energy efficiency value chain are already witnessing increased green order inflows over the past few years. Moreover, companies managing their emissions efficiently in carbon-intensive sectors such as power, metals and cement would also reap the fruits of their ongoing efforts to transition toward low-carbon footprint. Players such as JSW Energy, JSW Steel, Tata Steel and Dalmia Bharat in the current scenario could gain at the cost of others (see Exhibits 14-16).

Indian companies upping their game to transition toward lower carbon footprint

Several Indian companies have already upped their game by taking proactive steps to reduce their carbon footprints. Among the Nifty-50, 28 companies have set up goals/targets to achieve net-zero/carbon neutrality, with specific timelines (see Exhibit 17). Further, 312 companies (including 96 listed companies) have committed to science-based targets (see Exhibit 18) to reduce carbon emissions. The top-5 sectors that have adopted science-based targets- chemicals, pharmaceuticals and life sciences, software and services, construction materials and automobiles and components- comprise ~57% of total companies (see Exhibit 19).


Click here to send ur comments or to feedback@equitybulls.com

Disclaimer:The article above is a gist / extract of the original report prepared by the research firm / brokerage firm. This article is not to be considered as an offer to sell or a solicitation to buy any securities. This article is meant for general information only. www.equitybulls.com, its employees or owners or the research firms, its employees or owners won't be responsible for any liability that may arise from information, errors or omissions in these articles. www.equitybulls.com or its employees or owners / the research firms or its employees or clients or owners may from time to time hold positions in securities referred in this article. For detailed research reports, please contact the concerned research firm directly.





Other Headlines:

CRISIL Ratings: Agrochemicals sector to see 7-9% growth amid modest exports

SBI Capital Markets: RBI Monetary Policy Dec'24 - RBI faces arduous task of managing all dynamics: Liquidity, Currency, Growth and Inflation

SBICAPS Monthly Ecocapsule Dec'24 : FY25 - A TALE OF TWO HALVES OR ONE OF FULL DESPAIR? - Executive Summary

CRISIL Ratings: Revenue growth of organised luggage makers to halve to 8-10%

CRISIL Ratings - Cement demand to grow at a moderate pace of 7-8% this fiscal

CRISIL Ratings: For small finance banks, RoA to dip ~40 bps this fiscal

Securitisation volumes witness strong growth; likely to reach ~Rs. 60,000 crore in Q2 FY2025: ICRA

CRISIL Ratings: Operating losses of state discoms to stay high despite 15-20% dip

CRISIL Ratings: Tamil Nadu garment exporters to see 8-10% revenue growth

CRISIL MI&A: Inflated natural rubber prices to puncture tyre maker margins

Infrastructure bond issuances by public sector banks to drive banks' bond issuances to an all-time high in FY2025: ICRA

CRISIL Ratings: Apparel retailers to stitch 8-10% growth with festivals, fast fashion

CRISIL Ratings: For ARCs, rising power consumption to boost recoveries from stressed operational thermal plants

Views of ICAI on SA 600 vs ISA 600

CRISIL Ratings: Wagon makers set to roll in ~20% revenue growth this fiscal

CRISIL Ratings: Basmati industry to see revenue grow ~4% on a high base this fiscal

CRISIL: Pharmaceutical sector set for 8-10% revenue growth this fiscal

CRISIL Ratings: Flexible packaging players' credit profiles to stay subdued this fiscal

Industry credit expected to grow over 12 per cent: FICCI-IBA Bankers' Survey

CRISIL Ratings: Decadal-low duty to push gold jewellery retailers' revenues up by 22-25%

CRISIL Ratings: Education loan AUM of NBFCs to top Rs 60,000 crore this fiscal

Evolving asset quality risks to impact growth and profitability of microfinance: ICRA

Near-term Consolidation; Focus Remains on Style & Sector Rotation - Axis Securities

CRISIL Ratings: Paper packaging volume to grow, but profitability to plumb lows

CRISIL MI&A: Corporate revenue growth likely moderated to 5-7% in April-June, the slowest in 15 quarters

CRISIL Ratings: Revenue growth of auto dealers to enter the slow lane this fiscal

Declining liquidity coverage ratios to slow down credit growth for banks: ICRA

CRISIL Ratings: Road developers to see slower revenue growth of 5-7% next fiscal

CRISIL Ratings: Small finance banks to grow advances 25-27% this fiscal

Global monetary easing to pick up pace - Puneet Pal, Head-Fixed Income, PGIM India Mutual Fund

Kotak Institutional Equities: Strategy: 1QFY25: Converging trends

CRISIL Ratings: Cement makers line up ~Rs 1.25 lakh crore capex over fiscals 2025-27

CRISIL Ratings: Urea import dependency to fall to 10-15% from this fiscal

CRISIL Ratings: 20% ethanol blending goal means more sugarcane utilisation

Kotak Institutional Equities: Automobiles & Components: 1QFY25 review: Steady quarter; demand outlook weakening

CRISIL MI&A: Macroeconomics First Cut - Goods exports fall, services soften

Kotak Institutional Equities: Consumer: 1QFY25 review- Uptick in staples, continued weakness in discretionary

CRISIL Ratings: Despite cash disbursement restriction gold-loan NBFCs shine

SBICAPS Report - The Green Pill: Labelled Bond Issuances, ESG Indices, Global Sustainable Funds

We expect the 10 yr benchmark bond yield to keep drifting lower gradually - PGIM India Mutual Fund

Strategy: Faith, froth and fundamentals by Kotak Institutional Equities

Earnings growth should be the key driver of returns hereon - Vinay Paharia - CIO, PGIM India Mutual Fund

IT Services: ERD services: Auto pulse-challenges ahead - Kotak Institutional Equities

Banks, Diversified Financials : Strong on expected lines across BFSI - Quarterly Review - Kotak Institutional Equities

Metals & Mining: SC ruling-empowers the states; marginal negative impact - Kotak Institutional Equities

CRISIL Ratings: Revised deposit norms unlikely to be onerous for HFCs

CRISIL Ratings: 6 gigawatt renewable energy storage to be added by fiscal 2028

CRISIL Ratings: Thermal share in power generation to dip over 500 bps next fiscal

Indian bond market issuances exceeded $105 billion, $25 billion new equity issued in FY24 - Shri Pramod Rao, ED, SEBI

One third of Nifty 100 companies hire thousands of young talent on apna.co


Website Created & Maintained by : Chennai Scripts
West Mambalam, Chennai - 600 033,
Tamil Nadu, India

disclaimer copyright © 2005 - 2020