Étude | 02/12/2009 
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As Europe prepares to put sustainable development at the centre of its growth strategy for the coming decade, it seems opportune to examine the effectiveness of European action against climate change. The European Union has become the undisputed world leader on the issue, it is true. But the Union's environmental strategy still lacks coherence and even credibility. The powerful economic instruments created by the EU need to be reformed and completed if carbon is to be taxed more effectively.

This study proposes just such a reform of Europe's carbon taxation, concerning both the emission permits market and Europe's various carbon tax regimes. The authors survey the unhealthy trend of carbon emissions in the EU and look closely at the instruments available to fight climate change: emission permits market, regulation, and environmental tax. It emerges that these tools, in their current form, are poorly suited to the declared aims of the EU. On the basis of this observation, four scenarios for a new European carbon taxation are sketched out, each corresponding to a different degree of political ambition.




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Articles by Jacques Le Cacheux :
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Authors
senior economist and scientific advisor at OFCE (Sciences-Po Center for economic research) and a visiting scholar at Harvard Center for European Studies (CES).
Jacques Le Cacheux is Professor of Economics at the Université de Pau et des Pays de l'Adour and Director of the Economic Research Department of the OFCE (sciences Po Center for Economic Research).
In view
Note by Notre Europe | 19/01/2010
On 14th January, in Brussels, around 80 participants assisted to the presentation of the study " An ever less carbonated union? Towards a better European taxation against climate change" by Eloi Laurent and Jacques Le Cacheux. The presentation of the study by the authors was followed by a debate chaired by Peter Carl in which participated Walter Deffaa, Alberto Cornejo Pérez and Patrick Ten Brink.
See also
Note by Eulalia Rubio | 10/02/2010
This paper was published as a chapter in "unlocking a low-carbon Europe: perspectives on EU budget reform", published by Green Alliance in February 2010 and available to download from Green Alliance Website.
Project
Research project