After years of avoiding any explicit mention of the primary
cause of climate change, negotiators at the United Nations Climate Change
Conference (COP28) in Dubai last year finally reached an agreement calling for
a “transition away from fossil fuels.” But another uncomfortable question still
looms large: How will that transition be financed? As Simon Stiell, the UN’s
climate chief, recently observed, “it’s blazingly obvious that finance is the
make-or-break factor in the world’s climate fight.”
Climate finance will be the single most important issue both
at COP29 in Azerbaijan this year and at COP30 in Brazil in 2025.
Notwithstanding recent pledges of money for a new “loss and damage” fund to
help developing countries deal with climate change, current financing falls far
short of what is required. The European Union estimates that it must invest
€1.5 trillion ($1.63 trillion) per year from 2031 to achieve net-zero emissions
by 2050, and developing countries (excluding China) are expected to need $2.4
trillion per year by 2030. Brazil alone will have to find an additional $200
billion to reach its 2030 emissions-reduction goals.
There are no simple solutions. The sluggish growth and tight
monetary conditions following the pandemic mean that even rich countries are
operating with limited fiscal headroom. While more private capital is needed
everywhere, its role will be smaller in low- and middle-income countries, owing
to the significant premiums they face when borrowing for green projects.
Bold new policies are needed to mobilize public funding, and
there is a strong case to be made for progressive taxes on carbon-intensive
activities and extreme wealth. Both would generate revenues while also
extending the principle of “common but differentiated responsibility” to
industries and individuals.
Taxation is the standard instrument for states to raise
funds reliably and at scale, and thus to commit to long-term spending and
investment plans. For developing countries, in particular, the predictability
of taxes makes them more useful than concessional finance. Moreover, new taxes
can unlock additional resources for countries to dedicate to climate-related
investments, sparing them from having to reallocate scarce funding within
existing budgets. Globally, a 0.1% financial-transactions tax could raise up to
$418 billion per year, while a relatively modest levy of $5 per ton of carbon
dioxide emissions could bring in $210 billion per year.
The International Monetary Fund has long advocated taxes on
CO2 emissions and fossil-fuel extraction, both as a source of climate finance
and to shape incentives by ensuring that polluters pay. The extra revenue from
such taxes would help high-income countries (the leading historical source of
emissions) fulfill their moral obligations toward poorer, more vulnerable
countries. As matters stand, rich countries’ financial assistance for
developing countries needs to be an order of magnitude greater than the current
pledge of $100 billion per year.
Pollution taxes would also help to redress inequalities
within countries. Even in those economies with lower historical and per capita
emissions, there is a significant gap between most of the population’s
emissions and the highest emitters. The economist Lucas Chancel finds that “carbon
inequality” is greater within countries than between them, and that it tracks
inequalities in income and wealth. This should come as no surprise. Globally,
the wealthiest 1% emit the same as the poorest 66% combined.
This injustice is not lost on ordinary citizens. In fact, it
increasingly threatens our ability to build and sustain a political consensus
for effective climate policies. Taxes to ensure that those with the greatest
means and the highest emissions pay their fair share would go a long way toward
convincing the public that a “just transition” is not just an empty slogan.
But while the theoretical case for such taxes is strong,
adoption and implementation has proven difficult. Capital, people (particularly
the wealthy), and emissions all move easily across borders, undermining the
efficacy of national or regional tax regimes. Though cross-border cooperation
on taxation is never easy, an international agreement would give countries more
leverage over their own resources, allowing them to protect those most in need.
Multilateralism would be in every country’s interest.
There are encouraging signs that the political taboo against
taxation is weakening. The text agreed by all parties at COP28 explicitly
called “for accelerating the ongoing establishment of new and innovative
sources of finance, including taxation.” And last November, UN member states
passed a resolution to establish a Framework Convention on International Tax
Cooperation, paving the way for a fairer approach to setting global rules.
Now, the G20, led by Brazil, is considering a global minimum
tax on the world’s 3,000 billionaires, who currently pay a much lower effective
tax rate than the rest of the population. The EU Tax Observatory estimates that
a 2% annual levy on their wealth – if properly coordinated – could raise $250
billion per year.
Capitalizing on this momentum, a diverse group of countries
has launched a new international tax taskforce. Chaired jointly by the leaders
of Kenya, Barbados, and France, its mandate is to explore tax policies that
could raise the equivalent of at least 0.1% of global GDP to finance
sustainable development and climate action. The point is not to prescribe a
single solution for all countries, but rather to assess the political and
technical obstacles to many plausible options, drawing on a diverse range of
experts and perspectives.
Many options are on the table, including taxes on aviation
and shipping, in addition to fossil-fuel extraction and financial transactions.
The taskforce will seek to advance our understanding of how such taxes could be
applied equitably, perhaps paving the way for an agreement on particular
policies.
Fair taxation could be a powerful lever for accelerating a just transition. By contributing fresh empirical findings and fostering trust and cooperation between countries, the new taskforce can help everyone to address the injustices at the heart of the climate crisis and unlock the resources they need to address it. Reducing the burden on poorer people and countries is not just a moral obligation. It is also necessary to win their support for a transition that cannot happen without them.
Laurence Tubiana, a former French ambassador to the
United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, is CEO of the European
Climate Foundation and a professor at Sciences Po, Paris.
Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2024