{"id":282709,"date":"2026-06-10T23:28:57","date_gmt":"2026-06-10T17:58:57","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/thepubliceconomist.com\/?p=282709"},"modified":"2026-06-10T23:29:31","modified_gmt":"2026-06-10T17:59:31","slug":"carbon-counts-how-the-world-learned-to-price-what-it-couldnt-see","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/thepubliceconomist.com\/?p=282709","title":{"rendered":"Carbon Counts: How the World Learned to Price What It Couldn&#8217;t See"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p>Modern economies are built on the assumption that value can be priced, exchanged, and efficiently<br>allocated through markets. But some of the most consequential forces shaping our collective<br>future\u2014clean air, stable climates, ecological resilience\u2014resist this logic, remaining largely invisible to<br>balance sheets and price signals. Carbon sits at a challenging intersection: a physical byproduct of<br>industrial progress that is both everywhere and nowhere, essential to modern life yet profoundly<br>destabilizing in its accumulation. The effort to \u201cprice carbon\u201d is therefore not merely a technical exercise,<br>but an attempt to make an abstract, delayed, and shared harm legible to economic systems designed for<br>immediate and private exchange.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Carbon is not a commodity in the traditional economic sense. Most commodities are physical: oil, wheat,<br>steel. On the other hand, carbon markets trade an absence, or permission to emit. It is not extracted,<br>processed, or consumed. It does not have intrinsic utility. Yet, in the past decade, carbon has become an<br>actively traded asset in the global economy. When a factory emits CO\u2082, the cost of the damage to the<br>climate is not borne by the factory, but by society at large. Traditional markets fail here because the price<br>of emitting is effectively zero. The carbon market poses an interesting thought experiment: it is a market<br>for the absence of a good, created not by nature but by policy.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>The Data Beneath the Price<\/strong><br>To understand why carbon is unusual, we must return to the fundamental problem it is designed to solve:<br>the negative externality of greenhouse gas emissions. Carbon markets originate from a classic economic<br>problem: emissions impose costs on society that are not reflected in market prices. Pigouvian instruments<br>are policy tools designed to correct market failures caused by externalities. When an activity creates a<br>negative externality (like pollution), markets overproduce it because the producer doesn\u2019t pay the full<br>social cost. Carbon pricing attempts to internalize those costs by aligning private incentives with social<br>welfare.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Carbon\u2019s strangeness reveals something profound about the way modern economies are trying to solve<br>climate change: by turning a fundamental planetary boundary into a financial instrument. A barrel of oil<br>can be weighed, inspected, and consumed; a ton of avoided or reduced CO\u2082 exists as a metric of what<br>would have happened in the absence of a particular intervention\u2014constructed through models, baselines, and assumptions. In that sense, carbon is the first commodity that depends more on data integrity than on physical scarcity. Where traditional commodity markets are anchored in observable flows of material goods, carbon markets are anchored in accounting systems that translate complex physical processes into standardized units of trade. This is what makes carbon markets structurally unlike anything that preceded them.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The value of carbon hinges on emissions inventories, monitoring technologies, and institutional trust in<br>how reductions are calculated and certified. By listing carbon alongside oil, gas, and financial derivatives<br>on major exchanges, modern economies extend market coordination into domains defined by collective<br>risk and delayed harm.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Regulation as Infrastructure<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Most commodities also operate in the present. Carbon clears across time. The damage from today\u2019s<br>emissions<em> <a href=\"https:\/\/www.ipcc.ch\/report\/ar6\/syr\/\">unfolds over decades<\/a><\/em>, through probabilistic climate pathways rather than discrete events. This<br>is also where carbon breaks market intuition: it prices damage that takes effect many years later. As a<br>result, the price of carbon embeds assumptions not only about measurement, but about time horizons. A<br>futures contract for crude oil ultimately references barrels that can be delivered, stored, and inspected. A<br>carbon allowance or offset contract references a right or a claim whose validity depends on measurement<br>protocols, baselines, and enforcement. In this sense, carbon resembles a regulatory derivative more than a conventional commodity. Its value is derived from policy constraints, compliance obligations, and<br>enforcement credibility.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Like a derivative, it abstracts a complex underlying reality. Futures and options traded on ICE, CME, or<br>EEX are underpinned by clearinghouse obligations, margining, and standardized contracts, ensuring that<br>market participants are not merely speculative, but also structurally governed within a legally sanctioned<br>framework. In this sense, the law itself functions as the \u201ccommodity infrastructure\u201d that allows carbon to<br>circulate, establishing enforceable rights and liabilities across borders and time. Carbon markets are also<br>not singular. Compliance systems such as the <a href=\"https:\/\/climate.ec.europa.eu\/eu-action\/carbon-markets\/eu-emissions-trading-system-eu-ets_en\"><em>EU Emissions Trading System<\/em><\/a> create legally enforceable<br>scarcity through caps and obligations. Voluntary markets, by contrast, rely on corporate demand and<br>credibility of standards rather than statutory compliance. Financial exchanges increasingly sit atop both<br>layers, trading standardized futures contracts that reference either regulatory allowances or baskets of<br>voluntary credits. This stratification means that the price of carbon is not one signal but many, reflecting<br>different logics of enforcement.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/taxation-customs.ec.europa.eu\/carbon-border-adjustment-mechanism_en\"><em>The EU&#8217;s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM)<\/em><\/a> additionally externalizes compliance<br>obligations into customs law, making a firm&#8217;s ability to access a market conditional on verified emissions<br>accounting. Importers must report embedded emissions and surrender certificates reflecting those<br>emissions. This creates administrative and data obligations across supply chains. This is especially<br>consequential for export-dependent economies whose manufacturers supply markets with steel, cement,<br>agricultural commodities and processed goods.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Similarly, mandatory disclosure frameworks such as the EU\u2019s CSRD or proposed SEC rules embed<br>carbon data into fiduciary and reporting obligations, giving financial actors a basis to treat emissions as a<br>risk factor. Across Asia, nascent domestic trading schemes are codifying similar obligations, creating<br>credible domestic demand for carbon instruments.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>From Carbon Markets to Carbon Governance<\/strong><br>After years of voluntary-market enthusiasm and the gradual expansion of regulatory carbon-pricing<br>systems, 2025\u201326 marks a significant period in the evolution of carbon governance. Compliance demand<br>for carbon credits has surged, border adjustment mechanisms are shaping global trade, and emerging<br>economies are beginning to anchor domestic frameworks to global pricing norms. This isn\u2019t just a story of<br>prices and products\u2014it\u2019s a story of how carbon governance is embedding itself into the architecture of<br>economic participation and international competition. <a href=\"https:\/\/www.worldbank.org\/en\/publication\/state-and-trends-of-carbon-pricing\"><em>According to the World Bank&#8217;s State and Trends of<br>Carbon Pricing 2025 report<\/em><\/a>, around 28% of global greenhouse gas emissions are now covered by a carbon price, with compliance-related demand for credits nearly tripling year-on-year. Revenues from carbon pricing exceeded USD 100 billion in 2024, a record high, underscoring the growing fiscal weight of these systems, and pointing to a future where emissions costs are firmly embedded in markets and public<br>budgets. Together, these developments indicate that carbon markets are evolving from isolated<br>instruments into integrated economic governance mechanisms that influence trade, investment, and<br>competition.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Carbon might be among the strangest commodities modern economies have traded, but it is also among<br>the most revealing. Its existence showcases the edges of traditional market logic\u2014and then pushes past<br>them. Where traditional commodities rely on physical scarcity to discipline markets, carbon relies on<br>institutional discipline to sustain value. Carbon is a serious attempt on whether markets, supported by<br>robust governance, can extend their coordinating power into domains of collective, long-term risk. It lives<br>in measurement systems, and in the collective willingness to treat an invisible harm as an economic fact.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>What carbon markets compel, above all, is accountability; the transformation of emissions from an<br>invisible externality into a measured, priced, and governed liability. Today, that answer is becoming less<br>theoretical and more realistic. Carbon is slowly embedding itself into the architecture of how economies<br>participate, compete, and account for their costs, a shift that is among the most significant institutional<br>innovations of our time. It is ultimately a test of whether markets, supported by robust governance, can<br>coordinate action against risks that are collective, global, and deferred across generations.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Modern economies are built on the assumption that value can be priced, exchanged, and efficientlyallocated through markets. But some of the most consequential forces shaping our collectivefuture\u2014clean air, stable climates, ecological resilience\u2014resist this logic, remaining largely invisible tobalance sheets and price signals. Carbon sits at a challenging intersection: a physical [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":282710,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_mo_disable_npp":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[240],"tags":[460,459,447,242],"class_list":["post-282709","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-environment","tag-carbon-credits","tag-carbon-markets","tag-climate-change","tag-decarbonizing-economy"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.8 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Carbon Counts: How the World Learned to Price What It Couldn&#039;t See - The Public Economist<\/title>\n<meta name=\"description\" content=\"Carbon is not a commodity in the traditional economic sense. Most commodities are physical: oil, wheat,steel. 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