Abatement is the process of actively reducing or eliminating greenhouse gas emissions from an industrial source. Within regulated carbon markets, it is the crucial, real-world action a company takes to decarbonize its operations, choosing to invest in cleaner technology instead of purchasing allowances to cover its pollution.
Abatement refers to the tangible reduction or prevention of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. It is the ultimate goal of carbon pricing mechanisms like the European Union Emissions Trading System (EU ETS). For companies covered by these regulations, abatement is not just an environmental strategy but a core economic decision driven by the price of carbon. When the cost of polluting—represented by the market price of a carbon allowance like an EUA—is high, companies are financially incentivized to find cheaper ways to abate, or cut, their emissions.
This process directly drives innovation and investment in decarbonization. The decision to abate is a constant calculation for a business, weighing the cost of internal changes against the cost of external compliance.
The mechanism works through a clear economic choice:
- Compliance Obligation: A factory or power plant must surrender one emission allowance (e.g., an EUA) for every tonne of CO₂ it emits.
- Cost Analysis: The company compares the market price of that allowance to its own internal cost of preventing one tonne of CO₂ from being emitted. This is known as the “marginal abatement cost.”
- Economic Decision:
- If it is cheaper to invest in cleaner technology (e.g., upgrading machinery, switching fuels) than to buy an allowance, the company will abate its emissions.
- If it is more expensive to implement changes than to buy an allowance, the company will purchase allowances on the market to cover its emissions.
- Impact of Investment: When investors purchase and hold carbon allowances, they reduce the available supply, which can contribute to a higher carbon price. This higher price makes abatement a more financially attractive option for a wider range of industries, thus accelerating real-world emission reductions.
Concrete Examples
- Power Generation: An electric utility company operating a coal-fired power plant decides to invest in a new solar farm. The cost of building and operating the solar farm, per tonne of CO₂ avoided, is now lower than the price of the EUAs it would have to buy to continue running the coal plant at full capacity. This switch is an act of abatement.
- Heavy Industry: A cement manufacturer installs a Carbon Capture, Utilization, and Storage (CCUS) system on its facility. While a significant capital investment, the system captures CO₂ before it enters the atmosphere. The company made this decision because the long-term cost of capturing its carbon is projected to be less than the future cost of buying an increasing number of emission allowances on a tightening market.
This economic framework ensures that emissions are cut where it is most cost-effective to do so, driving an efficient, market-led transition to a low-carbon economy. For more details on the financial instruments driving this, [see our guide on European Union Allowances (EUAs)]. For an official overview, refer to the primary regulator's documentation. [Source: European Commission, EU Emissions Trading System (EU ETS)].