Abstract

We study the stock returns of firms participating at the European Union Exchange Trading System (EU ETS), which are mostly high-greenhouse gas emitters from the energy sector, or very energy-consuming industries. This “cap and trade” scheme implies that high emitters (“brown” firms) must buy allowances for emission from low emitters (“green” firms). Thus, authorities require that CO2-equivalent emissions be verified by independent third-party carbon auditors. As a consequence our data is less prone to a “greenwashing” bias, in contrast with the literature which uses firms-provided, or data vendor-estimated emissions. In this particular framework, we show that green firms returns outperform brown ones, with an excess annual return between 6.6% and 7.9% across different variants, and with a slightly higher risk. Our results thus show that allowances scheme do modify the risk-return profile of stocks, which can provide a financial incentive to consider emissions in investment decisions. To favor ecological transition, policymakers could then generalize emissions trading systems and independent audits of emissions, and increase the cost of allowances.

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