Hannah Copeland, Lennart Brandt, Natalie Burr and Boromeus Wanengkirtyo

Emissions Trading Schemes (ETS) are an increasingly popular market-based policy to impose a price on carbon emissions (previously costless to the emitter) (World Bank Group (2025), DESNZ (2025)). With carbon prices expected to increase steadily, and sectoral coverage broadening, these schemes have gained the attention of monetary policy makers (Breeden (2025), Mann (2023)). But what are the implications for inflation? By constructing a new tool (a high-frequency identified ‘instrument’) to measure the impact of supply shocks in the UK carbon market, we document that a tighter carbon pricing regime temporarily increases energy prices and inflation, and decreases output. We find that this shock transmits through multiple energy-related commodity prices, including oil and gas, compounding cost-push pressures arising from the energy sector.
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