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European Energy Markets
11JUN

EC benchmark revision slashes EUA consensus 13%

3 min read
09:04UTC

The European Commission published new ETS benchmark reference values on 11 May for 2026-2030 free allowances, saving industry an estimated EUR 4 billion and prompting a 13% cut in analyst carbon price consensus.

EconomicDeveloping
Key takeaway

The EUR 4 billion free-allowance increase caps EUA upside while confirming industrial competitiveness has overtaken carbon ambition as Brussels' priority.

The European Commission released new benchmark reference values on 11 May for 2026-2030 free allowances under the EU Emissions Trading System, increasing allocation and saving companies an estimated EUR 4 billion in compliance costs. EUA December 2026 settled at EUR 78.75/tonne on 28 May. The market repriced before the official release: leaked signals on 6 May pushed EUA from EUR 73 to EUR 76/tonne.

A Reuters poll of ten analysts returned a 2026 consensus of EUR 80.61/tonne, down from EUR 92.65 in January, a 13% cut. The 2027 consensus fell to EUR 93.29 from EUR 107.29. In practice, desks hedged at January consensus face material mark-to-market losses on their carbon books. The revisions reflect a structural reappraisal: The Commission is subsidising demand destruction prevention rather than letting the carbon price signal force adjustment.

The clean spark spread for German CCGT generation makes the arithmetic visible. At EUR 47 TTF and EUR 78 EUA, output runs at roughly EUR 88/MWh against a fuel-plus-carbon stack above EUR 140/MWh: deeply negative. Gas-fired generation in Germany remains off-merit . European chemical plants are running at 62-68% capacity utilisation , and BASF has flagged Verbund freezes as a contingent option . The benchmark revision concedes what the utilisation data already showed: the carbon price was compounding the gas-cost structural disadvantage, and Brussels chose the factories over the climate target.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The EU's carbon market works like a pollution permit system: factories must buy permits to emit CO2, and the price of those permits incentivises companies to clean up their processes. The EU has just reduced the number of permits that industries must buy, saving them about EUR 4 billion in costs, to help manufacturers who are struggling with very high energy bills to stay competitive against cheaper overseas rivals. The downside is that cheaper carbon permits reduce the financial incentive for companies to invest in cleaner technology; so the decision helps struggling factories in the short run but may slow Europe's transition away from fossil fuels.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

European chemical and industrial competitiveness has been structurally impaired by the combination of TTF gas costs and EUA carbon costs: BASF, INEOS and Covestro are running at 62-68% capacity utilisation against an 80% profitability threshold. The benchmark revision is a direct response to lobbying from the chemistry and steel sectors, which have threatened relocation to lower-carbon-cost jurisdictions.

The Commission's 2026-2030 benchmark cycle set a policy decision point that coincided with the peak of the European energy cost crisis, creating unusual pressure to relieve industrial burden that might have been resisted in a lower-price environment.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    The 13% EUA consensus downgrade lowers the investment case for carbon capture and storage in Europe: projects requiring EUR 90+ EUA as a breakeven are commercially unviable at EUR 80.61/tonne, likely delaying final investment decisions by 2-3 years.

    Medium term · Assessed
  • Risk

    If the benchmark revision is read as a precedent that the Commission will relieve industry in every review cycle, the credibility loss could push EUA below EUR 70/tonne by 2027 as market participants anticipate further allocation increases.

    Short term · Suggested
  • Opportunity

    German chemical and steel plants running at 62-68% utilisation may stabilise or marginally improve capacity utilisation in H2 2026 as the EUR 4 billion cost saving flows through procurement decisions, partially offsetting the demand-destruction trend in industrial gas consumption.

    Short term · Assessed
First Reported In

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