Compare ETS
Use this function to compare the design elements and characteristics of up to three ETSs from around the world.
China - Hubei pilot ETS
General Information
The Hubei Pilot ETS was launched in April 2014. Covered entities must surrender allowances for all their covered emissions, and allocation is based on auctions or free allocation.
Hubei’s system covers around 500 entities in a broad range of industrial sub-sectors and data centers. Unlike the other Chinese pilots, Hubei does not pre-define which sectors are covered under its ETS; rather, it sets a threshold which applies to all industrial sectors. Allowances have primarily been freely allocated, through both grandparenting and benchmarking, although several ad hoc auctions have been held since 2014.
Hubei has been one of the most active regional markets in China and has the second largest market, in terms of spot trading volume, after Guangdong. It is also one of the regional pioneers for allowance forward trading in China. Hubei has also played an important role in the National Carbon Market: in 2017, it was selected to lead the development of the registry for the National Carbon Market, which the China Hubei Emission Exchange has operated since the National Carbon Market began. In 2022, Hubei established the China Carbon Emissions Registration and Clearing Co., Ltd. in Wuhan to manage the registry and clearing system for the National Carbon Market.
The Hubei ETS operates in parallel with China’s National Carbon Market. As the National Carbon Market expands, covered entities in these sectors are being integrated into the national system.
In November 2024, the Hubei Ecology and Environment Bureau (EEB) issued the “Work Plan for Establishing and Implementing Carbon Inclusive System (2024 to 2027)”, which sets the roadmap to establish provincial offset credits system and link it to Hubei ETS. In June 2025, Hubei EEB conducted a public consultation for “Hubei Carbon Inclusive Emission Reductions Management Measures (Trial)”, which will regulate the issuance, administration, and usage of the provincial offset mechanism.
In January 2025, Hubei announced that all covered entities surrendered their compliance units for compliance year 2023.
In June, the Hubei EEB issued the “Work Plan for expanding the coverage of Hubei ETS”. It sets the plan to lower inclusion threshold, brings in certain transport sub-sectors and public buildings, and adds coverage of non-CO2 emissions in selected sectors. The expansion will be implemented over compliance years 2025 to 2027.
In October, the Hubei EEB released the 2024 allocation plan, which applies similar allocation methods as the 2023 plan. For paper, automobile manufacturing, and phosphorus chemical industries, output-based benchmarking started to apply. It confirmed that covered entities from the steel, cement, and aluminum sectors have transitioned to the National Carbon Market.
Emissions & Targets
372.8 MtCO2 (2022)*
*Due to the lack of publicly available data, the data reported here is estimated by local expert based on public sources.
By 2030: Peak carbon emissions (Hubei Province Implementation Opinions on Implementing the New Development Concept and Promoting Carbon Neutrality)
By 2060: Climate neutrality (Hubei Province Implementation Opinions on Implementing the New Development Concept and Promoting Carbon Neutrality)
Average secondary market price: CNY 31.47 (USD 4.38)(updated prices available here)
Size & Phases
2014 and ongoing
The total emission limit under the Hubei ETS changes as a function of production (output) and is the sum of the bottom-up output-based/installation-level emissions limits for all individual covered entities. The bottom-up emissions limits do not represent an absolute cap. Inclusive of reserves, the caps for past years were as follows:
2014: 324 MtCO2
2015: 281 MtCO2
2016: 253 MtCO2
2017: 257 MtCO2
2018: 256 MtCO2
2019: 270 MtCO2
2020*: 166 MtCO2
2021: 182 MtCO2
2022: 180 MtCO2
2023: 179 MtCO2
2024: 80.7 MtCO2
*This decrease is mainly due to the transfer of the power sector into the National ETS.
Unlike other Chinese pilots, Hubei does not pre-define which sectors are covered under its ETS; rather, it sets a threshold which applies to all industrial sectors. Sub-sectors with entities above the threshold are then covered.
Those currently covered include heat supply, iron and steel, nonferrous metals, petrochemicals, chemicals, textiles, glass and other building materials, pulp and paper, ceramics, automobile manufacturing, equipment manufacturing, food and beverages, medicine producers, data centers and water supply. Until 2019, power generation was also covered, after which it was integrated into the National Carbon Market. Steel, cement, and aluminum were integrated into the National Carbon Market from 2024 onwards. From 2025, the Hubei ETS has started to cover certain non-industrial sectors, such as public buildings for data centers.
INCLUSION THRESHOLDS:
Until 2015: Annual energy consumption of more than 60,000 tonnes of coal equivalent (tce) in any year between 2010 and 2011, applying to all energy and industrial sectors.
2016 to 2022: Annual energy consumption of more than 10,000 tce in any of the most recent two years, applying to all energy and industrial sectors.
2023 onwards: Entities with annual emissions of 13,000 tCO2 or more.
2025: Previously covered sectors plus data centers with annual emissions of more than 5,000 tCO2 or annual energy consumption of more than 2,000 tce. Methane (CH4) in paper manufacturing, food and beverages, and pharmaceuticals is covered.
2026: Previously covered sectors plus public buildings with annual emissions of more than 10,000 tCO2 or annual energy consumption of more than 4,000 tce; cargo ports with annual emissions of more than 5,000 tCO2 or annual energy consumption of more than 2,000 tce. N2O and fluorinated gases in industrial sectors will be covered.
2027 (upcoming): Previously covered sectors plus road freight transport with annual emissions of more than 5,000 tCO2 or annual energy consumption of more than 2,000 tce and cargo ports with annual emissions of more than 3,000 tCO2 or annual energy consumption of more than 1,000 tce. The threshold for industrial sector companies will be lowered to annual emissions of more than 8,000 tCO2 or annual energy consumption of more than 3,000 tce.
Point source (industry); downstream (indirect emissions from electricity and heat consumption).
449 (2024)
Allowance Allocation & Revenue
Allowances are distributed for free, using benchmarking or grandparenting.
The allocation plan is updated every year. For the compliance year 2024:
FREE ALLOCATION:
Benchmarking: Benchmarking is used for plate glass, complete vehicle manufacturing, some paper types (toilet paper, printing paper and corrugated paper), and the phosphorus chemical industry.
Grandparenting: Grandparenting based on historical emissions intensity is used for heat production and supply, other paper making, glass and building materials, water supply, textiles, and equipment manufacturing, based on the previous three years’ data.
Grandparenting based on historical emissions or emissions intensity is used for other sectors except data centers.
For compliance year 2024, covered data centers received the number of allowances equal to their verified emissions.
Ex-post allocation adjustments are applied, especially for those sectors that use benchmarks and emissions intensity. In this case, entities first receive a volume of allowances equivalent to 70% of their previous year’s verified emissions; actual production data is then used to update allocation ex-post, after verification.
Hubei also uses a “market adjustment factor”, which is applied to all covered entities to reduce overall allocation. This is determined based on the previous year’s supply-demand balance, while taking the province’s overall economic development and the achievement of its climate mitigation targets and strategies into consideration. For the 2024 compliance year, it was set at 0.9344 (as compared to 0.9706 for the previous year). Covered entities that demonstrate strong efforts in reducing both air pollution and carbon emissions and are not subject to environmental penalties in 2024, will apply 0.97 as market adjustment factor.
Hubei uses a capping mechanism for compliance obligations. If the difference between an entity’s annual verified emissions and the allocation exceeds either 20% of the allocation or 200,000 tCO2 (above or below the allocation), the cap will be adjusted accordingly to balance out the surplus or deficit.*
AUCTIONING: A small share of the annual cap can be auctioned. The main purpose of auctions is to promote price discovery and provide regulated entities with additional supply to meet their compliance demand. To date, auctions have been held on an ad hoc basis and took place in 2014, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, and 2023. Recent years have seen two auctions per year, with the first for covered entities only and the second open to all participants. The reserve price of the auctions is the weighted average spot market price of the previous two years. Allowances have sold at the reserve price or slightly above.
*Two types of limits, as opposed to only one, are set based on the consideration that 20% may suit smaller entities better while 200,000 tCO2 may suit larger ones.
CNY 430.81 million (USD 59.9 million) since the beginning of the program
Revenues are attributed to the provincial treasury.
Flexibility & Linking
Banking is allowed, but only for allowances that have been traded at least once.
Borrowing is not allowed.
The use of offset credits (CCERs) and green electricity certificates is allowed. The green electricity certificates are the proof of the environmental attributes of China's renewable energy power, which can be commercially transferred between power producers and consumers.
The use of Chinese Certified Emission Reductions is no longer allowed since compliance year 2024.
QUANTITATIVE LIMITS: Only covered entities with a shortfall can use green electricity certificates and provincial credits to offset their emissions. This use is limited to the shortage and maximum 5% of the annual initial allocation for each entity. Green electricity certificates cannot be banked to offset the emission in the future.
QUALITATIVE LIMITS: Green electricity certificates must be certified both by the China Hubei Emission Exchange and the Hubei Electricity Exchange
ETS: Chinese national ETS
Domestic crediting mechanisms: Tan Pu Hui local offset credits in Hubei
Domestic crediting mechanisms (national): China Certified Emissions Reduction (CCER)
Compliance
One calendar year; covered entities have until the last working day of November of the following year to surrender allowances.
FRAMEWORK: The Hubei government has released general rules on monitoring and reporting guiding for all sectors. It also released Verification Guidelines for Hubei Province Enterprise Carbon Emission Verification (Trial) to guide the verification agencies and verifiers.
MONITORING: Covered entities are required to set up and implement plans to monitor their emissions.
REPORTING: Annual. Covered entities must submit their emission reports to the Hubei EEB by the end of March in the year following the compliance year.
VERIFICATION: Third-party verification is required. Third-party verifiers may be involved in mutual evaluation of each other’s verification reports. In addition, “fourth-party verification” is carried out by government-assigned experts to further enhance accuracy.
COVERED ENTITIES: Penalties for failing to submit an emissions or verification report on time range from CNY 10,000 (USD 1,391) to CNY 30,000 (USD 4173).
Between CNY 20,000 (USD 2782) and CNY 30,000 (USD4,173) can be imposed for non-compliance, in addition to the obligation to surrender the missing number of allowances.
TRADING INSTITUTIONS: Trade participants who manipulate the market face up to CNY 150,000 (USD 20,863) in fines.
THIRD-PARTY VERIFIERS: Verifiers submitting false verification reports face up to CNY 150,000 (USD 20,863) in fines.
Market Regulation
MARKET PARTICIPATION: Compliance entities; non-compliance entities such as domestic and international institutional investors; individual investors meeting the participation requirements of the relevant local trading exchange.
MARKET TYPES:
Primary: TheChina Hubei Emission Exchange organizes ad hoc auctions for the primary market. Since 2019, Hubei has held two separate rounds of auctions targeting different types of entities.
Secondary: Spot products include Hubei Emission Allowances (HBEAs) and CCERs. The HBEA spot forward product was introduced in 2016 but has not been traded since May 2017. The China Hubei Emission Exchange manages trading of all products.
LEGAL STATUS OF ALLOWANCES: Allowances are not considered financial instruments.
ALLOWANCE RELEASE AND REPURCHASE Instrument type: Price-based instrument
Functioning: In case of market fluctuations, severe supply-demand imbalances, or liquidity issues, the Hubei EEB –in consultation with an advisory committee consisting of government institutions and other stakeholders – can buy or sell allowances in order to stabilize the market. Specifically, the Hubei EEB takes action if the allowance closing price reaches a low or high point of the daily negotiation range six times during a 20-day period.
6% of the total cap is kept as a government reserve for market stabilization. The Hubei EEB can organize irregular auctions according to market demand, no fixed triggers are envisaged
EXCHANGE
Instrument type: Price-based instrument
Functioning: The exchange limits day-to-day price fluctuations to a 10% move in either direction for listed trading, as well as 30% for block trading. Only transactions within this price range can be successfully completed on the exchange.
Other Information
Hubei Ecology and Environment Bureau (EEB): Responsible for establishing and overseeing the Hubei ETS after governmental restructure in 2019.
China Hubei Emission Exchange: Responsible for operating the trading platform and registry.
No information is publicly available regarding the evaluation or review system. However, research on improving the Hubei ETS has been undertaken every year, funded by the local government.
China - Shanghai pilot ETS
General Information
The Shanghai Pilot ETS was launched in November 2013 and was the second Chinese region to start its pilot system.
The system covers 403 entities. It covered power and industrial sectors at the beginning and kept expanding into new sectors such as buildings, domestic aviation, maritime, and road transport. The Shanghai government has a plan to lower the inclusion threshold and expand the ETS to cover more public buildings and GHGs in the next three years.
Covered entities must surrender allowances for all their covered emissions, and allocation is based on auctions or free allocation. Ad hoc auctions were held between 2014 and 2019, after which they have been held every year.
The Shanghai ETS is the only pilot that has achieved a 100% compliance rate since its launch. It is also one of the most active pilots in terms of offset credit trading. Shanghai has been a center for carbon finance innovations in China, including repurchases, carbon funds, carbon trusts, Chinese Certified Emission Reduction (CCER) credit pledge loans, green bonds, and carbon margin trading.
The Shanghai ETS operates in parallel with China’s National Carbon Market. As the National Carbon Market expands to new sectors, covered entities in these sectors are transitioning out of the Shanghai ETS.
In December 2024, the allowance allocation plan for compliance year 2024 and the ETS working plan for 2025 were released. According to the 2024 allocation plan, nine companies in the hazardous waste management sector have been added, but with MRV obligations only. All covered entities surrendered their compliance units for compliance year 2024 before June 2025.
In February 2025, the Shanghai Municipal People’s Government issued the “Shanghai Carbon Emissions Management Measures”. These measures took effect in April, replacing the “Interim Measures for the Administration of Carbon Emissions in Shanghai” released in 2013, and now serve as the legal basis for the Shanghai ETS. The new Measures clarify the management responsibilities and operational procedures for the Shanghai ETS, increase penalties for violations, and introduce local offset mechanisms to encourage small-scale emission reduction projects and individual emission reduction actions.
In July, the Shanghai Municipal People’s Government issued the “Action Plan for Deepening Reform of the ETS from 2026 to 2030”. This plan sets out the development direction for the Shanghai ETS over the next five years, with key priorities including:
1. implementing an absolute cap for sectors with stable carbon emissions;
2. lowering thresholds for certain industries in 2026 and expanding the scope of covered sectors in 2028, with potentially covering other non-CO2 GHG;
3. further refining MRV rules and incorporating accounting for green energy;
4. increasing the proportion of auctioned allowances, with the share of those up to 8% in 2027 and setting to rise in subsequent years; and
5. promoting the generation and use of local offset credits.
Over the next five years, the Shanghai Ecology and Environment Bureau (EEB) and other relevant departments will refine the design of the Shanghai ETS in accordance with this plan.
In June, the allowance allocation plan for compliance year 2025 was released. It confirmed that covered entities in the steel and cement sectors have been integrated into the National Carbon Market.
In October, the Shanghai EEB issued the “Shanghai Carbon Inclusive Management Measures”. Coming into effect in November, these new measures supersede the “Shanghai Carbon Inclusive Management Measures (Trial)” issued in 2023, and further regulate the issuance, administration, and usage of the provincial offset mechanism, which generates Shanghai Carbon Emission Reduction (SHCER) credits.
The only auction that the Shanghai EEB organized in 2025 did not clear as no market participants submitted bids.
Emissions & Targets
Average secondary market price: CNY 65.89 (USD 9.16)
Size & Phases
PHASE 1: 2013 to 2015, also known as the “trial phase”
PHASE 2: 2016 to present
A cap under Shanghai ETS changes as a function of production (output) and is the sum of the bottom-up output-based/installation-level emissions limits for all individual covered entities. The bottom-up emissions limits do not represent an absolute cap. Inclusive of reserves, the caps for past years were set as follows:
PHASE 1:
~150 MtCO2 per year
PHASE 2:
2016: 155 MtCO2
2017: 156 MtCO2
2018: 158 MtCO2
2019: 158 MtCO2
2020[1]: 105 MtCO2
2021: 109 MtCO2
2022: 100 MtCO2
2023: 105 MtCO2
2024: 106 MtCO2
2025: 80 MtCO2
[1] This drop from 2019 is primarily due to the transfer of large parts of the power sector into China’s National ETS.
PHASE 1: Airports, domestic aviation, chemical fibers, chemicals, commercial buildings, power and heat, water suppliers, hotels, financial institutions, iron and steel, petrochemicals, ports, non-ferrous metals, building materials, paper, railways, rubber, and textiles.
Inclusion thresholds:
- Power and industry: Emissions of at least 20,000 tCO2 per year
- Other sectors: Emissions of at least 10,000 tCO2 per year
PHASE 2: Previous sectors plus shipping, electronic materials, pharmaceuticals, automotive manufacturing, and food manufacturing. Power plants were transferred to China’s National Carbon Market from 2019, but some special captive power plants and heat generation entities remain covered by the Shanghai carbon market. Data centers and road transport have been covered since 2022, with the latter only having MRV obligations. Hazardous waste management has been covered since 2024 with MRV obligations only.
The steel and cement sectors were integrated into the National Carbon Market in 2024, while the power grid is not covered as of the same year.
Inclusion thresholds:
- Industry: either emissions of at least 20,000 tCO2 per year or energy consumption of 10,000 tonnes of coal equivalent (tce) per year.
- Aviation: either emissions of at least 20,000 tCO2 per year or energy consumption of 10,000 tce per year.
- Maritime: either emissions of at least 100,000 tCO2 per year or energy consumption of 50,000 tce per year.
- Data centers: emissions of at least 20,000 tCO2 per year.
- Buildings (including ports and airports): either emissions of at least 10,000 tCO2 per year or energy consumption of 5,000 tce per year.
Point source (e.g., industry, road transport, aviation); downstream (indirect emissions from electricity and heat consumption).
403 entities (2025)
Allowance Allocation & Revenue
Allowances are distributed for free, using benchmarking or grandparenting.
In Phase 1, covered entities received allowances for the whole period at once. In Phase 2, allowances are allocated on an annual basis. In addition, allocation methods have been progressively improved, including increased use of benchmarks.
The allocation plan is updated every year. For the compliance year 2025:
FREE ALLOCATION:
Benchmarking: Free allocation based on sector-specific benchmarks is used for electricity and heat producers, and data centers.
Grandparenting: Grandparenting based on historical emissions intensity is used for some industrial sectors, aviation, ports, shipping, water suppliers, and public buildings, generally based on the previous three years’ data.
Grandparenting based on historical emissions is used for airports, and some industrial sectors with complex products or a considerable change in emissions boundaries, generally based on the previous three years’ data.
Ex-post allocation adjustments, e.g., based on production data, are applied for those with historical intensity or benchmarking allocations. For the compliance year 2025, these covered entities will receive allowances at 80% of 2024 their verified 2024 emissions as pre-allocation. Before the compliance deadline in 2026, the competent authority will supplement or deduct the allowance based on the verified output in 2025.
In addition to the basic allocation method, the Shanghai ETS has introduced three adjustment coefficients to encourage low-carbon fuels, continuous emission reduction, and reduction of other pollutants.
The lower the proportion of carbon-containing energy, the higher the percentage of free allowances allocated based on the allocation method. This free allowance ranges from a minimum of 93% to a maximum of 99%.
In addition, if covered entities reduce emissions over three years consecutively, they can receive an extra 0.5% or 1% of free allowances.
Covered entities that demonstrate strong efforts in reducing both air pollution and carbon emissions, and are not subject to environmental penalties nor violations during 2025 and 2026, will receive an additional 0.3 to 0.5% allowances.
AUCTIONING: A small share of the annual cap may be auctioned. The main purpose of auctions is to provide entities with additional supply to meet their compliance demand. One auction was held in each of the following years: 2014, 2016, 2018, and 2019. From 2020 to 2023, two auctions were held each year, and in 2024 three auctions were held. In 2025, only one auction was organized, in June, but no entities participated.
CNY 628.01 million (USD 87.30 million) since the beginning of the program
Revenues are attributed to the provincial treasury.
Flexibility & Linking
Banking is allowed, with some restrictions for banking across trading periods. For banked allowances from the first trading period, only one-third per year could be used by compliance entities between compliance year 2016 and 2018. Allowances are bankable for institutional investors without such an annual maximum limit.
According to the Action Plan for Deepening Reform of the ETS from 2026 to 2030, covered entities to be transferred to the National Carbon Market will have one-third of their remaining allowances in the Shanghai ETS released each year over a three-year period.
Borrowing is not allowed
The use of offset credits – CCERs and provincial offsets SHCERs – is allowed.
In 2023, Shanghai launched the provincial offset SHCER. There are two types of approved methodologies for SHCER. Type 1 is smaller-scale reduction projects, such as distributed photovoltaic power generation and public transportation. Type 2 is aimed at individual citizens using electric vehicles. Only the offset credits from Type 1 (SHCERCIR1) are eligible for compliance purposes under Shanghai ETS.
QUANTITATIVE LIMITS:
Phase 1: The use of CCER credits was limited to 5% of verified emissions.
Phase 2: From compliance years 2016 to 2018, the use of CCERs was limited to 1% of the annual allocation. For the compliance years 2019 and 2020, the use of CCERs was limited to 3% of verified emissions. In compliance year 2019, only 2% was allowed for offset credits generated outside the Yangtze River Delta region,[1] and 1% must have stemmed from within the region.
This limitation was raised to 5% in compliance year 2022 for both CCERs and SHCERs.
QUALITATIVE LIMITS:
Phase 1: Offset credits for reductions before January 2013 could not be used for compliance.
Phase 2: Same restriction as in Phase 1. Credits from hydro projects are not allowed.
Since compliance year 2024, only CCERs issued in the relaunched CCER system are eligible for compliance purposes.
In compliance year 2024, 15,690 tCO2e of SHCERs were surrendered for compliance purposes.
[1] The region covers Shanghai, Jiangsu, Zhejiang, and Anhui.
Although the SEEE operates the trading systems for both the National Carbon Market and the Shanghai regional pilot, the two markets are separate. The Shanghai ETS is not linked with any other system.
ETS: China’s National Carbon Market
Domestic offsetting mechanisms: Shanghai Carbon Emission Reduction (SHCER)
Domestic crediting mechanisms (national): China Certified Emissions Reduction (CCER)
Compliance
One calendar year. Covered entities must surrender allowances by June of the following year.
FRAMEWORK: The Shanghai government released “Guidelines for Greenhouse Gas Emission Accounting and Reporting in Shanghai (Trial)” for monitoring and reporting, as well as sector-specific guidelines for the following sectors: iron and steel, power and heat, chemicals, nonferrous metals, non-metallic mineral products, textiles,paper, aviation, shipping, large buildings (e.g., hotels, commercial and financial institutes), and transport (e.g., ports).
MONITORING: Covered entities are required to set up monitor plans for the next year by the end of December and follow them.
REPORTING: Annual. Covered entities must submit their emission reports to the Shanghai EEB before the end of March of the year following the compliance year. Road transport companies with either emissions of at least 10,000 tCO2 per year or energy consumption of 5,000 tce per year, and hazardous waste management companies with either emissions of at least 20,000 tCO2 per year or energy consumption of 10,000 tce per year, are also required to report their emissions with no compliance obligation.
VERIFICATION: Third-party verification is required. The Shanghai EEB commissions an independent third party to carry out verification. In addition, “fourth-party verification” is carried out by government-assigned experts. The government also assesses verifiers’ performance through a performance evaluation mechanism
COVERED ENTITIES: Penalties for failing to prepare an emissions data quality control plan as required, or failure to submit the annual emissions report in accordance with the requirements, or failure to properly retain the original records and management ledgers of the annual emissions report, shall be between CNY 50,000 (USD 6,954) and CNY 300,000 (USD 41,726).
Where an entity prepares an annual GHG emissions report with major defects or omissions, or engages in intentional concealment, falsification of data or information, use of false data or information, or other fraudulent acts, it shall be fined between
CNY 100,000 (USD 13,909) and CNY 300,000 (USD 41,726). Those persons directly responsible shall be fined between CNY 50,000 (USD 6,954) and CNY 100,000 (USD 13,909).
Where an entity fails to fulfill its obligation to surrender carbon emission allowances as required, in addition to being ordered to make up the shortfall in allowances, it shall be fined between CNY 200,000 (USD 27,817) and CNY 300,000 (USD 41,726).
VERIFIERS AND CONSULTANTS: Where a technical service institution issues a technical report with major defects or omissions, or engages in intentional concealment, falsification of data, or other fraudulent acts during the preparation or technical review process, the institution shall be fined between CNY 200,000 (USD 27,817) and CNY 300,000 (USD 41,726). The persons directly responsible shall be fined between CNY 20,000 (USD 2,782) and CNY 200,000 (USD 27,817).
Market Regulation
MARKET PARTICIPATION: Compliance entities; non-compliance entities (domestic institutional investors that meet the requirement of the carbon emission trading rules set up by the SEEE).
MARKET TYPES:
Primary: No set percentage of allowances are allocated via auctioning, though the Shanghai ETS regulations state that auctioning is to be introduced gradually. Ad hoc sales have been held since 2014 to provide compliance entities with additional supply. In addition, further auctions have also been held since 2020 where institutional investors have also been allowed to participate.
Secondary: Products include Shanghai Emission Allowances (SHEA), Shanghai Certified Emission Reduction (SHCERCIR1 & SHCERCIR2), Shanghai Emission Allowance Forwards, and CCERs. SHEAs and CCERs are spot products. Shanghai Emission Allowance Forward (SHEAF) is the standardized spot forward product.
LEGAL STATUS OF ALLOWANCES: The status of allowances as financial instruments is under consideration.
RESERVE
Instrument type: N/A
Functioning: A small share of the annual cap can be kept in a reserve for auctioning before the end of the annual compliance cycle as a market stability measure (see ‘Allowance Allocation’ section). The Shanghai EEB can organize irregular auctions according to market demand, no fixed triggers are envisaged.
EXCHANGE
Instrument type: Price-based instrument
Functioning: The SEEE implements a system of limits on price increases and decreases for trading over the exchange. For listed trading (trading volume less than 100,000 tCO2), this is 10% above or below the reference price (the weighted average price of all transactions on the previous trading day). For block trading (with a minimum trading volume of 100,000 tCO2), this is 30% above or below the reference price. Only transactions within this price range can be successfully completed on the exchange.
For block trading of allowances with a single buy or sell order of 500,000 tCO2 or more, the transaction price may be determined through negotiation between the trading parties.
Other Information
Shanghai Ecology and Environment Bureau (EEB): Acts as the competent authority setting the rules and overseeing the system.
Shanghai Environment and Energy Exchange: Responsible for operating the trading platform.
Shanghai Information Center: Responsible for overseeing and operating the registry.
Shanghai EEB has published annual ETS summary reports since 2024. According to the 2024 summary report, the absolute CO2 emissions from covered entities in industrial sectors dropped by 14.7% compared to 2016 levels. The absolute CO2 emissions from covered entities in the public building sector dropped by 12.8% compared to 2016 level. This same trend was also noted in the 2025 summary report.
Research on ETS improvements, funded by the local government, is undertaken every year.
Shanghai Carbon Emissions Management Measures (2025)
Action Plan for Deepening Reform of the ETS from 2026 to 2030 (2025)
Shanghai Carbon Inclusive Management Measures (2025)
Shanghai EEB - Allocation Plan for Compliance Year 2024 (including list of covered entities)
Shanghai EEB - Allocation Plan for Compliance Year 2025 (including list of covered entities)