Vivid EU ETS model

European Union Emissions Trading System model
Fact Sheet

Source: Commission modelling inventory and knowledge management system (MIDAS)

Date of Report Generation: Thu Mar 06 2025

Dissemination: Public

© European Union, 2025

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Overview

Acronym

Vivid EU ETS model

Full title

European Union Emissions Trading System model

Main purpose

The model represents the EU Emissions Trading System, as a competitive market where firms can optimise their holdings of emissions allowances over time. It returns a series of equilibrium prices, banking, and emissions within the EU ETS scope on an annual basis.

Summary

The Vivid EU ETS model was created by Vivid Economics to model the EU ETS, for the purpose of modelling the functioning of the Market Stability Reserve of the EU ETS (the MSR). The model builds on the modelling approach from Quemin and Trotignon (2019) [1] that is calibrated to represent the average EU ETS compliance entity.

The model considers the EU ETS as a competitive market where firms can bank emissions allowances. The model is dynamic as the number of banked allowances from a given year will affect the total supply of allowances in the subsequent year. Firms are required to surrender allowances for compliance each year that match their emissions and bank any remaining allowances that they hold across years. Solving the model returns a series of equilibrium prices, banking, and emissions within the EU ETS scope on an annual basis.

The model has been used to assess MSR options for the Impact Assessment of the EU ETS review.

[1] Quemin S and Trotignon R (2019) – “Emissions trading with rolling horizons”. Centre for Climate Change Economics and Policy Working Paper 348/Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment Working Paper 316. London: London School of Economics and Political Science

Model categories

Climate

Model keywords

ClimateemissionsMarket Stability ReserveMSRTradingEU ETS

Model homepage

Ownership and Licence

Ownership

Third-party ownership (commercial companies, Member States, other organisations, …)

Ownership details

Vivid Economics

Licence type

Non-Free Software licence

The license has one or more of the following restrictions: it prohibits creation of derivative works; it prohibits commercial use; it obliges to share the licensed or derivative works on the same conditions.

Details

Structure and approach

The representative firm in the model minimises its abatement cost with rolling horizons and limited foresight. In the model, the firm faces the problem of choosing emissions and abatement over a given time horizon. The firm takes into account its baseline emissions forecast and supply of allowances for the next 10 years (more precisely, the firm decides on emissions in year t after making forecasts of up to year t+9). Baseline emissions in this model are a theoretical construct to represent the emissions in absence of a carbon price. The supply of allowances is determined by the EU ETS cap and augmented by MSR dynamics. The difference between the baseline emissions and the supply of allowances over this time horizon determines the total abatement required from the firm, thus entering its optimisation problem as a budget constraint. The firm minimises the net present value of abatement costs over these X years given this budget constraint and a given interest rate (in addition, there is a borrowing constraint in which the firm can only borrow allowances up to the number of free allocations in the subsequent year. However, this constraint is not binding over the time period in 2020-2030). Limited foresight of the firm means that its forecast of baseline emissions may deviate from the actual baseline emissions. Shocks to the system will affect the firm’s expectations and therefore its optimal choice of emissions and abatement. Finally, equilibrium prices are calculated by mapping the firm’s abatement to a marginal abatement cost curve.

The model is the best-in-class representation of the MSR available in the literature. This includes explicit representation of MSR intakes, releases, corresponding thresholds, the invalidation mechanism, and the calculation of total number of allowances in circulation in the EU ETS (TNAC) on an annual basis. In particular, the model captures the fact that the TNAC for a given year is reported in May in the subsequent year, then affecting auction volumes from September to August. Given the rules-based nature of the MSR, some other models in the literature estimate the TNAC simply by taking an exogenous emissions pathway as given. However, the advantage of optimisation models such as the one used in this assessment is that the emissions pathway is endogenous to the given policy design. In other words, changes in policy parameters will affect the perceived scarcity of emissions allowances and therefore the firm’s behaviour on emissions and abatement. For instance, a higher MSR intake rate should represent a tightening of future allowance supply and therefore reduce emissions today and increase TNAC. The model used in this assessment, adapted from Quemin and Trotignon (2019) [1], is able to model this while capturing realistic aspects of firm behaviour – limited foresight and rolling horizons, as noted above. These aspects of firm behaviour are taken from the latest academic literature and provides an additional perspective to explore the impact of the MSR.

[1] Quemin S and Trotignon R (2019) – “Emissions trading with rolling horizons”. Centre for Climate Change Economics and Policy Working Paper 348/Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment Working Paper 316. London: London School of Economics and Political Science

Input and parametrization

  • Baseline emissions
  • Marginal Abatement Cost Curve
  • Interest Rate
  • Anticipation Period
  • Growth rates
  • Assumptions on future EU ETS scope

Main output

  • MSR intakes
  • Total number of allowances in circulation
  • Emissions
  • Equilibrium carbon prices
  • Auctioned volumes
  • Auction revenues

Spatial & Temporal extent

The output has the following spatial-temporal resolution and extent:

ParameterDescription
Spatial extent / country coverageEU Member states 27EFTA countries
The model works at the aggregated level of the EU ETS, i.a. the EU + EEA Member States
Spatial resolutionWorld-regions (supranational)
Temporal extentMedium-term (5 to 15 years)
Temporal resolutionYears

Quality & Transparency

Quality

Model uncertainties

Models are by definition affected by uncertainties (in input data, input parameters, scenario definitions, etc.). Have the model uncertainties been quantified? Are uncertainties accounted for in your simulations?

yes
Uncertainties in policy environment are explicitly captured in scenario analysis. Uncertainties in inputs (baseline emissions, MACC, interest rates, anticipation period, growth rate) were tested using sensitivity analysis.

    Sensitivity analysis

    Sensitivity analysis helps identifying the uncertain inputs mostly responsible for the uncertainty in the model responses. Has the model undergone sensitivity analysis?

    yes
    The model has undergone sensitivity analysis for all the input parameters (as above).

      Have model results been published in peer-reviewed articles?

      yes
      The model has been peer reviewed as part of publication in the Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control (see Quemin & Trotignon, 2021)

        Has the model formally undergone scientific review by a panel of international experts?

        Please note that this does not refer to the cases when model results were validated by stakeholders.

        no

          Model validation

          Has model validation been done? Have model predictions been confronted with observed data (ex-post)?

          not applicable
          Model looks at the future past 2021

            Transparency

            To what extent do input data come from publicly available sources?

            This may include sources accessible upon subscription and/or payment

            Entirely based on restricted-access sources

            Is the full model database as such available to external users?

            Whether or not it implies a specific procedure or a fee

            no
            The model and underlying database is a proprietary asset belonging to Vivid Economics.

              Have model results been presented in publicly available reports?

              Note this excludes IA reports.

              yes

              Have output datasets been made publicly available?

              Note this could also imply a specific procedure or a fee.

              no
              The scenarios and outputs provided as part of the study carried out in support of the EU ETS review are intended for open publication.

                Is there any user friendly interface presenting model results that is accessible to the public?

                For instance: Dashboard, interactive interfaces...

                no

                  Has the model been documented in a publicly available dedicated report or a manual?

                  Note this excludes IA reports.

                  yes
                  The final report includes a methodology section for publication.

                  Is there a dedicated public website where information about the model is provided?

                  no

                    Is the model code open-source?

                    no

                    Can the code be accessed upon request?

                    no

                    The model’s policy relevance and intended role in the policy cycle

                    The model is designed to contribute to the following policy areas

                    • Climate action

                    The model is designed to contribute to the following phases of the policy cycle

                    • Formulation – such as ex-ante Impact Assessments

                    The model’s potential

                    The model was used in the Impact Assessment of the EU ETS review, in order to assess different options for the Market Stability Reserve.

                    Previous use of the model in ex-ante impact assessments of the European Commission

                    Use of the model in ex-ante impact assessments since July 2017.

                    2021
                    SWD/2021/601 final

                    Impact assessment accompanying the document Directive of the European Parliament and of the Council: amending Directive 2003/87/EC establishing a system for greenhouse gas emission allowance trading within the Union, Decision (EU) 2015/1814 concerning the establishment and operation of a market stability reserve for the Union greenhouse gas emission trading scheme and Regulation (EU) 2015/757

                    Lead by
                    CLIMA
                    Run by
                    Vivid Economics
                    Contribution role
                    baseline and assessment of policy options
                    Contribution details

                    The model helped to assess the following impacts:

                    • Economic growth and employment
                    • Investments and functioning of markets
                    • Emission of greenhouse gases
                    • Economic incentives set up by market based mechanisms
                    • Ability to adapt to climate change
                    • Energy intensity of the economy
                    • Fuel mix used in energy production

                    Bibliographic references

                    Studies that uses the model or its results

                    No references in this category

                    Peer review for model validation

                    Emissions trading with rolling horizons 

                    Published in 2021
                    Quemin, S., & Trotignon, R. (2021). Emissions trading with rolling horizons. Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control, 125, 104099. doi:10.1016/j.jedc.2021.104099

                    Model documentation

                    No references in this category

                    Other related documents

                    No references in this category