HomeCarbon CreditsKraneShares Announce 2 new Carbon ETF's - KEUA & KCCA

KraneShares Announce 2 new Carbon ETF’s – KEUA & KCCA

Based on investor interest in KRBN (KraneShares Global Carbon ETF), the firm has launched two additional carbon allowances-focused ETFs.

“Through the phenomenal success of KRBN, we learned that many of our clients also want targeted exposure to the underlying markets,” said Luke Oliver, managing director and head of strategy at KraneShares.

“KEUA and KCCA provide access to the component carbon allowance markets at various stages of their growth cycle. With these new ETFs, investors can take a customizable precision-approach to invest in carbon markets.”

The KraneShares European Carbon Allowance ETF (KEUA) and the KraneShares California Carbon Allowance ETF (KCCA) are the new funds.

KEUA – Provides exposure to the European Union Allowances cap-and-trade carbon allowance program solely, and is actively managed with a 0.79% expense ratio.

The benchmark for the fund is the IHS Markit Carbon EUA Index, which follows the most-traded EUA futures contracts in the market, which is the oldest and most liquid for carbon allowances.

The market presently covers around 40% of all EU emissions, covering 27 member states as well as Norway, Iceland, and Liechtenstein. In an effort to reach long-term carbon emission targets, the yearly cap reduction was recently boosted from 2.2% to 4.2%.

KCCA– Provides exposure to the California Carbon Allowances cap-and-trade carbon allowance scheme solely, and is actively managed with a 0.79% expense ratio.

The fund’s benchmark is the HIS Markit Carbon CCA Index, which measures the most actively traded CCA futures contracts in a market that covers around 80% of California’s greenhouse gas emissions and has also covered Quebec’s emissions since its expansion in 2014.

The cap is now set to drop by 4% each year in order to achieve future carbon emission targets, and it has a built-in floor price that increases by 5% per year, plus an inflation adjustment.

 

Both funds may invest in carbon credit futures with different maturity dates than the index, or they may weight futures differently than the index. The fund may trade in CTFC-regulated futures and swaps beyond the CFTC 4.5 limit and is thus classified as a “commodity pool.”

Many countries and regions have implemented carbon-cap-and-trade programs, which limit how much carbon an individual firm can produce before needing to acquire allowances to offset extra emissions.

KraneShares presently invests in markets that have cap-and-trade schemes tied to emissions limits imposed by the Paris Agreement.

By establishing such programs, investors and markets can collaborate to put pressure on corporations to reduce emissions when exceeding the emissions limit becomes increasingly expensive.

Both funds join the increasing array of carbon allowance-focused ETFs, which includes the KRBN, which presently invests in the EU and North American markets, whereas the two new funds will each target a single market.

Most Popular
LATEST CARBON NEWS

Multi-Billion Dollar U.S. Clean Energy Tax Credits Are Here

President Joe Biden's signature climate legislation, the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), has sparked a multibillion-dollar market for clean energy tax credits within a short...

Data Centers Power Demand Fuel U.S. Utility Q1 Earnings Discussions

US utility analysts anticipate that discussions on first-quarter 2024 earnings calls will continue to be driven by artificial intelligence (AI) and data center power...

Green Star Royalties Invests $5.6M In NativState LLC for Carbon Offset Portfolio

Green Star Royalties, the world’s first carbon credit royalty and streaming company boasts funding top-notch North American nature-based climate solutions. It’s a joint venture...

Mercedes-Benz Reveals First-Ever Electric G-Wagon

As automakers and suppliers invest heavily in electric vehicle (EV) capacity and technology development, the actual demand for EVs has yet to catch up,...
CARBON INVESTOR EDUCATION

What Is COP28? Key Issues to Watch Out at 2023 Climate Summit

After a record-breaking year of devastating effects of climate change, from record wildfires in Greece and Canada to floods in Libya, the United Nations...

Climate Disclosure: New Corporate Standards for a Net Zero World

As part of the world’s continued efforts to combat climate change and transition towards net zero, one important piece of the puzzle is new...

Carbon Pricing: Understanding The Economics and Trends of Fighting Climate Change

As global temperatures continue to rise, the urgency surrounding climate policies has intensified, thrusting carbon pricing into the limelight of climate discussions. The race to...

The EU Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD): Key Things to Know

Companies operating in the European Union will have to deal with new non-financial and sustainability reporting requirements starting January 2024 with the EU's Corporate...