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Are South African Businesses Adapting To The Demands Of The Carbon Tax Policy ? A Case Of Distell

Climate change is our planet's biggest threat, making it one of the most important subjects. Climate change adversely affects the temperature, weather, and the environment we live in, which causes rising sea levels, prolonged droughts, supercharged storms, wildfires, and flooding. Governments have a...

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Main Author: Trimble, Dale
Other Authors: Ismail, Faizel
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Graduate School of Development Policy and Practice 2024
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access_status_str Open Access
author Trimble, Dale
author2 Ismail, Faizel
author_browse Ismail, Faizel
Trimble, Dale
author_facet Ismail, Faizel
Trimble, Dale
author_sort Trimble, Dale
collection Thesis
description Climate change is our planet's biggest threat, making it one of the most important subjects. Climate change adversely affects the temperature, weather, and the environment we live in, which causes rising sea levels, prolonged droughts, supercharged storms, wildfires, and flooding. Governments have addressed strategies to create more climate-resilient economies. One approach being adopted by countries is using pricing mechanisms such as Emissions Trading Systems, which was predominately used in Europe, and the Carbon Tax policy, which is being used in South Africa and is the focus of this paper. The carbon tax system is designed to put a value on GHG emissions when businesses produce goods and services. This research focuses on whether South African companies are adapting to the demands of the carbon tax policy. This study initially sought to discover whether the carbon tax policy promotes behavioural change by reducing GHG emissions within businesses. The rationale for this paper is that South Africa must decrease GHG emissions per its agreements with the UNFCCC and the Paris Agreement. South Africa is currently the 14th highest carbon emitter globally, and the reason for its high carbon emissions is that its primary power provider, ESKOM, relies on fossil fuels for electricity generation. Despite the carbon tax system being a pricing mechanism to reduce GHG emissions, there have been criticisms about the policy as it is seen as progressive. However, the tax raises production costs and could negatively impact firms' competitiveness. The research design used was a case study approach performed on South Africa's largest wine producer, namely Distell Group Limited, thus having an idiographic approach with semi-unstructured online interviews conducted. A convenience sampling method was used to gather participants, and the data collected were unstructured and nonnumerical, thus making it qualitative. The main finding of this research was that businesses are generally reducing GHG emissions due to the increased energy costs incurred; thus, limiting and conserving energy is important. The policy has not had much influence in this area as the effective tax rate is too low to encourage any radical change needed to achieve the environmental targets stated in the NDCs. This paper illustrates that there are very few adverse effects on the competition among firms as a consequence of the carbon tax policy. For South Africa to achieve the double dividend, the government must display more transparency in raising and applying carbon taxes. The recommendations for practice are based on the study of the literature and case study insights. The government should limit the discretion around allocating carbon tax revenues and treat them separately for financing environmental reforms, adverse effects on low-income people, and protecting trade-exposed sectors of companies like Distell. Implementing tax incentives for programs that focus on mitigation and adaptation, as well as sustainable business practices and investments in green technology, will assist in transitioning into a green economy.
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language eng
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provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2024
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/39930 Are South African Businesses Adapting To The Demands Of The Carbon Tax Policy ? A Case Of Distell Trimble, Dale Ismail, Faizel Development Policy and Practice Climate change is our planet's biggest threat, making it one of the most important subjects. Climate change adversely affects the temperature, weather, and the environment we live in, which causes rising sea levels, prolonged droughts, supercharged storms, wildfires, and flooding. Governments have addressed strategies to create more climate-resilient economies. One approach being adopted by countries is using pricing mechanisms such as Emissions Trading Systems, which was predominately used in Europe, and the Carbon Tax policy, which is being used in South Africa and is the focus of this paper. The carbon tax system is designed to put a value on GHG emissions when businesses produce goods and services. This research focuses on whether South African companies are adapting to the demands of the carbon tax policy. This study initially sought to discover whether the carbon tax policy promotes behavioural change by reducing GHG emissions within businesses. The rationale for this paper is that South Africa must decrease GHG emissions per its agreements with the UNFCCC and the Paris Agreement. South Africa is currently the 14th highest carbon emitter globally, and the reason for its high carbon emissions is that its primary power provider, ESKOM, relies on fossil fuels for electricity generation. Despite the carbon tax system being a pricing mechanism to reduce GHG emissions, there have been criticisms about the policy as it is seen as progressive. However, the tax raises production costs and could negatively impact firms' competitiveness. The research design used was a case study approach performed on South Africa's largest wine producer, namely Distell Group Limited, thus having an idiographic approach with semi-unstructured online interviews conducted. A convenience sampling method was used to gather participants, and the data collected were unstructured and nonnumerical, thus making it qualitative. The main finding of this research was that businesses are generally reducing GHG emissions due to the increased energy costs incurred; thus, limiting and conserving energy is important. The policy has not had much influence in this area as the effective tax rate is too low to encourage any radical change needed to achieve the environmental targets stated in the NDCs. This paper illustrates that there are very few adverse effects on the competition among firms as a consequence of the carbon tax policy. For South Africa to achieve the double dividend, the government must display more transparency in raising and applying carbon taxes. The recommendations for practice are based on the study of the literature and case study insights. The government should limit the discretion around allocating carbon tax revenues and treat them separately for financing environmental reforms, adverse effects on low-income people, and protecting trade-exposed sectors of companies like Distell. Implementing tax incentives for programs that focus on mitigation and adaptation, as well as sustainable business practices and investments in green technology, will assist in transitioning into a green economy. 2024-06-19T07:44:37Z 2024-06-19T07:44:37Z 2023 2024-06-06T09:58:13Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/39930 eng application/pdf Graduate School of Development Policy and Practice Faculty of Commerce
spellingShingle Development Policy and Practice
Trimble, Dale
Are South African Businesses Adapting To The Demands Of The Carbon Tax Policy ? A Case Of Distell
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Are South African Businesses Adapting To The Demands Of The Carbon Tax Policy ? A Case Of Distell
title_full Are South African Businesses Adapting To The Demands Of The Carbon Tax Policy ? A Case Of Distell
title_fullStr Are South African Businesses Adapting To The Demands Of The Carbon Tax Policy ? A Case Of Distell
title_full_unstemmed Are South African Businesses Adapting To The Demands Of The Carbon Tax Policy ? A Case Of Distell
title_short Are South African Businesses Adapting To The Demands Of The Carbon Tax Policy ? A Case Of Distell
title_sort are south african businesses adapting to the demands of the carbon tax policy a case of distell
topic Development Policy and Practice
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/39930
work_keys_str_mv AT trimbledale aresouthafricanbusinessesadaptingtothedemandsofthecarbontaxpolicyacaseofdistell