Report

Delivering robust measurement pathways for a Scottish carbon land tax: an evidence review and feasibility study

Delivering robust measurement pathways for a Scottish carbon land tax: an evidence review and feasibility study

LUNZ Hub Calldown 26 was commissioned to assess whether a Scottish carbon land tax could provide a credible incentive to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from peatlands, complementing restoration grants and carbon market mechanisms.

Implementing a peat emissions tax raises measurement and administrative challenges, including attributing emissions fairly to individual landholdings, managing uncertainty transparently, and ensuring workable compliance and appeal processes.

This report provides a desk-based review of methods for measuring peat-related emissions, summarises their strengths and limitations, assesses their feasibility for a Scottish tax context, and identifies priority research needs to support policy development. It highlights trade-offs between accuracy, cost, spatial resolution and administrative burden, concluding that current methods are not yet sufficient for a nationally applied emissions-based peatland land tax, but recommending further evidence-gathering and phased piloting.

Click here to read the full report.

Alastair McVittie

Alistair McVittie

Reader in Environmental Economics

Nick Millard

Nick Millard

Agile Policy Centre

Click here to read the full report

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