Powerful emitters ignore Beijing carbon scheme deadline and question its authority, says report
More than a quarter of the companies deemed responsible for emitting Beijing's heavy pollution have ignored a deadline for submitting verified reports of their 2013 emissions

More than a quarter of all companies covered by Beijing’s municipal carbon laws ignored a key reporting deadline, local media said on Friday, with some powerful companies questioning the local government trading body’s authority to regulate them.
Beijing’s carbon trading market, one of six set up in China to rein in rapidly growing greenhouse gas emissions, caps carbon dioxide from nearly 500 local enterprises.
Most of them must hand over permits to the government to cover for their emissions, while some must only report their CO2 levels.
But 140 of them missed an April deadline to submit a verified report of their 2013 emissions, local newspapers reported on Friday, a key to determining how many permits each firm must hand over to the government to cover for CO2 output.
Some of the firms implied that Beijing’s Development and Reform Commission (DRC), which operates the scheme, did not have the authority to issue such orders.
