
EU Carbon Border Tax Raises Global Trade Tensions
The European Union's Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) has sparked global trade tensions as it enters its transitional phase in 2025. Designed to combat carbon leakage and level the playing field for EU industries, the CBAM imposes a carbon tariff on imports of carbon-intensive goods such as steel, cement, and electricity. The mechanism, part of the European Green Deal, aims to align import costs with the EU's internal carbon pricing under the Emissions Trading System (ETS).
Transitional Phase and Global Concerns
From 2023 to 2025, importers of six carbon-intensive sectors—aluminium, cement, electricity, fertilisers, hydrogen, and iron and steel—are required to report their emissions. The full implementation, starting in 2026, will require importers to purchase CBAM certificates based on the EU ETS allowance prices. This move has raised concerns among trading partners, particularly developing nations, who fear increased costs and reduced market access.
Economic and Environmental Impact
The CBAM is expected to accelerate decarbonization by discouraging carbon-intensive imports and encouraging cleaner production methods. However, critics argue that it could disproportionately affect developing economies reliant on carbon-heavy industries. The EU has proposed reforms, such as the "CBAM-plus," to redirect revenues to support decarbonization efforts in these countries.
For more details, visit the European Commission's CBAM page.