How Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism is Energizing the EU Carbon Market and Industrial Transformation
By: Joseph Nyangon, Brecht Seifi
Potential Business Impact:
Makes imported goods pay for their pollution.
The global carbon market is fragmented and characterized by limited pricing transparency and empirical evidence, creating challenges for investors and policymakers in identifying carbon management opportunities. The European Union is among several regions that have implemented emissions pricing through an Emissions Trading System (EU ETS). While the EU ETS has contributed to emissions reductions, it has also raised concerns related to international competitiveness and carbon leakage, particularly given the strong integration of EU industries into global value chains. To address these challenges, the European Commission proposed the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) in 2021. CBAM is designed to operate alongside the EU ETS by applying a carbon price to selected imported goods, thereby aligning carbon costs between domestic and foreign producers. It will gradually replace existing carbon leakage mitigation measures, including the allocation of free allowances under the EU ETS. The initial scope of CBAM covers electricity, cement, fertilizer, aluminium, iron, and steel. As climate policies intensify under the Paris Agreement, CBAM-like mechanisms are expected to play an increasingly important role in managing carbon-related trade risks and supporting the transition to net zero emissions.
Similar Papers
Evaluating the EU Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism with a Quantitative Trade Model
General Economics
Makes cleaner products by taxing pollution.
Understanding Carbon Trade Dynamics: A European Union Emissions Trading System Perspective
Applications
Helps EU trade carbon, but it's not perfect.
Inefficiencies of Carbon Trading Markets
General Finance
Makes pollution rules work better for everyone.