The EU Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism and its Influence on Imports from India
- In its “Fit for 55” program, the European Union (EU) integrates several instruments with the goal of achieving climate neutrality by 2050. One of the cornerstones of the program is the EU Emissions Trading System (EU-ETS), which imposes a levy on CO2 and other greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, thus internalizing external costs, restoring fair competition, incentivizing sustainable investment and efficiently distributing the remaining greenhouse gas budget through a cost-effective, market-oriented mechanism. This carbon pricing scheme, however, only affects companies which emit GHGs within the EU. Imported products thereby achieve a cost advantage over products produced within the scope of the EU-ETS, leading to competitive pressure on EU-ETS companies and the risk that they might move production facilities outside the scope of the EU-ETS (“carbon leakage”). In order to avoid carbon leakage and encourage cleaner industrial production in partner countries, the EU decided to introduce the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) to put a fair price on carbon emissions from the manufacturing of products imported into the EU. The CBAM transitional phase will go into effect on October 1, 2023. Initially, it will only apply to selected industrial products and precursors whose production is particularly carbon intensive and which are deemed to have the highest potential risk of carbon leakage. Once the CBAM is fully active, all importing companies will have to declare the embedded emissions for their products and surrender the corresponding amount of CBAM certificates. It is to be expected that importing companies will strongly rely on their international suppliers to provide information on the embedded emissions. India is both an important trade partner of the EU and, because of its strong reliance on coal power plants, a heavy greenhouse gas emitter both in absolute and relative terms. Importers of products from India into the EU will therefore have to purchase a significant number of carbon allowances under the CBAM regulations. This paper explains the functional mechanism of the CBAM and identifies the product flows from India to the EU for the affected products. It describes the product groups, their importance for Indian companies as well as the future requirements, and is intended to support Indian companies that export to the European Union to prepare for the CBAM requirements both during the transition phase and once the system is fully active.
Author: | Frank Best |
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URL: | https://hdl.handle.net/10419/285311 |
Publisher: | ZBW - Leibniz Information Centre for Economics |
Place of publication: | Kiel; Hamburg |
Document Type: | Report |
Language: | English |
Year of Publication: | 2023 |
Release Date: | 2024/09/23 |
Tag: | Aluminium; CBAM; Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism; Carbon Intensity; Emission Trading Scheme; EU-ETS; India; Imports; Iron; Steel; EU |
Page Number: | 21 |
Institutes: | Fakultät Wirtschafts-, Kultur- und Rechtswissenschaften |
DDC functional group: | 300 Sozialwissenschaften |
Open Access?: | Ja |
Licence (German): | Urheberrechtlich geschützt |