EU seals agreement on world’s first carbon tariff
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EU seals agreement on world’s first carbon tariff

Oct 26, 2023

By Kira Taylor | EURACTIV.com

13-12-2022 (updated: 19-12-2022 )

EU negotiators reached a deal to put a price on carbon-intensive products entering the EU after a final 10-hour round of negotiations [Mohammed Chahim]

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EU negotiators reached an agreement early on Tuesday morning (13 December) that will pave the way for Europe to set up the world's first levy on carbon-intensive goods entering its market.

The so-called carbon border adjustment mechanism (CBAM) will mirror the EU's own domestic carbon price, thereby shielding European industry from cheaper, more-polluting products imported from abroad.

It will initially apply to imports including iron and steel, cement, aluminium, fertilisers and electricity as well as hydrogen.

The agreement was sealed the day after the G7 group of industrialised nations announced the creation of an "international climate club", aimed at fostering greener industry.

"For the first time, we will ensure fair treatment for our enterprises, which pay a carbon price in Europe, and their foreign competitors, who do not," said Pascal Canfin, the chairman of the European Parliament's environment committee.

"This is a major step that will allow us to do more for the climate while protecting our businesses and our jobs," he said in a statement.

"CBAM will be a crucial pillar of European climate policies. It is one of the only mechanisms we have to incentivise our trading partners to decarbonise their manufacturing industry," said the European Parliament's lead negotiator, Mohammed Chahim.

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz presented the long-awaited terms for his ‘climate club’, a platform for countries wishing to protect the climate. However, it may be overshadowed by similar initiatives recently announced.

Jozef Síkela, industry and trade minister for the Czech Republic, which ran negotiations on behalf of the 27 EU member states also welcomed the deal as a key part of European climate action.

"This mechanism promotes the import of goods by non-EU businesses into the EU which fulfil the high climate standards applicable in the 27 EU member states," he said. "This will ensure a balanced treatment of such imports and is designed to encourage our partners in the world to join the EU's climate efforts," he affirmed.

The levy will be launched on 1 October 2023 for a test period that imposes only reporting obligations on the imports of goods covered by the scheme. After this transition period, the full levy will kick in.

However, the end of the test phase is yet to be decided and will be discussed in further negotiations at the end of the week.

The levy will cover imports of iron and steel, cement, aluminium, fertilisers and electricity, in line with the European Commission's initial proposal tabled in July 2021. Following Tuesday's agreement, it will also cover hydrogen, indirect emissions under certain conditions and some downstream products.

Any companies importing these into the EU will have to buy certificates to cover the carbon emissions embedded in them unless they can prove they have already been accounted for by climate legislation in the producer country.

Over time, the levy will replace the much-criticised allowances that EU industries currently receive for free under the bloc's carbon market, the Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS).

"It is an alternative to our current carbon leakage measures, which will allow us to apply the polluter pays principle to our own industry," said Chahim.

EU negotiators aim to reach an agreement during late-night negotiations on Monday (12 December) on a new levy that would put a price on carbon-intensive goods entering the EU.

In the negotiations, the European Parliament pushed to expand the number of sectors covered by the levy beyond what the European Commission had suggested in 2021.

Lawmakers succeeded in including hydrogen, which is mainly produced from coal in non-EU countries, according to a November paper from the EU executive that assessed the possibility of including more sectors.

The paper said that, while imports of hydrogen are currently quite low, they are foreseen to grow in the coming years and that "the introduction of hydrogen appears less complex than the inclusion of other sectors under consideration for an extension".

The European Parliament also succeeded in including processed products, such as screws and bolts and similar articles made from iron or steel.

Other downstream products could be added following a review carried out before the end of the transition period. The inclusion of organic chemicals and plastics will also be assessed before the end of the transition period.

Alongside these, the European Parliament wanted to include indirect emissions – those caused by the production of the energy used in the manufacturing process.

This proved a major sticking point in the final, 10-hour negotiation. In the end, indirect emissions will be included "under certain circumstances", with more work required to finalise the details.

Two of the major elements of the levy remain undecided. These are the timeline for when the levy comes into force and whether to compensate EU exports, which won't be protected by the tariff.

Both of these will be discussed in a "jumbo" round of negotiations later this week as part of talks to reform the EU carbon market.

"I am hopeful that, by this weekend, the picture will be complete for this mechanism," said Nicu Ștefănuță, a Romanian MEP who negotiated on behalf of the centrist Renew Europe group in the European Parliament.

"CBAM is the EU's game changer for sustainable trade and will have positive effect in our aim to achieve the Paris Agreement target," he added.

Meanwhile, the industry is pushing hard for a gradual phase out of free allowances and support for exports, warning that without this, the levy will fail to prevent businesses relocating out of the EU.

"A robust CBAM that helps the industry compete means a gradual transition from free allowances to full CBAM certification," said AEGIS Europe, an industry group which brings together more than 20 European manufacturing associations.

"It also requires a workable and defendable export solution at the WTO level and a very sophisticated and solid anticircumvention regime," it added.

The United States may be able to avoid European plans to slap tariffs on imports of polluting goods because it as adopted climate targets that are similar to the EU's, the bloc's climate policy chief said on Tuesday (20 September).

Campaigners welcomed the extension of CBAM to include hydrogen and certain downstream products.

However, they denounced the EU's failure to agree on using revenues generated through the sale of CBAM certificates to fund climate action outside Europe.

"Europeans are responsible for double the carbon emissions as the poorest half of the world. Yet, the EU just agreed to pass the buck to those least responsible by forcing them to pay a tariff despite being hardest hit by the climate crisis," commented Chiara Putaturo, tax expert at Oxfam EU.

"The EU and EU countries need to increase climate finance funds, especially now that poor countries are going to bear the cost of the carbon tariff."  

[Edited by Frédéric Simon]

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Downstream products Exports and phase-out date left blank