4.6 Article

Border carbon adjustments and industrial competitiveness in a European Green Deal

Journal

CLIMATE POLICY
Volume 21, Issue 3, Pages 307-317

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/14693062.2020.1856637

Keywords

Border carbon adjustment; carbon pricing; competitiveness; free allocation; international trade

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This paper discusses the European Union's consideration of introducing a Border Carbon Adjustment as part of the European Green Deal, highlighting the potential weakening of EU producers' competitiveness in foreign markets by replacing free allocation with an import-only BCA. It also emphasizes the importance of free allocation in safeguarding the overall industrial competitiveness of exported products.
As part of the European Green Deal, the EU is considering the introduction of a Border Carbon Adjustment (BCA) on imports as an alternative to free allocation of emission allowances to reduce the risk of carbon leakage under the EU's Emissions Trading System (EU ETS). While a BCA for exports is not categorically excluded, it is less likely to be consistent with World Trade Organisation rules and therefore less likely to be proposed than an import-only BCA. In this paper, we show that replacing free allocation by an import-only BCA would weaken the competitiveness of EU producers in foreign markets. Free allocation also helps support the cost competitiveness of domestic products that are exported to non-EU markets. Therefore, a move to import-only BCAs does not necessarily make redundant the continued use of free allocation to help safeguard overall industrial competitiveness. While combining an import BCA with free allocation for exports can increase the risk of legal challenges, such risks may be reduced with an appropriate design. More broadly, policymakers need to navigate a complex trade-off between competitiveness support, a stronger carbon price signal, and extra fiscal revenue. Key policy insights A BCA on imports levels the playing field in domestic EU markets but does not provide competitiveness support to exports Therefore, a move to an import-only BCAs does not obviate the need for free allocation to safeguard overall industrial competitiveness While combining an import-only BCA with free allocation for exports increases the risk of legal challenges, such risks may be reduced with an appropriate design

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