Berliner Boersenzeitung - COP-and-trade? Tariffs, carbon tax weigh on climate talks

EUR -
AED 4.283851
AFN 73.487731
ALL 95.475232
AMD 432.980696
ANG 2.087841
AOA 1070.816537
ARS 1622.569301
AUD 1.639321
AWG 2.102556
AZN 1.976329
BAM 1.948961
BBD 2.350153
BDT 143.167615
BGN 1.945786
BHD 0.440554
BIF 3471.405161
BMD 1.166467
BND 1.489965
BOB 8.062707
BRL 5.828014
BSD 1.166806
BTN 110.612852
BWP 15.771589
BYN 3.285571
BYR 22862.749047
BZD 2.346765
CAD 1.596246
CDF 2706.203174
CHF 0.923585
CLF 0.026821
CLP 1055.618143
CNY 7.976591
CNH 7.98292
COP 4240.81832
CRC 530.637955
CUC 1.166467
CUP 30.91137
CVE 110.668563
CZK 24.40483
DJF 207.304627
DKK 7.472829
DOP 69.259002
DZD 154.830385
EGP 61.863559
ERN 17.497002
ETB 183.135497
FJD 2.5762
FKP 0.863327
GBP 0.866277
GEL 3.137941
GGP 0.863327
GHS 13.052952
GIP 0.863327
GMD 85.152274
GNF 10235.746283
GTQ 8.91468
GYD 244.122312
HKD 9.140142
HNL 31.040207
HRK 7.535839
HTG 152.823731
HUF 367.031692
IDR 20277.450381
ILS 3.497406
IMP 0.863327
INR 111.171261
IQD 1528.071492
IRR 1534487.060367
ISK 143.801971
JEP 0.863327
JMD 182.967953
JOD 0.82702
JPY 187.368385
KES 150.649127
KGS 101.983379
KHR 4677.531942
KMF 492.248906
KPW 1049.781227
KRW 1730.698645
KWD 0.359393
KYD 0.972384
KZT 540.453512
LAK 25633.107543
LBP 104436.761171
LKR 372.801813
LRD 214.484095
LSL 19.678175
LTL 3.444273
LVL 0.705584
LYD 7.407039
MAD 10.805856
MDL 20.087426
MGA 4840.837667
MKD 61.66201
MMK 2449.556444
MNT 4174.651856
MOP 9.419247
MRU 46.635096
MUR 54.859018
MVR 18.027751
MWK 2031.424536
MXN 20.500883
MYR 4.633185
MZN 74.543034
NAD 19.678918
NGN 1604.463581
NIO 42.821174
NOK 10.885351
NPR 176.980206
NZD 2.001681
OMR 0.44851
PAB 1.166806
PEN 4.110626
PGK 5.06267
PHP 71.842649
PKR 325.298418
PLN 4.262007
PYG 7259.525826
QAR 4.250024
RON 5.10866
RSD 117.357054
RUB 87.19153
RWF 1704.207977
SAR 4.374869
SBD 9.37704
SCR 15.984135
SDG 700.486194
SEK 10.885993
SGD 1.49523
SHP 0.870885
SLE 28.697358
SLL 24460.220841
SOS 666.642215
SRD 43.696996
STD 24143.507427
STN 24.729096
SVC 10.210172
SYP 129.168815
SZL 19.654905
THB 38.293355
TJS 10.939067
TMT 4.088466
TND 3.373714
TOP 2.808572
TRY 52.706568
TTD 7.934158
TWD 36.990411
TZS 3044.478063
UAH 51.42953
UGX 4346.746967
USD 1.166467
UYU 46.437049
UZS 14055.924874
VES 566.421989
VND 30743.398667
VUV 138.077204
WST 3.167979
XAF 653.660459
XAG 0.016135
XAU 0.000256
XCD 3.152435
XCG 2.102921
XDR 0.813865
XOF 652.055361
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.348137
ZAR 19.6955
ZMK 10499.598722
ZMW 22.023717
ZWL 375.60183
  • RBGPF

    0.2800

    63.75

    +0.44%

  • RYCEF

    -0.4000

    14.9

    -2.68%

  • CMSC

    -0.0100

    22.82

    -0.04%

  • NGG

    -1.4700

    85.98

    -1.71%

  • BTI

    -1.0200

    57.45

    -1.78%

  • BCE

    -0.2400

    23.26

    -1.03%

  • VOD

    -0.1500

    15.34

    -0.98%

  • GSK

    -3.0700

    51.4

    -5.97%

  • CMSD

    -0.1400

    23.06

    -0.61%

  • RIO

    -2.0000

    96.49

    -2.07%

  • BP

    0.4500

    46.8

    +0.96%

  • RELX

    -0.2100

    35.8

    -0.59%

  • JRI

    -0.0700

    12.74

    -0.55%

  • BCC

    -3.6100

    79

    -4.57%

  • AZN

    -1.4800

    185.2

    -0.8%

COP-and-trade? Tariffs, carbon tax weigh on climate talks
COP-and-trade? Tariffs, carbon tax weigh on climate talks / Photo: BAY ISMOYO - AFP/File

COP-and-trade? Tariffs, carbon tax weigh on climate talks

In Belem, the Brazilian city hosting COP30, it's hard to miss the BYD Dolphin Mini -- the Chinese hatchback that's dominating the local electric vehicle market, even as the company races to catch up in Europe and is absent in North America.

Text size:

Trade-restrictive measures loom large over this year's UN climate summit, with China pushing for wider market access for its green technologies and major developing economies challenging Europe over its new carbon border tax on carbon-intensive imports like steel and fertilizer.

Even smaller developing countries whose exports aren't targeted by Europe's Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) fear broader measures to come.

"Trade, at this COP, unlike previous COPs, has already been elevated," Li Shuo, director of the China Climate Hub at the Asia Society Policy Institute, told AFP. "We can already expect that trade will form the most prominent part of the outcome."

Traditionally, climate ambition and finance have dominated discussions -- how far major emitters will curb pollution, and how much money rich nations will provide to help developing countries adapt and accelerate their transition away from fossil fuels.

Countries including China, India and Brazil have repeatedly tried to put trade on COP agendas, without success. That's changing.

A draft text issued by the Brazilian presidency on Tuesday -- seen as paving the way for the final outcome text -- listed trade as the second of its four top bullet points.

- 'Free flow of green products' -

The tone was set earlier at a leaders' summit in November, when Chinese Vice Premier Ding Xuexiang urged countries to "remove trade barriers and ensure the free flow of quality green products."

The EU imposes steep tariffs on Chinese EVs -- reaching up to over 45 percent depending on the company -- while Canada and the United States go far higher still, exceeding 100 percent.

A Southeast Asian negotiator told AFP these realities rankle countries in Asia, which are buying up cheap Chinese green tech to accelerate their transitions, and find it "illogical" and "inconsistent" that Western nations are spurning the chance to do the same.

"We need to achieve the radical decarbonization of the global economy in the next two decades if we are to meet the Paris temperature goals," Alden Meyer of the think tank E3G told AFP.

"To the extent trade policies are creating barriers to achieving that objective, that's a legitimate topic."

The European Union's CBAM is another flashpoint.

The policy aims to level the playing field for industries covered by EU emissions rules by preventing companies from relocating to countries with weaker standards.

But major developing economies -- including India and South Africa -- are heavily exposed.

- CBAM and beyond -

"The Global North, having used carbon-intensive industries to develop themselves, are now throwing up the gates to the Global South," Mohamed Adow, of think tank Power Shift Africa, told AFP.

Concerns also extend beyond the sectors CBAM covers. An African negotiator from a cocoa-exporting country said the EU's paused deforestation regulations -- requiring proof commodities don't come from recently cleared land -- were another major worry.

The EU insists CBAM is not a trade policy but a climate one.

"Pricing carbon is something that we need to pursue with as many as possible, as quickly as possible," the bloc's climate commissioner, Wopke Hoekstra, said Monday. "We're not going to be lured into the suggestion that CBAM is a unilateral trade measure."

"Some countries say one thing here in negotiations, and they say another thing when we speak to them bilaterally," Sweden's Climate Ambassador Mattias Frumerie told AFP, explaining that privately some nations welcome CBAM as an incentive to decarbonize.

Brussels says CBAM was designed to comply with World Trade Organization rules.

Russia has launched a complaint, but with the WTO's dispute mechanism effectively paralyzed since 2019, opponents are seeking other venues to raise concerns, especially as the UK and Canada move forward with their own mechanisms.

David Waskow, director of the World Resources Institute's International Climate Initiative, said even if trade appears in the COP's final decision text, no one expects the summit to "magically" resolve these disputes. "They want to surface them, they want to poke each other," he told AFP.

"Sometimes doing that can lead to some recalibration of policy."

(H.Schneide--BBZ)