EU ready to address ‘specific concerns’ of India on carbon tax levy on imports
The Hindu
EU acknowledges India's concerns on Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism, ready to address worries and share experience.
The European Union has acknowledged India’s “specific concerns” about implementing the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) — the bloc’s tool to levy taxes on imports of certain carbon-intensive goods from early next year — and is ready to address them.
While some of the concerns may be “illegitimate”, as the CBAM is a WTO-compatible measure, the EU is committed to addressing all worries and sharing its experience to help in the implementation, an EU official said.
“I think we know that the Indian side has had specific concerns on CBAM and on the effect that it may have. We are, of course, committed to addressing those concerns with parties around the world that may be affected by CBAM,” the official said.
The EU is unlikely to include CBAM on the agenda for the talks between PM Narendra Modi and EU President Ursula von der Leyen on Friday (February 28, 2025) in New Delhi, though India wants to bring it up, another source said.
The CBAM is a regulation introduced by the EU to put a “fair price” on carbon-intensive goodsimported from non-EU countries. It is to create a level playing field with EU companies that account for their carbon emission through the bloc’s Emission Trading System (ETS).
The carbon tax, to be imposed in the first phase on six items including steel, aluminium, cement, fertilizer, hydrogen and electricity from January 1, 2026, could deal a blow to India’s exports to the bloc.
“The CBAM tax is estimated at 20-35% tariff equivalent. This is far higher than the EU’s average import tariff of 2.2% for manufactured products,” per a report by research body GTRI. It added that India’s metal sector would be particularly affected by the tax in the first phase of CBAM application and that exports of over $8 billion would be at stake.