
Carbon Tariff: Brussels Shooting Itself in the Foot in Trade Standoff with China
The Commission’s carbon border tax will likely increase the EU’s external economic vulnerability.

The Commission’s carbon border tax will likely increase the EU’s external economic vulnerability.

The tariff negotiations offer the EU a vital opportunity to pursue a fundamental change of direction.

Only 10% of firms will now face the carbon import charge, as Brussels quietly waters down its flagship climate tool

While the EU Parliament is ready to ease some of the Green Deal’s most harmful rules, deeper reforms still face stiff ideological resistance.

Despite being lauded in Europe as essential to the green transition, new EU carbon tariffs have evoked considerable anger in the Global South and stirred fears that the tariffs will destroy national steel industries and direct more countries into the arms of China.