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The View | Global trade rules should not get in the way of national decarbonisation efforts

  • Government programmes that promote sustainable production at home have been criticised for pricing out global competitors
  • But given the urgency of the climate crisis and lack of global cooperation, national initiatives may be the best way forward, regardless of their impact on trade

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Wind turbines near Bradwell on Sea, UK, on September 21, 2021. Photo: Bloomberg

Late last month, a foreign leader accused US President Joe Biden of pursuing “super aggressive” industrial policies. It was not Russian President Vladimir Putin or Chinese President Xi Jinping, whose countries are America’s main geopolitical rivals. Nor was it Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi or Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, whose countries have struggled under the weight of US-led sanctions.

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No, the complaint came from French President Emmanuel Macron, a US ally, about the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), Biden’s landmark initiative to decarbonise the American economy by subsidising domestic investment in renewable technologies.

Qualifying for these subsidies requires firms to source critical inputs from US-based producers, which irks Macron and other leaders, who claim that the new legislation undermines European industry. “The consequence of the IRA,” Macron put it bluntly, “is that you will perhaps fix your issue but you will increase my problem.”

Imposing costs on other countries while addressing climate change is, however, precisely what the European Union has been planning to do. Through its carbon border adjustment mechanism (CBAM), the EU will soon impose duties on certain carbon-intensive imports.
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The goal is to maintain a high domestic price for carbon without allowing foreign firms to undercut European producers through cheaper imports. But the import duties will also hurt many lower-income countries such as Mozambique, Egypt and India.

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