AbstractApproximately one fourth of global emissions are embodied in international trade and a significant portion flows from non-carbon-priced to carbon-priced economies. Border carbon adjustments (BCAs) figure prominently as instruments to address concerns arising from unilateral climate policy. Estimating the volume of emissions that could be potentially taxed under a BCA scheme has received little attention until now. This paper examines how a number of issues involved in the implementation of BCAs can affect their ability to cover emissions embodied in trade and thus address carbon leakage. These issues range from ensuring compliance with trade provisions and assumptions on the carbon intensity of imports, to determining which countrie...
Balancing a legitimate fear that carbon leakage could undermine the impact of any global climate cha...
Border Carbon Adjustments (BCAs) may play an important role in lowering the economic costs of greenh...
A growing number of scholars, environmentalists, politicians, and business leaders have recommended ...
Approximately one fourth of global emissions are embodied in international trade and a significant p...
AbstractApproximately one fourth of global emissions are embodied in international trade and a signi...
International trade contributes directly to global greenhouse gas emissions, as the carbon content o...
Because carbon taxes can lead to loss of competitiveness, applying tariffs on imports from non-carbo...
The prevailing uncertainties about the future of the post-Kyoto international legal framework for cl...
Carbon pricing is an essential instrument to address climate change. However international differenc...
In the absence of an international agreement on climate policy, unilateral carbon abatement creates ...
Harmonized carbon pricing across borders is hard to achieve in the real world as carbon leakage can ...
Balancing legitimate fears that carbon leakage could undermine the impact of any global climate chan...
Policymakers are often reluctant to implement strong carbon pricing for fear of disadvantaging domes...
Not only after the failure of the Copenhagen climate conference 2009, border carbon adjustment (BCA)...
Unilateral or sub-global policies to combat climate change are potentially sensitive to free-riding ...
Balancing a legitimate fear that carbon leakage could undermine the impact of any global climate cha...
Border Carbon Adjustments (BCAs) may play an important role in lowering the economic costs of greenh...
A growing number of scholars, environmentalists, politicians, and business leaders have recommended ...
Approximately one fourth of global emissions are embodied in international trade and a significant p...
AbstractApproximately one fourth of global emissions are embodied in international trade and a signi...
International trade contributes directly to global greenhouse gas emissions, as the carbon content o...
Because carbon taxes can lead to loss of competitiveness, applying tariffs on imports from non-carbo...
The prevailing uncertainties about the future of the post-Kyoto international legal framework for cl...
Carbon pricing is an essential instrument to address climate change. However international differenc...
In the absence of an international agreement on climate policy, unilateral carbon abatement creates ...
Harmonized carbon pricing across borders is hard to achieve in the real world as carbon leakage can ...
Balancing legitimate fears that carbon leakage could undermine the impact of any global climate chan...
Policymakers are often reluctant to implement strong carbon pricing for fear of disadvantaging domes...
Not only after the failure of the Copenhagen climate conference 2009, border carbon adjustment (BCA)...
Unilateral or sub-global policies to combat climate change are potentially sensitive to free-riding ...
Balancing a legitimate fear that carbon leakage could undermine the impact of any global climate cha...
Border Carbon Adjustments (BCAs) may play an important role in lowering the economic costs of greenh...
A growing number of scholars, environmentalists, politicians, and business leaders have recommended ...