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Carbon Tariffs: Climate Policy or Economic Warfare?

Carbon border adjustments like the EU's CBAM occupy genuinely contested ground: empirical evidence suggests they modestly reduce carbon leakage and can reinforce domestic carbon pricing, but modeling consistently shows their direct emissions reductions are small, and their distributional costs fall disproportionately on developing economies whose per-capita historical emissions are a fraction of Europe's. The core tension is not environmental versus economic but architectural — who controls the carbon accounting standards, who captures the revenue, and whether the mechanism functions as a complement to climate finance and technology transfer or as a substitute for it. The most consequential emerging story is not the EU-US policy divergence but the Global South's active construction of counter-architectures — China's carbon labeling, India's WTO coalitions, Argentina's lithium sovereignty law — which signal that the fight over carbon tariffs is ultimately a fight over who governs the rules of the decarbonizing global economy.

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