SOUTH Africa’s key industrial exporters have little leg room to wriggle out of the looming Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) levy.
Industries such as iron and steel sector, aluminium, cement, fertiliser, hydrogen and electricity sectors will be affected among others.
Industry sees the levy as part of green protectionism, through trade- related climate change response measures, such as border carbon adjustment, or other non-tariff barriers, that are becoming more prevalent internationally in exports markets of the European Union, US, United Kingdom, Australia, Canada and Japan, among others. Analysts caution that the global transition to sustainable development is under way and strengthening.
While green protectionist measures, like CBAM, from a Global South perspective are seen as unjust as they place additional burden on struggling economies or companies as they are part…