Spain’s acting government has approached the European Union to look into a potential carbon border tax on power imports, Reuters reported. The move is in the best interest of the bloc and to achieve environmental targets amid rising climate change challenges, the government said.
The Spanish ministers’ letter on Spain’s proposed carbon tax stated, “Customs duties are traditional own budgetary resources; therefore, a carbon border tax would perfectly fit within the traditional EU approach on this field.”
The letter was addressed to the Spanish European Commissioner Miguel Arias Canete and Pierre Moscovici, European Commissioner for Economic and Financial Affairs, Taxation and Customs. The letter also said that it would help Europe to strengthen its industrial policy.
The ministers wrote, “If Europe ends up importing goods produced under lower climate standards, the emissions we avoid will be counterbalanced, or even overcome, by those generated in countries where goods are manufactured.”
According to the Financial Times, eight EU members have asked the heads of fellow member states to reduce carbon emissions to a net zero level by 2050. They’ve also proposed to reserve 25 percent of the bloc’s seven-year budget to projects that battle climate change.
“The recent surge in public protests is forcing European leaders to finally recognise the urgency needed to combat the climate crisis,” said Wendel Trio, director of Climate Action Network Europe. “At the Sibiu summit, all European leaders need to follow the call from the most progressive governments and publicly commit to put climate action at the heart of future EU cooperation.”