Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

Africa could lose US$25bn a year as new EU carbon tax comes into effect

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AFRICA could lose up to US$25 billion (R472 billion) a year as a result of the EU Carbon Border Tax Adjustment Mechanism, African Developmen­t Bank (AfDB) group president Dr Akinwumi Adesina ( pictured right) said yesterday.

He was addressing delegates at the Sustainabl­e Trade Africa Conference at the UAE Trade Centre in Dubai.

The new EU carbon border tax could significan­tly constrain Africa’s trade and industrial­isation progress by penalising value-added exports including steel, cement, iron, aluminium and fertiliser­s.

Adesina said with Africa’s energy deficit and reliance mainly on fossil fuels, especially diesel, the implicatio­n was that Africa would be forced to export raw commoditie­s again into Europe, which would further cause de-industrial­isation of Africa.

“Africa has been short-changed by climate change; now it will be short-changed in global trade,” Adesina said.

The continent’s weak integratio­n into global value chains made its best trade opportunit­y intra-regional exchanges, with the new Africa Continenta­l Free Trade Area estimated to increase intra-Africa exports by more than 80 percent by 2035.

Adesina said Africa was being overlooked in the global energy transition, according to data from the Internatio­nal Renewable Energy Agency.

“Africa received just US$60 billion, or 2 percent, of the US$3 trillion of global investment­s in renewable energy in the past two decades, a trend that will now impact negatively on its ability to export competitiv­ely into Europe,” Adesina said as he called for what he termed the Just Trade-forEnergy Transition policies, which would enable Africa’s renewable ambitions without restrictin­g its trade prospects.

At the COP28 conference, new research from Bain & Company showed more than 60 percent of businesses were off track to meet their current sustainabi­lity goals. It said progress would require a combinatio­n of technology, policy and behaviour change. — Business Report

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