Research paper · research paper ·
TIPS
> The European Union’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) entered its transition period on 1 October 2023, with the first CBAM report for the fourth quarter of 2023 submitted on 29 February 2024. Key industries most affected in South Africa are iron, steel and aluminium. The transition period will run for over two years, ending in December 2025. South Africa is not ready financially and administratively to comply with CBAM requirements during the transition period. South Africa is not ready financially and administratively to comply with CBAM requirements during the transition period. Issues include domestic industries struggling to deal with logistical and energy problems, i.e. the collapse of Transnet infrastructure and loadshedding, short timelines for the transition, lack of awareness of decarbonisation and climate change measures, increasing costs of accessing global markets amid greening global value chains, incompatible infrastructure of accounting GHG emissions, and the rise of carbon clubs as a form of protecting industries in the Global North. It is paramount to act collaboratively on these issues. Government and affected industries, labour unions and researchers, need to work together to find solutions on CBAM for both large and small exporters. This paper relies heavily on industry-government-researchers workshops on the iron and steel and aluminium value chains held in November 2023, which formed part of initial efforts to raise these issues and try to find solutions in adapting trade to green international trade laws introduced in the Global North. Last modified on 05 March 2025 Published in Climate Change More in this category: « The European Green Deal (EGD) and its implications for African Trade Border Carbon Adjustments Research: Strategic Pathways to Mitigate Adverse Impacts » back to top Join our newsletter Stay informed about the latest TIPS news, research and events. SIGN UP Category Search Search <div id="sid
Abstract excerpted from the publisher page during the weekly research-corpus refresh. The full paper lives at the source.
Indexed in SA Policy Space from the publisher feed. The full paper, its citation, and any re-use rights live with TIPS.
Data as of 2026-05-11 · latest PMG meeting 2026-05-08