The European Commission again resisted a request on Monday by France and other countries to suspend the EU’s CO2 emissions levy on imported fertilisers, which the governments said would help farmers struggling with high prices.
Addressing a meeting of EU farming ministers in Brussels, EU Agriculture Commissioner Christophe Hansen said high fertiliser prices were a source of concern for the farming sector, but that suspending the carbon border levy “risks worsening the dependency on imports. And therefore we must be very careful on this issue.”
The EU is working on a plan to address issues in fertilisers markets, and will convene an “urgent” meeting on April 13 with industry on measures to support European fertiliser production and reduce dependencies, Hansen said.
Speaking in a news conference after the meeting, Hansen said he would look in to the impact of a possible suspension, but that he believed a better option would be to spend revenue collected by the levy on stabilising prices for farmers.
The EU carbon border levy, which launched on January 1, imposes a fee on the emissions associated with imported goods including fertilisers, steel and cement. The system, the first of its kind in the world, aims to protect European industries from being undercut by cheaper products from countries with weaker climate rules.









