Perdana, Sigit PriaVielle, Marc2022-01-202022-01-202022-01-20202210.1016/j.enpol.2022.113245https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/184667Implementation of CBAM to support EU climate neutrality by 2050 has raised concerns. As the mechanism aims to minimise leakage through equal fairness in global mitigation, imposing carbon tariffs on the EU’s imports of energyintensive goods could curtail the export of EU trading partners. This might be detrimental, especially to the LDCs, for their high exposures and vulnerability risks. This paper assesses and quantifies the implication of EU-CBAM and analyses eight complementary measures to mitigate the impacts on LDCs. Scenario developments are constructed by projecting the EU’s new climate targets relative to the reference scenario of the EU’s current policies. A more stringent climate target results in positive leakage, and implementing CBAM will reduce the rate by one-third by 2040. The analysis also confirms significant welfare loss for LDCs through declining exports. Exempting LDCs from EU CBAM is less justifiable, as this measure results in greater leakage than other options. A further assessment confirms that policy recommendation for CBAM should focus on the climate transformation pathway for LDCs. EU CBAM implementation with revenue redistribution targeted to promote clean and efficient use of energy in LDCs has improved the welfare of recipient countries, substantially reduced leakage, and proven cost-efficient for the EU.Carbon border adjustment mechanismClimate financeComputable general equilibrium modelInternational competitivenessDeveloping countriesMaking the EU Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism acceptable and climate friendly for least developed countriestext::journal::journal article::research article