1. Introduction
Global climate change is intensifying, with carbon emission mitigation now constituting international consensus [
1]. The United Nations has specified in the Paris Agreement that the rise in global average temperature must remain below 2 °C [
2]. However, fragmented national climate commitments risk carbon leakage—where one nation’s emission reductions are offset by others’ increased outputs, diminishing global mitigation efficacy [
3]. Since climate change entered global governance agendas in the late 1980s, the EU has actively shaped climate leadership, pioneering emission control through its 2005 Emissions Trading System (EU ETS). Yet, reduced carbon quotas under EU ETS highlighted carbon leakage and industrial competitiveness challenges [
4]. The 2019 European Green Deal introduced CBAM (Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism) as a carbon leakage countermeasure. Initially targeting six sectors—steel, cement, aluminum, fertilizers, electricity, and hydrogen—CBAM entered legislative implementation through three key phases: draft release (July 2021), parliamentary approval (April 2023), and operational timelines (transition period October 2023—formal implementation January 2026).
China remains the world’s largest carbon emitter [
5], as documented in IEA’s 2023 Carbon Emissions Report with 12.6 billion metric tons of CO
2 equivalent emissions. The EU constitutes a pivotal market for Chinese steel and aluminum exports, representing 98.8% of carbon-intensive Sino-European trade during 2017–2023, with steel representing 75.1% and aluminum 23.7%. This concentration in CBAM-covered sectors exposes China’s export profile to substantial regulatory risks. With five of the six CBAM-targeted industries (excluding electricity) actively exporting to the EU, Chinese manufacturers face unavoidable CBAM impacts. Therefore, strategic countermeasures have become imperative for China to mitigate CBAM’s trade impacts within global decarbonization trends.
China’s “Going Global” strategy implementation since 2000 has propelled its emergence as a leading OFDI source [
6]. According to the Ministry of Commerce, China’s non-financial outward foreign direct investment surged from 60.07 billion (2011) to 130.13 billion (2023), representing a growth rate of 116.6% [
7]. OFDI serves dual strategic purposes for Chinese enterprises: facilitating integration into global economic circuits and addressing carbon tariff mechanisms alongside other green trade barriers. Greenfield investment and cross-border M&As constitute principal implementation channels. Specifically, greenfield investment refers to the inception of new companies overseas—including production facilities, R&D centers, and distribution networks—to build fresh production capacity [
8]. In contrast, cross-border M&As involve acquiring stakes in existing foreign firms to gain operational control through asset or equity transfers. Two critical distinctions emerge: On one hand, greenfield investments exhibit heightened sensitivity to the business, tax, and other policy environments of the host country, particularly tax regimes [
9,
10]. The lower tax rates in the host country tend to enhance the attractiveness of greenfield investment for enterprises. On the other hand, we compare the greenfield investment and cross-border merger and acquisition data from FDI Markets and Zephyr databases. As shown in
Figure 1, it is found that the number and amount of greenfield investments by enterprises are significantly higher than those of cross-border mergers and acquisitions. Cross-border mergers and acquisitions may exhibit occasional and random patterns, while greenfield investment behavior by enterprises may be relatively more continuous and stable. Given greenfield investment’s superior reliability in reflecting authentic OFDI behaviors and data availability advantages, this study focuses on greenfield investment as the primary OFDI analytical framework, with subsequent empirical validation.
This study makes three principal contributions to the extant literature: First, prior studies have predominantly examined the effects of CBAM on international trade and carbon leakage, with limited attention to corporate outward foreign direct investment (OFDI) behavior. Given that OFDI, especially greenfield investment, may be an effective strategy for Chinese enterprises to mitigate the trade shocks of CBAM, this paper extends the existing research on carbon tariffs to the realm of corporate greenfield investment. Second, we innovatively dissect CBAM’s operational mechanisms driving greenfield investments via dual channels: trade restructuring effects and innovation demand-driven effects. Third, the current body of research is primarily conceptual, with scarce empirical support, and is largely based on general equilibrium approaches. Our empirical strategy employs difference-in-differences (DID) methodology to establish causal inferences.
The paper proceeds as follows:
Section 2 synthesizes a literature review on CBAM and greenfield investment.
Section 3 develops theoretical hypotheses grounded in trade restructuring and innovation demand frameworks.
Section 4 outlines the research framework, including the DID formulation, variable definition, and data compilation.
Section 5 presents baseline estimates, robustness checks, and mechanism analyses.
Section 6 explores heterogeneous treatment effects.
Section 7 culminates with a discussion of conclusions, corresponding policy recommendations, limitations, and future research directions.
7. Conclusions and Recommendations
7.1. Conclusions
We utilized a difference-in-differences (DID) model to examine the effect of the European Union’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM), announced in 2019, on greenfield investment of Chinese firms. This analysis is based on panel data from Chinese A-share listed companies in the Shanghai and Shenzhen stock markets over the period from 2011 to 2022. The analysis yields three key insights:
First, CBAM exerts a statistically significant positive effect on greenfield investment (β = 0.0516, p < 0.05). Nevertheless, its effects on aggregate outward FDI and cross-border M&A remain insignificant. This discrepancy may be attributed to the sporadic and stochastic nature of M&A transactions. Concurrently, it indicates that outward foreign direct investment (OFDI) responds to CBAM through selective restructuring rather than through broad capital flow adjustments.
Second, mechanism analysis reveals CBAM’s dual operational pathways: (i) trade restructuring—increased export costs reduce dependence on EU markets, promoting corporate greenfield investment by bypassing trade barriers (substitution effect) and expanding non-EU market penetration (creation effect); (ii) innovation-driven adaptation—the imperative for low-carbon development has driven corporate demand for green technology innovation (as reflected in increased R&D intensity), thereby fostering greenfield investment by enterprises. These pathways collectively validate the Theory of Overcoming Trade Barriers and the Reverse Green Technology Spillover Theory, while expanding the regulatory determinants framework of OFDI.
Third, heterogeneity tests show that CBAM’s impact on greenfield investment differs by firm location, ownership, and investment motives. Specifically, Eastern-region enterprises with internationalization expertise, non-state-owned firms (heightened risk adaptability), and market-seeking horizontal producers (cost-driven relocation patterns) are more susceptible to CBAM’s influence.
This study advances empirical support for the “trans-trade barrier effect” theory of outward foreign direct investment by demonstrating how carbon tariffs stimulate greenfield investments among Chinese firms. It extends theoretical and empirical investigations of the Porter Hypothesis into the domain of environment–trade composite policies. In contrast to conventional perspectives that treat trade barriers as pure investment deterrents, our findings reveal that firms strategically intensify greenfield investments to circumvent compliance costs associated with the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism.
Compared with existing studies, our findings enrich theoretical reasoning and empirical analysis through three distinct dimensions. First, in contrast to the existing literature that predominantly focuses on CBAM’s negative policy effects, we systematically investigate and empirically confirm its positive promotional effects on greenfield investment—a sustainable investment modality. Second, while prior research has predominantly concentrated on simulating the comprehensive impacts of the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism on international relations and national economies, few studies have microscopically analyzed its formative mechanisms shaping enterprises’ long-term investment decisions. This study breaks through conventional research paradigms by extending the economic effects of carbon tariffs to corporate response behaviors, thereby addressing the research gap in CBAM’s micro-level consequences. Third, whereas existing scholarship predominantly relies on general equilibrium methods, we employ the Difference-in-Differences methodology. This approach overcomes previous limitations in dynamic causal effect evaluation and reduces excessive dependence on model assumptions, thereby facilitating more robust assessments of CBAM’s short- to medium-term impacts while effectively mitigating endogeneity concerns.
7.2. Recommendations
First, enterprises in CBAM-affected industries should strategically leverage greenfield investment to circumvent trade barriers. By establishing production facilities in host countries, firms can not only bypass carbon tariff-induced export costs but also reduce emission intensity through localized supply chains, achieving an “investment-over-export” strategic shift. Location selection should prioritize (i) EU member states—utilizing their advanced technologies and stringent emission standards to produce competitive goods; and (ii) non-EU regions abundant in clean energy and green innovation—thereby enabling indirect EU market access while avoiding direct trade constraints.
Second, enterprises should optimally utilize greenfield investments to acquire overseas green technologies, resources, and knowledge, thereby mitigating CBAM’s long-term negative impacts while enhancing adaptability to evolving trade regimes. By capitalizing on host countries’ environmental subsidies and tax incentives, firms can actively develop clean energy solutions and low-carbon technologies. The repatriation of acquired technologies and equipment enables domestic enterprises to strengthen CBAM compliance capabilities. Furthermore, deploying technical personnel to assimilate advanced environmental management systems and production techniques facilitates knowledge transfer, ultimately elevating the home country’s innovative capacity through applied expertise integration.
Third, to enhance the level and efficiency of greenfield investment, enterprises must improve three key capabilities: risk sensitivity, investment flexibility, and market acuity. By leveraging these capabilities, they can nimbly circumvent the trade barriers posed by CBAM and maintain the competitiveness of their products in the EU market. Given the capital-intensive nature and extended development timelines inherent in greenfield projects, firms should conduct comprehensive due diligence on host countries’ carbon regulatory frameworks and market entry requirements. This necessitates developing robust intelligence-gathering systems to systematically analyze evolving market dynamics and consumer preferences, enabling strategic selection of optimal investment locations, timing, and operational models aligned with CBAM compliance objectives.
Fourth, strategic synergy between governments and enterprises is essential for enhancing outward foreign direct investment capabilities and trade barrier resilience. Eastern provincial governments should intensify fiscal support for OFDI initiatives and low-carbon technology R&D. Eastern enterprises ought to pioneer investment excellence, guiding central/western counterparts in executing strategic greenfield investments to integrate into global value chains. Concurrently, central/western governments should deepen collaboration with Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) partners, leveraging geoeconomic and natural advantages to cultivate alternative export markets and production networks. This dual approach not only mitigates EU market dependence but also activates trade creation effects through localized horizontal production capacity building, thereby optimizing the utilization of resources in BRI economies.
7.3. Limitations and Future Research Directions
This study has several limitations. First, constrained by data timeliness, the findings primarily reflect corporate responses during CBAM’s initial phase. As carbon tariffs constitute a progressive policy tool, their long-term effects and dynamic adjustment mechanisms remain unclear and warrant continuous investigation. Second, while our sample consists of Chinese listed companies, the generalizability of results to other economies may be limited—we strongly encourage international scholars to extend this research framework. Methodologically, although the difference-in-differences approach effectively identifies short-term causal effects of CBAM, the parallel trend assumption may be violated in long-term policy evaluations, necessitating further dynamic effect analyses. Finally, potential omitted variables—such as interactions with other climate policies, green technology reserves, and environmental regulation pressures—could bias the results and require systematic examination.
Future research could be extended through the following directions: First, a dynamic analytical framework could be developed to characterize the lifecycle effects of carbon tariffs by integrating longitudinal data tracking after full policy implementation. Second, cross-national comparative studies should be conducted to reveal how differences in CBAM policy designs across jurisdictions induce heterogeneous impacts on greenfield investment location choices. Third, while this study primarily examines market mechanisms, subsequent investigations could examine the role of governmental factors and policy synergies between CBAM implementation and China’s domestic carbon regulatory framework. Fourth, researchers should deepen the analysis of intra-group heterogeneity sources through subgroup differentiation studies to elucidate the underlying causes of carbon tariffs’ varied impacts across entities.