AI-Powered Carbon Border Adjustments

2050 Consulting, Alfa Laval, Toyota Material Handling, Linköping University and Hexa­tronic are part­nering in the AI-Powered Carbon Border Adjust­ments research project. The purpose of the project is to inve­stigate how Arti­ficial Intel­li­gence (AI) can be used to prevent carbon dioxide leakage in the EU’s emis­sions trading system.

Within the research project, it is inve­sti­gated how an AI system can contribute to the imple­men­tation of the carbon border adjustment mechanism (CBAM) proposed by the EU. An AI-prototype is deve­loped that must be effi­cient and reliable enough to be perceived as legi­timate by inter­na­tional trading partners, as well as by business within the EU. The research project is financed by Vinnova, in consul­tation with Formas and the Energy Agency, and within the call for proposals “AI in the service of the climate”.

Project time:   2021 — 2024

Total budget:   9.135.560 SEK

More about the project

The purpose of the project is to enable stringent policy mecha­nisms to avoid carbon leakage between countries and thereby support the imple­men­tation of the Paris agre­ement, fulfilled with the following research questions:

How can an AI system be designed, capable of producing and vali­dating LCAs for products assembled and produced in Sweden, EU and the World, with suffi­cient precision and inter­pre­ta­bility for carbon border adjustments?

What type, quantity, and quality of data will be required for machine learning to empower such an AI system and enable reliable and bias-free LCA predictions?

What requi­re­ments are put on the AI system for the LCA emission calcu­la­tions to be regarded as legi­timate, in terms of trans­pa­rency, equality and effecti­veness, in inter­na­tional gover­nance and by industrial actors?

The research will also touch on ques­tions about how such an AI system can handle uncer­tainty, precision, inter­pre­tation of data and fairness. The project, which runs from 2021 to 2024, is divided into five different work packages that include data collection, design and deve­lopment of machine learning systems and studies of legi­timacy and feasibility.

The hope is that a prototype can be deve­loped that can auto­ma­ti­cally perform life cycle analysis and calcu­la­tions based on publicly avai­lable data on climate foot­prints such as the Envi­ronment Product Decla­ration as well as infor­mation on the energy system in the current manu­facturing country.

The project will contribute to creating more trans­pa­rency in the reporting of a large number of products and in the longer term make it easier for the EU to introduce import fees for carbon dioxide in line with current WTO regulations.

News from the project

Newsletter August 2023
Nyhetsbrev Augusti 2023
Newsletter June 2023
Nyhetsbrev Juni 2023
Newsletter April 2023
Nyhetsbrev April 2023

Contact

For more infor­mation about the project, contact AICA:s project coor­di­nator Anna Nyquist