The
EU and
China joined
Brazil as members, as well as the
UK,
Canada,
Chile,
Mexico,
Armenia,
Zambia,
Rwanda,
Andorra,
Guinea,
New Zealand,
Monaco,
Singapore, and
Norway. By 15 November, 18 countries had joined. According to the
Niskanen center the members of the coalition after COP 30, are working on "mandatory carbon pricing frameworks, incentivizing emission reduction domestically and providing a competitive edge when facing border charges on exports." This can have a strong impact on
the United States of America, because 7 of them account for more than 2/3 of U.S. goods exports. Generally, the American industry is considered as low carbon, however some policies of Donald Trump are fastly destroying this advantage. For American exporters to not lose their carbon advantage, the United States needs to implement a mechanism for cutting emissions. On the 7 of January the
Council of the European Union is expected to begin discussion about the "first step of the non-binding instrument (NBI) procedure". On 14 of January, the council approved beginning negotiations about it. The
European Commission support the coalition, for strenghten climate action and improve its international relations. The
International Carbon Action Partnership intends to work closely with it, and Brazil's membership should facilitate it. According to the
European Commission, the work of the EU and Brazil will allow the formal launch of the Coalition in 2026. The aim is to sustain political momentum and improve cooperation between countries with compliance markets. The creation of the coalition is considered as part of global progress on carbon pricing. In March 2026, the Climate Coalitions Working Group (GCPP) announced that it is now focused on the practical implementation of the coalition, working directly with governments, policymakers and industry across the world, including in
Southeast Asia,
Africa and more. This includes advancing mutual recognition of carbon pricing systems, creating tools to help governments navigating border carbon adjustments and carbon pricing. The group is working in cooperation with the Coalition of Finance Ministers for Climate Action. The aim is to create a "durable institutional architecture—aligning climate ambition with economic competitiveness." The extraordinary secretary for carbon markets in Brazil
Cristina Fróes de Borja Reis, said during a webinar organized by
international emission trading association (IETA) that the governance and the rules of the coalition should be approved in May 2026 in Florence, then in the second half of the year in China and then globally at
COP31. According to an article published in
the Diplomat as of May 2026, the coalition "is writing the interoperability standards that will determine whose
carbon credits count globally" and this will deeply affect the countries of
Global South. == References ==