Trade adjusted or consumption-based carbon emissions relatively is a new area of research. Trade adjusted carbon emissions is adjusted by deducting exports, adding imports and production based carbon emissions. This measure enables to capture the importance or contribution of international trade to global carbon emissions. This study further highlights each country's contribution to global carbon emissions through trade.This study aims to explore the possible determinants of trade adjusted carbon emissions for group of seven economies from 2000-2020. This study used a novel index for financial inclusion along with the role of environment related taxes and environment related innovation is also tested. The study uses non parametric method of panel data, that is, method of moments quantile regression, along with panel cointegration and diagnostic tests to detect interdependence and heterogeneity in the slop. Moreover, this study also tested the role of exports and imports with GDP for trade adjusted carbon emissions. The empirical findings from this study suggest that exports, environment related innovation and taxes and financial inclusion cause a reduction in trade or consumption-based carbon emissions. Moreover, both imports and gross domestic product cause an upsurge in consumption or trade adjusted carbon emissions. This study provides practical policy implications in the light of empirical findings related to environment related taxes, financial inclusion, exports, environment related innovations, imports and gross domestic product. K E Y W O R D S environment related taxes, financial inclusion, Group of Seven, trade adjusted emissions 1 | INTRODUCTION Currently, the world is facing multiple challenges, that is, COVID-19, global economic crises and most importantly, the issue of environmental degradation. Global leaders are uniting under various themes to devise relevant policies, that is, the Paris agreement and, most recently, COP26 (United Nation Conference on Climate Change), to curb the issue of environmental degradation. COP26 aims to drop global carbon emissions and keep the global temperature at a maximum of 1.5 C (UNFCCC, 2022). Further, member countries also agreed on providing financial support to the poor countries and the loss and damage caused by environmental degradation. Keeping the importance of COP26 and Paris agreement, the role of international trade and its contribution to global carbon emissions cannot be ignored. Its contribution to global carbon emission is around 20%-30% by the end of 2021 (Hussey & Faunce, 2021). International trade, one of the main pillars of economic growth, has contributed around 58% by the end of 2017 to the total gross domestic product of 23% back in 1960 (Khan, Ali, Jinyu, et al., 2020).Following the importance of international trade, this study explores the possible determinants and its impact on trade adjusted carbon emissions. This study investigates the economic factors and