The Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) is an EU instrument that imposes a CO2 price on imported goods that would be subject to a carbon price if produced within the EU. Its goal is to prevent carbon leakage—the relocation of carbon-intensive production to countries with lower or no CO2 costs. CBAM has been in a transitional phase since October 2023 and will become fully operational in January 2026.
For manufacturing companies, CBAM is more than an import tax; it is a data challenge. Anyone importing carbon-intensive precursors from third countries must prove their CO2 content—and anyone exporting to the EU must be able to verify their own production emissions.
CBAM initially targets six carbon-intensive sectors that are heavily regulated under the EU Emissions Trading System (ETS):
The EU Commission intends to expand the scope gradually; organic chemicals and polymers are already under discussion. For manufacturers using steel and aluminum as primary raw materials, CBAM is an immediate operational topic.
Starting in 2026, importers of CBAM-relevant goods from non-EU countries must purchase CBAM certificates equivalent to the CO2 price paid for domestic production. If a carbon price was already paid in the country of origin, it will be credited.
The number of required certificates is based on the actually embedded emissions of the imported goods. While importers can use "default values," these are intentionally set at the average emissions of the worst-performing 10% of EU producers. Proving actual, lower emissions is therefore a direct competitive advantage for exporters.
For EU-based manufacturers, CBAM acts primarily as a competitive shield. However, it becomes operationally relevant in three scenarios:
To calculate the "embedded emissions" of a product, verifiable data from the shop floor is required:
By 2026, estimates will no longer be sufficient. Verifiers will require data that can be traced back to actual meter readings and production logs.
Yes. There is no SME exemption. Every importer of CBAM-relevant goods from third countries must register as an authorized CBAM declarant and fulfill reporting duties, regardless of company size.
If an importer cannot provide verified data from their supplier, the EU applies default values. These are based on the average emissions of the 10% most carbon-intensive EU producers in that sector, making them significantly more expensive than most primary data.
Embedded emissions must be confirmed by an accredited verifier. The verifier checks if the calculation methodology follows CBAM rules and if the underlying shop floor data (energy/production volumes) is robust and documented.
During the transition phase (until 2025), failure to report can result in penalties of €10 to €50 per tonne of unreported emissions. From 2026 onwards, stricter sanctions aligned with the EU ETS penalties will apply.