What are the implications of the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM)?

Written By

tatjana beck Module
Tatjana Beck

Associate
Germany

As an associate at our Hamburg office and a member of our Administrative & Regulatory and Corporate practice groups, I advise German and international clients in the energy and utilities sector as well as in corporate law.

hermann rothfuchs module
Dr. Hermann Rothfuchs

Partner
Germany

I am a partner and member of both our international Energy and Utilities Sector Group and our Regulatory and Administrative Practice Group. What sets me apart is my in-depth legal expertise in combination with a keen sense of the challenges faced by industries which have to succeed in a largely regulated environment.

I. Purpose

The Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (cf. Regulation (EU) 2023/956 of 10th May 2023 establishing a carbon border adjustment mechanism; “CBAM”), aims to put a price on greenhouse gas emissions from imports at the same level as products manufactured in the EU.

The intention is to prevent companies from benefiting from outsourcing their production to countries outside the EU with lower CO2 pricing, so-called carbon leakage. CBAM is designed to ensure that companies in the EU are not unfairly disadvantaged by having to bear higher climate change costs than their competitors outside the EU.

II. Background

Creating a level playing field in the context of the cost of emissions is particularly important, as the cost of CO2 emission certificates is expected to rise significantly by 2034, when the current free allocation of emission allowances ends.

III. Applicability of CBAM

The CBAM reporting duty concerns all EU-based companies importing iron, steel, cement, aluminium, electricity, fertilisers, hydrogen and certain upstream and downstream products in pure or processed form from non-EU countries. An extension of the scope of imported materials is to be expected by 2026.
IV. Current and future duties under CBAM

1. Transition Period
The introduction of CBAM will take place gradually as of 1st October 2023 with a transition period until 31 December 2025. During this transitional period companies importing certain goods are obliged to submit quarterly reports on the greenhouse gas emissions of their exports. However, no compensation payments will have to be made at this point.

2. Full implementation
Major changes are to be expected as of 1st January 2026 when the transitional period ends. Firstly, imports will be limited to expressly authorised CBAM declarants. Companies may apply for such authorisation as of 31st December 2024.

Furthermore, as of 1st January 2024 companies will be subject to the CBAM greenhouse gas emission pricing, the prices for the respective certificates will gradually increase. At the same time, reporting will only be made on an annual basis.

3. Reporting Details
The CBAM report shall in particular contain the following information:

  •  total quantity of each type of imported commodity, in megawatt-hours for electricity and in tonnes for other commodities;
  • total actual embedded emissions for each commodity;
  • total of indirect emissions for each commodity; and
  • CO2 prices paid in a country of origin.

Latest insights

More Insights
solar panel car park

Parking lots and solar panels: publication of the implementing decree for the APER Law

Nov 22 2024

Read More
Orange bag on yellow background

Why are Corporate PPAs important for the Retail and Consumer sector?

Nov 22 2024

Read More
featured image

French nuclear energy policies

3 minutes Nov 21 2024

Read More