Why in the news?
The European Union’s (EU) Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) (CBAM) is a, as of January 1, 2026, fully implemented policy designed to levy a tax on carbon-intensive imports, such as steel, cement, aluminum, fertilizers, electricity, and hydrogen. This is applied to prevent “carbon leakage”. It ensures foreign producers pay a similar carbon price to EU firms, aiming to encourage global. It is in the news as it enters its decisive phase ahead of 2026, raising concerns for India’s carbon-intensive exports to the EU. Its relevance has increased after the conclusion of the India-EU Free Trade Agreement, which includes a non-discrimination (forward-MFN) clause on CBAM but does not remove the regulation itself.
What is the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM)?
- Carbon Pricing Instrument: Applies a carbon price on imports equivalent to the EU carbon price under the ETS.
- Leakage Prevention Tool: Prevents relocation of carbon-intensive production to jurisdictions with weaker climate policies.
- Climate-Trade Linkage: Integrates climate objectives directly into customs and trade regulation.
- WTO Compatibility Claim: Structured to mirror domestic carbon pricing to avoid discrimination.
How Does CBAM Function in Practice?
- CBAM Certificates: Requires EU importers to purchase certificates reflecting embedded emissions.
- Price Benchmarking: Certificate prices linked to EU ETS allowance auction prices.
- Annual Compliance: Importers must declare embedded emissions and surrender certificates annually.
- Carbon Cost Deduction: Allows deduction if an equivalent carbon price is already paid in the exporting country.
- Equivalence Provision: Exempts exporters from jurisdictions with comparable carbon pricing regimes.
What is the Implementation Timeline of CBAM?
- Transitional Phase (2023-2025):
- Reporting-only regime with quarterly disclosure of embedded emissions.
- No financial liabilities imposed.
- Definitive Regime (from 2026):
- Mandatory purchase and surrender of CBAM certificates.
- Threshold-based authorisation requirement for EU importers (above 50 tonnes).
Which Sectors and Products are Covered?
- Iron and Steel: Includes selected downstream products such as nuts and bolts.
- Cement: High process emissions sector.
- Aluminium: Energy-intensive production profile.
- Fertilisers: Emissions from chemical processing.
- Electricity: Cross-border power imports.
- Hydrogen: Emerging but carbon-sensitive input.
Together, these sectors account for over 50% of emissions in EU ETS-covered industries when fully phased in.
Why Did the EU Introduce CBAM?
- Carbon Leakage Risk: Prevents displacement of emissions rather than their reduction.
- ETS Integrity: Supports tightening of the EU ETS by phasing out free allowances.
- Climate Ambition: Reinforces the EU’s 55% emissions reduction target by 2030.
- Trade Neutrality: Aligns treatment of domestic and imported goods.
What are the Global and Economic Implications?
- Emission Outcomes: OECD simulations indicate global emissions fall by 0.54% with CBAM, compared to 0.39% without it.
- Trade Reorientation: EU importers shift sourcing towards cleaner producers.
- Sectoral Spillovers:
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- Covered EU industries regain domestic competitiveness but face export disadvantages.
- Downstream sectors face higher input costs without border protection.
- Country-Level Effects:
- Cleaner exporters (Chile, Mexico, Türkiye) gain marginally.
- Carbon-intensive exporters (India, South Africa) face modest export contraction (~0.2%).
Why Does CBAM Matter for India?
- Export Exposure: India is a major exporter of iron, steel, aluminium, and fertilisers to the EU.
- Carbon Intensity Gap: Higher emissions intensity increases CBAM liability.
- Policy Equity Concerns: Raises questions of common but differentiated responsibilities.
- Administrative Burden: Requires robust emissions accounting and verification infrastructure.
- Diplomatic Engagement: EU’s acknowledgment of India’s concerns reflects negotiation space.
Are there any regulatory concessions given to India on the CBAM regime after the India-EU FTA?
- India secured a “forward-Most Favoured Nation (forward-MFN) clause on CBAM”, i.e., any future CBAM relaxations, flexibilities or concessions that the EU grants to other partners will automatically apply to India.
- Technical dialogue & cooperation: A structured technical dialogue to ease market access under CBAM and help exporters comply.
- Financial support pledge: The EU committed financing assistance (reported figure: ~€500 million over two years) to support India’s emissions reduction efforts.
- Rapid-response / rebalancing mechanism: Treaty language to rebalance rights if EU regulatory measures impair FTA benefits to Indian firms (safeguard-like clause).
- CBAM was not removed: The FTA does not repeal or exempt India from CBAM. The EU confirmed CBAM remains in place; the deal only ensures parity if the EU later gives concessions to others. CBAM remains operational.
- Plain effect of the forward-MFN clause: India will get the same future relaxations the EU grants other partners but CBAM still applies until and unless the EU changes its rules for everyone.
Likely sectoral impact on India (concise, with editorial/analysis references)
- Steel (highest exposure): Continued cost pressure for flat-rolled and high-carbon products; EU remains a major buyer (e.g., ~44% of India’s steel exports to EU in some analyses), so impact on volumes and margins persists unless India decarbonises faster. .
- Aluminium: Risk of lower exports for high-emission aluminium; parity helps if EU later gives credits or recognition to cleaner producers, but immediate certificate costs remain.
- Cement & fertilisers: High process emissions mean persistent CBAM liability; cost pass-through to EU buyers limited, exporters will bear squeeze.
- Downstream industries (autos, machinery): Indirect effect via higher input costs if upstream suppliers face CBAM costs; competitiveness may be affected for export-oriented value chains.
- MSMEs: Disproportionate burden from verification and reporting costs, parity clause doesn’t reduce compliance complexity. Editorials warn of non-tariff barrier effects. .
Conclusion
The Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism marks a structural shift in global trade, where climate regulation increasingly conditions market access. For India, CBAM poses real competitiveness and compliance challenges for carbon-intensive sectors, even as it aligns with the EU’s climate ambitions. The conclusion of the India–EU Free Trade Agreement provides limited but meaningful relief by securing a forward-Most Favoured Nation–type non-discrimination clause on CBAM, ensuring parity with any future concessions extended to other partners. However, the agreement does not dilute or suspend CBAM obligations, and carbon costs will continue to apply from 2026. Ultimately, the FTA mitigates relative disadvantage but does not eliminate structural pressures. India’s long-term response must therefore combine trade diplomacy with accelerated domestic decarbonisation, robust emissions accounting, and targeted support for vulnerable sectors to remain competitive in an increasingly climate-regulated global economy.
PYQ Relevance
[UPSC 2022] Discuss global warming and mention its effects on the global climate. Explain the control measures to bring down the level of greenhouse gases which cause global warming, in the light of the Kyoto Protocol, 1997.
Linkage: CBAM connects climate mitigation with trade by pricing carbon in imports, making environmental regulation a market-access condition. It fits GS-III Environment as an example of climate policy shaping global trade and industry.
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