News Room - Steel Industry

Posted on 25 Feb 2025

Leaked EU document reveals paired back, simplified CBAM

Changes have been proposed to Europe's Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) that would simplify some processes, and reduce its scope, Kallanish learns from an obtained leaked draft amendment.

While CBAM will still come into force in January 2026, the requirement to purchase certificates will be delayed and payment will be simplified. Certificates will now need to be purchased from February 2027 to cover the previous year, removing the obligation to purchase certifications on a quarterly basis for the first year.

Gabriel Rozenberg, chief executive of software company Cbamboo, says that while the definitive CBAM period will still start in 2026, there is an easing up in term of cash flow and bureaucracy.

Other changes proposed will see more companies now exempt from CBAM’s scope, with the thresholds at 50 tonnes/year or less than 100 t/y of embodied CO2 emissions of imported goods. This move is believed to remove around 90% of companies from the mechanism’s scope.

EU documents show that for the first year of CBAM’s transitional phase, which only required reporting, iron and steel accounted for 69% of overall tonnages reported across targeted sectors. Given the large tonnages handled by steel importers, the minimal threshold exemption is unlikely to benefit this sector.

“The European Commission is tightening the focus on the big emissions that CBAM is designed to tamp down on," Rozenberg notes.

He adds that some sub processes and side processing of metals and goods that have minimal emissions associated with them are now out of scope.

This consists of finishing processes that are carried out by separate installations not covered by the EU Emissions Trading System (ETS). The embedded emissions of those production processes, which are relatively low, should be excluded from the system boundaries of the calculation of emissions, the document says.

Meanwhile, penalties have also been increased for deliberate non-compliance, rising by 3-5 times.

“This is all about refining and focusing CBAM – making it stronger and clearer, while cutting out a lot of bureaucracy where that would have a low impact. CBAM will go ahead: on time, as planned, in January 2026,” Rozenberg adds.

Meanwhile, Dan Maleski, senior environmental markets advisor and CBAM lead at Redshaw advisors, tells Kallanish that while the changes may relieve some immediate pressure, the financial risk exposure stays the same. "Companies will still be on the hook for 2026 emissions but won’t need to fully account for them until 2027. This delay doesn’t remove the financial burden, it just shifts when it hits."

“[This] grossly simplifies an overly-complex and burdensome regulation for importers of smaller quantities of goods: a positive development that made the EU CBAM appear overly-bureaucratic," he adds. "The proposal maintains a proportionate approach to internalising the external cost of carbon pollution despite the threat of global border tariff escalations."

Maleski also notes the uncertainty surrounding US President Donald Trump's threats of reciprocal tariffs and how this will impact CBAM. The EU industry’s existing direct subsidy – EUA free allocation – will be reduced via free allocation reductions, so that a level playing field is baked into the mechanism.

Source:Kallanish