According to about.bnef.com, the European Union’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) entered its pricing phase on January 1, 2026, imposing new financial obligations on importers of emissions-intensive goods. The policy targets six sectors: iron and steel, aluminum, cement, fertilizers, hydrogen, and electricity — all critical nodes in global industrial supply chains.
How CBAM Obligations Are Calculated
CBAM costs depend on multiple variables, including embedded emissions intensity, country of origin, EU Emissions Trading System (ETS) carbon prices, and production methodology. Among these, emissions values — whether verified by importers or assigned as defaults by the European Commission — are identified as the most significant driver of cost variation across suppliers.
Importers unable to submit verified emissions data will be charged using default values set by the Commission. These defaults may prove substantially punitive: for cement and clinker, they could reach up to 1.3 times the import value. The mechanism is explicitly designed to incentivize transparency and low-carbon production — but it also risks creating a new competitiveness hierarchy, where verified low-emission suppliers gain market share over unverified or high-intensity producers.
Disproportionate Impact Across Exporting Nations
Default CBAM obligations vary significantly by country, even among peers with comparable export volumes. For example, India supplied about 15% of hot-rolled steel imported into the EU in 2024 — yet faces one of the highest default charges: up to €293 ($343) per metric ton in 2026. In contrast, South Korea and Turkey hold similar export shares but face comparatively lower default costs.
- CBAM-covered sectors: iron and steel, aluminum, cement, fertilizers, hydrogen, electricity
- Phased implementation aligns with the gradual reduction of free allowances under the EU ETS
- Default values apply when importers cannot verify their own emissions data
- BloombergNEF’s EU CBAM Obligation Calculator (EUCBAM 1.0.2) enables scenario-based cost estimation by market, product, year, and carbon price assumption
Practical Implications for Supply Chain Professionals
For global supply chain professionals, CBAM introduces urgent operational and strategic considerations. First, verifying and documenting Scope 1 and 2 emissions across Tier 1–2 suppliers is no longer optional — it directly affects landed cost and market access. Second, procurement decisions must now weigh not only price and lead time, but also CBAM liability exposure: sourcing from jurisdictions with high default rates (e.g., India for steel, Vietnam for cement) may erode margins unless emissions verification is robust. Third, logistics and trade compliance teams need integrated tools — such as BloombergNEF’s Excel-based calculator — to model cost impacts across alternative sourcing routes and production pathways. Finally, the policy accelerates pressure on industrial buyers to engage suppliers in decarbonization efforts, turning emissions data into a core component of supplier scorecards and contract terms.
Source: about.bnef.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










