Western Balkans seek CBAM changes for electricity as EU carbon charges hit exports
Governments across the Western Balkans are pressing for urgent adjustments to European Union rules after carbon-related charges applied to electricity […]
Governments across the Western Balkans are pressing for urgent adjustments to European Union rules after carbon-related charges applied to electricity […]
EU market integration with the Western Balkans has long relied on a combination of physical connectivity and regulatory alignment. That
EU carbon border rules are beginning to show up not only in industrial import bills, but also in the way
EU carbon border rules are moving from design to daily implementation for power trading. From 1 January 2026, electricity imported
European Union importers are moving from carbon reporting to carbon-linked trade decisions, and the shift is becoming visible in customs
EU trade rules are increasingly translating carbon costs into day-to-day commercial decisions, and electricity is becoming one of the clearest
Carbon border compliance is increasingly showing up far from customs offices, reshaping how banks assess borrowers whose products depend on
EU CBAM implementation is pushing verification capacity beyond traditional accreditation boundaries, particularly as more installations outside the EU enter the
Serbia’s industrial exporters are moving closer to a new trade compliance reality as the EU prepares to apply carbon-related charges
CBAM implementation is moving from policy design into operational reality, and the reporting mechanics are already reshaping trade relationships across
EU climate policy has helped reduce greenhouse gas emissions over the past two decades, but emissions linked to importing goods
European climate policy has helped cut greenhouse gas emissions over the past two decades, but the carbon footprint linked to