CBAM turns carbon price into a supply-chain cost driver for EU–Serbia industry
EU companies importing goods from Serbia are increasingly treating the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism as a core commercial risk, not […]
EU companies importing goods from Serbia are increasingly treating the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism as a core commercial risk, not […]
EU importers are preparing for a new phase of carbon border compliance that will turn embedded emissions into a recurring
EU CBAM implementation is shifting attention from emissions reported at the factory gate to the carbon profile embedded in products
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
European trade in industrial goods is increasingly shaped by what happens after production: the ability to document emissions, trace products,
EU trade compliance is increasingly linked to climate performance, and the EU Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism is at the center
EU CBAM compliance is increasingly being translated into a practical question for industrial CFOs: how to secure verifiable low-carbon electricity
EU trade and climate rules are tightening the link between electricity procurement and border compliance for carbon-intensive goods. For exporters
EU carbon border compliance is increasingly being managed inside buying departments rather than at customs desks. For importers under the
The EU’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism is increasingly shaping how importers assess supply risk, even before any formal border charge
EU importers preparing for the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism are increasingly focused on whether “green” claims can survive procurement scrutiny,