CBAM shifts electricity from a cost line to a carbon risk factor for exporters
Grid emissions become embedded in traded goods For many industrial exporters, electricity has long been treated primarily as a procurement […]
Grid emissions become embedded in traded goods For many industrial exporters, electricity has long been treated primarily as a procurement […]
Trade compliance is moving from documentation to pricing for Serbian industry, with the EU Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism tightening the
EU trade compliance under the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism is increasingly being stress-tested by market conditions that sit outside the
Serbia’s manufacturers are entering a tougher operating environment where trade compliance, electricity costs and decarbonisation investment needs increasingly move together.
Europe’s carbon border rules are reshaping how industrial supply chains compete, with the practical pressure now shifting from corporate targets
EU climate policy is increasingly being enforced through trade compliance and capital allocation, not only through domestic emissions regulation. For
Serbia is nearing adoption of two climate-related laws that would introduce both domestic carbon pricing and a border adjustment framework
Trade compliance under the EU’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism is set to intersect with a new national carbon price in
CBAM electricity risk tied to power market integration Serbia could avoid paying CBAM on electricity shipments into the EU if
CBAM starts for key industrial imports from January 1 In an interview with Forbs Srbija, Blagoje Paunović, president of Serbia’s
Regulatory change is set to tighten the link between carbon performance and market access for Serbia’s exporters, with the EU
CBAM compliance risks extend beyond trade costs Serbia’s Fiscal Council has warned that the EU Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism could