The European Union's Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) entered its definitive phase on January 1, 2026, marking the first time a major economy has imposed a carbon price on embedded emissions in imported goods. Importers of cement, steel, aluminium, fertilisers, electricity, and hydrogen must now purchase CBAM certificates priced to the EU Emissions Trading System (ETS) level, creating profound ripple effects for global supply chains, industrial competitiveness in emerging economies, and the architecture of international trade law.
What Is CBAM and How Does It Work?
CBAM is the EU's flagship policy tool to prevent carbon leakage—the phenomenon where EU manufacturers relocate production to regions with weaker climate policies, or where domestic products are replaced by more carbon-intensive imports. By requiring importers to buy certificates at a price equivalent to the EU ETS allowance price, CBAM ensures that imported goods face the same carbon cost as those produced within the bloc. The European Commission published the first CBAM certificate price for Q1 2026 at €75.36 per metric ton of CO2 equivalent on April 7, 2026, calculated as the weighted average of EU ETS auction clearing prices. For 2026, prices will be published quarterly, transitioning to weekly publication from 2027 onward.
During the first week of implementation, over 12,000 economic operators applied for CBAM authorization, with more than 4,100 obtaining authorized declarant status. CBAM-covered trade volumes reached approximately 1.66 million metric tons in the first reporting window, with iron and steel products dominating at 98% of declared volumes. Turkey, China, India, Canada, Taiwan, and Vietnam emerged as the leading countries of origin for CBAM-covered imports.
Global Trade Disruptions and Supply Chain Realignment
Impact on Major Exporters
The CBAM impact on emerging economies varies significantly by country and sector. Turkey, China, and India are among the top exporters of CBAM-covered goods to the EU. A study published in Energy Policy found that CBAM exerts relatively substantial macroeconomic impacts on major export-oriented developing countries such as India, Turkey, and Russia, but has a more limited impact on China due to its large economic scale and strategically optimized export structure.
India has been particularly vocal in opposing the mechanism, with government officials signaling potential retaliation at the World Trade Organization (WTO). At the WTO Ministerial Conference in Yaoundé, developing nations led by India, China, Brazil, and South Africa argued that CBAM acts as a trade barrier disguised as climate policy, threatening supply chains and making decarbonization costly for emerging economies. Critics contend it violates WTO principles including Most-Favoured Nation and National Treatment, though the EU defends the measure under GATT Article XX for environmental protection.
Mozambique's Mozal Shutdown: A Cautionary Tale
On March 15, 2026, Mozambique's Mozal smelter—one of Africa's largest aluminium producers and majority-owned by South32—shut down after failing to secure a new electricity supply agreement. While CBAM was not the direct cause, it added cost pressures that made higher electricity tariffs untenable. Mozambique is among the most vulnerable countries to CBAM, facing up to a 1.6% GDP reduction according to modeling by the Center for Global Development. The Mozal shutdown highlights the intersection of energy pricing, sovereign debt, and carbon border policy, underscoring the urgent need for EU policy clarity and flexibility for least-developed countries.
Geopolitical Reactions and WTO Challenges
The WTO challenge to CBAM is shaping up to be a landmark case in international trade law. China and India have formally raised concerns at the WTO, arguing that CBAM discriminates against developing countries that have contributed less to historical emissions. The United States, under the Trump administration, has also voiced strong opposition. U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright warned of 'huge legal risks' for American companies, though some legal analysts argue that many U.S. exporters already meet EU requirements and that a domestic U.S. carbon pricing system could reduce compliance costs.
Brazil and Russia have joined the chorus of critics, with Brazil raising concerns at UN climate talks. The EU maintains that CBAM is WTO-compatible and necessary to achieve its 2030 climate targets. Analysts predict CBAM costs could reach €22 billion by 2035, creating powerful incentives for trading partners to adopt their own carbon pricing mechanisms.
Will CBAM Catalyze Global Decarbonization or Fragment Trade?
The central question facing policymakers is whether CBAM will drive global adoption of carbon pricing or fragment the trading system into climate-aligned and climate-exposed blocs. Some countries are already responding by developing their own carbon pricing systems. The United Kingdom is implementing its own CBAM, while Turkey, China, and others are exploring or expanding emissions trading schemes. This 'Brussels Effect'—where EU regulations become global standards—could accelerate decarbonization worldwide.
However, the risk of trade retaliation remains real. India has threatened retaliatory measures, and the US-EU trade tensions over climate policy could escalate if Washington views CBAM as an unfair trade practice. The EU has signaled willingness to provide financial and technical support to poorer nations, but critics argue the current level of support is insufficient.
Expert Perspectives
'CBAM represents the most ambitious attempt yet to embed climate costs into international trade,' says Dr. Helena Varkkey, a trade policy expert at the University of Malaya. 'The first quarter of 2026 is the critical window to assess real-world compliance costs, trade flow disruptions, and geopolitical reactions as importers file initial certificate purchases and governments test this unprecedented policy instrument.'
Economists at the UN University World Institute for Development Economics Research (UNU-WIDER) have modeled the economic implications for Southern Africa, finding that Mozambique and South Africa face particularly high exposure due to carbon-intensive export structures. Their dynamic computable general equilibrium analysis suggests that without adequate flexibility mechanisms, CBAM could exacerbate inequality between developed and developing nations.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the CBAM certificate price for 2026?
The first CBAM certificate price for Q1 2026 is €75.36 per metric ton of CO2 equivalent, based on the average EU ETS auction price. Quarterly prices will be published throughout 2026, with weekly prices starting in 2027.
Which products are covered by CBAM?
CBAM initially covers cement, iron and steel, aluminium, fertilisers, electricity, and hydrogen. By 2030, all sectors covered by the EU ETS will be included.
How do importers comply with CBAM?
Importers of more than 50 tonnes of CBAM goods must become authorized CBAM declarants, submit quarterly declarations of embedded emissions, and purchase and surrender CBAM certificates. Certificate purchases begin in February 2027 for 2026 imports.
Can carbon prices paid abroad be deducted?
Yes. If a carbon price was already paid in the country of origin, it can be deducted from the CBAM certificate obligation. This provision is designed to encourage other nations to adopt their own carbon pricing systems.
Is CBAM legal under WTO rules?
The EU argues CBAM is compatible with WTO rules under GATT Article XX, which allows trade measures for environmental protection. However, China, India, Brazil, and others have challenged it at the WTO, arguing it violates non-discrimination principles. The outcome of these challenges remains uncertain.
Conclusion: A Defining Moment for Climate and Trade
As the first quarter of 2026 draws to a close, CBAM is already reshaping global trade patterns. The mechanism's success will depend on whether it can drive genuine emissions reductions without triggering a trade war that harms the world's most vulnerable economies. The coming months will reveal whether CBAM becomes a template for climate-aligned trade policy or a source of geopolitical friction that fragments the global trading system. Policymakers in Brussels, Beijing, Washington, and Delhi are watching closely—and the decisions they make will determine the future of climate action in international commerce.
Sources
- European Commission, Taxation and Customs Union: CBAM Overview
- European Commission: First CBAM Certificate Price
- SteelOrbis: CBAM Implementation Begins Smoothly
- CNBC: US, China, India Lash Out at EU Climate Policy
- ODI: Mozambique's Mozal Shutdown and CBAM Flexibilities
- UNU-WIDER: Economic Implications of CBAM for South Africa and Mozambique
- S&P Global: First CBAM Certificate Price Confirmed
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