The Council is seeking more comprehensive product coverage and enhanced anti-circumvention measures before negotiations with Parliament.
The EU’s carbon border policy is progressing into a more challenging phase after member states backed a position to expand the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism and close loopholes potentially weakening the bloc’s climate and industrial rules. This decision initiates discussions with the European Parliament on the extent to which Brussels should apply carbon costs to imports without creating undue burdens for companies and trade partners.
The Council position agreed on 12 June would extend CBAM to certain downstream products made with carbon-intensive inputs, particularly those using iron, steel, and aluminum. It would also reinforce anti-circumvention measures, including rules to prevent companies from avoiding carbon costs through changes in product classification, routing, or production structure.
For EU policymakers, this issue has become a test of the Union’s ability to defend its decarbonization strategy while maintaining fair competition for European industry, ensuring legal predictability at the border, and avoiding broader trade conflicts with partners viewing CBAM as a costly barrier.
CBAM entered its definitive phase on 1 January 2026 following a transitional reporting period. The mechanism requires importers of covered goods to account for embedded carbon emissions and, if necessary, purchase certificates linked to the EU carbon price. It currently applies to carbon-intensive sectors such as iron and steel, cement, fertilizers, aluminum, electricity, and hydrogen.
The Commission describes the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism as a way to ensure imported goods face a carbon price equivalent to that paid by EU producers under the Emissions Trading System. The policy aims to reduce the risk of carbon leakage, where production moves outside the EU to areas with weaker climate rules, or where EU products are displaced by imports with higher embedded emissions.
The Council’s new stance reflects a concern that a narrow system could leave gaps. If only raw or semi-finished materials are covered, producers outside the EU might make more processed goods before export, bypassing the mechanism while still competing with European manufacturers subject to the Union’s carbon price. The proposed extension to downstream goods aims to make that strategy less appealing.
Member states also seek clearer rules for exceptional cases. The Council states any temporary exemption in serious and unforeseen circumstances should be based on objective criteria, like exposure to severe price increases. This clause highlights one of the policy’s central tensions: CBAM must be robust enough to matter, yet flexible enough to avoid harming the internal market during shocks.
The debate comes at a sensitive time for Europe. Governments aim to revive industrial investment, reduce energy and compliance costs, and respond to global competition. Simultaneously, the EU wants to demonstrate that climate ambition can be integrated into trade policy rather than remain a domestic burden on European producers.
That makes CBAM part of Europe’s broader industrial strategy debate, where competitiveness, trade defense, climate policy, and strategic autonomy increasingly overlap. Politically, the argument in Brussels is that companies investing in cleaner production shouldn’t be undercut by imports that face no comparable carbon cost.
However, the tool also raises questions for trading partners and smaller operators. Importers need reliable emissions data, clear customs procedures, and predictable certificate prices. Producers in developing economies may face new administrative demands even where they have limited capacity to measure and verify emissions. The EU has committed to supporting developing and least-developed countries in adapting to CBAM, but the adequacy of that support will remain closely scrutinized.
The next stage depends on Parliament’s position and the subsequent negotiations. Lawmakers are likely to examine the balance between environmental integrity, administrative simplicity, and the risk of cost shifts through supply chains. Industry groups will push for clarity on product lists and reporting duties, while climate advocates will assess whether the final law closes real loopholes or leaves too much discretion.
Currently, the Council agreement indicates that member states want CBAM to evolve beyond a symbolic border charge. They aim to transform it into a functioning institutional system: one that prices carbon, protects the credibility of EU climate policy, and signals to global suppliers that access to the European market will increasingly depend on verifiable emissions performance.
The more challenging question is whether that system can remain fair as it expands. For CBAM to be legitimate, Brussels will need to demonstrate not only that it protects European industry but that it applies rules transparently, assists partners in adapting, and avoids using climate policy as a disguised form of protectionism.














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