On 17 August 2023, the European Commission adopted the Implementing Regulation of the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM), which sets out the transitional reporting obligations for EU importers of CBAM goods, as well as the transitional methodology for calculating embedded emissions released during the production process of CBAM goods (for prior coverage, see the article in the July 2023 issue of Indirect Tax News). At the same time, the Commission published guidance for affected EU importers and non-EU installations on the practical implementation of the new rules.
The implementation rule governs the reporting obligations of EU importers of goods affected by the CBAM that apply during the transitional period of 1 October 2023 – 31 December 2025. The following goods are subject to the new measures during the transitional phase: cement, iron and steel, aluminum, fertilisers, electricity and hydrogen and certain precursor goods—all goods that pose a significant risk of leakage. As from 1 October, traders must report on the direct and indirect greenhouse gas emissions embedded in their imports subject to the CBAM but do not have to make any financial adjustments. Affected importers must file a quarterly report by the end of the month following the relevant quarter (the first time by 31 January 2024) through a transitional register established by the European Commission. The Commission has developed a transitional registry to help importers perform and report as part of their CBAM obligations. Registry access can be obtained by making a request to the national competent authority of the EU member state in which the importer is established (click here for a list of the national competent authorities).
The Implementing Regulation also provides detailed information on the methods for calculating embodied emissions and, for the first year, allows importing companies to choose between three reporting methodologies:
- Communication according to a new methodology (EU method);
- Report based on equivalent national systems of third countries; or
- Relationships based on reference values.
At the end of the transitional period, the EU will carry out a review of the functioning of the CBAM and will conduct an analysis based on the data collected aimed at assessing the sectors to which the CBAM should be extended, as well as any necessary changes.
The permanent CBAM system will become effective on 1 January 2026, at which time importers will be required to declare annually the quantity of goods imported into the EU in the preceding year and their embedded greenhouse gas emissions and comply with the related payment system based on CBAM certificates.
Eleonora Briolini
BDO in Italy