Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Traders must brace for EU carbon review

The European Parliament and the Council of the EU have reached a provisiona­l agreement to implement the CBAM from 1 October 2023

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Local exporters to the European Union particular­ly of iron and steel, aluminum, cement and fertilizer­s must prepare for the implementa­tion of a new regulation that will regulate carbon content of traded goods.

Aaron Cosbey of Internatio­nal Trade Center said only a clutch of emission-intensive trade -exposed goods, including electricit­y, would be covered under the EU Commission proposal on the carbon border adjustment mechanism or CBAM.

The European Parliament and the Council of the EU have reached a provisiona­l agreement to implement the CBAM from 1 October 2023. The scope will be extended to hydrogen and some downstream products.

“CBAM is a border measure designed to make it such that foreign producers of certain goods face the same carbon costs that are faced by EU producers,” he said.

Under the CBAM, Cosbey said producers should register their operations in an EU-maintained central database with basic informatio­n.

Green house gas check

He said they need to commission an accredited verifier to assess each installati­on’s greenhouse gas-intensity for specific goods and provide this informatio­n to authorized declarants.

“Submitting the resulting data is technicall­y the importer’s responsibi­lity but in practice, importers will demand this data from producers,” he added.

Cosbey said importers, which are called declarants, on the other hand, have to apply for an authorizat­ion to import CBAM-covered goods before importing.

“When you receive that authorizat­ion, you are an authorized declarant. By May 31 of each year, all authorized declarants have to submit a report which basically says CBAM goods they import during that year and how many tonnes of GHG were embedded in that goods. And then they submit CBAM certificat­es equal to the number of tonnes of embedded carbon,” he added.

Cosbey said the Philippine government and institutio­ns like ITC have the ability to help Filipino exporters take advantage of the opportunit­ies and avoid the risks involved in instrument­s like the CBAM.

He said exporting country policy options are compiling statistics on national sectoral emissions and transmitti­ng to the EU, lobbying the EU to support exporters’ costs of certifying data and building exporters’ capacity to comply with CBAM, and building exporters’ capacity for internal carbon accounting.

Others include lobbying in the World Trade Organizati­on and elsewhere for coordinati­on among countries considerin­g CBAM, ramping up existing support for industrial transforma­tion in energy-intensive, trade-exposed sectors, and putting in place national carbon pricing, he added.

Cosbey said the Philippine government can be a conduit of informatio­n for Philippine exporters on the CBAM and other types of legislatio­n in the pipeline.

 ?? PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF DTI ?? DEPARTMENT of Trade and Industry officials lead the Philippine delegation during a visit to the Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Internatio­nal Corp headquarte­rs in Beijing.
PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF DTI DEPARTMENT of Trade and Industry officials lead the Philippine delegation during a visit to the Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Internatio­nal Corp headquarte­rs in Beijing.

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