
CBAM Certificate Price Rules for Suppliers and EU Buyers
CBAM certificate price rules have been made stricter and mandatory from January 2026. Here is a look at specific rules and how it impacts suppliers
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The Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) is the EU’s new climate regulation that requires companies exporting certain goods into the European Union to disclose their embedded carbon emissions.
During the transitional phase (2023–2025), EU importers must submit quarterly CBAM reports, which depend heavily on accurate emissions data from their suppliers in Thailand. Moreover, CBAM reporting becomes mandatory from January 2026 and the importers are mandated to pay carbon tax as per the embedded carbon emissions in their product.
Thailand exports to the European Union stands at 10% of its total export to the EU, which is the 4th largest export destination. Moreover, 1.49% of its total export to the EU is under CBAM, majorly impacting the iron and steel industry. Other reasons CBAM matters for Thai businesses are:
For Thailand’s manufacturing and export sector, CBAM is becoming a key factor in maintaining competitiveness and supply chain reliability.
Any Thai company exporting CBAM-regulated goods to the EU must provide emissions data to help their EU importers file CBAM reports.
Industries currently covered by CBAM:
Iron and Steel
Aluminium
Fertilizers
Cement
Electricity
Hydrogen
Even small exporters are required to provide emissions information during the transitional phase.
Clean Carbon provides complete CBAM support designed for Thailand’s industrial and export landscape.
We identify which processes, materials, and product categories fall under CBAM.
Gathering accurate facility-level and product-level data:
We calculate:
We produce structured CBAM data files that importers can directly upload into the EU system.
As rules evolve, we ensure that your reporting remains accurate and up-to-date.
Our goal is to make CBAM easy, accurate, and hassle-free for Thai exporters.
We focus exclusively on CBAM, carbon reporting, and EU compliance.
We work with leading exporters across Thailand’s steel, aluminium, cement, and fertilizer sectors.
All methodologies follow EU CBAM guidance, ISO standards, and GHG Protocol.
We deliver precise CBAM-ready data within tight importer deadlines.
We bridge the gap between Thai exporters and EU importers.
Your data is prepared to meet 2026 verification requirements from day one.
Yes. If you export CBAM-covered products to the EU, your importer must report the carbon emissions — and they need data directly from you.
Your EU buyer will use default values, which are usually higher than actual emissions.
This makes your product appear more carbon-intensive — reducing competitiveness.
Yes. Reporting is required, but no payment of carbon tax yet.
Accurate reporting is important to avoid penalties or disrupted shipments.
Typically:
We help you collect everything correctly.
Yes — starting 2026. Clean Carbon prepares your data to be verification-ready.
No. Even small shipments to the EU must include emissions data.

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