CBAM as a Catalyst for India’s Green Transition

Context:
The European Union’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) has entered its definitive implementation phase, directly affecting carbon-intensive imports such as steel, aluminium, and cement. For India, CBAM presents both short-term trade challenges and a long-term opportunity to accelerate its green industrial transition and align with evolving global climate standards.

Key Highlights:

  • Policy & Trade Developments
  • The EU has operationalised CBAM, levying a carbon cost on imports based on embedded emissions.
  • Indian steel exports to the EU declined by nearly 30% in FY25 compared to FY24 during CBAM’s transitional reporting phase.
  • The EU Emissions Trading System (ETS) auction in December 2025 cleared at €87.57 per tonne of CO₂, reflecting a tightening carbon market under the European Union climate regime.
  • Impact on Indian Industry
  • Post-COVID, Indian steel exports to the EU had surged due to cost competitiveness, but CBAM reversed this trend.
  • Despite CBAM, EU importers continue sourcing Indian steel, recognising advantages in decarbonised tonnes over cheaper but higher-emission alternatives.
  • Carbon pricing is reshaping global value chains, with emissions intensity emerging as a key trade determinant.
  • Green Hydrogen & Industrial Decarbonisation
  • India’s National Green Hydrogen Mission targets 5 million metric tonnes per annum (MMTPA) by 2030.
  • Progress remains slow: only ~3 GW of electrolyser capacity awarded, against an estimated requirement of 60–100 GW.
  • Projects such as Sembcorp’s Tuticorin green ammonia hub face delays due to technology IP constraints and restrictions on Chinese electrolysers.
  • Structural & Cost Challenges
  • Green steel production entails higher capital costs, dependence on renewable energy backups, and interim reliance on cleaner fuel blends.
  • Green hydrogen is expected to become commercially competitive only around 2040, necessitating transitional strategies.

Relevant Prelims Points:

  • CBAM: A carbon tariff mechanism that equalises carbon costs between domestic EU producers and foreign exporters.
  • EU ETS: Cap-and-trade system setting a ceiling on emissions and enabling carbon price discovery.
  • National Green Hydrogen Mission: India’s flagship initiative to decarbonise industry and energy through renewable hydrogen.
  • Electrolysers: Core technology for producing green hydrogen using renewable electricity.

Relevant Mains Points:

  • Economic Dimension: CBAM challenges India’s carbon-intensive exports but incentivises productivity and technological upgrading.
  • Environmental Dimension: Aligns trade with climate goals, discouraging carbon leakage and promoting low-carbon production.
  • International Relations: Highlights climate-trade linkages and the need for equitable transition pathways for developing economies.
  • Industrial Policy: Decarbonisation requires reforms in MRV (Measurement, Reporting, Verification) systems to match EU ETS standards.
  • Way Forward:
  • Harmonise India’s MRV frameworks with global benchmarks to maintain export competitiveness.
  • Liberalise imports of intermediate goods for green technologies to scale renewable and hydrogen capacity.
  • Provide targeted fiscal support and carbon-market instruments to de-risk green steel and hydrogen investments.
  • Leverage India’s abundant renewable energy potential, low-cost iron ore, and hydrogen ambitions to emerge as a global leader in green metals.

UPSC Relevance:

  • GS 3: Economy, environment, climate-friendly industrialisation
  • GS 2: International trade, climate diplomacy
  • Prelims: Climate mechanisms, carbon markets, green energy missions
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