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Draft shows that EU will exempt most companies of carbon border levies

Draft shows that EU will exempt most companies of carbon border levies

A draft proposal by the European Commission showed that the Commission would propose to exempt "the vast majority of" companies from the EU's Carbon Border Levy because they only produce 1% of the emissions under the scheme.

The commission will propose the move this week, as part of an overall package of measures designed to reduce red tape and streamline business processes. This would dramatically reduce the number of importers who are currently covered by a world-first border tax on carbon in the European Union.

The draft proposal of the Commission, which was seen by, detailed plans to limit the application of the CBAM (also known as the carbon border levie) to only companies that import goods up to a threshold of 50 tonnes of mass per year.

"A mass-based criterion reflecting the average emission intensity of the volume imported CBAM products would better translate climate objectives of the CBAM." The threshold of 50 tonnes would exempt the majority of importers of their obligations under this Regulation," said it.

According to the draft, this change would cover more than 99% emissions that are covered by the border carbon tax.

The carbon border tax would replace existing CBAM regulations, which require all companies and individuals importing CBAM covered goods worth more than 150 euros to pay it starting next year.

In 2026, this policy will charge at the EU-border for the CO2 emissions that are embedded in steel, aluminum, cement, and other imported goods.

Wopke H. Hoekstra, EU Climate Commissioner said this month that the analysis of the Commission had shown that nearly all the emissions covered under the carbon border tax - 97% of them - were produced by only 20% of companies in the scheme.

The draft document stated that the majority of exempted consumers are small or medium businesses.

It said that "for these importers, compliance with CBAM obligations results in a significant administrative burden which outweighs the environmental and regulatory benefits."

Before the Commission publishes it on Wednesday, there is still time for changes to be made. All changes to EU policy must be approved by both the European Parliament as well as the EU member states.

(source: Reuters)