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India’s Strategic Response to the EU’s Border Adjustment Mechanism

Context

The EU’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) came into force on January 1, 2026, marking a major shift in how global trade and climate policy intersect.

About Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism

  • It is a European Union (EU) tariff on carbon-intensive products.
  • It is a new EU instrument for preventing carbon leakage, that is, the shifting of the production of goods to non-EU countries where there is a lower or no carbon cost associated with their production.
  • Purpose: To put a fair price on the carbon emitted during the production of carbon-intensive goods that are entering the EU and to encourage cleaner industrial production in non-EU countries.

Current Status

●     Renewable Expansion: Crossed 200 GW, and non-fossil capacity exceeds 51%.

●     Net-Zero Commitment: Pledged a net-zero emissions target by the year 2070.

●     Green Hydrogen: Targets 5 MMT annual production by 2030.

●     Carbon Market: Carbon Credit Trading Scheme (CCTS) covers 490 obligated high-emission industrial entities.

●     Ethanol Blending: Achieved 20% blending, reducing oil imports and transport emissions.

Associated Challenges

  • Unequal Carbon Cost Burdens: EU industries enjoy decarbonisation subsidies and phased allowances until 2034, while Indian exporters bear the full CBAM charges without any state support.
  • No Exemption under India-EU FTA: The FTA (January 27, 2026) offers India no special treatment, with the EU maintaining a uniform, inflexible approach.
  • Climate Justice and Sovereignty: By retaining carbon revenues while offloading decarbonisation costs onto developing nations, the EU risks turning India into a rule-taker rather than a rule-maker in the global climate regime.
Does India needs a India Border Adjust Mechanism(IBAM)
A Strategic Countermeasure: India can respond proactively by introducing an India Border Adjustment Mechanism (IBAM), which would impose a carbon-based charge on exports destined for CBAM-regulated markets.

Need for Coordinated Implementation

●     IBAM should not be implemented unilaterally. Instead, it must be developed through the institutional framework of Annex 14-A to ensure:

●     Recognition under CBAM Article 9

●     Seamless offsetting of CBAM liabilities

●     Policy credibility and international acceptance

Capping the Carbon Burden: If properly aligned with CBAM, IBAM can ensure that Indian exporters do not face any higher net carbon cost than what CBAM would impose alone.

Way Forward

  • Establishing a Carbon Market: India’s CCTS (2023) requires industrial installations to hold tradable carbon credits against verified emissions, establishing a measurable domestic carbon pricing framework.
  • Leveraging CBAM Article 9: CBAM’s Article 9 allows importers to deduct home-country carbon costs, creating a legal pathway for India’s domestic carbon price to be recognised at the EU border.
  • Avoiding Double Pricing: Crediting CCTS under Article 9 prevents double pricing, upholds environmental integrity, and ensures trade fairness.

Ultimately, “IBAM-ing the CBAM” reflects a broader vision  engaging with a carbon-constrained world on equitable terms while preserving national sovereignty and developmental priorities.

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