China's Exporters Grapple with EU's New Carbon Tariff System
Quick Look
- Chinese manufacturers exporting to the EU face new regulatory hurdles due to the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM).
- The system requires detailed carbon intensity data, causing significant compliance challenges for companies like Neil Miao's, who struggle with understanding and providing the required information.
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Why It Matters
China's firms in the EU are navigating rising trade tensions and regulatory hurdles, particularly a new EU carbon tariff system.
As trade tensions between Beijing and Brussels continue to rise, China’s firms in the European Union have been forced to walk a delicate tightrope: expanding their presence in the lucrative market while grappling with heightened regulatory hurdles and rapid geopolitical shifts. In the first part of this three-part series, we look at a new, complex EU carbon tariff system that has business owners scratching their heads.
Neil Miao has been exporting metal hardware to Europe for years. But earlier this year, his purchase orders began arriving with a new document that threatened to throw the deals into disarray.
It was a complex, multi-tabbed spreadsheet demanding row upon row of technical data: from exact factory coordinates to the carbon intensity of upstream materials. Miao’s small company in northern China’s Hebei province had no ability to track – or often even understand – the metrics.
But that did not matter to the firm’s German client. Unless the form was completed, the cargo would not clear European customs, Miao was told.
Miao is among hundreds of thousands of global manufacturers scrambling to adapt to the European Union’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) – a carbon tariff system that entered its implementation phase in January.
The new regime aims to prevent “carbon leakage” by ensuring any products entering the European Union face the same carbon-related costs as domestically made goods. But in China, many producers say the policy is creating mountains of red tape while often failing to achieve its stated goals.
Open Questions
- How will Chinese manufacturers adapt long-term?
- Will the EU policy achieve its goals?
- What are the broader economic impacts?






