BETA

130 Amendments of Massimiliano SALINI related to 2021/0214(COD)

Amendment 83 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 9
(9) The initiative for a carbon border adjustment mechanism (‘CBAM’) is a part of the ‘Fit for 55 Package’. That mechanism is to serve as an essential element of the EU toolbox to meet the objective of a climate-neutral Union by 2050 in line with the Paris Agreement by addressing risks of carbon leakage resulting from the increased Union climate ambition. The CBAM is also consistent with the EU's objective of Open Strategic Autonomy.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 88 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 10
(10) Existing mechanisms to address the risk of carbon leakage in sectors or sub- sectors at risk of carbon leakage are the transitional free allocation of EU ETS allowances and financial measures to compensate for indirect emission costs incurred from GHG emission costs passed on in electricity prices respectively laid down in Articles 10a(6) and 10b of Directive 2003/87/EC. However, free allocatExisting carbon leakage measures are based on strict benchmarks established by the best- performing installations. These measures also represents an incentive to reduce emissions under the EU ETS weakens the price signal that the system provideshile also providing a carbon price signal for emissions above the benchmark level; they have proven so foar the installations receiving it compared to full auctioning and thus affects the incentives for investment into further abatement of emissionso be effective in reducing the risk of carbon leakage, although in the context of lower carbon prices than those experienced recently and those forecasted by 2030.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 89 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 10
(10) Existing mechanisms to address the risk of carbon leakage in sectors or sub- sectors at risk of carbon leakage are the transitional free allocation of EU ETS allowances and financial measures to compensate for indirect emission costs incurred from GHG emission costs passed on in electricity prices respectively laid down in Articles 10a(6) and 10b of Directive 2003/87/EC. However,The system of meeting benchmarks as precondition for receiving free allocation under the EU ETS weakens theensures an additional price signal that the system provides for the installations receiving ithem compared to full auctioning and, thus affects positively the incentives for investment into further abatement of emissions and remains an important tool to reduce the risk of carbon leakage as long as there is no global CO2 emission pricing system.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 96 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 11
(11) The CBAM seeks to replacestrengthen carbon leakage protection in view of higher EU climate ambitions by 2030 and thereafter replace progressively these existing mechanisms by addressing the risk of carbon leakage in a different way, namely by ensuring equivalent carbon pricing for imports and domestic products. To ensure a gradual transition from the current system of free allowances to the CBAM, the CBAM should be progressively phased in while free allowances in sectors covered by the CBAM are phased out and by ensuring that EU products exported in the global market are not replaced by more carbon intensive products, which would undermine the objective of reducing global emissions. To ensure a gradual transition from the current system of free allowances to the CBAM, free allowances should only be phased out once the CBAM regulation has proven its effectiveness in terms of protection from the risk of carbon leakage both for imports and exports, not before 2030 and only following a three years test phase running from 2026 to 2028 during which the effectiveness of the mesure will be throughly assessed by the Commission. The combined and transitional application of EU ETS allowances allocated free of charge and of the CBAM should in no case result in more favourable treatment for Union goods compared to goods imported into the customs territory of the Union.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 102 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 11
(11) The CBAM seeks to replacecomplement these existing mechanisms by addressing the risk of carbon leakage in a differentn additional way, namely by ensuring equivalent carbon pricing for imports and domestic products. To ensure a gradual transition from the current system of free allowances to the CBAM, the CBAM should be progressively phased in while free allowances in sectors covered by the CBAM are phased out. The combined and transitionalthe compliance with WTO rules, the combined application of EU ETS allowances allocated free of charge and of the CBAM should in no case result in more favourable treatment for Union goods compared to goods imported into the customs territory of the Union.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 111 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 12
(12) While the objective of the CBAM is to prevent the risk of carbon leakage, this Regulation would also encourage the use of more GHG emissions-efficient technologies by producers from third countries, so that less emissions per unit of output are generated. Therefore, it will be relevant to export more sustainable products manufactured in the EU and avoid substitutes at a global level with higher carbon footprint.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 114 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 12 a (new)
(12 a) While the surrenderingof CBAM certificates for EU importers addresses the risk of carbon leakage on the EU market, it is essential that the CBAM would also seek to reduce the possibility of European low-carbon exports being replaced by carbon-intensive items on third country markets or by goods that are not subject to equivalent climate policy and carbon costs, undermining the goal of lowering global emissions. It is therefore necessary to continue addressing the risk of carbon leakageassociated with European exports to third countries that have not yet limited or priced GHG emissions at the same levels as the EU.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 116 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 12 b (new)
(12 b) This Regulation does not apply to goods exported from the EU and therefore does not address carbon leakage associated with exports. Consequently, the Commission should monitor and evaluate the mechanism’s impact on export markets and, if the assessment of the effectiveness of the CBAM in tackling carbon leakage on the EU market is positive, after the three year test period, the Commission shall present a report to the European Parliament and Council accompanied with a legislative proposal to address the carbon leakage risk on export markets while starting the free allocation phase out as set out in the ETS directive.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 117 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 11
(11) The CBAM seeks tointends to complement and progressively replace these existing mechanisms by addressing the risk of carbon leakage in a different way, namely by ensuring equivalent carbon pricing for imports and domestic products. To ensure a gradual transition from the current system of free allowances to the CBAM, the CBAM should be progressively phased in while free allowances in sectors covered by the CBAM are phased out. The combined and transitional application of EU ETS allowances allocated free of charge and of the CBAMshould be phased out only after a comprehensive transitional period between 2026 and 2030 and once the CBAM has proven to be efficient, fit for purpose, operational and tested to mitigate the risk of carbon leakage. The combined application of EU ETS allowances allocated free of charge and of the CBAM is needed to allow producers, importers and traders to adjust to the new regime and to assess the effective implementation of the CBAM but should in no case result in more favourable treatment for Union goods compared to goods imported into the customs territory of the Union as continuous trade with third countries are essential for the Union and its diversified supply chains.
2022/02/08
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 119 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 12 c (new)
(12 c) If European industries producing goods subject to the CBAM face significant difficulties as a result of its implementation, the Commission develops an in-depth assessment in close collaboration with the industrial secotrs. This assessment should be completed as soon as possible to determine whether the mechanism is effective and practible.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 121 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 13
(13) As an instrument to prevent carbon leakage and reduce GHG emissions the CBAM should ensure that imported products are subject to a regulatory system that applies carbon costs equivalent to the ones that otherwise would have been borne under the EU ETS. The CBAM is a climate measure which should prevent the risk of carbon leakage and support the Union’s increased ambition on climate mitigation, while ensuring WTO compatibility. However, the CBAM should be combined with rules addressing the exports component, such as the implementation of full or partial export duty exemptions, in order to fully eliminate concerns of carbon leakage and protect the competitiveness of European exported goods. Such a mechanism would be in line with the rules provided by the WTO Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures (ASCM).
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 122 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 13
(13) As an instrument to prevent carbon leakage and reduce GHG emissions the CBAM should ensure that imported products are subject to a regulatory system that applies carbon costs equivalent to the ones that otherwise would have been borne under the EU ETS. The CBAM is a climate measure which should prevent the risk of carbon leakage and support the Union’s increased ambition on climate mitigation, while ensuring WTO compatibility; imports and domestic production shall be treated in the same way to ensure WTO compatibility; the CBAM shall ensure a level playing field between EU domestic and foreign producers, ensure full protection against carbon leakage for European industry and avoid emission transfers to third countries; as well as the impact on exports and dependent sectors along the value chain.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 129 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 11 a (new)
(11 a) To prevent carbon leakage both in the Union and in third country markets, goods of Union origin that are subject to the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism of this Regulation and that are exported to third countries and territories should benefit from an export adjustment. This export adjustment must continue to incentivize Union producers to reduce their emissions and should apply until third countries adopt carbon prices and equivalent measures that are comparable to those in the Union, with special attention to interrelated carbon leakage protection measures, taking into account the principle of common but differentiated responsibilities and respective capabilities, in the light of different national circumstances.
2022/02/08
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 132 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 15
(15) In order to exclude from the CBAM third countries or territories fully integrated into, or linked, to the EU ETS and where the carbon cost burden is equivalent to that under the EU ETS, in the event of future agreements, the power to adopt acts in accordance with Article 290 of TFEU should be delegated to the Commission in respect of amending the list of countries in Annex II. Conversely, those third countries or territories should be excluded from the list in Annex II and be subject to CBAM whereby they do not effectively charge the ETS price on goods exported to the Union.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 135 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 16 a (new)
(16 a) The implementing act pursuant to Article 7(6) shall include all input materials that contribute significantly to GHG emissions. In the case of stainless steel (CN codes 7218-7223), ferro-alloys shall be included in the list of input materials as they fulfil this criterion.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 142 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 12 a (new)
(12 a) While the surrendering of CBAM certificates for EU importers addresses the risk of carbon leakage on the EU market, it is essential that the CBAM would also seek to reduce the possibility of European low-carbon exports being replaced by carbon-intensive items on third country markets or by goods that are not subject to equivalent climate policy and carbon costs, undermining the goal of lowering global emissions. It is therefore necessary to continue addressing the risk of carbon leakage associated with European exports to third countries that have not yet limited or priced GHG emissions at the same levels as the EU.
2022/02/08
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 143 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 19
(19) However, while the EU ETS sets an absolute cap on the GHG emissions from the activities under its scope and allows tradability of allowances (so called ‘cap and trade system’), the CBAM shouldall not establish or lead to quantitative limits to import, so as to ensure that trade flows are not restricted or constrain trade flows. Moreover, while the EU ETS applies to installations based in the Union, the CBAM should initially be applied to certaina limited scope of goods imporlisted into the customs territory of the Union Annex I, after close review, the scope should be extended to also include finished goods.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 147 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 20
(20) The CBAM system has some specific features compared with the EU ETS, including on the calculation of the price of CBAM certificates, on the possibilities to trade certificates and on their validity over time. These are due to the need to preserve the effectiveness of the CBAM as a measure preventing carbon leakage over time and to ensure that the management of the system idoes not add excessively burdensome administrative burden to EU companies in terms of obligations imposed on the operators and of resources for the administration, while at the same time preserving an equivalent level of flexibility available to operators under the EU ETS.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 148 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 20
(20) The CBAM system has some specific features compared with the EU ETS, including on the calculation of the price of CBAM certificates, on the possibilities to trade certificates and on their validity over time. These are due to the need to preserve the effectiveness of the CBAM as a measure preventing carbon leakage over time and to ensure that the managemadministrative burdent of the system is not excessively burdensomekept to a minimum in terms of obligations imposed on the operators and of resources for the administration, while at the same time preserving an equivalent level of flexibility available to operators under the EU ETS.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 149 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 13
(13) As an instrument to prevent carbon leakage and reduce GHG emissions the CBAM should ensure that imported products are subject to a regulatory system that applies carbon costs equivalent to the ones that otherwise would have been borne under the EU ETS. The CBAM is a climate measure which should prevent the risk of carbon leakage and support the Union’s increased ambition on climate mitigation, while ensuring WTO compatibility and industrial competitiveness.
2022/02/08
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 151 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 21
(21) In order to preserve its effectiveness as a carbon leakage measure, the CBAM needs to reflect closely the EU ETS price. While on the EU ETS market the price of allowances is determined through auctions, the price of CBAM certificates should reasonably reflect the price of such auctions through averages calculated on a weekly basis. Such weekly average prices reflect closely the price fluctuations of the EU ETS and allow a reasonable margin for importers to take advantage of the price changes of the EU ETS while at the same ensuring that the system remains manageable for the administrative authoritystem at the same time needs to consider the costs and administrative burden impacting EU downstream industries.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 151 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 13 a (new)
(13 a) As CBAM is a mechanism that addresses the risk of carbon leakage on the EU market for EU imports, it is essential to avoid the risk that EU exports are replaced by more carbon intensive goods on the global market. Hence, the Commission shall analyse its implementation and effectiveness throughout the administrative transitional period and shall by the end of this period submit a report to the European Parliament and Council that specifies the carbon leakage risk on export markets accompanied with a proposal preventing the carbon leakage risk on export markets with safeguards of products intended for exports, such as export rebates.
2022/02/08
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 152 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 21 a (new)
(21 a) In order to keep any additional burden to an absolute minimum the CBAM should be easy to administer and not place an undue burden on enterprises, especially small and medium- sized enterprises (SMEs).
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 154 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 23
(23) Given that the CBAM applies to imports of goods into the customs territory of the Union rather than to installations, certain adaptations and simplifications would also need to apply in the CBAM regime. One of those simplifications should consist in a declarative system where importers should report the total verified GHG emissions embedded in goods imported in a given calendar year. A different timing compared to the compliance cycle of the EU ETS should also be applied to avoid any potential bottleneck resulting from obligations for accredited verifiers under this Regulation and the EU ETS. The transition period should be of adequate timeframe to allow European companies to adjust and focus on low carbon investments.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 156 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 23 a (new)
(23 a) Given the unique nature of the CBAM and the need forclose EU coordination, a CBAM authority at the EU level should be established to properly implement and monitor the provisions contained in this regulation.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 157 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 24
(24) In terms of sanctions, Member Statesthe EU Central Authority should apply penalties to infringements of this Regulation and ensure that they are implemented. The amount of those penalties should be identical to penalties currently applied within the Union in case of infringement of EU ETS according to Article 16(3) and (4) of Directive 2003/87/EC. However, in case of circumvention or absorption practices or in case of repeated infringements of the provisions of the present Regulation, stronger penalties should apply to avoid undermining the effectiveness of the CBAM regime.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 163 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 29
(29) The goods under this Regulation should be selected after a careful analysis of their relevance in terms of cumulated GHG emissions and risk of carbon leakage in the corresponding EU ETS sectors while limiting complexity and administrative burden. In particular, the actual selection should take into account basic materials and basic products covered by the EU ETS with the objective of ensuring that imports of energy intensive products into the Union are on equal footing with EU products in terms of EU ETS carbon pricing, and to mitigate risks of carbon leakage. A mechanism centred solely on basic materials could lead to a shift in imports towards intermediate and final products not covered by the mechanism, thereby affecting the EU industry and increasing the risk of carbon leakage; A thorough, proper and comprehensive impact assessments should be done after the transition period also aimed to identify measures for sectors where the risk of carbon leakage is highest, while taking into consideration the sector’s competitiveness; This requires transparency throughout of the process leading to the CBAM, as well as engagement with the EU’s trading partners and to avoid any possible retaliations. Other relevant criteria to narrow the selection should be: firstly, relevance of sectors in terms of emissions, namely whether the sector is one of the largest aggregate emitters of GHG emissions; secondly, sector’s exposure to significant risk of carbon leakage, as defined pursuant to Directive 2003/87/EC; thirdly, the need to balance broad coverage in terms of GHG emissions while limiting complexity and administrative effort.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 173 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 19
(19) However, while the EU ETS sets an absolute cap on the GHG emissions from the activities under its scope and allows tradability of allowances (so called ‘cap and trade system’), the CBAM shouldmust not establish quantitative limits to import, so as to ensure that trade flows are not restricted or disrupted. Moreover, while the EU ETS applies to installations based in the Union, the CBAM should be applied to certain goods imported into the customs territory of the Union to ensure a level playing field and prevent the risk of carbon leakage while ensuring compatibility with WTO.
2022/02/08
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 184 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 38
(38) As importers of goods covered by this Regulation should not have to fulfil their CBAM obligations under this Regulation at the time of importation, specificonly necessary administrative measures should be applied to ensure that the obligations are fulfilled at a later stage. Therefore, importers should only be entitled to import CBAM goods after they have been granted an authorisation by competent authorities responsible for the application of this Regulation.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 189 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 24
(24) In terms of sanctions, Member States should apply penalties to infringements or circumvention practises of this Regulation and ensure that they are implemented. The amount of those penalties should be identical to penalties currently applied within the Union in case of infringement of EU ETS according to Article 16(3) and (4) of Directive 2003/87/EC.
2022/02/08
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 196 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 11
(11) The CBAM seeks to replacecomplement and conceivably replace, after 2030, these existing mechanisms by addressing the risk of carbon leakage in a different way, namely by ensuring equivalent carbon pricing for imports and domestic products. To ensure a gradual transition from the current systemthat this new mechanism achieves the above objective, and prior to any gradual phasing-out of free EU ETS allowances to the CBAM, the CBAM should be progressively phased in while free allowances in sectors covered by the CBAM are phased out, there is a need to assess a fully-operational CBAM based on the data gathered by the European Commission in the period 2026-2028, and to evaluate the impacts on value chains. Furthermore, before any reduction in the free allowances allocated is contemplated, an effective export protection mechanism must be established to ensure that the environmental objectives of the CBAM are not undermined by carbon leakage arising from the cancellation of European exports. The combined and transitional application of EU ETS allowances allocated free of charge and of the CBAM should in no case result in more favourable treatment for Union goods compared to goods imported into the customs territory of the Union.
2022/02/15
Committee: ENVI
Amendment 202 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 52
(52) The Commission should evaluate the application of this Regulation before the end of the transitional period and report to the European Parliament and the Council. The report of the Commission should in particular focus on possibilities to enhance climate actions towards the objective of a climate neutral Union by 2050. The Commission should, as part of that evaluation, initiate collection of information necessary to prevent distortion of competition in the EU and in global markets and possibly extend the scope to indirect emissions, as well as to other goods and services at risk of carbon leakage, and to develop methods of calculating embedded emissions based on the environmental footprint methods47 . With regard to indirect emissions, the evaluation shall take into account the exposure of EU producers to carbon costs passed on in electricity prices due to the functioning of the EU energy market. _________________ 47 Commission Recommendation 2013/179/EU of 9 April 2013 on the use of common methods to measure and communicate the life cycle environmental performance of products and organisations (OJ L 124, 4.5.2013, p. 1).
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 204 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 52
(52) The Commission should evaluate the application of this Regulation before the end of the transitional period and report to the European Parliament and the Council. The report of the Commission should in particular focus on possibilities to enhance climate actions towards the objective of a climate neutral Union by 2050, without hindering the efficiency of trade with goods covered by the CBAM. The Commission should, as part of that evaluation, initiate collection of information necessary to possibly extend the scope to indirect emissions, as well as to other goods and services at risk of carbon leakage, and to develop methods of calculating embedded emissions based on the environmental footprint methods47 . _________________ 47 Commission Recommendation 2013/179/EU of 9 April 2013 on the use of common methods to measure and communicate the life cycle environmental performance of products and organisations (OJ L 124, 4.5.2013, p. 1).
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 209 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 52 a (new)
(52 a) Given the particularities of the European electricity market vis-à-vis those of third countries, the provisions laid down in Articles 10a(6) and 10b of Directive 2003/87/EC play a crucial role in ensuring the competitiveness of EU electro-intensive industries against carbon leakage. These particularities result in an embedded carbon cost even when the electricity being consumed by an installation is decarbonised. Should the Commission seek to extend the scope to indirect emissions, the said provisions of Directive 2003/87/EC should not be phased out until the European electricity mix has been decarbonised to a degree that the mismatch between indirect costs and indirect emissions is negligible.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 210 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 52 a (new)
(52 a) Agriculture is a sector of strategic importance in terms of food security and food autonomy. Accordingly, the impact of the inclusion of fertilizers in the CBAM on European agriculture, food security and food autonomy must be reviewed before the CBAM including the financial adjustment for fertilizers should apply.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 216 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 54
(54) The Commission should strive to engage in an even handed manner and in line with the international obligations of the EU, with the third countries whose trade to the EU is affected by this Regulation, to explore possibilities for dialogue and cooperation with regard to the implementation of specific elements of the Mechanism set out this Regulation and related implementing acts. It should also explore possibilities for concluding agreements to take into account their carbon pricing mechanism, provided that they deliver equivalent GHG emissions reductions and carbon costs constraints.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 217 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 54
(54) The Commission should strive to engage in an even handed manner and in line with the international obligations of the EU, with the third countries whose trade to the EU is affected by this Regulation, to explore possibilities fornsure dialogue and enhance cooperation with regard to the implementation of specific elements of the Mechanism set out this Regulation and related implementing acts. It should also explore possibilities for concluding agreements to take into account their carbon pricing mechanism.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 219 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 11 a (new)
(11a) To prevent carbon leakage both in the Union and in third country markets, goods of Union origin that are subject to the CBAM and that are exported to third countries and territories should benefit from an export adjustment. That export adjustment should continue to incentivise Union producers to reduce their emissions and should apply until third countries adopt carbon prices and equivalent measures that are comparable to those in the Union, with special attention to interrelated carbon leakage protection measures, taking into account the principle of common but differentiated responsibilities and respective capabilities, in the light of different national circumstances.
2022/02/15
Committee: ENVI
Amendment 227 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 58
(58) In order to remedy circumvention of the provisions of this Regulation, the powerCommission should put forward a legislative proposal to adoapt acts in accordance with Article 290 of TFEU should be delthis Regulation when it is deemed necessary and possible, with regaterd to the Commission in respect of supplementing the list of goods in Annex Iinternational commitments of the Union, such as those under the WTO.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 232 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 1 – paragraph 1
1. This Regulation establishes a carbon border adjustment mechanism (the ‘CBAM’) for addressing greenhouse gas emissions embedded in the goods referred to in Annex I, upon their importation into the customs territory of the Union, in order to prevent the risk of carbon leakage from the EU and contribute to the reduction of global carbon emissions.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 235 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 1 – paragraph 3
3. The mechanism willshould progressively become an alternative to the mechanisms established under Directive 2003/87/EC to prevent the risk of carbon leakage, notably the allocation of allowances free of charge in accordance with Article 10a of that Directive, if it has been proven to be effective in preventing carbon leakage both for imports into and exports from the Union’s custom territory, and without prejudice to maintaining EU ETS allowances free of charge at benchmark level until a test period with actual surrendering obligation by declarants running until 2030 has proven such effectiveness.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 238 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 46 a (new)
(46 a) To reduce the risk of carbon leakage as well as to ensure a level playing field for European industry, all practices of circumvention shall be prohibited. The Commission shall evaluate the risk of circumvention practices, especially the likelihood of modified trade patterns towards downstream products, as well as resource shuffling, cost absorption, manipulation of emissions data, wrongful labelling of goods and slight modifications of the product so as to import a product under a different customs code of all sectors included in Annex I of this Regulation. The Commission shall be empowered to adopt delegated acts to strengthen anti- circumvention measures when appropriate.
2022/02/08
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 240 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 1 – paragraph 3
3. The mechanism will progressively become an alternative toain purpose of the mechanism will be to complement the mechanisms established under Directive 2003/87/EC to prevent the risk of carbon leakage, notably the allocation of allowances free of charge in accordance with Article 10a of that Directive.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 243 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 2 – paragraph 2
2. This Regulation applies to the goods referred to in paragraph 1 where those goods, or products processed from those good in case of export to third countries, are brought to, or leave the continental shelf or the exclusive economic zone of a Member State.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 247 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 49 a (new)
(49 a) This Regulation shall progressively enter into force in two steps. Between 2023 and 2025 an administrative transitional period where Articles set out in Article 36 (a) and (c) of this Regulation shall apply. Between 2026 and 2030 a comprehensive transitional period where all Articles set out in Article 36 of this Regulation shall apply. During this period free allocation should remain in place.
2022/02/08
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 250 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 50
(50) An administrative transitional period without financial adjustment should apply during the period 2023 until 2025. A CBAM without financial adjustment should applyto 2025, with the objective to facilitate a smooth roll out of the mechanism hence reducing the risk of disruptive impacts on trade and European industry. Declarants should have to report on a quarterly basis the actual embedded emissions in goods imported during the administrative transitional period, detailing direct and indirect emissions as well as any carbon price paid abroad.
2022/02/08
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 257 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 50 a (new)
(50 a) A comprehensive transitional period with financial adjustment should apply during the period 2026 to 2030, with the objective to facilitate a smooth roll out of the mechanism hence reducing the risk of disproportionate impacts on European industry.
2022/02/08
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 258 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 50 b (new)
(50 b) A temporary Carbon Leakage Protection Reserve should be established between 2031 to 2035, linked to the reduction of free allocation. Each year, the free allocation no longer provided to the CBAM sectors, based on the free allocation phase-out calculation, should be placed into the temporary Carbon Leakage Reserve. To this purpose the Commission shall every year, from 2031 to 2035, present to the parliament and Council a report on the effectiveness of this Regulation in lowering carbon leakage. By 28 February, the following year the Commission shall report to the Parliament and the Council on the entry into force of CBAM and its effectiveness during the preceding year. If the assessment is positive, the allowances placed in the reserve should automatically be auctioned. If the assessment proves negative impact on lowering carbon leakage, the allowances placed in the reserve should automatically be returned to industry, to mitigate the risk of carbon leakage.
2022/02/08
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 262 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 2 – paragraph 12
12. The Union, may conclude agreements with third countries with a view to take account of carbon pricing mechanisms in these countries in the application of Article 9. These agreements shall not lead to undue preferential treatment of imports from third countries as regards the CBAM certificates to be surrendered and they must not take into account any carbon pricing mechanisms that are considered to be circumvention practices under Article 27.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 265 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 52
(52) The Commission should evaluate the application of this Regulation before the end of the administrative transitional period and report to the European Parliament and the Council. The report of the Commission should in particular focus on possibilities to enhance climate actions towards the objective of a climate neutral Union by 2050. The Commission should, as part of that evaluation, initiate collection of information necessary to possibly extend the scope of Annex I to indirect emissions, as well as to other goods and services at risk of carbon leakage, such as finished goods, and to develop methods of calculating embedded emissions based on the environmental footprint methods47 .. The Commission should in particular focus on: (a) the impact on competitiveness of European industry and downstream industry, impact on SMEs, possible disproportionate administrative burden, possible circumvention practices, distortion in trade patterns and possibilities to enhance climate actions towards a climate neutral Union by 2050. Accompanied by proposals to avoid negative impact on such sectors; (b) a proposal to avoid possible carbon leakage in export markets; (c) a proposal to extend the scope of this Regulation to finished goods containing goods listed in Annex I; to ensure competitiveness of European manufacturing industry and prevent carbon leakage; __________________ 47Commission Recommendation 2013/179/EU of 9 April 2013 on the use of common methods to measure and communicate the life cycle environmental performance of products and organisations (OJ L 124, 4.5.2013, p. 1).
2022/02/08
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 275 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 52 a (new)
(52 a) During the comprehensive transitional period, biannual between 2025-2030 and every year thereafter until 2035, the Commission shall evaluate the application of this Regulation and report to the European parliament and the Council. The Commission should in particular focus on: (a) the impact on European industry and downstream industry of sectors listed in Annex I, and possible additional administrative burden; (b) the effectiveness of this Regulation in reducing carbon leakage and possible circumvention practices; and (c) the impact of CBAM on Union trade of goods listed in Annex I and possible distortion in trade patterns;
2022/02/08
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 282 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 4 a (new)
Article 4 a Notification and Registration of Exports 1. Any declarant wishing to obtain adjustments to their emission allowances corresponding to the embedded emissions of the goods produced in the EU and exported outside the territory of the customs union shall be registered as a declarant according to Article 4 and shall notify the competent authority of its intention at the time of lodging the predeparture declaration. On release of the goods, the customs office of export will transmit the necessary particulars of the export movement to the competent authority which shall issue a certificate establishing the allowance adjustments to be granted to calibrate the regulatory obligation. 2. The Commission is empowered to adopt implementing acts, concerning the standard format of the notification and the delays and procedure to be followed by the competent authority when processing applications for obtaining a CBAM certificate in accordance with paragraph 1 and the rules for identification by the competent authority of the declarants. Those implementing acts shall be adopted in accordance with the examination procedure referred to in Article 29(2).
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 283 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 6 – paragraph 2 – point a a (new)
(a a) the total quantity of each type of goods or the share of these goods in products processed from those goods, as referred to in point a of this paragraph, exported during the calendar year preceding the declaration, expressed in megawatt hours for electricity and in tonnes for other goods;
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 287 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 15
(15) In order to exclude from the CBAM third countries or territories fully integrated into, or linked, to, the EU ETS in the event of future agreements, the power to adopt acts in accordance with Article 290 of TFEU should be delegated to the Commission in respect of amending the list of countries in Annex IIand only when the carbon costs passed on in the products imported are completely equivalent to those under the ETS within the EU, and when there is a free energy market, the European Commission should submit a proposal to the European Parliament and the Council to amend the current Regulation. Conversely, those third countries or territories should be excluded from the list in Annex II and be subject to CBAM whereby they do not effectively charge the ETS price on goods exported to the Union.
2022/02/15
Committee: ENVI
Amendment 290 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 7 – paragraph 6
6. The Commission is empowered to adopt implementing acts concerning detailed rules regarding the elements of the calculation methods set out in Annex III, including determining system boundaries of production processes, emission factors, installation-specific values of actual emissions and default values and their respective application to individual goods as well as laying down methods to ensure the reliability of data on the basis of which the default values shall be determined, including the level of detail and the verification of the data. Where necessary, those acts shall provide that the default values can be adapted to particular areas, regions or countries to take into account specific objective factors such as geography, natural resources, market conditions, prevailing energy sources, or industrial processes. The implementing acts shall build upon existing legislation for the verification of emissions and activity data for installations covered by Directive 2003/87/EC, in particular Implementing Regulation (EU) No 2018/2067.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 293 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 58
(58) In order for CBAM to be efficient in lowering carbon leakage, all possible circumvention practices should be addressed by this Regulation. In order to remedy circumvention of the provisions of this Regulation, the power to adopt acts in accordance with Article 290 of TFEU should be delegated to the Commission in respect of supplementing the list of goods in Annex I.
2022/02/08
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 298 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 8 – paragraph 3 – introductory part
3. The Commission is empowered to adopt implementing acts concerning the principles of verification referred to in paragraph 1 as regards the possibility to waive the obligation for the verifier to visit the installation where relevant goods are produced and the obligation to set thresholds for deciding whether misstatements or non-conformities are material and concerning the supporting documentation needed for the verification report. Provisions laid down in such implementing acts shall be equivalent to the provisions set in Regulation 2018/2067.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 304 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 9 – paragraph 2
2. The authorised declarant shall keep records of the documentation, certified by an independent person, verifier accredited pursuant to art. 18 and in line with the competences established in art. 8(1) concerning the verification of embedded emissions. The accredited verifier is required to demonstrate that the declared embedded emissions were subject to a carbon price in the country of origin of the goods and keep evidence of the proof of the actual payment for that carbon price which should not have been subject to an export rebate or any other form of compensation on exportation.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 307 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 9 – paragraph 2
2. The authorised declarant shall keep records of the documentation, certified by an independent person, required to demonstrate that the declared embedded emissions were subject to a carbon price in the country of origin of the goods and keep evidence of the proof of the actual payment for that carbon price which should not have been subject to an export rebate or any other form of compensation on exportation.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 310 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 9 – paragraph 4
4. The Commission is empowered to adopt implementing acts establishing the methodology for calculating the reduction in the number of CBAM certificates to be surrendered, regarding the conversion of the carbon price paid in foreign currency into euro at yearly average exchange rate in accordance with paragraph 1, and regarding the qualifications of the independent person certifying the information as well as elements of proof of the carbon price paid and the absence of export rebates or other forms of compensation on exportation being applied as referred to in paragraph 2. Those implementing acts shall be adopted in accordance with the examination procedure referred to in Article 29(2).
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 313 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 10 – paragraph 1
1. The Commission shall, upon request by a register the information on operators of an installations located in a third country, register the information on that operator and on itsies and on those installations in a central database referred to in Article 14(4).
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 317 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 10 – paragraph 6
6. The records referred to in paragraph 5, point (c), shall be sufficiently detailed to enable the verification in accordance with paragraph 5, point (b), and to enable any competent authority to verify and to review, in accordance with Article 19(1), the CBAM declaration made by an authorised declarant to whom the relevant information was disclosed in accordance with paragraph 8.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 322 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 10 – paragraph 8
8. The operator may, at any timefter 5 years and with previous notification, ask to be deregistered from the database.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 325 #
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 327 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 11 – paragraph 1 – introductory part
1. A central CBAM authority at the EU level is established for the purpose of implementing and managing this Regulation.Its composition and tasks shall be established by way of separate Regulation. Each Member State shall designate the national competent authority to carry out the obligations and cooperate with the EU CBAM authority under this Regulation and inform the CommissionEU CBAM authority thereof.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 331 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 11 – paragraph 1 – subparagraph 1
The Commission shall make available to the Member States a list of all competent national authorities and publish this information in the Official Journal of the European Union.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 332 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 11 – paragraph 2
2. Member States shall require that national competent authorities exchange any information that is essential or relevant to the exercise of their functions and duties through a network established under the responsibility of the EU CBAM authority.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 337 #
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 339 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 12 – paragraph 1
The CommissionEU CBAM authority shall be assisted by the competent national authorities in carrying out their obligations under this Regulation and coordinate their activities.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 342 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 13 – paragraph 1
All information acquired by the central and national competent authorityies in the course of performing itstheir dutyies which is by its nature confidential or which is provided on a confidential basis shall be covered by an obligation of professional secrecy. Such information shall not be disclosed by the competent authority without the express permission of the person or authority that provided it. It may be shared with customs authorities, the Commission and the European Public Prosecutors Office and shall be treated in accordance with Council Regulation (EC) No 515/97.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 349 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 14 – paragraph 3
3. The information in the database referred to in paragraph 2 shall be confidentialmade available to the public, unless it is proven that it is business confidential according to the relevant EU legislation. Non- confidential summaries must be included with confidential information. Information equivalent to the one made publicly available for EU producers under the EU ETS central database shall be made public.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 351 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 14 – paragraph 4
4. The CommissionEU CBAM authority shall establish a central database accessible to the public containing the names, addresses and contact details of the operators and the location of installations in third countries in accordance with Article 10(2). An operator may choose not to have its name, address and contact details accessible to the public.The central database should insofar as possible, mirror the ETS database
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 352 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 15 – paragraph 1
1. The CommissionEU CBAM authority shall act as central administrator to maintain an independent transaction log recording the purchase of CBAM certificates, their holding, surrender, re-purchase and cancellation and ensure coordination of national registries.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 355 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 15 – paragraph 3
3. If irregularities are identified as a result of the controls carried out under paragraph 2, the Commission shall inform the Member State or Member States concerned for further investigation in order to correct the identified irregularities. Identified irregularities shall be corrected as soon as possible from their identification and, where appropriate, penalties pursuant to article 27 shall apply.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 358 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 16 – paragraph 1
1. The national competent authority shall assign to each authorised declarant a unique CBAM account number which will be registered with the EU CBAM Authority.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 359 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 17 – paragraph 1 – introductory part
1. The national competent authority shall authorise a declarant who submits an application for authorisation in accordance with Article 5(1), if the following conditions are fulfilled:
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 361 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 17 – paragraph 1 – point a
(a) the declarant hasand the operators of installations located in third countries from whom the declarants sources goods have respectively not been involved in a serious infringement or repeated infringements of customs legislation, circumvention of antidumping or antisubsidy duties, taxation rules and market abuse rules and has no record of serious criminal offences relating to its economic activity during the five years preceding the application;
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 366 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 17 – paragraph 2
2. Where the national competent authority finds that the conditions listed in paragraph 1 are not fulfilled, or where the applicant has failed to provide the information listed in Article 5(3), the authorisation of the declarant shall be refused.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 367 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 17 – paragraph 3
3. If the national competent authority refuses to authorise a declarant, the declarant requesting the authorisation may, prior to an appeal, object to the relevant authority under national law, who shall either instruct the national administrator to open the account or uphold the refusal in a reasoned decision, subject to requirements of national law that pursue a legitimate objective compatible with this Regulation and are proportionate.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 368 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 17 – paragraph 4 – introductory part
4. A decision of the competent national authority authorising a declarant shall contain the following information
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 370 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 17 – paragraph 6 – introductory part
6. The competent national authority shall require the provision of a guarantee in order to authorise a declarant in accordance with paragraph 1, if the declarant was not established throughout the two financial years that precede the year when the application in accordance with Article 5(1) was submitted.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 371 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 17 – paragraph 6 – subparagraph 1
The competent national authority shall fix the amount of such guarantee at the maximum amount, as estimated by the competent authority, of the value of the CBAM certificates that the authorised declarant have to surrender, in accordance with Article 22.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 372 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 17 – paragraph 7
7. The guarantee shall be provided as a bank guarantee, payable at first demand, by a financial institution operating in the Union or by another form of guarantee which provides equivalent assurance. Where the competent national authority establishes that the guarantee provided does not ensure, or is no longer certain or sufficient to ensure the amount of CBAM obligations, it shall require the authorised declarant either to provide an additional guarantee or to replace the initial guarantee with a new guarantee, according to its choice.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 373 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 17 – paragraph 8
8. The competent national authority shall release the guarantee immediately after 31 May of the second year in which the authorised declarant has surrendered CBAM certificates in accordance with Article 22.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 375 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 17 – paragraph 9
9. The competent national authority shall revoke the authorisation for a declarant who no longer meets the conditions laid down in paragraph 1, or who fails to cooperate with that authority.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 376 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 18 – paragraph 2
2. In addition to paragraph 1, a national accreditation body may on request accredit a person as a verifier under this Regulation after checking the documentation attesting its capacity to apply the verification principles referred to Annex V to perform the obligations of control of the embedded emissions established in Articles 8, 10 and 38.deleted
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 378 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 18 – paragraph 3
3. The Commission is empowered to adopt delegated acts in accordance with Article 28 for the accreditation referred to in paragraph 2, specifying conditions for the control and oversight of accredited verifiers, for the withdrawal of accreditation and for mutual recognition and peer evaluation of the accreditation bodies.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 380 #
1. The competententral and national authorityies may review the CBAM declaration within the period ending with the fourth year after the year in which the declaration should have been submitted. The review may consist in verifying the information provided in the CBAM declaration on the basis of the information communicated by the customs authorities in accordance with Article 25(2) and any other relevant evidence, and on the basis of any audit deemed necessary, including at the premises of the authorised declarant.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 382 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 19 – paragraph 1 – point 1 (new)
(1) The national competent authority shall inform the EU CBAM authority of the quantity and installation source of the exports. The EU CBAM authority shall inform the Commission of the data received so as to allow the Commissionto to make adjustments to the allowances to be surrendered for the intallation source of the exports.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 387 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 19 – paragraph 2
2. Where a CBAM declaration in accordance with Article 6 has not been submitted, the competent authority of the Member State of establishment of the authorised declarant shall assess the CBAM obligations of that declarant on the basis of the information at its disposal and calculate the total number of CBAM certificates due at the latest by the 31 December of the fourth year following that when the CBAM declaration should have been submitted.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 408 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 26 – paragraph 4 a (new)
4 a. In case of repeated failure to surrender a number of CBAM certificates corresponding to the emissions embedded in goods imported during the previous year, or in case of submission of false information in the CBAM declaration, an authorized declarant, and any of its related parties, maybe automatically excluded from the register for a given period from the date of exclusion. The respective verifier – and any of its related parties - who has certified the accuracy of the information in the CBAM declaration should have its certification withdrawn by the central CBAM authority.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 411 #
Proposal for a regulation
Recital 40
(40) An authorised declarant should be allowed to claim a reduction in the number of CBAM certificates to be surrendered corresponding to the carbon price already paid for those emissions in other jurisdictions, but only if such jurisdictions make provision for a free energy market.
2022/02/15
Committee: ENVI
Amendment 412 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 26 – paragraph 5
5. Member StatesThe central CBAM authority may apply administrative or criminal sanctions for failure to comply with the CBAM legislation in accordance with their national rules in addition to penalties referred to in paragraphs 2 and 4a. Such sanctions shall be effective, proportionate and dissuasive.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 417 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 27 – paragraph 2
2. Practices of circumvention include situations where a change in the pattern of trade in relation to goods included in the scope of this Regulation whether slightly modified or not, stems from a practice, process or work, has insufficient due cause or economic justification other than avoiding obligations as laid down in this Regulation and consist in replacing those goods with slightly modified products, which are not included in the list of goods in Annex I but belong to a sector included in the scope of this Regulation.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 419 #
2 a. The practice, process or work referred to in the first subparagraph include, inter alia: (a) the slight modification of the product concerned to make it fall under customs codes which are normally not subject to the obligations of this Regulation, provided that the modification does not alter its essential characteristics; (b) false declarations as to the identity of the producer of the product concerned or of the nature of the product concerned or the production process involved in making it; (c) the consignement of the product concerned via third countries to which no or more favourable obligations apply; (d) the reorganisation by exporters or producers of their patterns and channels of sales in order to eventually avoid obligations as laid down in this Regulation,or undermine their effects, including on overall GHG emissions and on prices of the like products, for instance via practices of resource shuffling;For thepurpose of this point, resource shuffling shall be defined as any practice, process or work that have insufficient due cause or economic justification other than avoiding obligations as laid down in this Regulation, or undermining their effects, without delivering environmental benefits on global GHGemissions; (e) any other measure to eventually avoid or evade obligations as laid down in this Regulation, or undermine their effects, including onoverall GHG;
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 429 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 27 – paragraph 3
3. A Member State or any party affected or benefitted by the situations described in paragraph 2 may notify the Commission if it is confronted, over a two-month period compared with the same period in the preceding year with a significant decrease in the volume of imported goods included in the scope of this Regulation and an increase of volume of imports of slightly modified products, which are not included in the list of goods in Annex I. The Commission shall continually monitor any significant change of pattern of trade of goods and slightly modified products at Union level.deleted
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 434 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 27 – paragraph 3 a (new)
3 a. Following a notification from a Member State, an interested party or on its own initiative, the Commission may decide, following an investigation, to extend obligations laid down in this regulation, in whatever way is necessary to prevent future circumvention of the mechanism, when circumvention of the measures in force is taking place.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 434 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 10 a (new)
Article 10 a Export adjustment to reduce the risk of carbon leakage and associated increases in global emissions 1. An export adjustment shall be granted to operators of installations subject to Directive 2003/87 for goods manufactured in the EU listed in Annex I and that are exported to third countries and territories other than those listed in Annex II, Section A. 2. The amount of the export adjustment shall be equal to the Euro value of the CBAM certificates published in accordance with Article 22(2) during the calendar week of export of the exported goods, multiplied by default values based on the average emission intensity of the 10 percent best performing EU installations for that type of good, multiplied by tons of goods falling within the scope of paragraph 1. This calculation shall take also into account ETS benchmarking methodologies already established for which the denominator is not expressed in tons of goods (e.g., for refined products and steam-cracking),as well as other alternative methodologies, to the extent applicable. 3. Notwithstanding paragraph 2, where goods within the scope of paragraph 1 are produced in EU installations with an emission intensity that is lower than the default value for that type of product as set pursuant to paragraph 2, the amount of the export adjustment shall be calculated based on the actual embedded emissions per ton of product calculated in accordance with the methodology of points 2 and 3 of Annex III. 4.The export adjustment shall be reduced to reflect the extent to which EU ETS allowances continue to be allocated free of charge in accordance with Article 10a of Directive 2003/87 to operators of installations producing the goods listed in Annex I in the Union. 5. The European Commission is empowered to adopt implementing acts, in accordance with the examination procedure referred to in Article 29(2), establishing methodologies to define the amount of the export adjustment in accordance with paragraph 2 and 3. 6. The European Commission is empowered to adopt delegated acts, in accordance with Article 28, defining the procedures and requirements to grant an export adjustment under paragraph 1 in accordance with paragraphs 2, 3, and 4 and the methodologies defined in accordance with paragraph 5. 7. When drafting the implementing and delegated acts of paragraphs 5 and 6 above, the Commission shall give all interested parties and third countries an opportunity to comment. 8. The European Commission shall regularly assess, on a third country or group of countries basis, whether EU producers continue to require the export adjustment of paragraph 1 in order to prevent the risk of carbon leakage. In doing so, the Commission shall monitor and consult with third countries on the extent to which they adopt carbon prices and equivalent measures comparable to that in the Union, with special attention to interrelated carbon leakage protection measures, taking into account the principle of common but differentiated responsibilities and respective capabilities, in the light of different national circumstances. On the basis of this assessment, by December 2025 [i.e., end of transitional period] and every five years thereafter, the Commission shall present a report on the progress made by third countries and the extent to which a Union export adjustment continues to be necessary. Where justified, the European Commission shall present to the European Parliament and Council a legislative proposal suspending the export adjustment or introducing any necessary modifications.
2022/02/08
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 437 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 27 – paragraph 5
5. Where the Commission, taking into account the relevant data, reports and statistics, including when provided by the customs authorities of Member States, has sufficient reasons to believe that the circumstances referred to in paragraph 3 are occurring in one or more Member States, it is empowered to adopt delegated acts in accordance with Article 28 to supplement the scope of this Regulation in order to include slightly modified products for anti-circumvention purposes.deleted
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 445 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 27 – paragraph 5 a (new)
5 a. Decisions referred to in the third paragraph shall be subject to theappeal procedure as set out in Article 30.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 446 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 27 – paragraph 5 b (new)
5 b. The Commission shall always investigate possible circumvention when notified by a Member State or an interested party. Initiations shall be made by means of a Commission regulation which shall also instruct customs authorities of Member States to subject imports to registration. The Commission shall provide information to the Member States once a party or a Member State has submitted a request to initiate an investigation and the Commission has completed its analysis thereof, or where the Commission has itself determined that there is a need to initiate an investigation.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 449 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 27 – paragraph 5 c (new)
5 c. Investigations shall be carried out by the Commission. The Commission may be assisted by customs authorities and the investigation shall be concluded in due time.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 451 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 27 – paragraph 5 d (new)
5 d. The Commission Decision finding circumvention shall impose a penalty pursuant to article 26 on an Authorised Declarant involved in the circumvention and, if appropriate, the operator of the installation located in the third country that is linked to the Authorised Declarant. Where appropriate, the penalty shall also entail the withdrawal of import authorisation and be extended to the operator.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 453 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 27 a (new)
Article 27 a Absorption 1. If any party submits sufficient evidence that, following the entry into force of this Regulation, an Authorised Declarant has been absorbing the cost of the CBAM Certificates, resulting in no or insufficient movement in the resale prices or subsequent selling prices of the imported product in the Union, and that such a situation has insufficient due cause or economic justification other than undermining the effects of the obligations as laid down in this Regulation, the Commission shall open an investigation. Once a party has presented sufficient evidence justifying the opening of an inquiry and the Commission hasfinished its study, the Commission will inform the Member States. 2. The investigation may also be opened, under the conditions set out in the first subparagraph, on the initiative of the Commission or at the request of a Member State. 3. During an investigation pursuant to this Article, any interested party shall be provided with an opportunity to clarify the situation with regard to resale prices and subsequent selling prices. 4. Investigations shall be carried out by the Commission. The Commission may be assisted by customs authorities and the investigation shall be concluded within in due time. 5. If it is concluded that the obligations as laid down in this Regulation should have led to movements in such prices, the Commission shall take appropriate measures to re-establish the effectiveness of the obligations as set out in this Regulation. Such measures imposed pursuant to this Article shall not exceed the amount of the penalties as set out in Article 26.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 461 #
1. The Commission shall be assisted by the CBAM Committee. The committee shall be a committee within the meaning of Regulation (EU) No 182/2011. The CBAM committee should include representatives from enterprises affected by the Regulation to ensure transparency, as well as mitigate risk of litigation and possible trade disputes.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 473 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 30 – paragraph 2
2. Before the end of the transitional period, the Commission shall present a report to the European Parliament and the Council on the application of this Regulation. The report shall contain, in particular, an in-depthe assessment ofdeveloped in cooperation with the sectors at risk of carbon leakage covered by this regulation of the rules to be applied in the testing period established pursuant art. 30bis and the possibilities to further extend the scope of embedded emissions to indirect emissions and to other goods at risk of carbon leakage than those already covered by this Regulation, as well as an assessment of the governance system as well as an assessment of the impact on competitiveness of the EU downstream industry. It shall also contain the assessment of the possibility to further extend the scope to embedded emissions of transportation services as well as to goods further down the value chain and services that may be subject to the risk of carbon leakage in the future. Such an extension should be considered only if a clear calculation methodology has been established by the Commission and once the mechanism has proven fully effective in terms of achieving its objective of carbon leakage protection.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 494 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 30 a (new)
Article 30 a Before phasing out free allocation to sectors at risk of carbon leakage covered by this rule, the Commission will monitor and assess the mechanism's efficacy in terms of the risk of carbon leakage. To this purpose, the Commission shall publish a report to the European Parliament and the Council, following consultation with the sectors subject by this Regulation,evaluating: a. the first three years (2026-2028) of thesurrendering obligation pursuant to article 22; b. the risk of carbon leakage on export markets. If the assessment is positive, the report shall be accompanied by a legislativeproposal to phase out free allocation to sectors subject to this regulation and to adopt a solution to mitigate the risk of carbon leakage on the export market.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 506 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 35 – paragraph 2 – point d
(d) the carbon price due in a country of origin for the embedded emissions in the imported goods, which is not subject to an export rebate or other form of compensation on exportation.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 510 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 36 – paragraph 3 – point a
(a) Articles 32 to 34 shall apply until 31 December 2025the end of the year the commission has evaluated the application of this Regulation, reported to the European Parliament and the Council and the European Parliament has given its consent to the full application of the CBAM including the financial adjustment.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 522 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 36 – paragraph 3 – point d
(d) Articles 4, 6, 7, 8, 9, 14, 15, 16, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27 and 31 shall apply from 1 January 2026of the year after the commission has evaluated the application of this Regulation, reported to the European Parliament and the Council and the European Parliament has given its consent to the full application of the CBAM including the financial adjustment.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 542 #
Proposal for a regulation
Annex III – point 3 – paragraph 2 – introductory part
Where AttrEmg are the attributed emissions of goods g, and ALg the activity level of the goods, the latter being the amount of goods produced in the reporting period in that installation, and EEInpMat are the embedded emissions of the input materials (precursors) consumed in the production process. Only input materials listed as relevant to the system boundaries of the production process as specified in the implementing act adopted pursuant to Article 7(6) are to be considered. The implementing act pursuant to Article 7 (6) shall include all input materials that contribute significantly to GHG emissions. In the case of stainless steel (CN codes 7218-7223), ferro-alloys shall be included in the list of input materials as they fulfil this criterion. The relevant EEInpMat are calculated as follows:
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 545 #
Proposal for a regulation
Annex III – point 4 – point 4.1 – paragraph 1
When actual emissions cannot be adequately determined by the authorised declarant, default values shall be used. These values shall be set at the average emission intensity of each exporting country and for each of the goods listed in Annex I other than electricity, increased by a mark-up, the latter to be determined in the implementing acts of this Regulation. When reliable data for the exporting country cannot be applied for a type of goods, the default values shall be based on the tenfold average emission intensity of the 10 per cent worst performing EU installations for that type of goods.
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 547 #
Proposal for a regulation
Annex III – point 6
6. Adaptation of default values based on region specific features Default values can be adapted to particular areas, regions of countries where specific characteristics prevail in terms of objective factors such as geography, natural resources, market conditions, energy mix, or industrial production. When data adapted to those specific local characteristics are available and can define more targeted default values, the latter may be used instead of default values based on EU installations. Where declarants for goods originating in a third country, or a group of third countries can demonstrate, on the basis of reliable data, that alternative region specific adaptation of default values are lower than the default values defined by the Commission the former can be used.deleted
2021/12/16
Committee: INTA
Amendment 558 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 1 – paragraph 3
3. The mechanism willcould progressively become, after 2030 and only if the data gathered in the period 2026- 2028 show the CBAM to effectively protect against carbon leakage and if an export protection mechanism has been successfully introduced, an alternative to the mechanisms established under Directive 2003/87/EC to prevent the risk of carbon leakage, notably the allocation of allowances free of charge in accordance with Article 10a of that Directive.
2022/02/15
Committee: ENVI
Amendment 594 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 2 – paragraph 5 – point b a (new)
(ba) The carbon costs of imported products are completely equivalent to those under the EU’s ETS;
2022/02/15
Committee: ENVI
Amendment 616 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 27 – paragraph 2
2. Practices of circumvention include situations where a change in the pattern of trade in relation to goods included in the scope of this Regulation, whether slightly modified or not, stems from a practice, process or work that have has insufficient due cause or economic justification other than avoiding obligations as laid down in this Regulation and consist in replacing those goods with slightly modified products, which are not included in the list of goods in Annex I but belong to a sector included in the scope of this Regulation, or undermining their effects, including on overall GHG emissions and on prices of the like products.
2022/02/08
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 618 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 27 – paragraph 2 – point 1 (new)
(1) The practice, processor work referred to in the first subparagraph include, inter alia:
2022/02/08
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 618 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 2 – paragraph 11
11. The Commission is empowered to adopt delegated acts in accordance with Article 28should submit a proposal to the European Parliament and the EU Council to amend the lists in Annex II, Sections A or B, depending on whether the conditions in paragraphs 5, 7 or 9 are satisfied. Before that proposal is submitted, the European Commission should conduct a detailed consultation with stakeholders.
2022/02/15
Committee: ENVI
Amendment 619 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 27 – paragraph 2 – subparagraph 1 (new)
(a) the slight modification of a product to make it fall under another customs code which are not subject to the obligations of this Regulation; b) false declarations regarding identity of the producer, the product concerned, the nature of the product concerned or the production process; (c) the consignment of the product concerned via third countries where no or more favourable obligations apply; (d) the reorganisation by exporters or producers of their patterns and channels of sales in order to avoid obligations of this Regulation, or undermine their effects, for instance via practices of resource shuffling. Resource shuffling shall be defined as any practice, process or work that that have insufficient due cause or economic justification other than avoiding obligations as laid down in this Regulation, or undermining their effects, without delivering environmental benefits on global GHG emissions; (e) in the circumstances indicated in paragraph 2, the assembly of parts by an assembly operation in the Union or a third country.
2022/02/08
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 652 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 30 – paragraph 2
2. Before the end of the transitional 2. period, the Commission shall present a report to the European Parliament and the Council on the application of this Regulation. The report shall contaThe Commission should evaluate the application of this Regulation before the end of the administrative transitional period and report to the European Parliament and the Council. The first report of the Commission should in particular focus on possibilities to enhance climate actions towards the objective of a climate neutral Union by 2050. The Commission should, as part of that evaluation, initiate collection of information necessary to possibly extend the scope of Annex I to indirect emissions, as well as to other goods and services at risk of carbon leakage, such as finished goods, and to develop methods of calculating embedded emissions based on the environmental footprint methods: (a) the impact on competitiveness of European industry and downstream industry, impact on SMEs, possible disproportionate administrative burden, possible circumvention practices, distortion in trade patterns and possibilities to enhance climate actions towards a climate neutral Union by 2050. Accompanied by proposals to avoid negative impact on such sectors; (b) a proposal to avoid possible carbon leakage in export markets; (c) a proposal to extend the scope of this Regulation to finished goods containing goods listed in Annex I; to ensure competitiveness of European manufacturin,g in particular,dustry and prevent carbon leakage; (d) the assessment of the possibilities to further extend the scope of embedded emissions to indirect emissions and to other goods at risk of carbon leakage than those already covered by this Regulation, as well as an assessment of the governance system. It shall also contain the assessment of the possibility to further extend the scope to embedded emissions of transportation services as well as to goods further down the value chain and services that may be subject to the risk of carbon leakage in the future.
2022/02/08
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 667 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 30 – paragraph 2 a (new)
2a. During the comprehensive transitional period, biannual between 2025-2030 and every year thereafter until 2035 the Commission shall evaluate the application of this Regulation and report to the European parliament and the Council. The Commission should in particular focus on: (a) the impact on European industry and downstream industry of sectors listed in Annex I, as well as on SMEs and possible additional administrative burden for SMEs; (b) the effectiveness of this Regulation in reducing carbon leakage and possible circumvention practices; and (c) the impact of CBAM on Union trade of goods listed in Annex I and possible distortion in trade patterns;
2022/02/08
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 695 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 31 – paragraph 2 a (new)
2a. For the first years of operation of this Regulation, the production of products listed in Annex I shall benefit from free allocation in reduced amounts. A factor reducing the free allocation for the production of those products shall be applied (CBAM factor). The CBAM factor shall be equal to 100 % for the period between 2026 and the end of 2030, 80 % in 2031 and shall be reduced by 20 percentage points each year to reach 0 % by the fifth year.
2022/02/08
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 695 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 6 – paragraph 2 – point c a (new)
(ca) the emissions verification report, including the details of the verifier;
2022/02/15
Committee: ENVI
Amendment 743 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 9 – paragraph 1
1. An authorised declarant may claim in its CBAM declaration a reduction in the number of CBAM certificates to be surrendered in order for the carbon price paid in the country of origin for the declared embedded emissions to be taken into account. The reduction may only be granted to countries operating in a free energy market, so as to ensure a genuine level playing field.
2022/02/15
Committee: ENVI
Amendment 758 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 9 – paragraph 2
2. The authorised declarant shall keep records of the documentation, certified by an independent personaccredited verifier, required to demonstrate that the declared embedded emissions were subject to a carbon price in the country of origin of the goods and keep evidence of the proof of the actual payment for that carbon price, which should not have been subject to an export rebate or any other form of compensation on exportation.
2022/02/15
Committee: ENVI
Amendment 775 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 10 – paragraph 1
1. The Commission shall, upon request by a register the information on operators of an installations located in a third country, register the information on that operator and on itsies and on their installations in athe central database referred to in Article 14(4).
2022/02/15
Committee: ENVI
Amendment 777 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 10 – paragraph 6
6. The records referred to in paragraph 5, point (c), shall be sufficiently detailed to enable the verification in accordance with paragraph 5, point (b), and to enable any competent authority to conduct audits and review, in accordance with Article 19(1), the CBAM declaration made by an authorised declarant to whom the relevant information was disclosed in accordance with paragraph 8.
2022/02/15
Committee: ENVI
Amendment 784 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 10 – paragraph 7
7. An operator mayust disclose the information on the verification of embedded emissions referred to in paragraph 5 to an authorised declarant. The authorised declarant shall be entitled to avail itself of that disclosed information to fulfil the obligation referred to in Article 8.
2022/02/15
Committee: ENVI
Amendment 794 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 10 a (new)
Article 10a Export adjustment to reduce the risk of carbon leakage and associated increases in global emissions 1. An export adjustment shall be granted to operators of installations subject to Directive 2003/87/EC for goods manufactured in the EU listed in Annex I and that are exported to third countries and territories other than those listed in Annex II, Section A. 2. The amount of the export adjustment shall be equal to the Euro value of the CBAM certificates published in accordance with Article 22(2) during the calendar week of export of the exported goods, multiplied by default values based on the average emission intensity of the 10 percent best performing Union installations for that type of good, multiplied by tons of goods falling within the scope of paragraph 1 of this Article. That calculation shall take also into account EU ETS benchmarking methodologies already established for which the denominator is not expressed in tons of goods, for example refined products and steam-cracking, as well as other alternative methodologies, to the extent applicable. 3. Notwithstanding paragraph 2, where goods within the scope of paragraph 1 are produced in Union installations with an emission intensity that is lower than the default value for that type of product as set pursuant to paragraph 2, the amount of the export adjustment shall be calculated based on the actual embedded emissions per tonne of product calculated in accordance with the methodology of points 2 and 3 of Annex III. 4.The export adjustment shall be reduced to reflect the extent to which EU ETS allowances continue to be allocated free of charge in accordance with Article 10a of Directive 2003/87/EC to operators of installations producing the goods listed in Annex I in the Union. 5. The Commission is empowered to adopt implementing acts, in accordance with the examination procedure referred to in Article 29(2), establishing methodologies to define the amount of the export adjustment in accordance with paragraph 2 and 3 of this Article. 6. The Commission is empowered to adopt delegated acts, in accordance with Article 28, defining the procedures and requirements to grant an export adjustment under paragraph 1 of this Article in accordance with paragraphs 2, 3, and 4 of this Article and the methodologies defined in accordance with paragraph 5 of this Article. 7. When drafting the implementing and delegated acts referred to in paragraphs 5 and 6 respectively, the Commission shall give all interested parties and third countries an opportunity to comment. 8. The Commission shall regularly assess, on a third country or group of countries basis, whether Union producers continue to require the export adjustment of paragraph 1 in order to prevent the risk of carbon leakage. In doing so, the Commission shall monitor and consult with third countries on the extent to which they adopt carbon prices and equivalent measures comparable to that in the Union, with special attention to interrelated carbon leakage protection measures, taking into account the principle of common but differentiated responsibilities and respective capabilities, in the light of different national circumstances. On the basis of this assessment, by [ end of transitional period] and every five years thereafter, the Commission shall present a report on the progress made by third countries and the extent to which a Union export adjustment continues to be necessary. Where appropriate, the Commission shall present to the European Parliament and to the Council a legislative proposal suspending the export adjustment or introducing any necessary modifications.
2022/02/15
Committee: ENVI
Amendment 1186 #
Proposal for a regulation
Article 30 a (new)
Article 30a The Commission shall review the functioning of the CBAM on the basis of the data gathered in the period 2026-2028 with a view to assessing its effectiveness in protecting industries against the risk of carbon leakage and its impact on the security of national supply and on value chains. In 2029, the Commission shall submit a report to the European Parliament and the Council on the effectiveness of the CBAM on the basis of the impact assessment conducted on the data gathered in the period 2026-2028, and shall also do so whenever the assessment of the effectiveness of the CBAM in addressing carbon leakage dictates that EU ETS allowances should continue to be allocated free of charge pursuant to Article 10a of Directive 2003/87/EC in order to prevent the risk of carbon leakage post-2030. The report shall also cover the mechanism established to protect exports.
2022/03/16
Committee: ENVI