
In less than two years, the EU's Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) will officially enter full implementation. This is no longer a story of the "future" – it is a real legal and financial risk that every business exporting goods to Europe must face.
From 2026, EU importers will have to purchase CBAM certificates corresponding to the carbon emissions of imported goods. From 2027, the pressure will shift back to Vietnamese suppliers in the form of:
✅ Requires transparent and verifiable emissions data.
✅ The calculation method must comply with EU standards.
✅ Reporting obligations can shift along the supply chain.
Legal and financial consequences: If reliable data cannot be provided, the importer is forced to apply a high default emission value – meaning soaring CBAM costs, eroded profit margins, and the risk of contract termination or unfavorable renegotiation.
The question for businesses is no longer "Will CBAM affect me?" but rather "How prepared am I?"
🔹 Has an emissions data management system been established yet?
🔹 Has a greenhouse gas inventory been conducted according to international standards?
🔹 Is there a roadmap for reducing emissions to protect long-term competitiveness?
🔹 Has it been clearly determined which party is responsible for making the declaration in the export contract?
This isn't just a technical issue – it's about compliance, risk management, and market protection.
📌 WEBINAR: "CBAM 2027 Pressure – What Should Businesses Do Starting Today?"
>>> Registration link: https://bit.ly/4uyjyO6
🗓 Time: 9:30 – 11:00, May 27, 2025
💻 Format: Online (Zoom)
🎯 For: Businesses exporting iron and steel, cement, aluminum, fertilizers, electronics, plastics, machinery, agricultural products, etc. to the EU.
Attend to understand: reporting obligations, required data, and priority action plans – before legal risks become actual damages.
👉 Register now – Limited spots available.

