CBAM and Pakistan Textiles: What the Carbon Border Adjustment Means for Your Factory
What Is CBAM and Why Should Pakistan Care?
The Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) is the EU's most consequential trade policy in a generation. Phased in from October 2023, with full financial obligations starting January 2026, CBAM requires importers of goods into the EU to purchase carbon certificates corresponding to the carbon price that would have been paid under EU carbon pricing rules had the goods been produced within the EU. In plain terms: if your factory in Pakistan emits more carbon per tonne of product than the EU benchmark, your EU buyer pays more — and passes that cost back to you in price negotiations.
For Pakistan's textile sector, CBAM is initially targeted at cement, steel, aluminium, fertilisers, electricity, and hydrogen — not textiles directly. However, the EU has explicitly confirmed that textiles will be added in a subsequent phase. Independent estimates, including from the Pakistan Institute of Development Economics (PIDE) and APTMA, suggest CBAM expansion to textiles could add an effective tariff equivalent of 5–12% to Pakistani garment exports to the EU by 2030.
CBAM Timeline: What Is Already Happening
Covered sectors: cement, iron, steel, aluminium, fertilisers, electricity, hydrogen. EU importers must start collecting production data from suppliers including carbon intensity per tonne of product.
Carbon price tracked against EU ETS (Emissions Trading Scheme) price — currently EUR 50–70 per tonne CO2. Pakistan steel and aluminium exporters face direct costs from this date.
The EU Commission review in 2025–2026 will determine timeline and scope. Factories with verified GHG inventories (ISO 14064-compliant) will be able to demonstrate lower embedded emissions — reducing their CBAM exposure.
How CBAM Will Be Calculated for Textiles (Projected)
Illustrative projection based on EUR 60/tonne CO2 and IPCC textile emission benchmarks. Not a financial forecast.
What Pakistani Textile Factories Should Do Now
The factories that will have the strongest position when CBAM reaches textiles are those that begin building verified carbon inventory data today. Here is a practical priority list:
- Commission a Scope 1 and Scope 2 energy audit — this is the foundation of all downstream carbon reporting.
- Begin collecting Scope 3 data from key suppliers — yarn mills and fabric producers represent 40–60% of your embedded carbon.
- Switch to solar for wet processing energy — dyeing and finishing are the largest controllable Scope 2 source.
- Engage an ISO 14064-accredited verifier — self-reported data will not satisfy CBAM requirements. Third-party verification will be mandatory.
- Document your baseline now — you need a 2024 or 2025 verified baseline to demonstrate improvement over time and claim lower-emission status under CBAM.
Further Reading
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