For Serbian exports into the EU, CBAM should be treated as a cross-border compliance chain, not only as a customs formality. The EU importer or its authorised indirect customs representative carries t
CBAM, PPAs and the new bankability model for wind, solar and battery storage
CBAM is quietly transforming the financing logic of renewable energy projects across Europe and especially throughout South East Europe. Until recently, wind, solar and battery-storage projects were f
CBAM is turning industrial verification into a strategic engineering discipline across South-East Europe
For much of the past two years, the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism was treated across South-East Europe as a future customs complication, an ESG reporting exercise or another Brussels-driven compl
CBAM is turning industrial verification into a strategic engineering discipline across South-East Europe
For much of the past two years, the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism was treated across South-East Europe as a future customs complication, an ESG reporting exercise or another Brussels-driven compl
CBAM 2026 forces Chinese manufacturers to reprice Europe—Serbia emerges as a strategic export platform
The introduction of the EU’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) in its definitive phase from 2026 marks a structural break in global manufacturing economics. For China-based exporters—particula
CBAM rewrites Serbia’s electricity export model, elevating renewables as the only competitive path into EU markets
The introduction of CBAM into EU electricity imports from January 2026 has fundamentally altered the economics of Serbia’s power exports. What was previously a spread-driven, largely price-based arbit
CBAM turns electricity into a measurable export cost across South-East Europe
The commercial meaning of electricity in South-East Europe has changed. For decades it was treated primarily as an input cost, volatile but manageable, important for margins but rarely decisive in str
CBAM turns electricity into a measurable export cost across South-East Europe
The commercial meaning of electricity in South-East Europe has changed. For decades it was treated primarily as an input cost, volatile but manageable, important for margins but rarely decisive in str
Europe’s Industrial Accelerator Act and the race to anchor low-carbon industry in South-East Europe
The European Commission’s proposed Industrial Accelerator Act (IAA) arrives at a moment when Europe’s industrial model is being re-engineered under simultaneous pressure from decarbonisation mandates,
Renewable power in Serbia becomes a trade instrument as CBAM rewrites industrial competitiveness
The role of renewable energy in Serbia is undergoing a quiet but profound transformation. What was until recently a straightforward electricity business—selling megawatt-hours into the wholesale marke

