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
Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism is triggering caution among EU importers — and Serbian exporters are feeling the effects
The European Union’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) was conceived as a climate policy tool designed to prevent carbon leakage and level the playing field between European industry and forei
Serbian exporters race to prepare for Europe’s carbon border regime
European climate policy is beginning to reshape the competitive landscape for manufacturers beyond the European Union’s borders. For Serbian exporters whose products depend heavily on energy-intensive
Industrial electricity procurement under CBAM: Renewable sourcing strategies and competitive positioning in CSEE
The introduction of the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) is rapidly transforming the strategic landscape for industrial electricity procurement across Central and South-East Europe. While CBA
CBAM and the EU emissions trading system: Structural implications for power markets in CSEE
The European Union’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) represents one of the most consequential structural reforms of the continent’s climate policy architecture since the creation of the EU E
Renewables, PPAs and Guarantees of Origin: Serbia’s 1.5 TWh CBAM electricity challenge
Serbia’s quantified exporter green-electricity gap of 0.4–1.4 TWh per year is best treated as a build programme with a proof layer, not as a policy slogan. The number matters because it represents the
Serbia’s CBAM electricity constraint: Company-level green power demand, attribute scarcity and the new logic of exporter-anchored renewables
Serbia’s CBAM exposure is often discussed as if it were a reporting problem that sits inside customs paperwork and corporate sustainability departments. In reality, from 2026 onward, it behaves more l
CBAM pressure on Serbia’s electricity exports and RES producers, and the industrial case for owning green power
From 1 January 2026, electricity imported into the EU from Energy Community Contracting Parties is explicitly within CBAM’s scope, creating an administrative and financial layer on cross-border power
CBAM and Serbia’s industrial crossroads: Export exposure, renewable power constraints and the prospect of green metals by 2030
The European Union’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) has begun reshaping the competitive landscape for heavy industry across Europe’s neighboring economies. For Serbia, whose industrial base

