Hall Chadwick ESG
Net-Zero in Practice 2026: How Taiwanese Companies Should Reflect the First Year of Carbon Fee Implementation in Their Financial Statements
In January 2026, Taiwan will officially begin levying its carbon fee.
For many business owners, the first reaction is often, “Is this just another excuse for the government to collect money?”
But from an accountant’s perspective, there is an uncomfortable truth that needs to be stated clearly: the carbon fee is neither a slogan nor a sustainability branding issue. It is a real cost that will flow directly into the financial statements.
And in the first year, the biggest risk is not how much you pay. The real challenge lies in how the cost is recognized, when it is accrued, and whether it is accounted for correctly at all.
For many business owners, the first reaction is often, “Is this just another excuse for the government to collect money?”
But from an accountant’s perspective, there is an uncomfortable truth that needs to be stated clearly: the carbon fee is neither a slogan nor a sustainability branding issue. It is a real cost that will flow directly into the financial statements.
And in the first year, the biggest risk is not how much you pay. The real challenge lies in how the cost is recognized, when it is accrued, and whether it is accounted for correctly at all.
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- Sustainability Accounting
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- IFRS S2
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- Taiwan ESG Regulations 2025
- Corporate Accounting Advisory
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- Sustainability
- ESG
- Accounting
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- Hall Chadwick Taiwan