Hall Chadwick ESG
Reading the Signals Behind a Potential Delay of the EU CBAM: Should Taiwanese Exporters Continue Transforming or Wait and See? Financial Strategies for ‘International Carbon Border Taxes
In recent months, a new narrative has started to circulate in the market:
“It seems the EU CBAM may be postponed until 2027. Does that mean we can afford to wait and see?”
Many Taiwanese exporters—particularly in steel, aluminum, cement, chemicals, and other energy-intensive manufacturing sectors—are quietly weighing the same question:
should capital expenditures be put on hold, at least for now?
From the perspective of an accountant and financial advisor, I would put it bluntly:
a delay is not a cancellation—and waiting may ultimately prove to be the most expensive option of all.
“It seems the EU CBAM may be postponed until 2027. Does that mean we can afford to wait and see?”
Many Taiwanese exporters—particularly in steel, aluminum, cement, chemicals, and other energy-intensive manufacturing sectors—are quietly weighing the same question:
should capital expenditures be put on hold, at least for now?
From the perspective of an accountant and financial advisor, I would put it bluntly:
a delay is not a cancellation—and waiting may ultimately prove to be the most expensive option of all.
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