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—particularly in steel, aluminium, cement, fertilisers and electricity-intensive goods—the shift is immediate and financial: carbon is no longer an externality, but a direct cost embedded in every tonne exported to Europe.
The analysis from China Briefing highlights a central reality. As CBAM moves beyond reporting into actual payments—through certificate purchases beginning in 2027—Chinese manufacturers face a widening cost gap driven by differences between EU carbon pricing and China’s domestic carbon system.
For exporters, this is not a marginal adjustment. It is a reconfiguration of competitiveness, particularly in carbon-intensive sectors where margins are already thin.
Against this backdrop, Serbia—and more broadly the Western Balkans—begins to emerge as a strategic workaround location for Chinese industrial capital.
CBAM impact: A structural cost shock for China-based manufacturing
The core mechanism of CBAM is straightforward but transformative. Importers into the EU must purchase carbon certificates reflecting the embedded emissions in imported goods, effectively aligning foreign producers with EU carbon pricing under the ETS.
For China-based manufacturers, this introduces three immediate pressures:
1. Direct cost increase
High-emission production—particularly coal-based steel and aluminium—faces additional per-tonne costs, eroding traditional price advantages.
2. Carbon transparency requirement
Exporters must provide verified emissions data, shifting from estimated to auditable carbon accounting systems.
3. Long-term competitiveness risk
As CBAM expands into downstream products (automotive components, machinery), exposure increases across entire value chains.
China is among the most exposed trading partners, with tens of billions of euros in exports affectedas CBAM scope expands.
The implication is clear: China-based production for EU markets becomes structurally less competitive unless decarbonised—or relocated.
Serbia as a CBAM arbitrage platform
This is where Serbia enters the equation.
Chinese companies establishing production in Serbia can, in principle, achieve a three-layer strategic advantage.
1. Avoidance of direct CBAM cost structures (Short–medium term)
Serbia is not part of the EU ETS system, nor fully integrated into CBAM’s internal carbon pricing architecture. This creates a temporary arbitrage window:
• Production in China → subject to full CBAM cost
• Production in Serbia → potentially lower embedded carbon pricing exposure
While CBAM still applies to imports into the EU regardless of origin, carbon accounting becomes project-specific rather than systemically penalised, allowing companies to:
• optimise emissions profiles at plant level
• use cleaner energy mixes selectively
• reduce certificate obligations
This shifts Chinese firms from high-average carbon intensity (China grid) to optimised marginal carbon intensity (Serbia-based assets).
2. Control over carbon footprint through asset-level engineering
Perhaps the most important advantage is control.
In China, manufacturers are constrained by:
• coal-heavy grid structures
• legacy industrial processes
• national carbon pricing frameworks still below EU levels
In Serbia, Chinese investors can design greenfield or semi-greenfield production assets with:
• renewable PPAs (wind, solar, hybrid systems)
• gas or lower-carbon baseload
• modern, energy-efficient processes
This allows them to produce “CBAM-optimised exports”, where:
• emissions per unit are reduced
• carbon certificates required at EU border are minimized
The difference is not marginal. Even partial decarbonisation can materially alter export economics under CBAM.
3. Nearshoring into the EU industrial perimeter
Serbia offers a geographic advantage that is becoming increasingly valuable under CBAM:
• proximity to EU markets
• integration into European logistics corridors
• preferential trade arrangements
This enables Chinese firms to reposition from:
“distant exporter with carbon penalty”
to
“nearshore producer with controlled emissions profile”
At the same time, EU policy is moving toward “Made in Europe” and local-content frameworks, increasing pressure on non-EU exporters.
Production in Serbia allows Chinese firms to partially align with these dynamics without fully relocating into higher-cost EU jurisdictions.
Sector-level implications
The benefits of Serbia-based production are not uniform—they are strongest in CBAM-covered and energy-intensive sectors.
Steel and metals
• High CBAM exposure
• Potential for electric arc furnace (EAF) + renewable integration
• Significant margin recovery vs China-based exports
Aluminium and processing
• Electricity-driven emissions → high optimisation potential via renewable sourcing
Cement and building materials
• Ability to blend lower-carbon inputs
• Reduced transport emissions due to proximity
Downstream manufacturing (next phase)
As CBAM expands, sectors such as:
• automotive components
• machinery
• fabricated metals
will increasingly benefit from localized, lower-carbon production hubs.
What Chinese companies can realistically achieve
If Chinese companies establish and scale production in Serbia, the strategic upside is substantial.
1. Margin recovery under CBAM
By reducing embedded carbon intensity, companies can:
• lower CBAM certificate costs
• restore price competitiveness in EU markets
• protect export volumes
In some cases, this could mean recovering double-digit percentage margins otherwise lost under CBAM pricing scenarios.
2. Creation of “CBAM-safe supply chains”
Chinese firms can reposition themselves as:
• compliant suppliers to EU industrial buyers
• partners in decarbonised value chains
This is particularly relevant for European OEMs facing their own Scope 3 emissions obligations.
3. Vertical integration opportunities
When combined with Chinese-owned industrial assets (e.g. mining, processing), Serbia enables:
• co-location of energy + production
• captive supply chains
• reduced exposure to volatile energy and carbon costs
This mirrors emerging models already visible in Eastern Serbia’s mining–energy nexus.
4. Strategic positioning ahead of CBAM expansion
CBAM is not static. Its expansion to downstream products is widely expected.
Early movers into Serbia-based production can:
• establish regulatory familiarity
• build verified carbon reporting systems
• secure market share before competitors adjust
Constraints and risks
The opportunity is significant, but not without constraints.
1. Regulatory convergence risk
Serbia’s eventual alignment with EU carbon pricing could narrow the arbitrage window over time.
2. Grid carbon intensity
If Serbian electricity remains partially coal-based, emissions benefits may be limited unless renewable sourcing is secured.
3. EU policy tightening
Local-content rules and industrial policy could increasingly favour production inside the EU, not just near it.
4. Financing and ESG scrutiny
Projects must meet European environmental and governance standards to access capital and markets.
Structural shift: From export model to location strategy
The deeper implication of CBAM is that it transforms manufacturing strategy itself.
Chinese companies exporting to Europe are no longer simply optimizing:
• labour cost
• scale
• logistics
They must now optimise:
• carbon cost per unit
• location of production relative to carbon regimes
• access to low-emission energy systems
Serbia fits into this equation as a transitional industrial platform—a location where Chinese capital can:
• maintain cost advantages
• reduce carbon exposure
• stay connected to EU markets
Emerging direction
CBAM is effectively redrawing industrial geography.
For Chinese manufacturers, the question is no longer whether to adapt—but where.
Production anchored in China for EU export is becoming structurally less competitive. Production relocated or expanded into EU-adjacent, lower-cost, controllable-carbon jurisdictions like Serbiaoffers a pathway to retain market access.
If executed at scale, this shift could turn Serbia into a key nearshoring node for Chinese industrial capital targeting Europe, particularly in carbon-intensive and energy-dependent sectors—linking Chinese investment strategy directly to the evolving architecture of EU climate policy.
Elevated by cbam.engineer
