News » Revised EU ETS state aid guidelines published
Revised EU ETS state aid guidelines published
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The European Commission published, on 21 September 2020, its revision of the EU ETS State Aid guidelines for the compensation of indirect carbon costs for the period 2021-2030. These revised guidelines are designed to support sectors that, like steel, are most at risk of carbon leakage.
The publication follows the recent Commission’s proposal on increasing the 2030 climate targets. In the absence of comparable efforts by trading partners, it is important to develop a strengthened framework of measures to address the risk of carbon leakage, with benchmark-based free allocation and indirect costs compensation, as well as an effective carbon border adjustment mechanism
Compensation for indirect costs incurred by the steel industry is an essential measure to mitigate the risk of carbon leakage due to the carbon costs passed on to the steel sector from the energy sector.
EUROFER has the following overall perspective on the revision:
The European steel sector is committed to emissions reduction, and compensation for indirect carbon costs forms an essential part of the policy framework necessary to ensure that the sector can continue to decarbonise whilst remaining globally competitive.
Industry welcomes the European Commission’s work on the development of a regulatory framework for CO₂ transport infrastructure, which will be critical to achieving the EU’s climate objectives and enabling the scale-up of Carbon Capture, Utilisation and Storage (CCUS) as part of an integrated value chain, including emitters, transport, storage operators, and CO2 offtakes for use in products.
Brussels, 19 May 2026: Europe’s steel industry has welcomed today’s approval by the European Parliament of the new EU steel trade measure, calling it an important step towards addressing the growing pressures facing the sector from record imports, global overcapacity and rising international protectionism.
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