Secure Your EU
Exports with Expert

CBAM Reporting
in Lucknow

Are you exporting Steel, Aluminum, Cement, or Chemicals from India to the European Union? Ensure seamless trade and keep your EU buyers happy with our end-to-end CBAM compliance advisory.

Get a Free CBAM Assessment

Find out how CBAM impacts your specific exports.

Our Lucknow-based team will contact you within 24 hours.

150+

CBAM Reports Filed

100%

EU Compliance Rate

50+

Lucknow Clients

0

Penalties Incurred

Why Lucknow Exporters Trust Us

We bridge the gap between Indian manufacturing realities and strict European Union environmental regulations.

EU-India Expertise

We understand both the Indian industrial landscape and the exact formatting the EU CBAM Transitional Registry demands from your EU buyers.

Data Confidentiality

Your manufacturing data and emission metrics are kept strictly confidential, ensuring your competitive advantage remains secure.

Competitive Edge

By providing accurate, verified CBAM data, you become the preferred, hassle-free supplier for European importers.

CBAM Sectors We Cover

Our experts specialize in calculating and reporting embedded emissions for all carbon-intensive sectors regulated under the EU CBAM.

Iron Steel

Aluminum

Cement

Fertilizers

Chemicals

Electricity

Our Proven Methodology

A transparent, step-by-step process designed to minimize disruption to your daily operations.

Step 01

Data Collection

We securely gather facility and production data from your ERP or operational teams.

Step 02

Emission Calculation

Our experts calculate embedded emissions strictly following EU CBAM methodologies.

Step 03

Verification

Internal audits ensure 100% accuracy and compliance before any data is shared.

Step 04

EU Submission

We prepare the exact XML formats required for your EU buyers to submit to the registry.

Frequently Asked Questions

Everything you need to know about CBAM and our services.

What is CBAM?

The Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) is an EU regulation that puts a fair price on the carbon emitted during the production of carbon intensive goods that are entering the EU, and to encourage cleaner industrial production in non-EU countries.
Any EU importer of goods covered by CBAM (currently iron, steel, cement, fertilizers, aluminum, electricity, and hydrogen) must register as an authorized declarant and submit quarterly reports on the embedded emissions of their imports.
Our team of experts handles the end-to-end process. We collect emissions data directly from your global suppliers, calculate the embedded emissions according to strict EU methodologies, and prepare the exact documentation required for submission to the CBAM Transitional Registry.
Yes. Our consulting team analyzes your supply chain to identify high-emission hotspots. We provide actionable strategies to source from lower-emission suppliers or work with existing suppliers to reduce their carbon footprint, directly lowering your future CBAM certificate costs.
If you export aluminium, steel, iron, fertilisers, hydrogen, electrical energy, or cement to the EU, this concerns you. From 1 January 2025, all imports of these goods must come with detailed CBAM emissions reporting. The reporting must follow the EU’s CBAM methodology.

Failing to comply can trigger hefty CBAM fines of ₹900 to ₹4,500 per tonne of unreported CO₂.
Across India’s industrial belt, factory managers already juggle orders every Monday morning. Now, many must also prepare quarterly CBAM reports. It adds new pressure to already packed schedules. This is not just paperwork. Accurate reporting can decide whether your next big export order goes through.

Initially, CBAM EU applies to imports of the most carbon-intensive goods from specific sectors. The transitional phase, which began in October 2023, covers the following sectors:

  • Cement
  • Iron and Steel
  • Aluminium
  • Fertilisers
  • Electricity
  • Hydrogen

It also covers select downstream products, like screws and bolts, widening the compliance net. If your exports include these, compliance is unavoidable (CBAM goods list).

If your Indian company exports goods to the EU worth more than ₹13,500 (€150) a year, you are officially a CBAM declarant.

This means you need to report CBAM carbon data and buy CBAM certificates. It is not just the big multinationals headquartered in India. Even European subsidiaries of Indian companies importing CBAM goods fall under the same rules (PwC India, 2024).

Perhaps you’re already feeling a bit overwhelmed. You’re not alone.

Tracking emissions across multiple suppliers and facilities is overwhelming if done manually. Spreadsheets often fail.

Technology makes it manageable. Digital carbon accounting platforms, blockchain-based traceability, and AI-powered analytics automate calculations. They verify supplier data and generate audit-ready reports.

Several Indian startups and consulting firms now provide solutions tailored to local exporters. Beyond compliance, these tools offer insights into your CBAM carbon data.

Perhaps you discover that one supplier produces most of your emissions or that small changes in production save both costs and carbon.

Investing early in technology can turn regulatory pressure into a strategic advantage. What once felt like a headache becomes an opportunity.

Don't let CBAM compliance put your EU exports at risk.

Helping exporters in Lucknow stay compliant with EU CBAM rules—fast, accurate, and hassle-free.