Research

Industrial Decarbonisation Intelligence for India

Research

Twenty-six articles across six research clusters — covering CBAM compliance operations, India’s Carbon Credit Trading Scheme, steel decarbonisation economics, aluminium’s electricity-driven CBAM exposure, fertiliser green hydrogen pathways, and the power sector transition. All analysis is based on publicly available information, primary regulatory data, and independent interpretation. All data points are sourced and linked.

26 Articles published
6 Research clusters
5 Industrial sectors tracked
Apr 2026 Last updated
Breaking Analysis  ·  2 April 2026 The West Asia War and India’s Industrial Economy: Sector-by-Sector Impact Assessment

The Strait of Hormuz crisis that erupted on February 28, 2026 is transmitting cost and supply disruption across all five sectors Reclimatize tracks. Fertilisers face a critical LNG and sulphur shock — 86% of LNG for India’s urea plants sourced from West Asia; Qatar halted LNG exports March 4; urea prices globally surged 30–40%. Steel and aluminium exporters face freight costs three to five times higher. India’s 266 GW renewable portfolio — now 51% of installed power — is demonstrating its energy security advantage in real time. Read the full sector-by-sector assessment →

CBAM Cluster 7 Articles

The EU Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism entered its financially live definitive period on January 1, 2026. The first annual declaration is due September 30, 2027. This cluster covers the mechanism’s structure, the operational compliance process, and sector-specific cost and strategy implications for Indian steel, aluminium, fertilisers, and the broader trade policy response.

Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism and Its Impact on Indian Industry The mechanism, what it costs, which sectors face the most exposure, and why the decisions Indian industry makes now will determine competitive positioning through 2034.
How CBAM Works: A Practical Guide for Exporters Six operational steps from product classification and embedded emissions calculation through to the CBAM Registry, certificate surrender, and third-party verification under IR 2025/2547.
CBAM and Indian Steel: What the Carbon Levy Actually Costs and How to Respond India’s average BF-BOF emission intensity of 2.1 tCO₂/t sits 54% above the EU benchmark. ICRA estimates compliance costs of USD 60–165/t between 2026 and 2034. India bears 18% of total global CBAM steel costs — nearly double its EU import share.
CBAM and Indian Aluminium: Why Renewable Electricity Is Now a Trade Competitiveness Question Approximately 80% of Indian aluminium emissions come from captive coal plants. CBAM today covers Scope 1 only — but when indirect electricity emissions are included, the cost differential becomes transformative for coal-based producers.
CBAM and Indian Fertilisers: Green Ammonia, the Hydrogen Purchase Obligation and What Comes Next For green ammonia, CBAM exposure is zero — a direct financial premium for India’s green hydrogen transition at exactly the moment the National Green Hydrogen Mission needs it. AM Green’s Kakinada facility and what it means commercially.
India’s WTO Challenge to CBAM: The Legal Arguments, the Timeline and What It Means for Exporters India has raised CBAM at the WTO 29 times but has not filed a formal case. Four legal grounds, the EU’s defences, Russia’s DS639 precedent, and why building India’s domestic carbon market is the most strategically powerful response available to exporters right now.
India’s 2035 NDC and What It Actually Means for Industrial Decarbonisation India’s updated NDC — approved Union Cabinet March 25, 2026 — targets 47% emissions intensity reduction, 60% non-fossil capacity, and a 3.5–4 Bt carbon sink by 2035. What each target means for the five sectors Reclimatize tracks.
India CCTS Cluster 4 Articles

India’s Carbon Credit Trading Scheme is the most significant domestic climate market instrument launched since the PAT scheme. With 740 obligated entities across nine sectors and the first compliance years already running, the CCTS is creating both compliance obligations and CCC trading opportunities. This cluster covers how the scheme works, how it interacts with CBAM, and the operational MRV and verification requirements.

India’s Carbon Credit Trading Scheme: How the CCTS Works 740 obligated entities, nine sectors, gate-to-gate Scope 1 and Scope 2, FY 2023-24 baseline, intensity-based baseline-and-credit design, and the compliance calendar for FY 2025-26 and FY 2026-27. The complete structural overview.
India’s CCTS and CBAM: How the Carbon Price Offset Deduction Works The Omnibus provision under Regulation EU 2025/2083 that allows carbon prices paid in India under CCTS to reduce the net CBAM certificate obligation — and the stringent documentation trail that must be maintained to use it.
CCTS Compliance Operations: MRV, CCC Issuance and the Verification Bottleneck Only 50–60 Accredited Carbon Verification Agencies are available for CCTS verification in India. The MRV cycle, verification timeline, ACVA shortage risk, and how CCCs are issued on the Indian Carbon Market and traded on IEX and PXIL.
CCTS Offset Mechanism: Eight Approved Methodologies and How Project Registration Works BEE notified eight offset methodologies on March 28, 2025. BEE opened registration in June 2025. What each methodology covers, eligibility criteria, and what offset CCCs are worth relative to compliance CCCs.
Steel Cluster 5 Articles

India produced approximately 149–150 MMT of crude steel in 2024 and is targeting 300 MMT capacity by 2030. The sector faces simultaneous pressure from CBAM (on the export side), CCTS (domestically), and the structural imperative to decarbonise a production base that is 77% BF-BOF. This cluster covers the taxonomy, H₂-DRI economics, CBAM compliance operations, and the scrap-EAF opportunity.

India’s Green Steel Taxonomy: The 3, 4 and 5-Star Framework Gazette 763(E), December 2024. From 3-star (<2.2 tCO₂/t) to 5-star (<1.6 tCO₂/t). What each threshold requires and the procurement and compliance implications. H₂-DRI Economics for India’s Steel Sector The cost gap between NG-DRI (~Rs 45–55/kg H₂ equivalent) and green H₂-DRI, the investment case at different hydrogen price assumptions, and the West Asia energy security dimension. CBAM Compliance Operations for Steel Exporters CBAM for steel covers Scope 1 only. The five-step MRV cycle, the Monitoring Methodology Document, EU-accredited verifiers, and the €40–50/t savings from actual vs default values. India’s Steel Scrap Landscape and the EAF Expansion Opportunity Scrap share is 23% vs a 50% target by 2047. Domestic generation is 32 MMT; demand is 41 MMT. The VSP has scrapped 3% of eligible vehicles in three years. The supply gap will reach 20–30 MMT by 2030. CBAM and Indian Steel: The Export Competitiveness Challenge Certificate costs, the benchmark deduction mechanism, and the CBAM cost differential between BF-BOF (~€130–150/t) and scrap-EAF (~€20–30/t) at current EU ETS prices.
Aluminium Cluster 4 Articles

Aluminium is the sector where decarbonisation is almost entirely an electricity question. CBAM for aluminium covers both Scope 1 and Scope 2, making electricity source the decisive competitive variable. CCTS targets are plant-level and drawn from the Official Gazette. And secondary aluminium holds India’s lowest CBAM cost position of any aluminium product by a very large margin.

Open Access Renewable Procurement for Indian Aluminium Smelters State-by-state landed cost comparison for solar open access vs coal CPP. Odisha’s 50% CSS exemption makes RE cost-competitive with coal today — simultaneously delivering CCTS, CBAM, and cost benefits. CBAM and Indian Aluminium: Why Scope 2 Electricity Is the Decisive Variable Indian coal smelters face embedded emissions of 12–18 tCO₂/t vs 1–2 tCO₂/t for hydro competitors. The resulting €800–1,000/t CBAM cost gap — on a product worth ~€2,200/t — makes structural change unavoidable for EU export competitiveness. CCTS Compliance Strategy for Aluminium Smelters: Targets, Abatement Levers and the CCC Opportunity Plant-level GEI targets from the Official Gazette: Vedanta Jharsuguda Smelter II 13.49→12.83 tCO₂e/t; BALCO 15.71→14.81; Mahan 15.63→14.74. Five abatement levers ranked by financial return — PFC reduction first. Secondary Aluminium: India’s 95% Lower-Carbon Route and Lowest CBAM Cost Position Secondary aluminium uses 95% less energy than primary smelting. CBAM cost: ~€20–50/t vs €1,000–1,400/t for coal primary. Added to CCTS January 13, 2026. The pre-consumer scrap anti-circumvention rule and India’s 85% import dependency on scrap.
Fertilisers Cluster 4 Articles

India’s fertiliser sector is simultaneously the most exposed sector under the West Asia war shock (86% of LNG from West Asia; 65.8% of sulphur imports from West Asia) and the sector with the clearest long-run decarbonisation pathway through green hydrogen. This cluster maps the HPO, the green ammonia export opportunity, N₂O abatement under CCTS, and the CO₂ feedstock economics of urea decarbonisation.

India’s Hydrogen Purchase Obligation: The HPO Framework The HPO mandates that fertiliser producers source a rising share of hydrogen from green electrolysis. Targets, timelines, penalty structure, and what it means for urea plant economics and CCTS compliance. Green Ammonia Export Economics: India, CBAM and the EU Market Opportunity Green ammonia carries zero CBAM embedded emissions. The cost gap between green and grey ammonia, AM Green’s Kakinada facility, and the EU premium for zero-carbon nitrogen feedstocks mapped against CBAM certificate prices. CCTS and Fertilisers: N₂O Abatement and GEI Compliance Strategy N₂O from nitric acid production has a GWP of 273. Catalytic abatement is the highest-return CCTS lever for fertiliser producers — delivering over 90% N₂O reduction at capital costs that pay back in under two years at current CCC prices. Urea Decarbonisation: CO₂ Feedstock and the CCUS Pathway Urea production consumes CO₂ as a feedstock, creating a circular carbon logic. How CCUS integration changes the decarbonisation economics of India’s largest single fertiliser, and what the West Asia LNG shock means for the gas-to-green transition timeline.
Power and Carbon Markets Cluster 6 Articles

India crossed 52.57% non-fossil installed power capacity in February 2026 — exceeding its earlier 2030 target five years ahead of schedule. Coal generation fell 3% in 2025, the first structural decline since 1973. The West Asia war has made India’s 266 GW renewable portfolio a live energy security asset. This cluster covers the regulatory frameworks that govern how industrial consumers access renewable electricity and trade carbon credits.

India’s RCO and RPO Targets for Industrial Consumers The Renewable Consumption Obligation and Renewable Purchase Obligation frameworks — who is obligated, current targets by sector, and how RCO/RPO compliance interacts with CCTS Scope 2 GEI reduction. India’s CCC Market: How Carbon Credit Certificates Are Issued and Trade CCCs trade on IEX and PXIL under CERC oversight. Market design, price formation mechanics, banking provisions, CCC issuance formula, and how the compliance cycle creates structured demand. Green Energy Open Access Rules 2022: The Framework for Industrial Renewable Procurement The GEOA Rules 2022 reduced the threshold to 100 kW. Wheeling charges, cross-subsidy surcharge exemptions, and how state-level variation changes the real landed cost of renewable electricity across India’s five key industrial states. India’s Grid Emission Factor: CEA Methodology, Current Values and CCTS Scope 2 Impact CEA V21.0 (December 2025): WAEF FY 2024-25 = 0.710 tCO₂/MWh (provisional). How the GEF is calculated, how it is used in CCTS Scope 2 measurement, and the declining trajectory as RE penetration rises. India’s REC Market: Pricing, Compliance and the CCTS Interaction CERC First Amendment notified March 2026: offshore wind 4× multiplier, pumped hydro 3×, VPPA framework under Regulation 14A. Why RECs satisfy RCO obligations but do not reduce CBAM embedded emissions for aluminium or steel. India’s Power Sector Transition: Coal Decline, Renewable Surge and What It Means for Industry Coal generation fell 3% in 2025 — the first structural decline since 1973. RE generation +22% to 270 BU. Power sector CO₂ fell 3.8%. Non-fossil capacity: 52.57% as of February 2026. The industrial cost and CCTS implications mapped.
Our Approach

How we approach the research

We write for practitioners, not general audiences. That means going into the numbers, naming the regulations, and trying to say something useful rather than something safe. All articles are sourced to primary regulatory data — Official Gazette notifications, CEA publications, BEE circulars, EU implementing regulations — not secondary summaries.

Policy Monitoring

We track what comes out of BEE, MNRE, MoEFCC, CEA, CERC, and DG TAXUD — and translate notifications into what they mean for each sector, rather than just summarising them.

Energy and Cost Analysis

We calculate actual CBAM certificate costs using live EU ETS prices and verified emission intensities. We calculate open access landed costs using actual tariff orders. We use GEI targets from the Official Gazette, not industry estimates.

Carbon Market Mechanics

We map how CCTS, CBAM, RECs, and the offset mechanism interact — and where the compliance frameworks diverge in ways that matter for investment decisions (e.g. RECs satisfy RCO but don’t reduce CBAM Scope 2 for steel).

Strategic Implications

We connect energy markets and carbon policy to capital allocation and competitive positioning — and track how geopolitical shocks like the West Asia war change the economics of every decarbonisation investment in real time.

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