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CBAM Legislation Blogs Update Date: November 7, 2025 2 dk. Reading Time

Which Greenhouse Gases Does CBAM Consider and How Does Its Interface Stay Simple?

Which Greenhouse Gases Does CBAM Consider and How Does Its Interface Stay Simple?
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CBAM and Greenhouse Gases: Which Emissions are Tracked and How is the Interface Simplified?

Borderline Carbon Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) reporting is based on greenhouse gas emissions. However, an important issue is which gases are taken into account in this process and how the user interface remains simple and straightforward despite the increasing number of gas types.

Which Greenhouse Gases Does CBAM Cover?

On the CBAM side, the main focus of reporting is carbon dioxide (CO2). However, the calculation is not limited to this gas.

  • Main Gases

    Mainly the main greenhouse gases such as methane (CH4), diazotoxide (N2O) and carbon dioxide (CO2) are considered.

  • Other Gases

    It also takes into account other greenhouse gases that occur during production processes or as industrial emissions.

  • Carbon Dioxide Equivalent

    Because these different gases have different impacts on climate change, they are all converted to a common unit of measurement, the carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e), and included in the report.

How Does the User Interface Stay Simple as the Types of Greenhouse Gases Increase?

Just because CBAM takes into account multiple GHGs doesn't mean that the process becomes complicated for the user. CimpactPro software manages this complexity in the background, keeping the interface extremely simple. The "soccer player card" logic we mentioned earlier also applies here.

  • The user only enters activity data

    The user does not actually have to differentiate between types of greenhouse gases

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