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EBA participates in EESC hearing on enlargement and EU climate policy

15/ 05/ 2026
  On 11 May, EBA Deputy Directors Svitlana Mykhailovska and Iaroslava Savastieieva spoke at the European Economic and Social Committee (EESC) hearing on Enlargement and EU Climate Policy.   EBA leadership, in their speeches, highlighted Ukraine’s role as an EU candidate country in advancing climate neutrality, with particular attention to the practical economic implications for Ukraine’s war-affected industry. The key focus remained on the implementation of the CBAM and carbon pricing.   EBA emphasised that EU enlargement and climate ambition must move forward in parallel. To make this feasible, climate policy should better reflect real economic and security conditions. It was suggested that this should include ensuring access to financing, applying sufficiently long transition periods, and introducing a differentiated approach to CBAM and the EU Emissions Trading System (ETS) for Ukraine. In this context, EBA highlighted the importance of exempting Ukraine from the obligation to purchase CBAM certificates while maintaining full reporting requirements.   This approach is not about lowering climate ambition. It is about ensuring that decarbonisation remains achievable in practice, preserving industrial capacity, and strengthening both Ukraine’s resilience and the EU’s long-term climate objectives.   EBA will continue engaging with EU partners to develop a workable framework that enables Ukraine to advance its obligations as a future EU member, while taking into account the consequences of war on industry and its restraining impact on transformation efforts.
On 11 May, EBA Deputy Directors Svitlana Mykhailovska and Iaroslava Savastieieva spoke at the European Economic and Social Committee (EESC) hearing on Enlargement and EU Climate Policy.
 
EBA leadership, in their speeches, highlighted Ukraine’s role as an EU candidate country in advancing climate neutrality, with particular attention to the practical economic implications for Ukraine’s war-affected industry. The key focus remained on the implementation of the CBAM and carbon pricing.
 
EBA emphasised that EU enlargement and climate ambition must move forward in parallel. To make this feasible, climate policy should better reflect real economic and security conditions. It was suggested that this should include ensuring access to financing, applying sufficiently long transition periods, and introducing a differentiated approach to CBAM and the EU Emissions Trading System (ETS) for Ukraine. In this context, EBA highlighted the importance of exempting Ukraine from the obligation to purchase CBAM certificates while maintaining full reporting requirements.
 
This approach is not about lowering climate ambition. It is about ensuring that decarbonisation remains achievable in practice, preserving industrial capacity, and strengthening both Ukraine’s resilience and the EU’s long-term climate objectives.
 
EBA will continue engaging with EU partners to develop a workable framework that enables Ukraine to advance its obligations as a future EU member, while taking into account the consequences of war on industry and its restraining impact on transformation efforts.

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