EU CBAM · National Competent Authority

MITECO Spain's CBAM authority

MITECO (Spanish Ministry for Ecological Transition and Demographic Challenge) is Spain's National Competent Authority for the EU Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism. CBAM declarant applications go through the EU's central registry; MITECO reviews and approves applications from importers established in Spain.

Informational reference. This page links to MITECO's official site and the EU CBAM Registry. Verify all NCA-specific procedures, contact details, fees, and processing timelines with MITECO directly before applying — published guidance changes.

At a glance

Full name
Spanish Ministry for Ecological Transition and Demographic Challenge
Ministerio para la Transición Ecológica y el Reto Demográfico
Country
Spain(España)
Parent ministry
Spanish central government (cabinet-level)
Official website
www.miteco.gob.es
Official CBAM page
See official site for the current CBAM section.

How to apply for authorised CBAM declarant status

EU CBAM declarant applications are submitted through the central EU CBAM Registry — the same portal for every member state. MITECO reviews and approves applications from importers established in Spain.

Country-specific supporting documentation, language requirements, and processing timelines vary. Verify the current procedure with MITECO directly via the official CBAM page above before preparing your application.

Run a CBAM cost calculation

A typical Spain-based importer brings 5,000t of Portland cement (CN 25232900) from Turkey. Open the calculator to see the live cost — it auto-applies the EU default embedded emissions per Reg 2025/2621 and the latest weekly certificate price.

Run this calc live

Sector: Cement. Annual surrender for 2026 imports falls due 31 May 2027.

What's specific to Spain

Spain's extra-EU CBAM-scope imports are dominated by iron & steel (54% of 499.4 kt total). Sector mix: iron & steel 54% · cement 31% · fertilisers 11% · aluminium 4%.

Top non-EU partners by sector

  • iron & steel: Israel (7%) · Turkey (6%) · United Kingdom (5%)
  • cement: Turkey (28%) · Morocco (21%) · Algeria (18%)
Active sectoral trade associations: UNESID (iron & steel, via EUROFER); Oficemen (cement, via CEMBUREAU); ANFFE (fertilisers, via Fertilizers Europe).

Sources: Eurostat Comext (Dec 2024 extra-EU import flows); EUROFER, CEMBUREAU and Fertilizers Europe published member lists. Single-month snapshot — pattern may shift in multi-month aggregates.

Key CBAM dates

  • 31 March 2026

    Authorised CBAM declarant application deadline

  • 1 February 2027

    CBAM Registry opens for certificate purchases (covering 2026 imports)

  • 31 May 2027

    First annual CBAM declaration deadline (for 2026 imports)

  • 2027 onwards

    Certificate price publication moves from quarterly to weekly

  • 2034

    Free-allocation deduction phases out (CBAM_factor → 0)

MITECO CBAM — common questions

Where do I submit my CBAM declarant application as a Spain-based importer?+
All EU CBAM declarant applications are submitted through the central EU CBAM Registry at https://cbam.ec.europa.eu/authorised-declarant/, regardless of which member state your business is established in. MITECO reviews and approves applications from importers established in Spain — the submission portal itself is shared across the EU.
How do I contact MITECO about CBAM?+
MITECO's official site (linked above) is the canonical channel for current contact details. Email addresses and phone numbers change as the agency restructures; we deliberately don't republish them here so you reach the live source. The European Commission also maintains the official member-state NCA list at taxation-customs.ec.europa.eu/carbon-border-adjustment-mechanism_en.
Does MITECO charge a fee for CBAM declarant authorisation?+
Regulation (EU) 2023/956 does not impose an EU-wide fee for declarant authorisation. National fees, where they exist, are published on each NCA's own site — most member states publish no fee for the authorisation step itself. Verify on MITECO's official site (linked above) before assuming.
In which language must I submit my CBAM application via MITECO?+
The central EU CBAM Registry accepts submissions in English. Some member states require supporting documents (verifier reports, EORI evidence, etc.) translated into España; MITECO publishes the language requirements for Spain on its CBAM page. Verify before assembling your application package.

For Spain-specific application steps, fees, and contact details, refer to MITECO's official site (linked above).