British manufacturers requiring new monitoring equipment or system implementations to comply with carbon documentation requirements face the additional challenge of making these purchases and installations during the year-end holiday season. The timing creates logistical complications as suppliers and service providers operate with reduced capacity.
Brussels has confirmed that the anticipated carve-out from the carbon border adjustment mechanism will not be implemented by year-end, leaving businesses approximately two weeks—spanning the Christmas and New Year period—to procure and implement necessary infrastructure. The mechanism requires detailed documentation of carbon emissions throughout manufacturing processes, potentially necessitating new monitoring equipment, data management systems, or process modifications that typically require planning and coordination.
Manufacturing organizations emphasize that implementing compliance infrastructure represents substantial operational undertakings even under optimal conditions. Make UK describes the requirements as “extensive,” suggesting that businesses without existing carbon monitoring systems face significant implementation projects. Completing these projects during the holiday season, when equipment suppliers, system integrators, and technical consultants operate with limited staff, compounds already substantial challenges.
The timing is particularly problematic for small and medium-sized enterprises that UK Steel identifies as especially vulnerable to compliance burdens. Smaller operations may lack internal technical expertise to implement systems independently, requiring external support that becomes more difficult to secure during the holiday period. Equipment delivery timelines, installation scheduling, and technical support availability all face holiday-related constraints.
Government representatives are directing businesses to the Department for Business and Trade for support, though the holiday timing affects both businesses and support providers. Companies must balance the urgency of meeting January deadlines against the practical realities of reduced supplier and consultant availability during the year-end period. Negotiations continue toward a potential carbon linking agreement, but businesses requiring infrastructure investments cannot delay procurement hoping for imminent relief. Although actual tax payments won’t be required until 2027, monitoring and documentation systems must be operational immediately in January. The holiday season timing creates a particularly challenging environment for businesses requiring substantial infrastructure implementations to achieve compliance.

