Correction to CBAM Builder and Index prices for Monday June 15

Fastmarkets has corrected its CBAM Certificate Builder, €/tCO2e and CBAM Certificate Index, €/tCO2e for June 15 due to a backend calculation error.

The prices did not include the newest market data in their calculations and have been recalculated as below:

CB-CC-0041 CBAM Certificate Builder, €/tCO2e
Incorrect: 71.85
Corrected: 74.32

CB-CC-0042 CBAM Certificate Index, €/tCO2e
Incorrect: 73.31
Corrected: 75.27

Fastmarkets’ pricing database has been updated accordingly.

These prices are part of the Fastmarkets CBAM Physical Prices package.

For more information, or to provide feedback on the early publication of these prices, or if you would like to provide price information by becoming a data submitter to these prices, please contact pricing@fastmarkets.com and carbonpricing@fastmarkets.com. Please add the subject heading “re: CBAM price calculations.”

Please indicate if comments are confidential. Fastmarkets will consider all comments received and will make comments not marked as confidential available upon request.

To see all Fastmarkets’ pricing methodology and specification documents, go to the Fastmarkets methodology page.

What to read next
The publication of Fastmarkets’ MB-AS-0001 Arsenic 99% min As, in-whs Rotterdam, $/lb, MB-RE-0001 Rhenium APR catalytic grade, in-whs dup Rotterdam, $/kg Re, MB-RE-0002 Rhenium metal pellets 99.9% Re min, in-whs dup, Rotterdam $/lb and MB-HF-0001 Hafnium, max 1% Zr, in-whs global locations, $/kg assessments was incorrectly published because of a reporter error.
The subsidiaries of the German FBB producer FOLBB Baiersbronn Frischfaser Karton and Folding Boxboard Eerbeek have filed for the initiation of insolvency proceedings and a suspension of payments.
Fastmarkets is proposing to change the price formation process of 26 global tube and pipe prices to calculations from assessments, effective September 9, 2026.
As the market entered May, spring demand has not lived up to expectations with weakness reported to have been compounded by a stock overhang.
With CP1 spot prices down to $9.50 and airlines still holding back, the real debate is about which layer of CORSIA credit supply the market is pricing, from theoretical potential to the credits airlines can actually buy.
Fastmarkets has calculated its Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) Certificate Index at a price only slightly below the official average price for the first quarter of this year, when the regime was brought into operation.