• circular economy,  compliance e AEO

    Status of authorised CBAM declarant: next steps by waiting for the definitive regime 2026

    From the 1 January 2026, thanks to EU regulation n. 2025/486 UE of 17 March 2025, the importers and indirect customs representative will be in the position to apply for the status of authorised CBAM declarant.  On 31 march 2025, to make it possible, the EU Commission will launch the Authorisation Management Module (AMM) in the CBAM registry. CBAM (definitive regime) in principles: a) EU importers of goods covered by CBAM will register with national authorities where they can also buy CBAM certificates; b) EU importers will declare the emissions embedded in their imports and surrender the corresponding number of certificates each year; c) If the carbon price has already been…

  • accise e imposte di consumo,  circular economy,  compliance e AEO,  energie rinnovabili,  free trade agreement,  made in

    Customs bulletin n.5/2025: normativa doganale, accise, economia circolare, sostenibilità ed energie rinnovabili

    Il customs bulletin n.5 di Dogana Sostenibile segnala i provvedimenti normativi pubblicati tra il 3 e il 9 febbraio 2025  in Italia, UE e altri paesi europei. DOGANE & ACCISE -ITALIA 14 febbraio 2025 Agenzia delle entrate risposta 34/2025 “Disciplina IVA delle c.d. esportazioni ”franco valuta” – Non applicazione articolo 8 decreto del Presidente della Repubblica 26 ottobre 1972, n. 633” 13 febbraio 2025 Fisco Oggi “Cambi delle valute estere: online le medie di gennaio 2025” 12 febbraio 2025 Agenzia dogane e monopoli avviso su “aggiornamento aliquote iva in taric legge di bilancio 2025”. Il testo riporta quanto segue: “ si segnala che è stato effettuato l’aggiornamento nella Banca dati…

  • made in

    Non-preferential origin and economically justified working

    In Harley-Davidson Europe and Neovia Logistics Services International v Commission (T-324/21), the General Court has dismissed an action for annulment against a Decision by the European Commission (2021/563) on the validity of certain decisions relating to binding origin information (BOI). About the “commercial/non-preferential origin” (made in) of the goods, the Tribunal highlithed that: the relocation of the production in a customs territory outside the European Union, just only to avoid the application of its commercial policy measures, must be considered incapable because it is not economically justified; the EU Commission is entitled to annul any BOI (binding origin information) and also BTI (binding tariff information) when these “rulings” are released…