Asuene just locked in a partnership with CBAMBOO, the UK cloud provider built around one thing. Making the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism actually workable for companies that need to deal with it. The timing matters because the EU rolls CBAM into full operation in January 2026 and no exporter outside Europe gets a free pass.
On paper the guideline is easy but in reality it is painful. If you import carbon-intensive products such as steel or fertilizer into the EU, the carbon dioxide that was released during production will be calculated as a cost. Importers will have no choice but to purchase CBAM certificates corresponding to EU carbon prices. Japanese exporters will also need to track, calculate and report emissions in sync with their EU partners. No data, no access. It is that simple.
CBAMBOO, which was established in 2023, has become a provider of SaaS tools specifically designed for CBAM to more than 100 companies already. Asuene highly regarded their ability to keep up with the changes in EU regulations and their excellent technical knowledge. Both firms now plan to plug into each other’s customer networks and strengthen hands-on support for companies scrambling to meet CBAM rules.
こちらもお読みください: パルクールジャパンとケーズコープがエージェントフォースとデータ360を開始
For users of Asuene’s decarbonization platform ASUENE, this tie-up means direct access to CBAMBOO’s features. Everything from gathering emissions data for EU importers to doing the tax math to generating the right reports. ASUENE is already big across Asia, especially in manufacturing, and Asuene is blunt about the situation. CBAM is no longer optional for Japanese and Asian exporters. It is a management priority that decides who stays competitive.
By teaming up, アスエネ そして CBAMBOO want to push companies toward full compliance and make supply chain decarbonization less of a theoretical slogan and more of an operational requirement.

