India’s carbon market crossed a landmark threshold in 2026. With the Carbon Credit Trading Scheme (CCTS) now operational and mandatory for designated heavy industries, millions of Indian businesses are waking up to a new regulatory reality. Whether you are a steel manufacturer in Jharkhand, a cement producer in Rajasthan, or a textile exporter in Surat, the CCTS will affect your bottom line.
The Legislative Foundation
The CCTS was born out of the Energy Conservation (Amendment) Act, 2022, which empowered the Bureau of Energy Efficiency (BEE) under the Ministry of Power to design and operate India’s domestic carbon market. The scheme creates a framework where certain energy-intensive industries — called “obligated entities” — must meet emission intensity targets. Those who exceed their targets can sell surplus credits; those who fall short must buy them.
Which Sectors Are Covered?
Phase 1 of CCTS covers the most emissions-heavy industries:
- Aluminium · Cement · Chlor-alkali
- Fertilisers · Iron and Steel
- Paper and Pulp · Petrochemicals
- Petroleum Refineries · Textiles
Together, these sectors account for a substantial portion of India’s industrial CO₂ output. Future phases are expected to expand coverage to additional sectors.
How Does Trading Work?
Each obligated entity receives an emission intensity target — a permitted amount of greenhouse gas per unit of production. If a factory emits less than its target, it earns Indian Carbon Credits (ICCs). These ICCs can be sold on the Indian Carbon Market (ICM), which operates through registered exchanges — currently BSE and NSE.
Companies that exceed their emission targets must purchase enough ICCs to cover the gap, or face financial penalties. This creates a direct economic incentive for every covered business to reduce emissions.
Key Players in India’s CCTS:
• BEE (Bureau of Energy Efficiency) — sets targets and monitors compliance
• Grid Controller of India (GCI) — administers the ICC registry
• BSE & NSE — authorised trading exchanges for ICCs
• MoPNG / MoEFCC — policy oversight and coordination
Voluntary vs. Compliance: The Difference for Businesses
Businesses outside the obligated sectors can still participate voluntarily, generating offset credits that can be sold to compliance entities or international buyers. This is a significant revenue opportunity for renewable energy companies, forestry project developers, and sustainable agriculture initiatives.
What Should Businesses Do Right Now?
Organisations should begin by conducting a carbon audit to understand their current emission intensity. They should assess whether they fall under obligated sectors in the current or upcoming CCTS phases. Engaging with a verified carbon market platform like Carbon Credits Network to understand both compliance obligations and trading opportunities is a smart first step.
India’s CCTS is not a burden. It is a structured pathway to profitability through sustainability. The companies that act now will gain a competitive edge — in compliance costs, in global market access, and in investor attractiveness — over those who wait and react.
Navigate India’s Carbon Regulations with Confidence
Carbon Credits Network provides exclusive, up-to-date guidance on CCTS compliance, ICC trading, and strategic carbon positioning for Indian businesses.

