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Thailand’s Draft Comprehesive Climate Change Act

GenevaTimes by GenevaTimes
April 14, 2026
in Business
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Thailand’s Draft Comprehesive Climate Change Act
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Thailand is transitioning from fragmented, sector-specific environmental regulations to a unified and comprehensive national framework through its proposed Climate Change Act (CCA). This legislative shift, driven by international trade pressures such as the EU’s carbon border adjustments and domestic net-zero commitments, aims to establish an economy-wide architecture for carbon management.

Key Points

  • Structural Regulatory Shift: The draft CCA moves away from traditional pollution control toward a centralized governance regime that includes statutory emissions targets, mandatory reporting for designated operators, and market-based mechanisms.
  • Core Market Mechanisms: The Act proposes an emissions trading scheme (ETS), a potential carbon tax based on emissions intensity, and a regulated framework for the verification and trading of carbon credits.
  • Green Taxonomy Integration: Thailand has introduced a “traffic-light” (Green, Amber, Red) classification system to define sustainable economic activities, which is expected to become the standard for disclosure requirements and sustainable finance.
  • Legal Risks: Companies face increasing exposure to litigation regarding “greenwashing” or misleading sustainability claims, which may be prosecuted under securities laws, consumer protection statutes, or the new CCA enforcement regime.
  • Regional Interoperability: The legislation is designed to be technically compatible with foreign carbon markets, with long-term goals of integrating Thailand’s carbon mechanisms with those of neighboring ASEAN states.
  • Adaptive Legislation: The Act is structured as “living legislation,” featuring a mandatory five-year review cycle that allows authorities to tighten targets and recalibrate regulatory tools without requiring constant parliamentary amendments.
  • Preparation Strategy: Businesses are encouraged to establish emissions baselines and internal carbon pricing frameworks immediately, rather than waiting for the formal enactment of the law.

Thailand is being driven to adopt a centralized, economy-wide carbon management framework (the draft Climate Change Act) by a combination of domestic policy imperatives and external market pressures.

Domestic Drivers

  • Net-Zero Commitments: The primary domestic driver is the government’s commitment to achieving national net-zero policy goals, which require the transition from incremental, sector-specific regulations to a unified, enforceable legislative framework.
  • Standardization of Sustainability: There is a need to establish a centralized governance regime that can effectively translate national emissions targets into binding obligations for specific sectors and operators.
  • Integration of Fiscal and Market Tools: The government aims to move beyond traditional pollution control toward a system that integrates mandatory greenhouse gas reporting, emissions trading schemes (ETS), and potential carbon taxes to manage environmental impact at scale.

International Drivers

  • International Trade Pressures: Thai exporters face significant risks from external regulations, most notably the EU’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) . Without a domestic carbon pricing mechanism, Thai goods may be subject to carbon tariffs, placing them at a competitive disadvantage in global markets.
  • Investor Demand: There is growing pressure from investors for credible, standardized sustainability regulation. This includes the use of a “traffic-light” green taxonomy to categorize economic activities against technical screening criteria, which influences sustainable finance and disclosure requirements.
  • Regional Integration: Thailand is positioning its carbon management framework to be technically compatible with foreign carbon markets. The draft Act anticipates future connectivity with carbon markets in neighboring ASEAN states, which will likely evolve through bilateral or plurilateral arrangements based on regulatory equivalence and mutual recognition.

While political delays have pushed the timeline for enactment, legal experts advise businesses to proactively implement emissions tracking and internal governance systems to prepare for mandatory reporting, carbon pricing, and stricter sustainability disclosure standards.

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