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The EU Industrial Accelerator Act: What It Is, Why It Matters, and What Comes Next

Industrial Accelerator Act: transforming European industry with clean energy

On 4 March 2026, the European Commission published its proposal for the Industrial Accelerator Act — one of the most significant pieces of industrial legislation the EU has put forward in decades. For companies operating at the intersection of ESG, sustainability reporting, and regulatory compliance, this regulation introduces new procurement criteria, carbon labelling obligations, and data verification demands that will reshape how industrial companies — and the financial institutions that back them — measure and demonstrate their decarbonisation performance.

Energy-Intensive Industries at a Glance
0%
of EU greenhouse gas emissions from energy-intensive industries
7.8M
people employed across EII sectors in the EU
€549B
in annual added value generated by these sectors

From Clean Industrial Deal to Legislative Proposal

The IAA has its roots in the Clean Industrial Deal, adopted by the European Commission on 26 February 2025. The Deal framed decarbonisation not as a compliance burden but as a driver of economic growth — a direct response to the structural warnings documented in the Draghi Report on European competitiveness.

The initiative was originally conceived as the Industrial Decarbonisation Accelerator Act (IDAA), targeting energy-intensive industries specifically. In her September 2025 State of the Union address, Commission President von der Leyen renamed it the Industrial Accelerator Act — dropping “Decarbonisation” from the title to signal a broader scope covering competitiveness, reindustrialisation, and strategic autonomy alongside climate objectives.

Legislative Timeline
January 2025
Competitiveness Compass
Act first mentioned as a legislative priority within the EU’s Competitiveness Compass communication.
26 February 2025
Clean Industrial Deal Adopted
Commission adopts COM(2025) 85 final, formally announcing the Industrial Decarbonisation Accelerator Act.
April – July 2025
Public Consultation
Call for evidence opened 16 April 2025. Stakeholders invited to submit feedback via the Have Your Say portal.
September 2025
Renamed: Industrial Accelerator Act
Von der Leyen drops “Decarbonisation” from the title in her State of the Union address, broadening the initiative’s scope.
4 March 2026
Formal Proposal Published
COM(2026) 100 final published. Proposal now enters the ordinary legislative procedure with Parliament and Council.
2027 – 2028 (Estimated)
Entry into Force
Subject to trilogue negotiations. Key material procurement provisions targeted to apply from 1 January 2029.

The Problem the Act Is Designed to Solve

Energy-intensive industries — chemicals, steel, pulp and paper, refineries, cement, non-ferrous metals, glass, and ceramics — form the base of critical European value chains. Automotive, construction, net-zero technologies, defence, and aerospace all depend on them. Yet these sectors face a convergence of structural pressures that make decarbonisation investment difficult to justify at pace.

14.3% 2024 20% Target
Manufacturing % of EU GDP

A Decade of Deindustrialisation

EU manufacturing’s share of GDP has fallen from 17% in 2000 to just 14.3% in 2024. The IAA targets 20% of EU GDP by 2035.

17%
Year 2000
14.3%
2024 (actual)
20%
2035 (target)

Key Pressures on Energy-Intensive Industries

Structural factors undermining the business case for decarbonisation investment
Energy costs
Above non-EU competitors
Permitting
Multi-year delays
Clean tech costs
High capex, long payback
Import pressure
State-subsidised overcapacity
Demand weakness
Automotive & construction slowdown

The Four Pillars of the Industrial Accelerator Act

The IAA is structured around four main policy levers, each targeting a distinct dimension of the decarbonisation investment challenge.

1

Streamlined Digital Permitting

A single digital one-stop-shop consolidates all required authorisations. Maximum timelines apply, with tacit approval at intermediate stages where authorities miss deadlines.

One-stop-shop Tacit approval Digital-first
2

Industrial Acceleration Areas

Each Member State must designate at least one acceleration area within 12 months — clustering projects with pre-cleared permits and coordinated energy access on brownfield sites.

Min. 1 per Member State Brownfield priority
3

“Made in EU” & Low-Carbon Procurement

Public tenders, auctions, tax incentives, and state aid schemes will require minimum shares of EU-origin and low-carbon content across strategic sectors from 1 January 2029.

Public procurement 2029 deadline Low-carbon label
4

FDI Conditionality in Strategic Sectors

Foreign investments over €100M in batteries, solar PV, EVs, and critical raw materials face new conditions: a 49% ownership cap, mandatory joint ventures with EU partners, and IP transfer requirements.

>€100M threshold 49% ownership cap

Procurement Thresholds: The Detail That Matters

The IAA’s most commercially consequential provisions are binding minimum shares of low-carbon and Union-origin content for public procurement and subsidy schemes.

Proposal status: Thresholds are in COM(2026) 100 final and will be subject to amendment through Parliament and Council. Annex II provisions targeted from 1 January 2029.
Material Low-Carbon Threshold Union-Origin Required Applies to
Steel 25% Public procurement & support schemes
Concrete / Mortar (incl. clinker & cement) 5% ✓ Required Public procurement & support schemes
Aluminium 25% ✓ Required Public procurement & support schemes
Clean technologies (solar PV, heat pumps, wind, hydrogen, nuclear, BESS) Defined per technology ✓ Required Public auctions & subsidy schemes
Steel
Low-carbon threshold 25%
Union-origin required
Public procurement & support schemes
Concrete / Mortar (incl. clinker & cement)
Low-carbon threshold 5%
Union-origin required ✓ Required
Public procurement & support schemes
Aluminium
Low-carbon threshold 25%
Union-origin required ✓ Required
Public procurement & support schemes
Clean technologies (solar PV, heat pumps, wind, hydrogen, nuclear, BESS)
Low-carbon threshold Per technology
Union-origin required ✓ Required
Public auctions & subsidy schemes

Projected Impacts by 2030

30.6 Mt
CO₂eq reduction by 2030
~150K
Jobs generated or maintained
€686M+
Gross value added increase

What This Means for ESG Compliance and Reporting

For financial institutions, corporates, and ESG professionals, the IAA introduces data and disclosure obligations that sit squarely within existing and emerging regulatory frameworks.

  • Product-level carbon intensity data Companies must produce verifiable, auditable carbon intensity data at the product level to qualify for procurement thresholds and low-carbon labelling. Alignment with CSRD/ESRS, SFDR, and the EU Taxonomy is required.
  • Supply chain origin verification Procurement teams and investors must demonstrate that materials meet Union-origin thresholds — adding a data verification layer to existing obligations under CSDDD and ESRS.
  • Decarbonisation trajectory disclosure Investors financing energy-intensive industries will face new scrutiny around portfolio companies’ pathways. Single-year emissions figures are insufficient — credible forward-looking trajectories aligned with ETS assumptions will be expected.
  • ESG data infrastructure readiness The IAA’s carbon label and procurement rules presuppose robust data collection and cross-framework interoperability. Organisations relying on manual processes or siloed systems will face significant gaps ahead of 2029 deadlines.
The regulatory direction of travel

The IAA reinforces a trend visible across the EU regulatory agenda — from SFDR’s PAI indicators to the EU Taxonomy’s technical screening criteria, from CBAM to the Green Claims Directive. ESG data is moving from voluntary disclosure to operational prerequisite. Companies and investors that treat data infrastructure as a strategic asset — rather than a compliance overhead — are better positioned for what follows.

Legislative Status and Political Fault Lines

The proposal (COM(2026) 100 final) now enters the ordinary legislative procedure. Both the European Parliament and the Council of the EU will develop their positions, and the text will be modified through trilogue negotiations. The process is unlikely to conclude before 2027.

Key political tension

France is pushing for a strict EU-only interpretation of Union-origin rules, to maximise direct support for EU production and jobs. Germany has argued for a “Made with EU” model that would include trusted trade partners. This disagreement is likely to be one of the central negotiating points in the Council.

Given the complexity of the FDI provisions, the procurement rules, and the overlapping amendments to the Net Zero Industry Act, the Single Digital Gateway Regulation, and the Construction Products Regulation, entry into force is expected no earlier than 2027.

Assessing Your Exposure to the IAA

The IAA will reshape how industrial companies and their investors must collect, verify, and disclose carbon and origin data. Generation Impact Global helps organisations build the data infrastructure to navigate exactly this environment.

Speak with our team

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal or regulatory advice. The IAA is a Commission proposal and remains subject to legislative amendment.
Sources: European Commission COM(2026) 100 final; COM(2025) 85 final; Ares(2025)3079152; European Parliament Legislative Train Schedule; Latham & Watkins; Mayer Brown; Linklaters; Dechert; CMS Law-Now; Draghi Report on European Competitiveness.