In January 2026, the European Union’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) officially entered its taxation implementation phase, turning compliance warnings during the transition period into rigid cost expenditures. The lock manufacturing industry exporting to the EU has become one of the most directly impacted sectors.

The high carbon footprint of traditional metal processing processes is continuously squeezing the profitability of lock manufacturers. Driven by the full-chain transmission of CBAM carbon costs, the overall cost of lock products has risen by 15%-22%, and the industry’s profit margin continues to narrow.

How can lock manufacturers meet CBAM compliance requirements while preserving and even expanding their profit margins? The large-scale application of Metal Injection Molding (MIM) technology is exactly the key to breaking this dilemma.

Three Core Reasons for the Erosion of Lock Manufacturers’ Profits by CBAM

The loss of profits for lock manufacturers does not stem from a single carbon cost expenditure, but from three structural shortcomings of traditional manufacturing processes, which are continuously amplified under CBAM rules:

1. Rigid Carbon Costs Brought by High Carbon Footprint

In the production of traditional precision lock components (lock cylinders, lock bolts, transmission mechanisms), the raw material utilization rate is generally only 40%-60%. The full-chain processing of metal scrap generates a large amount of hidden carbon emissions; the energy consumption of multiple machining and heat treatment processes remains high, resulting in the carbon footprint per unit product far exceeding the CBAM benchmark threshold. The carbon costs incurred by the excess part directly erode 12%-18% of revenue.

2. High Loss Costs Brought by Multi-Process Machining

Complex lock components need to go through more than a dozen stamping, cutting and polishing processes, resulting in fast mold wear, large fluctuations in yield rate, and persistently high labor, rework and scrap costs. The already compressed profit margin of 8%-12% can easily break through the break-even point when superimposed with carbon costs.

3. Compliance and Market Access Risks Brought by Difficult Carbon Traceability

Traditional supply chains adopt decentralized processing across multiple links, making it extremely difficult to trace the carbon footprint of the entire process. Once the declared data fails to meet the standards, enterprises will not only face high fines from the EU, but also may lose their access to the EU market, bringing incalculable hidden compliance costs and market risks.

MIM Technology: Three Core Advantages to Lock in Up to 30% Profit Margin

MIM process is a near-net-shape forming technology that introduces modern plastic injection molding technology into the field of powder metallurgy. It can form complex and high-precision metal parts in one step, solving the pain points of traditional processes at the root, and each advantage can be directly transformed into realizable profits.

60%-70% Direct Reduction in Carbon Footprint, Cutting Rigid Carbon Costs

This is the core advantage of MIM technology to help lock manufacturers preserve profits:

10%-15% Reduction in Manufacturing Costs, Increasing Core Profits

While cutting carbon costs, MIM technology can further reduce costs from the production end, providing a second layer of protection for profits:

Green Premium + High-End Orders, Opening up Incremental Profit Space

In addition to cost reduction, MIM technology can also help lock manufacturers increase revenue and open up new profit growth points:

With the superposition of the above three advantages, MIM technology can help lock manufacturers achieve 15%-20% carbon cost reduction, and simultaneously reduce the comprehensive manufacturing cost by 10%-15%. The combination of the two optimizations can lock in a maximum of 30% of the core profit margin, and even achieve a contrarian growth in profits.

Yibi Precision: MIM Solution Service Provider for Lock Manufacturers’ CBAM Compliance

As a global service provider with 16 years of in-depth experience in MIM technology, Yibi Precision has built a complete low-carbon manufacturing system covering “material R&D – mold design – large-scale production – full-process carbon footprint traceability”, and specially creates MIM solutions adapted to CBAM compliance requirements for the lock industry.

At present, Yibi Precision’s MIM process has achieved:

Conclusion

Many lock manufacturers regard CBAM as a trade barrier, but its essence is an inevitable trend of the global manufacturing industry’s green and low-carbon transformation.

Passively responding to carbon costs will only continue to fall into the passive situation of profit compression; while actively deploying green manufacturing technology can transform compliance requirements into differentiated core competitiveness.

What MIM technology brings is never just a short-term compliance solution to cope with CBAM, but a long-term core support for lock manufacturers to achieve cost reduction, quality improvement and revenue growth in the low-carbon era.