California LCFS adds to record credit pile

  • Market: Biofuels, Emissions, Natural gas, Oil products
  • 30/04/24

Continued growth in renewable diesel and biogas supplied to California in the fourth quarter of 2023 lifted Low Carbon Fuel Standard (LCFS) credits available for future compliance by a record 2.9mn metric tonnes (t), according to state data published today.

A widening gap between newly generated credits and deficits has helped to drag credit prices down to roughly six-year lows. Credits available for future LCFS compliance, which do not expire, increased by more than half in 2023 to a volume able to satisfy an additional year of new deficits without any new lower-carbon fuel use.

Rising renewable diesel and biogas for transportation continued to drive the build in credits in excess of current compliance needs, which increased by 14pc in the fourth quarter. New renewable diesel credits rose by 6.7pc from the previous quarter to make up 40pc of all new credits for the final period of 2023. The fuel made up 58pc of the liquid diesel pool and petroleum diesel shrank to less than a third. Biogas, the second largest source of LCFS credits, grew by 6pc to hold about 17pc of all new credits in the quarter.

CARBOB consumption meanwhile fell by 3.3pc from the previous quarter. The fuel still makes up 89pc of all new program deficits.

LCFS programs require yearly reductions in transportation fuel carbon intensity. Higher-carbon fuels that exceed the annual limits incur deficits that suppliers must offset with credits generated from the distribution of approved, lower-carbon alternatives.

The previous quarter recorded a 2.2mn t build in credits available for future compliance, helping to drop confirmed trade to $56.60/t in February.

An ongoing California Air Resources Board (CARB) rulemaking could rebalance the widening gap between new credits and new deficits. Staff continue to seek comment on the approach participants would prefer.

Scenarios offered at a mid-month workshop considered different paths through a 30pc reduction target, compared to the current 20pc target, by the end of the decade. A 9pc reduction in 2025 targets — a drop more than seven times steeper than recent 1.25pc annual target adjustments — would trim available credits for future compliance by more than 8mn t before continuing to work toward a 30pc target in 2030, according to CARB.

A 5pc reduction in 2025 would have limited immediate effect on banked credits, based on staff simulations. Conditions would instead trigger a proposed mechanism that automatically accelerates to tougher targets at least once before 2030, and potentially twice — toughening the reduction target to 39pc.

Public comment on this balancing of program pace continues to 10 May.


Sharelinkedin-sharetwitter-sharefacebook-shareemail-share

Related news posts

Argus illuminates the markets by putting a lens on the areas that matter most to you. The market news and commentary we publish reveals vital insights that enable you to make stronger, well-informed decisions. Explore a selection of news stories related to this one.

News
05/06/24

Mercado mexicano evalúa cambios en incentivos de Pemex

Mercado mexicano evalúa cambios en incentivos de Pemex

Mexico City, 5 June (Argus) — La decisión de la estatal mexicana Pemex de cambiar los incentivos para los minoristas de combustible y sus distribuidores asociados podría reconfigurar la cadena de valor en un futuro próximo, según participantes del mercado. Pemex aumentó sus bonificaciones en efectivo, conocidas como el bono de visibilidad de la marca, para las gasolineras a Ps0.20/l a partir del 16 de mayo, frente a Ps0.09/l implementado desde finales de 2021. Pemex informó a sus franquiciados este mes que eliminó el pago de Ps0.08/l concedido anteriormente a los distribuidores que comercializan exclusivamente su combustible. La empresa estatal tomó esta decisión "sin proporcionar ninguna razón ni justificación para esta medida extrema", dijo la asociación mexicana de distribuidores de energía (AMDE) en una carta el 9 de mayo a Pemex. Los bonos eran "esenciales" para las operaciones de los distribuidores asociados de Pemex, y algunas empresas dependían de él para ser rentables, según AMDE. Aunque algunos distribuidores han considerado la posibilidad de emprender acciones legales contra Pemex por su decisión unilateral, AMDE espera resolver el problema a través de la comunicación directa con la empresa, de acuerdo con fuentes del mercado. Pero AMDE no ha recibido ninguna respuesta de Pemex desde el 9 de mayo y envió una segunda carta el 30 de mayo, dijo la asociación a Argus . Los distribuidores asociados de Pemex compran combustible directamente a la empresa y lo venden a minoristas o usuarios finales en estaciones de autoconsumo. Algunos distribuidores cuentan con espacio arrendado en terminales de almacenamiento de combustible. El riesgo para Pemex al eliminar la bonificación es que el acuerdo exclusivo entre la empresa y sus distribuidores asociados podría volverse poco atractivo para estos últimos, lo que podría llevarlos a comprar a importadores de combustible del sector privado, afirman fuentes del mercado. La bonificación de visibilidad de la marca solo se aplicaba a los distribuidores que venden exclusivamente combustible Pemex. La empresa estatal ha dependido durante mucho tiempo en los distribuidores y transportistas del sector privado para garantizar el suministro en México, incluso antes de la reforma energética de 2014, que abrió el mercado. La bonificación de visibilidad de marca de Pemex tenía como objetivo incentivar a los distribuidores a trabajar con Pemex, pero muchos distribuidores no construyeron la infraestructura de almacenamiento necesaria, dijo un minorista de combustibles. Reconfiguración de la cadena de valor La empresa con el cambio tiene como objetivo fortalecer su relación directa con los minoristas de combustible, eliminando los distribuidores asociados y motivando a los minoristas a comprar directamente a la propia comercializadora de Pemex, un distribuidor dijo a Argus . Esta estrategia impulsaría las ventas directas de MGC México, la comercializadora de Pemex, a los minoristas. Mientras tanto, duplicar el bono para las gasolineras minoristas ampliará aún más la presencia de Pemex en el mercado minorista de combustibles. La bonificación solo se aplica a las estaciones con la imagen más reciente de Pemex, introducida en agosto de 2018, y no a las estaciones que venden combustible Pemex bajo otras banderas. Según dijeron varios minoristas de combustible, algunos gasolineros que operan estaciones bajo banderas distintas a Pemex están considerando cambiar la marca de algunas estaciones después del aumento de la bonificación, dependiendo de los costos. La migración a marcas distintas a Pemex comenzó en 2016, cuando el gobierno mexicano permitió la inversión del sector privado en el sector minorista de combustibles. Sin embargo, la empresa ha recuperado progresivamente terreno en su cuota de estaciones de servicio desde 2019 bajo las políticas nacionalistas del gobierno actual en materia de energía. Pemex también ha implementado estrategias empresariales para aumentar su cuota de mercado en los mercados de gasolina y diésel, ofreciendo nueve niveles de descuentos basados en el volumen a sus clientes e introduciendo el bono de visibilidad de la marca en 2018, comenzando con Ps0.06/l para los minoristas. El número de estaciones bajo la bandera de Pemex aumentó en 3pc a 7,252 en marzo comparado con el año anterior, según los últimos datos de la empresa. Esto representa 54pc de las aproximadamente 13,600 gasolineras de México. Pemex cerró el primer trimestre con una cuota de mercado de 84.7pc en ventas de gasolina y 80.5pc en diésel, frente a 81.7pc y 71.5pc, respectivamente, un año antes, según datos de Pemex. Las ventas totales de gasolina y diésel de la empresa aumentaron en 12pc hasta los 996,200 b/d en abril, frente a los 887,500 b/d de abril de 2023, impulsadas por el aumento de su cuota de mercado. Por Antonio Gozain Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Find out more
News

Temperature likely to exceed 1.5°C limit by 2028: WMO


05/06/24
News
05/06/24

Temperature likely to exceed 1.5°C limit by 2028: WMO

London, 5 June (Argus) — There is an 80pc likelihood that the average global temperature across one of the next five years will breach the 1.5°C goal of the Paris climate agreement, the World Meteorological Organisation (WMO) said today. The Paris agreement seeks to limit global warming to "well below" 2°C above pre-industrial levels, and preferably to 1.5°C. Climate scientists use a time period of 1850-1900 as a pre-industrial baseline. But shorter-term warming, over a year or so, "does not equate to a permanent breach" of the Paris agreement goal, the WMO said. The chance of one of the next five years breaching the 1.5°C goal "has risen steadily since 2015, when such a chance was close to zero", the WMO said. It is also very likely that one of the next five years — 2024-28 — will be the hottest on record, with an 86pc chance of this happening, the organisation added. The warmest year on record was last year , at 1.45°C above pre-industrial levels. There is also a 47pc chance that the global temperature average over the entire period of 2024-28 will surpass the 1.5°C limit, the WMO said. The likelihood of this happening over 2023-27 was at 32pc. In a separate report today, EU earth-monitoring service Copernicus confirmed that last month was the warmest May on record globally. The average temperature for May was 1.52°C above pre-industrial levels, making it the 11th consecutive month at or higher than 1.5°C above that baseline, Copernicus said. The global average temperature for the past 12 months — June 2023-May 2024 — is the highest on record, at 1.63°C above the pre-industrial average, Copernicus data show. "The battle to limit temperature rise to 1.5°C will be won or lost in the 2020s," UN secretary-general Antonio Guterres said today, in a speech marking World Environment Day. "It's climate crunch time," he added. Guterres spoke ahead of the G7 summit, set for 13-15 June in southern Italy. The G7 countries are Italy — which holds the presidency this year — Canada, France, Germany, Japan, the UK and the US. The EU is a non-enumerated member. G7 finance ministers placed climate firmly on the agenda in a communique released after their meeting in late May. By Georgia Gratton Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

News

Malaysia’s Petronas lifts gas, lowers oil output in 1Q


05/06/24
News
05/06/24

Malaysia’s Petronas lifts gas, lowers oil output in 1Q

Singapore, 5 June (Argus) — Malaysia's state-owned Petronas reported higher gas production in this year's first quarter but slightly lower crude output. The firm also posted marginally higher revenue for the period but weaker profit. Petronas' gas production during January-March rose by 6.5pc to 1.74mn b/d of oil equivalent (boe/d). But oil production fell marginally by 2pc from the same period last year to 840,000 boe/d. The firm's output during the quarter was attributed to "stellar performances from Peninsular Malaysia, Sarawak and Sabah assets", it said. It also produced 2.68mn t of petrochemicals during the quarter, largely stable from a year earlier. The firm has been pressing ahead with its exploration efforts, offering five exploration blocks and five discovered resource opportunity clusters under the Malaysia Bid Round 2024. It was also awarded the Bobara working area last month under Indonesia's third petroleum bid round. Its gross LNG sales and crude sales both rose by 11pc from a year earlier to 9.9mn t and 29.1mn bl respectively. But its oil product sales and petrochemical products sales dropped by 8pc and 4pc to 71mn bl and 2.3mn t respectively. Petronas recorded revenue of 89.7bn ringgit ($19bn) for January-March, largely stable from the same period a year earlier despite prolonged price volatility, it said. But profit fell by 11pc to 21.3bn ringgit. Profitability was affected by lower realised gas prices, in line with market volatility, said the firm. It also attributed the lower profit to a rise in upstream operating expenditures and higher cash payments. The firm paid a 3bn ringgit dividend to the government for the quarter. The firm's capital expenditure (capex) during January-March rose by 2pc to 10.7bn ringgit. Out of this, the biggest share, or 64pc, went towards upstream investments, especially in Argentina, Brazil and Iraq, while 17pc went to gas investments. Petronas also spent 10pc of its capex on cleaner energy solutions and decarbonisation projects. It reported a 2.6pc drop in scope 1 and 2 greenhouse gas emissions to 11.3mn t of carbon dioxide equivalent during the quarter. The firm in February signed a storage site agreement for the M3 depleted field offshore Sarawak, with Japanese firms Japex, JGC and KLine. It also signed a joint study agreement in March with Japan's Jera to evaluate the feasibility of developing a carbon capture and storage value chain . By Prethika Nair Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

News

Q&A: LNG, renewables key for Australian gas: Jemena


05/06/24
News
05/06/24

Q&A: LNG, renewables key for Australian gas: Jemena

Sydney, 5 June (Argus) — Australian gas pipeline and power distribution firm Jemena has been at the forefront of the country's biogas sector through its Malabar facility in Sydney, while continuing to supply natural gas and eyeing hydrogen blending. Argus spoke to managing director David Gillespie on the sidelines of the Financial Review ESG Summit in Sydney about the company's future and how he views Canberra's future gas strategy. Edited highlights follow: Your thoughts on the future gas strategy, which was released with quite a bit of fanfare. What's the substance behind it? It's a piece of work that to me is very science backed. And ultimately the whole system needs to transition. It can't just be a view of one technology doing the heavy lifting. I think it's a strong acknowledgement of the role of gas that's going to be here, for not just firming of renewable energy in the future, but also those hard to abate industrial sectors. Ultimately over the long run I think gas itself is a fuel that's going to have a decarbonisation journey of its own. So it really promotes a conversation around getting down the path of a whole of system reduction of the energy sector's carbon footprint. Regarding biogas, are you seeing any kind of levers in the works to encourage production? Definitely there are green shoots. We've had the Malabar facility certified from a green power perspective and that's a great step. We're having really good engagement with government around inclusion of any purchases of that biomethane in the national greenhouse gas reporting, so if you buy certified biomethane you'll get the benefit for that in terms of emissions intensity of your business. We hope that's achieved within the next 12 months. Ultimately a strong market signal to drive investment will be a renewable gas target that will see us with very clear investment signals around the role that will play in terms of its future mix and scale, first and foremost for the industrial load that is hard to abate. Do you have an idea about what that target might look like and what sort of percentage? I don't. What I would say is if you take just the Sydney basin, two-thirds of the gas that's flowing through it is for industrial use, roughly 60 PJ/yr (1.6bn m³/yr) of gas. If you can decarbonise half of that through economically rational projects, proximate to the network, then you're on a pathway to making big inroads in the country's most populous state. We're looking at projects that are more scaled than the [2.5mn m³/yr] Malabar facility, more in the 1-2PJ range. So if you can encourage renewable gas further with targets, I think you'll really start to see some momentum. Where's the 200 TJ/d (5.34mn m³/d) Eastern Gas Pipeline (EGP) reversal project at? The [12km] pipeline to connect the [2.4mn t/yr] Port Kembla LNG terminal to the EGP was completed in December and the terminal construction will be complete by the first quarter of 2025, ahead of commercial operations from winter 2026. So the reversal activities we are completing will be lined up to be delivered by 1Q 2026. I don't think there's any new gas supply outside of LNG terminals that has a clear pathway to market in terms of approvals and timeframes. We're absolutely supportive of encouraging new supply but ultimately the most near-term solution is LNG terminals. Port Kembla's injection capacity is just over 500 TJ/d, about 40pc of the Victorian load today. So you're still going to, I think, need more supply over the long run as well. But this is going to be the first realistic option in the market. By Tom Major Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

News

Brazil's Porto Alegre airport to stay shut to Dec


04/06/24
News
04/06/24

Brazil's Porto Alegre airport to stay shut to Dec

Sao Paulo, 4 June (Argus) — The Salgado Filho international airport in Porto Alegre, in flood-hit Rio Grande do Sul state, is expected to remain closed until December, German airport management company Fraport said. The airport sustained significant damage in the record floods that hit that state in late April and early May. The floodwaters only recently receded, allowing Fraport to begin cleaning the terminal and clearing the runway. Prior to the floods, the airport had forecast that it would have 5,404 domestic and international flights and transport over 608,000 passengers in April. The company has yet to issue a firm assessment of the damage to the terminal and runway, but hopes that the airport will resume operations by the end of the year. Some flights have temporarily been redirected to the nearby Canoas air force base and Fraport is operating a temporary terminal at a shopping mall in Canoas. The airport was Brazil's eighth busiest in passengers transported in 2023. The floods have left at least 172 dead and over 579,000 people displaced, according to the state's civil defense. Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Generic Hero Banner

Business intelligence reports

Get concise, trustworthy and unbiased analysis of the latest trends and developments in oil and energy markets. These reports are specially created for decision makers who don’t have time to track markets day-by-day, minute-by-minute.

Learn more