Oil companies in Germany overfulfilled the domestic biofuels blending mandate for the 2022 compliance year by 3.3mn t CO2 equivalent (CO2e), according to preliminary data from the customs office.
Fuel suppliers obligated to fulfil the country's 7pc greenhouse gas (GHG) emission reduction quota generated around 10.92mn t CO2e by blending biodiesel, hydrotreated vegetable oil (HVO) or ethanol. This was higher than 10.7mn t in 2021, when the GHG quota was 6pc.
Oil companies claimed 843,600t CO2e from 1,714 GWh of electricity used to charge e-vehicles, up from 24,900t CO2e, or 199 GWh, in the 2021 compliance year. This substantial increase stems from a change in legislation that entered into force in 2022 and simplified the way GHG credits could be claimed, allowing charging point operators as well as non-public charging points to claim GHG savings.
Companies achieved 636,800t CO2e from using pure biofuels such as bio-LNG and bio-CNG as transport fuel. GHG savings from upstream emission reduction (UER) projects were 1.92mn t CO2e, up from 1.8mn t CO2e a year earlier.
Obligated parties could also claim around 2.6mn t CO2e from 2021 compliance.
Overall GHG savings achieved in 2022 compliance year amounted to 16.7mn t CO2e, up from 15.25mn t CO2e a year earlier.
The cap on crop-based renewable fuel tickets, the cap on biofuels produced feedstocks listed in Annex IX part B and the cap on palm oil-based biofuels and high-ILUC risk biofuels were surpassed by 30,700 GJ, 30,200 GJ and 58,200 GJ, respectively.
In order to achieve Germany's advanced sub-quota of 0.2pc of overall energy marketed, companies sold 8.3mn GJ of advanced biodiesel and 14.19mn GJ of advanced HVO, up by almost 125,000 GJ and 10mn GJ, respectively, from 2021. Including the excess carry over from 2021, companies could claim around 41.14mn GJ of advanced certificates, 21.91mn GJ more than needed to comply with the advanced sub-quota.