Latest market news

Singapore’s SP to launch 240MW solar project in China

  • Market: Electricity, Emissions
  • 06/09/24

Singapore's state-owned utility SP plans to start up a 240MW peak (MWp) agrivoltaic project in Guangdong province's Huizhou city, which will be fully operational by the end of this year.

MWp refers to the maximum power output potential a solar farm has when reaching ideal conditions. SP expects the project to generate 7.5bn kWh of green electricity over the next 25 years, reduce coal use by 920,000t and avoid 4.46mn t/yr of carbon emissions.

The project's solar installation capacity is 240MW, and marks SP's largest solar investment in China, the company said on 5 September. SP has secured 1.45GW of solar projects in China to date, spanning 18 provinces and municipalities.

SP in May also partnered with China environmental technology solutions provider Qingdao Daneng Environmental Protection Equipment to invest and build a 90MW aquavoltaic farm in Qingdao city. This will power a green hydrogen facility in Qingdao, likely referring to Chinese refiner Sinopec's 4,500 t/yr facility.

The solar project has an investment value of over 76mn Singapore dollars ($58.5mn) and is on track to connect to the grid by the end of the year. SP expects it to produce 162mn kWh/yr of green electricity and reduce carbon emissions by 160,000 t/yr. The operational model will incorporate renewable energy generation, grid integration, demand-side management, and energy storage.

SP's first investment in solar assets was in June 2023, for 78MWp of agrivoltaics assets across four agricultural sites in the Dabu county of Meizhou city in Guangdong province. The project will generate 91.3GWh/yr of clean electricity, and reduce coal usage by almost 30,000t, which amounts to cutting more than 91,000 t/yr of carbon emissions. The operational date of this project was not disclosed.

SP in May entered a strategic alliance with Shanghai-based CMB Financial Leasing to obtain financing services, which is expected to reach up to 8bn yuan ($1.13bn) over the next three years, to support the firm's deployment of renewable energy solutions in China. The projects will span utility-scale solar farms, distributed solar photovoltaic, energy storage, and district cooling and heating.


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
30/12/24

Viewpoint: Bearish year ahead for NOx markets

Viewpoint: Bearish year ahead for NOx markets

Houston, 30 December (Argus) — The Cross-State Air Pollution Rule (CSAPR) NOx allowance markets will likely face a bearish year in 2025, as the incoming administration of president-elect Donald Trump creates uncertainty over the fate of the latest federal regulation to curb emissions. The US Supreme Court halted implementation of the US Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) "good neighbor" plan in June with a nationwide stay. This left an already stunted regulation to cut NOx emissions, a precursor to harmful ground-level ozone, obsolete for the foreseeable future. EPA finalized a plan in March 2023 to help downwind states meet the 2015 national air quality standards by setting tighter ozone season NOx caps on power plants covered by CSPAR as well as new limits for industrial facilities in more than 20 upwind states. But by the time the justices issued the stay, the number of covered states had already shrunk by more than half because of lower-court orders pausing implementation in 12 states. Prices for seasonal NOx allowances have flatlined and the market has been illiquid over much of 2024 because of uncertainty over how numerous legal challenges against the good neighbor plan would play out. Argus has assessed Group 2 allowances at $775/short ton (st) and Group 3 allowances at a record low $1,250/st since January. This could change, albeit at a slow pace, because EPA finalized an interim rule in November to comply with the nationwide stay. Power plants that had been covered by the good neighbor plan are now under less-stringent NOx budgets tied to older air quality standards, and the 10 states that had been participating in the Group 3 market prior to the stay are now reshuffled into Group 2 and a separate 12-state "expanded" Group 2 market. All that remains is… uncertainty In the new year, the market will wait to see how the Trump administration will deal with the good neighbor plan and the associated legal challenges in the US Court of Appeals for the DC Circuit and the US Supreme Court. Because of the stay, there is no hurry for the new administration to address the legal woes, and it is unlikely the DC Circuit will soon rule on the legality of EPA's rejection of state ozone reduction plans. The Trump EPA, following precedent of prior administrations, will likely ask the court to pause litigation until it decides whether to continue defending the plan, according to Jeff Holmstead, assistant administrator at the agency under former president George W Bush. The agency will likely revoke the plan at some point and replace it with a rule that is more "modest" and would not significantly affect allowance prices, he said. The EPA under Trump could ultimately decide that upwind states do not significantly contribute to interstate pollution, reversing a determination that has underpinned the good neighbor plan. That could lead to downwind states asking the agency to address specific sources that contribute to their air quality problems, said Carrie Jenks, executive director of Harvard Law School's Environmental and Energy Law Program. The Supreme Court is also hearing a case to decide the proper court venue for Clean Air Act disputes, which involves the good neighbor plan. The Trump administration likely will agree with various states and industry groups that say EPA's rejections of individual state plans are not a "nationally applicable" action and must be litigated in the regional circuit courts, but the Supreme Court is likely to continue the venue case, Jenks said. Oral arguments will likely be held early next year. It is also unclear how Lee Zeldin, Trump's pick to lead EPA will affect the regulation. Zeldin is a moderate, given his history, and will likely "not want to impose significant new burdens on fossil fuel power plants", Holmstead said. Trump's plans to downsize the federal bureaucracy could also affect future rulemakings, according to Jenks. "Nobody really knows what's going to happen," she said. As a result, market activity is likely to remain limited in the coming months as participants await legal and regulatory clarity. In addition, markets are likely to be oversupplied now that power plants are under lighter NOx caps. Most states in the seasonal NOx markets were well below their limits for the 2024 ozone season, despite a 9.2pc increase in cumulative emissions in the expanded Group 2. EPA will also allow some power plants to convert vintage 2021-23 Group 3 allowances to Group 2 or expanded Group 2 allowances, adding to supply. With low demand and a potential oversupply, seasonal NOx allowances could see prices fall . By Ida Balakrishna Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Find out more
News

Viewpoint: Carbon offsets face bumpy road


30/12/24
News
30/12/24

Viewpoint: Carbon offsets face bumpy road

Houston, 30 December (Argus) — Carbon offset credits from California's cap-and-trade program will meet reduced compliance demand next year, while program updates promise to upend market dynamics. Each carbon offset under the joint California-Quebec carbon market, known as the Western Climate Initiative (WCI) equals 1 metric tonne of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from sources not covered by either cap-and-trade program. California and Quebec allow covered entities to use offsets from either program to meet their annual GHG emissions obligations. But market regulators are eyeing changes for carbon offsets in Quebec that may have wider impacts. Quebec is considering phasing out carbon offsets by 2030 as part of an ongoing rulemaking for a more-stringent program. While the province has not shared its final approach, regulators have floated in workshops either limiting offset use to 4pc of overall obligations for 2027-29 or putting offsets under the program's emissions cap. Quebec's Environment Ministry allows for covered entities to utilize carbon offsets for up to 8pc of outstanding emissions, including from California. Meanwhile, the California Air Resources Board (CARB) allows for covered entities to use CCOs for 4pc of obligations through 2025 and for 6pc starting in 2026, though at least half must come from projects that provide direct environmental benefits to the state (DEBs). After 2031, Quebec is mulling transitioning to a government carbon offset purchase-and-retire system, but it remains unclear how that might function — and what it means for the longevity of carbon offset projects in Quebec, said Joey Hoekstra, a policy associate with International Emissions Trading Association (IETA). "That mechanism and how that is going to look like and what that will be, there has not been a lot of details," he said. Quebec plans to finalize its program changes early in 2025 , with implementation in the spring. The move away from carbon offsets has implications for California's program, ClimeCo chief operating officer Derek Six said. "Quebec is an outlet for the non-DEBs credits in California," Six said. The province issues very few carbon offsets under its own protocols, just under 1.8mn since 2014, according to provincial data published in November. California, which allows for projects to generate credits in and outside the state, issued nearly 13.8mn CCOs in 2023 alone, with just under 9.6mn from non-DEBs projects. The CCOs without DEBs are an oversupplied market, said Six, compared with the limited number of projects that generate the more expensive DEBs credits in California. Argus last assessed California Carbon Offsets (CCOs) seller-guaranteed offsets at $14.60/t, CCOs with a three-year invalidation at $14/t and CCOs with an eight-year invalidation at $13.90/t on 20 December. CCOs with direct environmental benefits to the state (DEBS) currently trade at an $15.50/t premium to non-DEBs CCOs. In issuances over the past five years, non-DEBs have formed the bulk of credits distributed by CARB, with DEBS-eligible credits only going as high as 42.3pc of total issuances this year. Covered emitters in Quebec used 13.2mn non-DEBs CCOs to meet their 2021-2023 compliance obligations, along with roughly 75,000 CCOs with DEBS. Provincial entities used just under 366,400 carbon offsets generated in Quebec for compliance. California emitters utilized 13.2mn non-DEBs CCOs and nearly 13mn DEBs CCOs for their 2021-2023 compliance. Washington, which hopes to link its cap-and-trade program with the WCI as early as 2026, is unlikely to stopgap the shortfall in demand for non-DEBs credits once it allows outside credits, instead feeding further demand for DEBS CCOs. The state allows participants to use carbon offsets for 5pc of its emissions and a further 3pc from projects on federally recognized tribal lands over 2024-2026, reduced to 4pc and 2pc, respectively, for 2027-2049. The state's ongoing linkage rulemaking would allow the participants to use offsets from within a linked jurisdiction, which will include CCOs with DEBs and Quebec offsets. Washington's cap-and-invest, which started in 2023, has generated few offsets of its own so far — just over 310,000t, all from ODS projects. But that may change in the short term, Six said. Project developers have likely been holding off over this year until voters rejected an effort to repeal the state's program in November. "I would not be surprised if you all of a sudden see a bit of a flood of project listings from people who had Washington ODS material," he said. Washington is also conducting a rulemaking to increase the variety of projects resulting in carbon offsets credits. Ecology plans to implement these changes in summer 2025. But carbon offsets remain unlikely to be much of a cost-saving measure for compliance in Washington, Six said. Washington, unlike California or Quebec, puts them under its annual emissions cap and removes allowances in line with offset use. By Denise Cathey Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

News

Viewpoint: California-Quebec carbon faces murky 2025


27/12/24
News
27/12/24

Viewpoint: California-Quebec carbon faces murky 2025

Houston, 27 December (Argus) — The joint California-Quebec climate market, known as the Western Climate Initiative (WCI), is on tenterhooks going into 2025, stymied by rulemaking delays but on the cusp of a more mature phase. Both California and Quebec are eyeing more-stringent future programs and have floated a series of changes over the past year and a half designed to achieve those goals. The California Air Resources Board (CARB) is considering moving its program's mandate from the present 2030 target of a 40pc reduction in greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, compared with 1990 levels, to a 48pc reduction to keep the state on target to meet its 2045 goal of net-zero emissions. In line with this increased ambition, CARB will need to remove at least 180mn metric tonnes (t) of allowances from the 2026-2030 auction and allocation annual budgets to start with, and up to 265mn t in total from the program budgets from 2026-2045. CARB has floated other changes , including toughening corporate relationship disclosure requirements, increasing the program's cost-containment allowance price tiers and updating a portion of the program's carbon offset protocols. Quebec has considered removing 17.5mn t of allowances, which correspond to carbon offset uses for compliance in the province over 2013-2020. The Quebec Environmental Ministry proposed to address this by removing these allowances from the province's 2025-2030 auction budgets in a November 2023 workshop. Quebec is also mulling changing the current three-year compliance period to align with statutory 2030 and 2050 GHG targets. But this a move that California, which had discussed similar compliance period changes in April , has not revisited since. Quebec is considering tapering the limit for carbon offset use for compliance in the province by 2030 and transitioning over to a provincial reduction purchase mechanism in 2031, although regulators have not gone in-depth on how a replacement system would function. The WCI rulemakings have been marked by a series of delays over this year, pushing past projections from the end of last year that it would finalize program changes by the second half of 2024. Quebec, which was set to deliver a draft of program amendments in September, rescheduled to early 2025, with implementation expected in spring 2025. While the regulation was nearly complete in late September, the Quebec Environmental Ministry chose to postpone, since it cannot publish before California, said Jean-Yves Benoit, the agency's director general of carbon regulation and emissions data. CARB has signaled it intends to publish its package of rulemaking amendments in early 2025. The agency on 19 December confirmed it expects to "complete and release the regulatory package for a 45-day public comment period" in early 2025 but did not explain the delay. The agency may be waiting for a formal extension of the cap-and-trade program when the legislature resumes on 6 January. California lawmakers have given CARB explicit authority to utilize a cap-and-trade system to reduce GHG emissions out to 2030. CARB maintains it has authority to operate a cap-and-trade program past 2030, but program participants have stressed the need for formal certainty around the program to aid future planning. CARB will begin invoking the post-2030 budgets starting in 2028 for the program's advance auctions. The various delays have compressed the timelines California and Quebec must achieve their statutory target ambitions, making 2025 a potentially pivotal year. By Denise Cathey Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

News

Japanese firms to develop 1.07GW offshore wind power


27/12/24
News
27/12/24

Japanese firms to develop 1.07GW offshore wind power

Tokyo, 27 December (Argus) — Japanese firms will develop wind power farms with a total capacity of 1.07GW in Aomori and Yamagata prefectures, to raise domestic renewable power capacity as part of efforts to achieve the 2050 decarbonisation goal. Japan's largest power producer by capacity Jera, renewable energy firm Green Power Investment (GPI), and power utility Tohoku Electric Power will build a 615MW offshore wind farm off the coast of Aomori. The offshore wind farm will be the country's largest wind power project, according to Jera, and plans to start commercial operations in June 2030. Fellow utility Kansai Electric Power, trading house Marubeni, BP's subsidiary BP IOTA, Japanese gas distributor Tokyo Gas and local construction firm Marutaka separately plan to develop a 450MW offshore wind farm in Yuza city, Yamagata prefecture. The five companies set up a joint venture called Yamagata Yuza wind power ahead of the project. It plans to start commercial operations in June 2030, same as the other offshore wind project. The two projects are selected by the trade and industry ministry Meti's public offering which closed in July. The only way to build a large-scale offshore wind power plant is to apply for Meti's open call for proposals, Jera said. By Reina Maeda Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

News

Viewpoint: US gas market poised for more volatility


26/12/24
News
26/12/24

Viewpoint: US gas market poised for more volatility

New York, 26 December (Argus) — US natural gas markets may be subjected to more dramatic price swings in 2025 as growing LNG exports and increasingly price-sensitive producers place greater pressure on the US' stagnant gas storage capacity. Those price swings could pose challenges for consumers without ample access to gas supplies, as well as producers interested in keeping some output unhedged to capture potentially higher prices without taking on excessive financial risk. But volatility may also present opportunities for traders looking to exploit unstable price spreads, and for producers that can adapt their operations to fit a more unpredictable pricing environment. Calm before the storm High storage levels and low spot prices this year — averaging $2.11/mmBtu through November this year at the US benchmark Henry Hub — triggered by an unusually warm 2023-24 winter, may have obscured some of the structural factors pushing the US gas market into a more volatile future. But those structural factors remain and loom increasingly large for prices. The US has moved from a roughly 60 Bcf/d (1.7bn m³/d) market eight years ago to a more than 100 Bcf/d market today, "and we haven't grown our storage capacity at all", Rich Brockmeyer, head of North American gas and power at commodity trading house Gunvor, said earlier this year. As supply and demand for US gas grow, the country's roughly 4.7-Tcf storage capacity becomes ever less effective in stemming demand shocks, such as extreme winter weather events, which can more rapidly draw down inventories than in years past. Additionally, a growing share of US gas is being consumed by LNG export terminals being built and expanded on the US Gulf coast. When those facilities encounter unexpected problems and cease operations — as has happened numerous times at the 2 Bcf/d Freeport LNG terminal in Texas in recent years — volumes that were previously being liquefied and sent overseas were instead backed up into the domestic market, crushing prices. More LNG exports may mean more opportunities for such supply shocks. US LNG exports are expected to increase by 15pc to almost 14 Bcf/d in 2025 as operations begin at Venture Global's planned 27.2mn t/yr Plaquemines facility in Louisiana and Cheniere's 11.5mn t/yr Corpus Christi, Texas, stage 3 expansion, US Energy Information Administration data show. Spot price volatility will be most acutely felt in regions like New England that lack underground gas storage. "In areas like the Gulf coast, where you have a lot of storage, it won't be a problem," Alan Armstrong, chief executive of Williams, the largest US gas pipeline company, told Argus in an interview. Producers' trade-off Volatile gas markets are a mixed bag for producers, many of whom profit from volatility while also struggling to plan and budget based on uncertain revenues for unhedged volumes. Though insufficient gas storage deprives the market of stability, "from the standpoint of a marketing and trading guy that's trying to manage my gas supply to customers and my trading book, I love volatility",said Dennis Price, vice president of marketing and trading at Expand Energy, the largest US gas producer by volume. BP chief financial officer Sinead Gorman in November 2023 specifically named Freeport LNG's eight-month-long shutdown in 2022-23 from a fire as a driver of volatility in the global gas market. The supermajor was able to exploit the "incredibly fragile" gas market, she said, which was a key factor driving the success of its integrated gas business. "Those opportunities are what we typically seek and enjoy," Gorman said. Increasingly, producers have also been adapting to a more volatile market by switching production on and off in response to prices, but often without revealing the price at which a supply response will occur. Expand Energy, for instance, told investors in October that it was amassing drilled but uncompleted wells and wells that had yet to be brought on line, which it could activate relatively quickly when prices rise. It declined to name the price at which that would occur. Market participants, attempting to price in this phenomenon by anticipating producers' next moves may respond more dramatically to supply signals than in the past, when production was steadier. Producers' increased responsiveness to prices could help to balance the market somewhat, though more aggressive intervention into operations could take a toll on well performance and pipelines, FactSet senior energy analyst Connor McLean said. Producers are "treating the reservoir itself like a storage facility", Price said. By Julian Hast 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