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Singapore announces provisional marine biofuel standard

  • Market: Biofuels, Oil products
  • 05/10/22

Singapore's Maritime and Port Authority (MPA) has developed a provisional national quality standard for marine biofuels, as well as a framework laying down conditions for biofuel supply for licensed bunker fuel suppliers.

This standard is necessary and timely given that all marine fuels supplied in Singapore need to meet International Organization for Standardization (ISO) 8217 standards. But it is still under revision to include additional requirements for blends of distillate and residual fuel oils with fatty acid methyl ester(s), senior minister of state for transport Chee Hong Tat said at the Singapore International Bunkering Conference and Exhibition (Sibcon) on 5 October.

The standard was developed together with the industry, academia and relevant government organisations under a national standardisation programme overseen by government agency Enterprise Singapore.

The framework stating conditions for the supply of biofuels for licensed bunker suppliers was put in place to support trials conducted by vessels, Chee said. Singapore has so far supplied about 70,000t of biofuels to ocean-going vessels across more than 40 biofuel bunkering operations, he added.

The conditions for biofuel supply include a requirement for licensed bunker suppliers to ensure that the mass flow meter (MFM) installed on a bunker craft is intended for biofuel measurement with a measurement uncertainty at not more than 0.5pc, as well as a restriction against blending on board a bunker craft within the port of Singapore, according to the MPA.

The framework comes after the MPA at the start of 2017 required bunker fuels within the country's waters to be delivered using MFMs, which are designed to give more accurate readings of the volumes transferred from sellers to buyers.

Singapore will focus on full electrification and use of biofuels for local harbour craft in port waters In order to reach net zero emissions by 2050. A compatibility study on various biofuel types and percentage blends for harbour craft is currently under way, with findings expected later this year, Chee said.

Apart from biofuels, Singapore is also looking at LNG, methanol, ammonia and hydrogen derived from renewables and its carriers as part of a multi-fuel future.


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01/04/25

US oil, farm groups push EPA for steep biofuel mandate

US oil, farm groups push EPA for steep biofuel mandate

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The coalition is also pushing the agency to set a total conventional volume requirement at 25bn RINs, which would keep an implied mandate for corn ethanol flat at 15bn USG. Ethanol groups had previously eyed a mandate even higher, but limits on the amount of ethanol that can be blended into gasoline make much more-stringent requirements a tough sell to oil refiners. The coalition provided no specific request for the cellulosic biofuel subcategory, where most credit generation comes from biogas. Credits in that category are more expensive, but price concerns have been less potent recently given an EPA proposal to lower previously set cellulosic obligations, signaling that future volume requirements can be cut, too. EPA is aiming to finalize new RFS volume mandates by the end of the year if not earlier, people familiar with the administration's thinking have said. EPA officials signaled at the meeting they were working urgently on the rulemaking. 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Some retail groups, including the National Association of Convenience Stores and the National Association of Truck Stop Operators, instead sent a letter to EPA today arguing that the groups pushing steep volumes are discounting potential headwinds to the sector from new tax credit policy. Some of the groups advocating for higher biofuel volumes have pointed to high production capacity and feedstock availability, but have preferred to ignore thornier issues like tax credits, lobbyists say. "An overly aggressive increase in advanced biofuel blending mandates under the RFS will be punitive for American consumers" without extending a long-running $1/USG tax credit for biomass-based diesel blenders, the retailers' letter said. That incentive expired last year and was replaced by the Inflation Reduction Act's "45Z" credit, which offers subsidies to producers instead of blenders and throttles benefits based on carbon intensity. 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28/03/25
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28/03/25

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