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Parliament votes EU ETS ship inclusion

  • Spanish Market: Emissions, Natural gas, Oil products
  • 15/09/20

The European Parliament today voted for the inclusion of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from ships over 5,000 gross tonnes in the emissions trading system (EU ETS) by 1 January 2022. Parliament also wants firms to cut ships' annual average CO2 emissions by more than 40pc by 2030.

The vote confirms the position taken by the parliament's environment committee in July when adopting a draft legal report for a regulation on monitoring, reporting and verification of CO2 emissions from shipping.

Parliament also voted to include methane emissions in the monitoring and reporting obligation. And it called for 50pc of revenues from the sale of EU ETS allowances to the maritime sector to be used for an Ocean Fund, established for the period 2022-2030 to improve the energy efficiency of ships and support investment in decarbonisation.

An additional amendment adopted would oblige the commission, if also agreed to by EU member states, to propose by 31 December 2022 "additional requirements to reduce GHG emissions other than CO2, as well as to reduce air pollutants and the discharge of wastewater, including from scrubbers, into open waters from ships". And the review should also "consider" an extension of the scope of the regulation to include ships of 400-5,000 gross tonnage.

Under the proposed regulation, the commission would be given powers to determine the baseline for annual emission reduction factors for each ship category, as well as rules and means for calculating and collecting excess emissions penalties. The text adopted by parliament calls for firms to "linearly reduce the annual CO2 emissions per transport work by at least 40pc by 2030 as an average across all ships under their responsibility, compared to the average performance per category of ships of the same size and type".

To become law, parliament must negotiate a final legal text with EU member states. Draftswoman Jutta Paulus has suggested that negotiations may only begin next year as Germany, which is currently chairing meetings of EU member states, is focusing on agreeing a European climate law and the EU's long-term budget.

Addressing parliament, EU commissioner Johannes Hahn opposed using the regulation on monitoring, reporting and verification of ship CO2 emissions to include shipping in the EU ETS and to set a 40pc GHG cut as going beyond the aims of the commission's original proposal to align the EU with global data collection systems.

"But our goals are shared. The commission has already announced its intention to extend the ETS to maritime sectors," said Hahn.

Paulus explained the GHG goal as obliging 2030 emissions to be under 40pc of average fleet emissions today.

"That means first movers, who have already done something and whose ships are much more efficient, have much less to do. And if you don't want to make the investments then you can simply go slower," said Paulus.

"There are also many other possibilities — methanol, ammonia — that are waiting for a signal for the maritime sector to be included in the ETS. Only then would it be worthwhile," Paulus said.

The commission is set to announce a revision of the EU's GHG emissions reduction target for 2030 upwards from 40pc to 55pc. It also seeks to include "at least" intra-EU maritime transport in the EU ETS.

European leaders, too, have supported financing the EU's budget with revenues from the extension of the EU ETS to both the aviation and maritime sectors.


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27/12/24

Viewpoint: California-Quebec carbon faces murky 2025

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.

Viewpoint: Mild weather may pressure gas prices in 2025


27/12/24
27/12/24

Viewpoint: Mild weather may pressure gas prices in 2025

Houston, 27 December (Argus) — The US natural gas market has worked to lower inventories and bring prices up this year, but a warm 2024-25 winter may once again keep storage levels elevated in the new year. US natural gas inventories at the end of the 2023-24 winter season were well above average due to minimal heating demand caused by mild winter weather and robust US production. Storage levels ended the season on 29 March at 2.259 Tcf (64bn m³) — 39pc higher than the five-year average and 23pc higher than a year earlier. The higher inventories pushed down gas prices by minimizing concerns about supply shortfalls and disincentivized production this year, as large natural gas producers such as Chesapeake Energy and EQT reduced output on low prices and minimal expected demand. These interventions helped reduce the supply glut. Total US gas inventories for the week ending 1 November were 3.932 Tcf, entering the 2024-25 winter season only 6pc higher than the five-year average and 4pc higher than a year earlier. In addition, the US Energy Information Administration (EIA) predicted in its November Short Term Energy Outlook (STEO) that production in 2025 would be up 1pc from 2024 as lower inventories push up prices and once again incentivize production. EIA estimates that demand this winter will exceed last year's levels and keep inventories only just above average. According to December's STEO, inventories are expected to be 1.92 Tcf at the end of March 2025, only 2pc higher than the five-year average . However, the mild weather that has covered much of the country this November and December risks once again sharply cutting into heating demand, leaving inventories at the start of 2025's spring injection season high enough to again put downward pressure on gas prices. Heating demand in November was 12pc below the seasonal average, according to the National Weather Service (NWS). The mild weather caused prices at the Henry Hub, the US benchmark, to average roughly $2/mmBtu in November. However, EIA's December STEO predicted that prices at the Henry Hub would average just under $3/mmBtu for the rest of the winter heating season on expectations for cold weather. That cold weather has yet to fully materialize. While demand in the first week of December was 20pc higher than average on cold snap, temperatures since then have been above seasonal norms, with heating demand in the week ending 20 December landing at 22pc below average and demand in the week ending 28 December expected to be 26pc below average. If below-average demand continues into 2025, it is unlikely that inventories will drop as much as forecast. Prices this winter would be close to $3/mmBtu if withdrawals this season are close to 2.1 Tcf , East Daley Analytics senior director Jack Weixel said in September. US inventories had that level of withdrawal in winter from 2020-22. However, if temperatures this winter are once again well above average, Weixel said inventories could end the season more than 530 Bcf above average, cutting average prices to $2.50/mmBtu and undoing price from the smaller-than-average injection season. Prices may be especially pressured by rising production in the Permian basin of west Texas and southeastern New Mexico. Since most of the gas output from the Permian comes from oil wells, low gas prices may not affect production, as drilling decisions there are influenced by oil production rather than gas production. Prices may still rally this winter if temperatures dip low enough in January and February, offsetting the mild weather of November and December. In addition, the rise of LNG exports next year may boost demand and subsequently raise prices. Several LNG projects or expansions are currently underway in the US with the Golden Pass export terminal, the Plaquemines export terminal and the stage 3 expansion at Cheniere's Corpus Christi liquefaction terminal all expected to start up in 2025. By Anna Muthalaly Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Viewpoint: Trump tariffs may inflate midcon fuel costs


27/12/24
27/12/24

Viewpoint: Trump tariffs may inflate midcon fuel costs

Houston, 27 December (Argus) — President-elect Donald Trump's threat to impose tariffs on all Canadian imports would increase costs for producing US midcontinent road fuels, which are largely refined from Western Canadian Select (WCS) crude. Trump said in November that he plans to impose a 25pc tariff on all imports from Mexico and Canada after he takes office on 20 January. Canadian crude is the top feedstock for Midwest refiners, accounting for 66pc of the region's crude runs in September, according to US Energy Information Administration (EIA) data. Parts of the Midwest — as well as California and the northeast US — lack sufficient pipeline capacity to process domestic crude or to receive refined products from elsewhere in the country, according to the American Fuel and Petrochemical Manufacturers (AFPM), which represents many US refiners. So AFPM wants Trump to exclude crude and refined products from his proposed tariffs. Most refiners in the US midcontinent depend on heavy sour crudes, with over 20 marketers and refiners importing crude from Canada in September, including BP's 435,000 b/d Whiting, Indiana, refinery; Cenovus' 151,000 b/d Toledo refinery in Ohio; Marathon Petroleum's 140,000 b/d Detroit, Michigan, refinery; and Phillips 66's 356,000 b/d Wood River refinery in Roxana, Illinois. Generally, heavier sour crudes are less expensive than lighter, sweeter crudes like WTI. The US in September imported 4mn b/d of crude from Canada, accounting for 62pc of total US crude imports and a record high for the month, according to EIA data. The US midcontinent imported 2.6mn b/d of Canadian crude in the month, also a record high for September. In 2023, the region imported 2.7mn b/d of Canadian crude, the highest annual imports recorded for the region, according to the EIA. Canada could move more of its crude through its 590,000 b/d Trans Mountain Expansion (TMX) pipeline to the Pacific coast, where it would head to international markets. US importers could also take more from countries like Saudi Arabia and Venezuela , which produce the heavy, sour crudes favored by refiners in the upper US midcontinent. Each supplied more than 200,000 b/d to the US in September, the largest exporters after Canada and Mexico, according to the EIA. Pipeline movements from the US Gulf coast to the US midcontinent would likely increase if the upper US midcontinent refiners try to replace Canadian heavy sour crude. The region received 23.5mn b/d of crude from the Gulf coast, as the southern US midcontinent processes WTI. But the region would probably face higher landed costs for crude originating from overseas. Refineries would have to be more disciplined with the increased feedstock costs that the threatened tariffs would impose, according to one market participant. The region would still have to rely on Canadian crude because US Gulf coast crude barrels would still cost more, and midcontinent refiners would have difficulty finding alternative sources. WCS Hardisty crude prices have averaged a discount of $17.08/bl to WTI Houston so far in the fourth quarter. For road fuel prices during the fourth quarter to date, Chicago gasoline prices averaged a 1.33¢/USG discount to the US Gulf coast and Chicago ultra low sulphur diesel averaged a 1.34¢/USG discount. But regional spreads between Chicago and the US Gulf coast could continue to narrow if midcontinent refiners reduce operating rates. By Hunter Fite Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Shell shuts oil unit at Singapore refinery


27/12/24
27/12/24

Shell shuts oil unit at Singapore refinery

Singapore, 27 December (Argus) — Shell has shut an oil unit at the 237,000 b/d Pulau Bukom refinery in Singapore to investigate a "suspected leak", said the Maritime and Port Authority of Singapore (MPA) and National Environment Agency (NEA) today. Shell informed the government agencies that they will have to shut one of its "oil processing units" at Pulau Bukom to facilitate investigations into a suspected leak. The exact oil processing unit cannot be confirmed, but it is a unit "used to produce refined oil products such as diesel". This means it is likely a crude distillation unit or a hydrocracking unit. Shell's initial estimates show that a few tonnes of oil products were leaked, together with cooling water discharge. Sea water is typically drawn to aid in the cooling process, according to the media release. This came after the 20 October leak at a pipeline at Pulau Bukom, when 30-40t of "slop" — or a mixture of oil and water — leaked into the sea, according to Shell. The gasoline market has shown little reaction so far with spreads being "stagnant" and "range bound", said a Singapore-based gasoline broker. But this could be because of a lack of market activity, with many traders away for holidays at the end of the year. The gasoil January-February spread last traded at $0.58/bl in backwardation at around 6:30pm Singapore time on 27 December, according to a Singapore-based gasoil broker. This marks a slight increase from an assessment of $0.55/bl in backwardation on 26 December, according to Argus pricing data. By Aldric Chew Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Viewpoint: US naphtha market poised for change


26/12/24
26/12/24

Viewpoint: US naphtha market poised for change

Houston, 26 December (Argus) — US Gulf coast naphtha supplies accumulated in the last half of 2024 amid faltering demand, with gasoline blenders representing a higher profile buying sector, but a pending refinery closure is set to tighten the market. Demand for all naphtha grades was much weaker coming into December because of a bearish gasoline outlook and as elevated octane prices dampened naphtha demand. Poor refinery margins encouraged refiners to run minimally, cutting back on refiner demand as well. Gasoline blenders' demand for naphtha dominated in 2024, which highlighted stronger naphtha prices in visible trades. Prices for good quality, low sulphur N+A naphtha into the gasoline blend pool averaged about 10-15¢/USG above generic reformer feedstock naphtha. Naphtha sellers were also keen to export, which moved larger volumes without engaging in volatile domestic spot markets. US naphtha exports this year through mid-December were up by over 50pc to average 272,730 b/d from a year prior, according to Vortexa data. From November to mid-December, naphtha departures from the US were up on the year by 66pc to 312,800 b/d. Despite overall increased exports in 2024, weakened Asia Pacific and European naphtha markets in the latter half of December diminished arbitrage opportunities. Heavy virgin naphtha (HVN) differentials to Nymex RBOB hovered in the mid-to-stronger 30s¢/USG discounts in the first half of December, compared with upper Nymex RBOB -40s¢/USG observed in the same period last year. However, these higher differentials were attributed more to the lower Nymex RBOB pricing basis than market strength. Comparative cash prices hovered around 160¢/USG year on year, despite a 10¢/bl hike in differentials in 2024. Supply, demand changes in store A major supply change in the Gulf coast naphtha market should tighten the ample supply of naphtha by February. LyondellBasell is on schedule to begin a staggered shutdown of its 264,000 b/d refinery in Houston, Texas, in January. The last crude distillation unit (CDU) at the site is expected to shut by February. The refiner is a steady supplier of premium quality HVN with very low sulphur, which is typically sold into the gasoline blending market. Depending on production rates, LyondellBasell, also known as Houston Refining (HRC) in naphtha circles, can load 10-15 barges of the premium quality HVN a month. However, Gulf coast naphtha remains well-supplied. ExxonMobil's third CDU at its 609,000 b/d Beaumont, Texas, refinery started operations in 2023, adding more naphtha production to the region. Naphtha exports were also significant on the demand front in 2024, despite Gulf coast naphtha export opportunities to Venezuela being curbed again on 18 April. US sanctions on oil trades to Venezuela were eased in October 2023, but reimposed by April this year due to fresh political conflict. Naphtha exports to Venezuela are currently restricted to joint-venture partners such as Chevron and Reliance. Some participants hope the incoming administration of president-elect Donald Trump will re-address oil trading with Venezuela, keeping this an item to watch in 2025. US naphtha exports to Venezuela averaged 57,600 b/d in 2024, up from 11,100 b/d during 2023, according to Vortexa, on relaxation of Venezuela sanctions from October 2023 through May 2024. Meanwhile, naphtha exports out of the Gulf coast were still focused on shipments to South America, led by Brazil and Colombia. Exports to Brazil averaged 48,600 b/d in 2024, up by 68pc from 2023 while naphtha arrivals in Colombia averaged 36,600 b/d in 2024, up by 36pc from 2023. Colombia buys light naphtha from the US for use as diluent and sells full-range naphtha out of Mamonal port to the US. By Daphne Tan Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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