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Viewpoint: Signs of rebalance in 2021 for biomass

  • Spanish Market: Biomass
  • 18/12/20

Strong wood pellet production and weak demand over most of 2020 have left Europe's pellet market oversupplied. But early signs of demand have appeared in recent weeks and the Argus-assessed cif northwest Europe (NWE) forward curve for industrial wood pellets shows a steady contango in 2021.

But cif NWE spot prices are still far from North American producers' break-even rates, blocking forward trade as bids and offers remain too far apart.

Europe's industrial wood pellet consumption can decline rapidly with downtime at a single large unit, as demonstrated by the outage at RWE's Eemshaven plant in May, caused by a fire which halted biomass burn and left the plant either off line or burning coal only for six months. The drop in demand was further compounded by a month-long outage at the UK's 396MW Lynemouth plant from mid-October, after a control-room ceiling collapsed.

While all large units have resumed operations, the dip in demand has left biomass-burning utilities across Europe well supplied, with stocks across the continent at high levels. At least three utilities took on extra storage in 2020, although buyers have begun to dip into stocks as outages finish and the heating season starts.

But as supply has outpaced demand for the majority of 2020, any additional demand is likely to serve only to rebalance the market in 2021 and bring spot prices back to break-even production costs.

German utility RWE tripled its Dutch biomass burn in the third quarter, as firing continued at its 631MW Amer 9 plant. And its 1.5GW Eemshaven plant started co-firing biomass again in mid-November, further boosting demand.

RWE recently moved Amer from the hard coal to the biomass section of its Remit data, suggesting that a biomass-only future for the plant is moving closer.

If the UK's Drax and Lynemouth plants — totalling nearly 3GW of pellet-fired capacity across them — and Orsted's biomass-fired fleet in Denmark run steadily over the coming months, demand may prove steady enough for the market to regain some balance in the first half of 2021.

And further demand capacity growth will likely come in the form of increased co-firing in the Netherlands and the commissioning of UK biomass developer MGT's 299MW dedicated combined heat and power new-build Teesside plant, due to start up in February 2021.

Looking ahead, wood pellet producers have pointed to Germany and Poland as possible new European demand sources. But all bids were successful in a recent German coal capacity closure tender, taking nearly 5GW of coal capacity off line, and ending any speculation over the plants' conversion to biomass. German regulator Bnetza opened the second tender in early December, to close 1.5GW of coal-fired capacity in 2021. In Poland, Czech utility Cez has put on hold its planned dedicated 25MW biomass plant, despite EU support.

On the supply side, production capacity will continue to grow and some long-term contracts between North America and Asia will commence deliveries. At least two new pellet production facilities in the US are set to start commissioning in 2021 — US wood pellet producer Enviva's 700,000 t/yr Lucedale plant in Mississippi and Canadian producer Pinnacle's 360,000 t/yr Demopolis, Alabama, plant.

Enviva "expects to complete the purchase of the project site and commence certain pre-construction activities" for its planned 700,000 t/yr Epes production facility in Alabama by the end of 2020, when a final investment decision is expected. Enviva also has expansion work set for three of its plants. The producer has signed around 3.4mn t/yr of long-term take-or-pay wood pellet contracts with Japanese offtakers, with deliveries scheduled to start in 2021-25.

In Canada, the 200,000 t/yr High Level facility in Alberta, joint-owned by Pinnacle and lumber firm Tolko, is set to reach full capacity in 2021.

The pellets produced will be sold through Pinnacle's backlog of long-term contracts. Pinnacle has at least 11 long-term offtake agreements with Japanese buyers and at least three with South Korean consumers, with various start dates, for a combined 1.68mn t/yr of wood pellets.

Production is also set to restart at US wood pellet producer Highland Pellets' 600,000 t/yr Pine Bluff plant in Arkansas in the second quarter of 2021. The plant has been off line for upgrade work since January 2020. Highland expects to produce 675,000 t/yr initially, but lift nameplate capacity to 750,000 t/yr.

Outside North America, Russian pellet production has risen consecutively for the past seven years and is on track to grow again in 2020. Russia exported 1.83mn t in January-October 2020, setting numerous record highs for wood pellet exports throughout the year.

Infrastructure upgrades and streamlined logistics at St Petersburg have helped to increase shipments. And Russian producers ramped up their efforts to obtain SBP certification to meet sustainability requirements from European utilities. There were 26 operational SBP-certified biomass production facilities in Russia at the start of 2020 and 49 by the end of the year.

Russia has increased deliveries to the Asian market, making significant inroads in South Korea this year. Japanese traders expect imports from Russia — which competes with southeast Asian producers on price — to grow in future.

Upcoming growth in supply from North America is set to cover the rise in new demand from Asia, and Russian production is well-placed to supply Europe and Asia

Although supply has outweighed demand in 2020 and resulted in full storages, strong burn from all European utilities into early 2021, as we have seen in November and December, should deplete excess stocks and help gradually shift the industrial wood pellet market back into balance and spot prices into break-even territory. As the market stands, spot price levels look unlikely to move much higher than break-even production costs, particularly for North American producers, until next winter.

North American wood pellet capacity
CountryCompanyPlantCapacityPlanned start date
CanadaPinnacle/Tolko IndustriesHigh Level, Alberta200,000 t/yr4Q20 — operational
USPinnacleDemopolis, Alabama360,000 t/yr2Q21
USEnvivaLucedale, Mississippi700,000 t/yrmid-2021
USEnvivaNorthampton, North Carolina Southampton, Virginia510,000 t/yr + 400,000 t/yr4Q20
USEnvivaGreenwood, South Carolina500,000 t/yr + 100,000 t/yr2H21
USEnvivaEpes, Alabama700,000 t/yrFID expected by end of 2020
USHighland PelletsPine Bluff, Arkansas600,000 t/yr + 150,000 t/yr2Q21

European industrial wood pellet-fired capacity MW

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31/12/24

Adjustments to Dutch low-carbon subsidy scheme in 1Q25

Adjustments to Dutch low-carbon subsidy scheme in 1Q25

London, 31 December (Argus) — The Dutch government will inform parliament of an opening round of adjustments to the stimulation of sustainable energy production and climate transition (SDE++) scheme — which targets technologies related to low-carbon power and C02 sequestration — that can be made in the first quarter of 2025, following an exploration into the future of the scheme launched last year. In a letter to parliament released last week, the climate ministry and green groups laid out the findings, conclusions and possible follow-up steps for each technology type — renewable power, renewable heat, renewable gas, low-carbon heat and low-carbon production — included in the SDE++. The government included gasification of biomass in the scheme's renewable heat technology group, as well as geothermal energy, solar thermal and fermentation. Former Dutch climate and energy minister Rob Jetten told the Dutch parliament earlier this year that the government had decided to cut state support for new biomass-fired power generation under the SDE++ scheme. The SDE++ has become complex over the years, its implementation increasingly challenging, the letter said. And limits of what more appropriate support is possible within the current instrument have been reached. Although the SDE++ — possibly with adjustments — is still an appropriate instrument for the "time being" for some techniques, others may benefit from another form of stimulation, such as an investment subsidy, the ministry said. But until suitable alternative instruments are available, the SDE++ will remain available for these techniques. The number of categories in the SDE++ reached approximately 180 in 2024. The government will continue exploring adjustments to the SDE++ and replacement instruments and prepare a "complete" package of proposals in autumn 2025. By Hannah Adler Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Viewpoint: Wood chip supply may tighten in 2025


27/12/24
27/12/24

Viewpoint: Wood chip supply may tighten in 2025

London, 27 December (Argus) — Wood chip raw material availability has grown tighter in Europe in the past couple of years and is expected to remain so in 2025, but its impact on the spot market has been limited by lower-than-typical overall demand in the period. A stronger consumption outlook by energy and other industrial segments at existing and new plants may put the market to test in 2025. In the Nordics, wood chip supply availability was tight this year in the wake of a cut-off in Russian and Belarus supply following sanctions in 2022 and harvesting restrictions imposed by national and EU regulations. A slowdown in sawmilling also contributed to a steady tightening of wood chip supply, particularly in Finland, who's imports rose year on year in 2024 as companies struggled with increased domestic wood chip prices as raw material prices held high. Swedish hardwood chip imports over the first nine months of 2024 held considerably higher than long term averages but were lower when compared with a year prior ( see chart ). This was mainly owing to a year-on-year a drop in receipts from Uruguay, Germany and Portugal. Swedish end-users struggled to meet demand from local sources that at most times were uncompetitive with chips from abroad. Swedish forest industry group Sodra, located in southern Sweden, raised the prices of its wood to historical highs earlier in the year and also expects 2025 to be a "challenging" year. Wood chip supply in the Baltics also was tightened by a slowdown in sawmilling that weighed on sawmill residue supply and is not expected to improve in the near term. But forestry feedstock was available, and prices of fuel wood harvested in Estonia's state and private-owned forests edged down on the year in January-October, following record-high prices in 2022, data from Estonian state forestry agency RMK and private forestry centre Eramets show, although prices were still well above long-term averages ( see graph ). This scarcity has yet to have a market impact as end-users still are well supplied with near capacity stocks. End-users delayed deliveries where they could or put deliveries into storage over October-November 2024. Most northern European utilities switched on their wood chip-fired boilers later than usual as warmer weather pared heating demand. Outages further pressured on the demand side, with Swedish utility Stockholm Exergi's 190MW Vartan 1 having undergone an outage of nearly six months that is scheduled to end on 27 January 2025. Although consumption picked up from late November as temperatures dropped, the delay in wood chip burn for heat generation has left end-users with ample stocks. But a structural lack of raw materials probably will tighten wood chip supply once consumption picks up in the first half of next year on forecast colder weather. Lower temperatures forecast over the next month should result in quicker stock withdrawals and encourage spot demand. For example, overnight temperatures in Oslo, Norway, are forecast to average minus 5.5°C, about 0.5°C below seasonal norms in the 45 days to 9 February, Speedwell Weather data show. Elsewhere, in Poland, supply availability of biomass may tighten, if the draft regulation on requirements for domestic energy wood put forward by the government in July is approved. But it is likely that the restrictions will be softened in the final draft by the ministry, following public consultation in the preceding months, market sources said. Looking forward, new projects across northwest Europe probably will support import demand. While a 13-month outage that began on 12 December 2023 at Gazel Energie's 150MW wood chip-fired Provence 4 power plant weakened wood chip consumption this year, it is scheduled to resume operations on 5 January 2025. Gazel Energie reached a deal with the French government to supply power from the plant over the coming eight years, which may bolster imports. French hardwood imports more than halved in January-September this year compared with a year earlier. Elsewhere, in Finland, energy company Joensuu Biocoal is set to begin commercial operations at the 60,000 t/yr heat-treated biomass production plant in the first quarter of next year. Paired with fresh demand from new projects planned for the first quarter of 2025, the deficit of supply seen in the woody feedstock market this year probably will continue into 2025, tightening wood chip availability once consumption picks up. By Hannah Adler Swedish imports of hardwood chips '000t Estonia raw material prices €/m3 Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Viewpoint: Pellet boiler sales to drop in 2025


27/12/24
27/12/24

Viewpoint: Pellet boiler sales to drop in 2025

London, 27 December (Argus) — Sales of pellet-fired boilers and stoves for residential consumption are set to fall in 2025, after reaching record highs in 2024, partly because of government subsidies in Austria and Germany. The Austrian government has offered subsidies of up to €18,000 ($18,800) towards the price of a pellet stove or boiler — around 75pc of the cost of the appliance. The subsidies have been in place for the past two years, with the aim of incentivising households to switch away from fossil fuels. Low-income consumers are able to qualify for a subsidy of up to 100pc of the cost of a stove or boiler. This pushed up Austrian new boiler purchases to a record high of 19,181 in January-November, leading to expectations that full-year sales will surpass 2022 full-year sales of 21,629, figures from industry association ProPellets Austria show. Austrian pellet consumption is expected to reach 1.4mn t in 2024, well above the 1.2 mn t sold a year earlier. But Austrian elections earlier this year have resulted in a new and more conservative coalition government taking office, which will likely alter the subsidy scheme and reduce the subsidies' value. Coalition negotiations are currently ongoing. Several customer registrations for the subsidy scheme are still being finalised, so these buyers will likely purchase their boilers using the subsidies in the new year, according to ProPellets Austria data. This means boiler sales will probably be above the long-term average next year but below 2024 sales. Germany has launched a similar subsidy scheme, covering up to 70pc of the cost of a boiler. Wood pellet exports out of the country decreased by 139,705t on the year to 512,980t in January-September, customs data show, suggesting increased local demand. Wood pellet consumption in Switzerland is also expected to be stronger year on year, at 470,000t this year compared with 416,197t in 2023, according to wood pellet association ProPellets Switzerland data and projections. Meanwhile, pellet demand from the Italian and French markets has decreased on the year as the consumer base in those countries has declined. Italian and French households are not using pellet-fired stoves or boilers for their heating needs as much as they did in the past. And several buyers in Italy and France were still relying on stocks carried over from the previous year, as mild weather reduced consumption that year. Italian household pellet consumption fell to an estimated 2.2mn-2.4mn t in 2024 from around 3mn t/yr a year earlier, and this has weighed on pellet trading activity with pellet producers in the Baltic region — one of the main suppliers to the Italian market. Higher transport costs made it unprofitable to import pellets from the Baltic — which is over 700-800km away from Italy. And the cost of raw materials in the Baltic region increased this year, meaning pellets from the region were outpriced by pellets from other markets. Italian buyers are now heavily reliant on cheaper Brazilian pellets, which has also weighed on imports from other countries. Italy imported 262,245t from Brazil in January-September, up from 186,770t over the same period in 2023, the latest customs data show. This trend could continue well into 2025, with Brazil becoming an increasingly influential sourcing country for Europe. Danish imports from Brazil rose to 77,375t in January-November 2024 from just 1,110t a year earlier, customs data show. By Marta Imarisio Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Erex delays starting wood pellet production in Vietnam


16/12/24
16/12/24

Erex delays starting wood pellet production in Vietnam

Tokyo, 16 December (Argus) — Japan's renewable energy developer Erex will postpone the start-up of its wood pellet factory in Vietnam from December 2024 to around February 2025. The Tuyen Quang factory — which is the company's first wood pellet production project in Vietnam — has been running test operations, but cannot start commercial operations this month as initially scheduled, Erex said on 13 December. The company did not disclose the reasons for the delay. The factory in Tuyen Quang province will produce around 150,000 t/yr of wood pellets, mainly from locally-secured unused forest materials, and export them to other countries including Japan for biomass-fired power plants. The investment amount for this project is $20.4mn. Erex aims to build up to 20 wood pellet factories in Vietnam, and several ones in Cambodia. The company is also planning biomass-fired generation capacity in southeast Asia, with up to 18 power plants in Vietnam and five in Cambodia. The first one is scheduled to come on line this month in Vietnam. Erex's profits from projects in Vietnam and Cambodia are expected to grow rapidly and will account for more than 70pc of its whole profits around 2030, according to the company. By Takeshi Maeda Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

EU affirms 12-month deforestation delay


03/12/24
03/12/24

EU affirms 12-month deforestation delay

Brussels, 3 December (Argus) — Negotiators for the European Parliament and EU member states have provisionally agreed on delaying the implementation of the EU's 2023 deforestation regulation by one year. Fast-track adoption can now take place with a plenary vote expected on 16-19 December and later approval by EU ministers. The EU's council of ministers noted that the provisional agreement does not affect the substance of the existing deforestation rules. The final text, provisionally agreed, does not retain a "no risk" category, put forward by parliament's largest centre-right EPP party. Parliament had narrowly accepted the EPP proposal for the "no risk" category. Backing down on the amendment now allows the EU to proceed to EUDR adoption and publication in the bloc's official journal before the end of the year. Due diligence obligations set by the EU's 2023 deforestation regulation require operators and traders to ensure listed commodities and derived products, sold in or exported to the EU are "deforestation-free". Products include those made from cattle, wood, cocoa, soy, palm oil, coffee and rubber. The European Commission said it aims to finalise the country benchmarking system "as soon as possible but no later than 30 June 2025". And an information system where firms register due diligence statements will enter into operation on 4 December. Parliament's lead negotiator for the deforestation law, Christine Schneider, also pointed to a commitment by the commission to an "impact assessment and further simplification" for low risk countries or regions. "From 2028, countries practising sustainable forest management and showing no deforestation will have the opportunity to be exempted from unnecessary red tape," said Schneider, a member of the German centre-right EPP. The Centre-left S&D group said the system of "no risk" countries would have created an "unfair double standard", dividing EU member states into different risk categories. Negotiators firmly rejected this approach, the group said. "It was clear all along that their half-baked amendment proposals had no chance of success with the council and the commission," said Delara Burkhardt, German S&D negotiator for the deforestation law. Citing reasons of legal certainty, EU states quickly came out in favour of just a one year delay , agreeing with the commission's original proposal. Speaking to parliament on 3 December, the EU's director general for trade Sabine Weyand said robust commitments to halt deforestation in South America, as of 2030, and to ensure adherence to the Paris climate Agreement, are also "essential" elements of the EU's free trade agreement (FTA) with Mercosur countries — Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay, Uruguay, and now Bolivia. By Dafydd ab Iago Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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