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FSC, PEFC suspend Russian, Belarus wood certification

  • Spanish Market: Biomass
  • 09/03/22

The Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) has suspended trading certificates in Russia and Belarus and will "block wood sourcing" from the countries for as long as "the armed violence continues in Ukraine", it said on 8 March.

The decision is effective from 8 April 2022, the FSC said.

As a result, "wood and forest products from Russia and Belarus cannot be used in FSC products or be sold as FSC-certified anywhere in the world as long as the armed violence continues", it said.

FSC will give forest management certificate holders in Russia the option of keeping this accreditation, but will give "no permission to trade or sell FSC-certified timber", to continue to protect forests in Russia.

The certification body will publish further details on the implementation of this decision on 9 March, it said.

The Programme for the Endorsement of Forest Certification (PEFC) said on 4 March that all wood materials from the two countries would be considered "conflict timber" and could not be used in PEFC-certified products.

PEFC announced that all Russian and Belarusian material for which the due diligence system (DDS) has not been applied for after 2 March 11:55am eastern standard time is considered conflict timber and cannot be used in the PEFC chain of custody, or PEFC-certified or controlled sources.

Russian and Belarusian material already in storage within and outside both countries without the approved DDS will not be considered PEFC-certified.

According to PEFC's website, 31,976,108 hectares (ha) of forest in Russia and 9,022,400ha in Belarus were PEFC certified as of 31 December — 12.5pc of the global total. There were also 104 companies in Russia and 110 in Belarus that held PEFC chain of custody certification, or 1.7pc of the global total.

Market impact

Suspension of FSC and PEFC certifications will have a large impact on wood pellet and chip flows from Russia. Accreditation from either is a precondition for the sustainable biomass programme (SBP) certification required by almost all pellet and chip consumers in northwest European — Russia's largest market for pellets.

The SBP said on 7 March that it was closely monitoring the situation in Ukraine, but has yet to comment following the FSC and PEFC suspensions.

The European market was already tight this winter, with the conflict in Ukraine likely to remove over 2mn t/yr of material. Russia exported 2.2mn t of pellets in 2021 — 89.9pc to Europe — and Belarus exported 528,000t, with most bound for the Baltic states and elsewhere in Europe.

European consumers had already started asking producers in the US and other regions for additional spot volumes, with some companies suspending trade with Russia despite the fact that sanctions have yet to directly target the country's energy sector. But supply is still tight, with virtually no spot availability, and many utilities could opt to reduce generation, go offline, or increase coal burn at co-firing plants.

The impact of certification suspension will also be felt in Asia, and particularly in Japan, where utilities can only burn PEFC, FSC and SBP certified pellets to take part in the feed-in-tariff programme.

Japan imported 102,212t of pellets from Russia in 2021, up from 17,369t in 2020, as the biomass market continued to expand. And although Russia provided just 3pc of the country's biomass imports in 2021, suspension of trade with the country could tighten the market further.


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14/03/25

New Zealand's Genesis Energy signs wood pellet deal

New Zealand's Genesis Energy signs wood pellet deal

Sydney, 14 March (Argus) — New Zealand utility Genesis Energy has signed an initial agreement with biomass developer Carbona to study the viability of commercial wood pellet supply to the Huntly Power Station, supporting efforts to transition it from coal-fired power to wood-fired. Carbona is also building a 180,000 t/yr torrefied wood pellet plant in central North Island, it announced on 14 March. The company plans to sell the pellets it produces at the site to major utilities in New Zealand and abroad, beginning in 2028. Genesis-operated Huntly is New Zealand's largest power station, supplying the country's grid with 1,200MW, and currently runs on gas-fired and coal-fired generators. But Genesis has been exploring opportunities to substitute coal with biomass at Huntly over recent years. Genesis signed a non-binding pellet purchase agreement with Australian biomass producer Foresta last month. The utility at that time said that it would need 300,000 t/yr of torrefied wood pellets by 2028 to achieve its coal reduction goals. Carbona's deal with Genesis also comes just days after the Ministry of Business, Innovation, and Employment released data showing that coal and gas-fired electricity generation across New Zealand collapsed in the October-December 2024 quarter , dropping by 42pc on the year. By Avinash Govind Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Malaysia’s PKS exports fall in 2024, wood pellets rise


13/03/25
13/03/25

Malaysia’s PKS exports fall in 2024, wood pellets rise

Singapore, 13 March (Argus) — Malaysia's total PKS exports stood at 1.27mn t in 2024, down from 1.33mn t in 2023 because of lower demand from Japan and Thailand as well as heavy rain that affected crude palm oil (CPO) output and PKS availability. Malaysia exported 118,000t of PKS in December, down by 32pc from a year earlier, and 20pc lower than 148,000t in the previous month, according to GTT customs data. This is because of lower demand from Thailand, with Japanese demand levels rising slightly on the month in December. But Japanese demand dropped on the year in 2024, because of outages at several power plants following fire incidents, with longer maintenance periods capping PKS consumption in early 2024. But demand picked up after August 2024, and this was reflected in prices. Argus assessed prices for PKS fob Malaysia compliant with Japan's feed-in-tariff (FiT) at $94.63/t on 24 December, up from $83.92/t on 28 August. Argus last assessed the price at $95/t on 5 March this year. The country shipped 117,000t of PKS to Japan in December, down by 7.5pc from 126,000t a year earlier and higher by 10pc from 107,000t in November. Japan was the top export destination for PKS, accounting for 99pc of Malaysia's total exports in December. Shipments to Thailand stood at 829t in December, down by 98pc from 47,200t a year earlier, and 63pc lower from November. Wood pellets Total wood pellet exports from Malaysia were at 1.13mn t in 2024, rising by 31pc from 2023. Malaysia exported 143,000t of wood pellets in December 2024, 28pc higher from 111,000t a year earlier but lower by 10pc from 159,000t in November 2024, according to GTT customs data. The increase in shipments comes as top wood pellet-consuming countries like South Korea and Japan look to diversify their sources, especially as prices of pellets from key supplier Vietnam have continued to increase. Argus assessed the fob Vietnam to South Korea market at $131.63/t on 5 March from $122.19/t on 4 December, with the fob Vietnam to Japan market also climbing to $144/t from $134.83/t over the same period. Japan accounted for 39pc of the country's wood pellet exports in December. Malaysian wood pellet shipments to Japan stood at 56,000t in December, almost tripling from 19,800t a year earlier, but 39pc lower than 91,700t in November. Malaysian shipments of wood pellets to South Korea stood at 26,400t in December, more than doubling on the year but down by 31pc on the month. Shipments to South Korea accounted for 19pc of Malaysia's total wood pellet exports in December. There was a significant volume of wood pellets shipped to the Netherlands in December, with one cargo of 60,000t. This shipment made up 42pc of Malaysia's pellet exports in December. By Joshua Sim Malaysia's biomass exports in December 2024 t Quantity on month (%) on year (%) PKS Japan 117,367 10.2 -7.5 Thailand 829 -62.8 -98.2 Total 118,196 -20.4 -32.1 Wood pellets Netherlands 60,000 na -23.9 Japan 56,067 -38.8 182.8 South Korea 26,440 -31.4 133.8 Total 142,682 -10.5 28.3 Source: GTT Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Japan’s MGC to fund US biomass-based plastic start-up


13/03/25
13/03/25

Japan’s MGC to fund US biomass-based plastic start-up

Tokyo, 13 March (Argus) — Japanese petrochemical producer Mitsubishi Gas Chemical (MGC) announced on 12 March that it decided to invest an undisclosed value in a US biomass-based plastics start-up ReSource Chemical. ReSource Chemical is developing technology to generate furandicarboxylic acid (FDCA), which is a raw monomer used to produce plastic polyethylenefuranoate (PEF), from wooden biomass-based lignocellulose. PEF is expected to replace polyethylene-terephthalate (PET) once a reasonable production method is established, as PEF is likely to have stronger heat-resilience and durability as well as lower gas-transmission rate and moisture permeability than PET. US venture capital funds Khosla Ventures, Fathom Fund and Chevron Technology Ventures and other individual investors also plan to finance ReSource Chemical with MGC. ReSource Chemical will raise $15mn in total. The funds will be used to build a pilot plant to manufacture FDCA. MGC aims to procure furoic acid, which is an intermediate product in ReSource Chemical's FDCA production process. MGC said furoic acid is not currently in use, but the firm will explore potential usage of this biomass-based feedstock in future. Japanese companies have attempted to develop biomass-based plastics for decarbonisation. Domestic trading house Mitsui plans to explore producing 400,000 t/yr bio-PET in the southeastern region of the US, targeting to start output during 2025-2026. By Nanami Oki Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Brazil refinery to produce fuel from eucalypt


11/03/25
11/03/25

Brazil refinery to produce fuel from eucalypt

Sao Paulo, 11 March (Argus) — Petrobras-controlled Riograndense refinery successfully conclude tests to produce fuels from eucalyptus biomass in Brazil's southern Rio Grande do Sul state. The refinery used a bio-oil from eucalyptus biomass and converted it in fractions of fuel gas, LPG, components to produce gasoline and marine fuel with renewable content and others. The bio-oil came from industrial company Vallourec's forest unit in southeastern Minas Gerais state. The test reveals the possibility of using wood and other forestry residues as feedstocks for products usually coming from a fossil origin, said Petrobras's technology, engineer and innovation director Renata Baruzzi. Petrobras intends to transform Riograndense refinery into the first oil plant to produce 100pc renewable fuels in the world, according to Petrobras' chief executive Magda Chambriard. The efforts are part of Petrobras' BioRefino program, which will invest almost $1.5bn to generate sustainable fuels as of 2029. Riograndense refinery is also controlled by Brazilian companies Ultra Group and Braskem petrochemical. By Maria Albuquerque Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

EU consults on decarbonisation, clean tech aid


11/03/25
11/03/25

EU consults on decarbonisation, clean tech aid

Brussels, 11 March (Argus) — The European Commission has opened a consultation on updates to its state aid rules, which aim to take into account the bloc's proposed clean industrial deal — designed to simplify and speed decarbonisation. The commission is aiming to publish the rules in June, following input from EU states. The updated state aid rules would then apply to how the commission decides on EU states' financing of projects up until the end of 2030. The draft provides for member states' simplified tender procedures for renewables and energy storage. The commission specifically notes the possibility of granting aid without tender for less mature technologies, such as renewable hydrogen. There would also be more flexibility for EU states aiding industrial decarbonisation, with a choice of tender-based schemes, direct support and new limits for very large projects. The commission lists batteries, solar panels, wind turbines, heat-pumps, electrolysers and carbon capture usage and storage among clean technologies that can be supported, as well as their key components and critical raw materials. Officials note the possibility of EU countries de-risking private investment. The rules, when adopted, would also allow for investment in storage for renewable fuels of non-biological origin (RFNBOs), biofuels, bioliquids, biogas, biomethane, and biomass fuels as long as they obtain at least 75pc of their content from a directly connected and related production facility. Aid can only be granted for biofuels, biogas, and biomass fuel production if compliant with the bloc's renewables directive. While the rules for biofuels are not new, they do reflect the wider scope of aid now foreseen by the commission. And officials say the rules allow for projects in the EU to receive aid from a member state if a comparably project would receive aid in a third country. The commission released its proposed clean industrial deal in late February . The deal targets a simplification of rules, to allow EU member states to aid industrial decarbonisation, renewables rollout, clean tech manufacturing and de-risking private investments. Today's consultation runs until 25 April. By Dafydd ab Iago Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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