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Carbon - In focus: Biomethane ACCU pathway uncertain
Carbon - In focus: Biomethane ACCU pathway uncertain
London, 6 March (Argus) — Australia will explore expanding the carbon-crediting pathway for its nascent biomethane industry, but a potential preference for renewable gas certificates over Australian Carbon Credit Units (ACCUs) may curb that development, stakeholders said. The Australian government last month prioritised the creation of a new Alternative Waste Treatment ACCU method that could boost emissions abatement by offering a potentially longer crediting period and by adding biomethane generation as an eligible activity. This could potentially promote a higher uptake of ACCU projects for biomethane facilities in Australia, which would help developers and investors to finance new plants, as well as increase the future supply of carbon credits that companies use in the compliance market's safeguard mechanism, or for voluntary purposes. But overlaps between ACCUs and new certification options — the renewable gas guarantees of origin (RGGOs) under GreenPower's Renewable Gas Certification and the future product guarantee of origin (PGO) certificates under the Clean Energy Regulator (CER's) managed guarantee of origin GO scheme — mean that the carbon-crediting pathway for biomethane may be limited, according to industry participants. Limited ACCU uptake Participation in ACCU projects has been very limited under existing or expired methods, although this is mostly because there are still very few biomethane projects in Australia. There are just two active ACCU methods that support biomethane facilities: the Animal Effluent method , which focuses on reducing methane emissions from animal waste by capturing and treating effluent, and the Reducing Methane Emissions from Landfill Gas method, which targets methane reduction from landfill sites by capturing and destroying landfill gas, converting it to electricity, or upgrading it into biomethane. Of nearly 30 projects currently registered under the Animal Effluent method, only two involve biomethane facilities, according to the CER. And there are no projects registered under the Reducing Methane Emissions from Landfill Gas method, which was only made late last year . There is also one project involving biomethane production registered under the Domestic, Commercial and Industrial Wastewater method, which expired on 31 March 2025. None of these three biomethane projects have received ACCUs yet, nor projects registered by bioenergy developer Delorean that do not specifically mention biomethane with the CER but are expected to generate that product ( see table ). "Since the making of the biomethane methodologies in 2022, the CER has received enquiries about the potential eligibility of biomethane projects under the ACCU Scheme," a spokesperson told Argus . "There has not been any particular trend in these enquiries and the CER does not produce forecasts on biomethane production for future ACCU project generation." LMS Energy joins Delorean and other developers The most recent of these projects — the Wasleys biomethane project in South Australia (SA) — was registered with the CER in December by Australia's largest landfill gas operator, LMS Energy, in partnership with Australian pork producer SunPork. The A$24.1mn ($16.95mn) project, which could become Australia's first commercial-scale agricultural renewable natural gas facility, will receive A$10mn of funding from the Australian Renewable Energy Agency (Arena). LMS plans to use anaerobic digestion to collect biogas generated from animal effluent and upgrade it to biomethane for use as a natural gas substitute. This would reduce SunPork's scope 1 greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. Currently, biogas released from uncovered piggery effluent ponds is the largest source of emissions for the pork industry. If successful, the project could overcome regulatory barriers by establishing and demonstrating clear pathways for the recognition of agricultural biomethane in carbon crediting and renewable gas certification schemes, according to Arena. LMS did not reply to questions about the timeline of the project, plans for future biomethane facilities or challenges around risks for double-counting or overlap for ACCUs and certificates like RGGOs and PGOs. Delorean, which last year signed an agreement with utility Origin Energy to sell biomethane and the corresponding RGGOs from its SA1 Salisbury bioenergy facility in SA, did not reply either to questions about the expected interplay between ACCUs and RGGOs from its projects. The company has said its projects would have potential for several products and revenue sources, including biomethane, RGGOs, ACCUs and biogenic liquid carbon dioxide (LCO2). Biomethane from SA1 Salisbury will be delivered via the gas network following a connection agreement last year with gas network Australian Gas Networks (AGNL), part of Australian Gas Infrastructure (AGIG). AGIG did not reply to questions either. RGGOs and ACCUs to be stapled and retired together Under rules set by GreenPower, ACCUs created from projects under the Animal Effluent, Reducing Methane Emissions from Landfill Gas, or any other methods, would need to be stapled with RGGOs in case the latter are also created in respect of the same activity. The ACCUs and RGGOs would then need to be retired together to the same entity, to avoid double counting, GreenPower's renewable fuels team lead Brad Bailey told Argus . There is just one facility currently accredited to create RGGOs — gas pipeline and power distribution firm Jemena's Malabar plant in Sydney in New South Wales (NSW). RGGOs have been already issued to the 95 TJ/yr (2.5mn m³/yr) facility, but not yet retired. Two biogas or biomethane projects are in the process of obtaining accreditation, and more than 30 projects have expressed interest in participating, Bailey said. While it would be up to the end customer to surrender either the ACCUs or RGGOs stapled together, Jemena anticipates the use of RGGOs for market trading as these certificates can be used by consumers for emission reduction rather than offsets, renewable gas general manager Suzie Jakobovits said. "Jemena supports additional ACCU methods that recognise biomethane as low-emission fuel. But while ACCU pathways are valuable, more recent policy advancements have provided a more valuable incentive for biomethane production," she said, noting the renewable gas certification schemes and their allowed use from July to reduce scope 1 emissions under the National Greenhouse and Energy Reporting (NGER) scheme. Jemena has not been developing any further biomethane projects of its own. It has instead signed initial contracts with project developers including Optimal Renewable Gas (ORG), Valorify, Sojitz and Gwydir Circular Economy to potentially connect their planned biomethane facilities into its gas network. "It will be up to the biomethane producer to determine whether to register for ACCUs and/or renewable gas certificates," Jakobovits said. More support needed For ORG managing director Mike Davis, the new Alternative Waste Treatment ACCU method could be potentially more flexible to transfer emission benefits from the current pathways to anaerobic digestion plants. But the company sees RGGOs as "more valuable than ACCUs" as they are recognised as a scope 1 emission reduction pathway rather than an offset, he said. Other biomethane developers like Valorify, as well as major waste management firms such as EDL Energy, Cleanaway and Veolia — which are among Australia's largest landfill gas ACCU project operators — did not respond to requests for comment. Waste management firm LGI said it is not currently involved in biomethane projects. Australian gas pipeline operator APA declined to comment. The firm launched in 2024 a public round of expression of interest for potential biomethane supply projects, but decided not to proceed because of a combination of technical and commercial factors unique to the project. Beyond the RGGO, PGO and ACCU pathways and the NGER change last year, the biomethane industry will need further government policy and financial support, Jakobovits said. She highlighted the NSW government's A$170mn Renewable Fuel Strategy launched in November to support renewable fuel and biomethane production in the state. "This support is only available in NSW. Other states or federal government support is required to stimulate biomethane production in other states," she said, suggesting policies like the development of a national renewable gas policy approach and the recognition of biomethane as a priority industry under the Future Made in Australia and as a priority investment area within Arena. ACCU projects supporting biomethane facilities Project Developer Method Crediting period ACCUs issued Wasleys Biomethane Project LMS Energy Animal effluent 11/12/2025-10/12/2037 0 UAG Bio Nutrients Facility UAG Bio Nutrients Animal effluent 15/05/2024-14/05/2036 0 Ryan Group Anaerobic Biodigester Ryan Meat Company Domestic, Commercial and Industrial Wastewater 25/08/2026-24/08/2038 0 Salisbury Bioenergy Project Delorean Alternative Waste Treatment 2015 25/03/2025-24/03/2032 0 Stanhope Bioenergy Project Delorean Alternative Waste Treatment 2015 08/03/2025-07/03/2032 0 Stanhope Bioenergy Project Delorean Animal effluent 20/09/2025-19/09/2037 0 source - CER Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2026. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.
Dutch ACM obliges Nam to market Norg, Grijpskerk space
Dutch ACM obliges Nam to market Norg, Grijpskerk space
London, 25 February (Argus) — Dutch regulator ACM has ordered Nam to prepare to market gas storage capacity at the Norg and Grijpskerk sites for the 2026-27 storage year, in parallel to its negotiations with state-owned EBN to take over filling obligations. Nam must begin the process to market space at the two sites "immediately" and an arrangement must be in place by 1 April, according to ACM's binding obligation on Nam. ACM has imposed this binding course of conduct on Nam to ensure that market participants can access the storage facilities and to avoid risking security of supply in the 2026-27 winter. Nam, as owner of the sites, can make arrangements with firms to fill the sites in a timely manner, but if this does not happen then Nam is obliged to offer market participants access to the sites. Nam — held in equal shares by Shell and ExxonMobil — will take over both sites on 1 April following the dismantling of Gasterra, which has been the sites' sole capacity holder since 1997. Nam is already negotiating with EBN to take over filling duties for the facilities. If Nam and EBN reach an agreement in the near future, then Nam will no longer need to comply with this binding course of conduct. But it is unclear whether Nam will reach an agreement before 1 April, which creates a possibility that the Netherlands will miss its EU-imposed filling target, ACM said. The Netherlands must have at least 74pc of its storage filled from 1 October-1 December. "There is no time to first complete negotiations" and Nam must begin the process to market the capacities in parallel to the negotiations, ACM said. The storage space must be marketed on objective, transport and non-discriminatory terms that would ensure fair allocation and pricing. Nam must market this capacity through auctions or an open season. If there is plenty of available capacity, Nam can offer capacity on a first-come, first-served basis. If demand is higher than available space Nam must switch to an objective auction allocation. And Nam must prevent capacity hoarding by using mechanisms like use-it-or-lose-it. Nam must also publicly offer all unused or uncontracted capacity. The firm must offer multiple services, including long-term and short-term bookings, bundled and unbundled capacity, and firm and interruptible allocations. The contract terms cannot hamper competition and any capacity limits must be strictly based on technical restrictions of the facilities. Nam must also publish all relevant technical and commercial information for use of facilities, in line with other EU member states. Nam must charge a reasonable rate, based on historical costs and rates, ACM said. Nam has argued that Norg and Grijpskerk should not be treated as gas storage installations under Dutch law, claiming that ACM's legal basis for imposing third-party access is invalid. The firm also said ACM is misusing the binding obligation to enforce storage fill targets, rather than enhance market functioning, and warned that it would conflict with existing contractual obligations. Nam also said that technical limits make it unrealistic to enable new users — let alone multiple users — by 1 April, saying several required services simply cannot be delivered at such short notice. ACM rejected all of Nam's complaints. By Alejandro Moreano Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2026. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.
Santos agrees 200PJ gas sales deal with South Australia
Santos agrees 200PJ gas sales deal with South Australia
Sydney, 20 February (Argus) — Australian independent Santos will deliver about 20 PJ/yr (534mn m³/yr) to Whyalla steelworks under a 10-year binding term sheet signed with the South Australian (SA) state government. The total of 200PJ of gas will supply the 1.2mn t/yr Whyalla steelworks after it transitions into a low-emissions iron facility, subject to a gas supply agreement being signed by 30 June, Santos said on 20 February. Deliveries will start from 1 March 2030. Delivered ex-Moomba using indexed pricing with a prepayment structure, the deal will coincide with the expiry of Santos' Horizon contract with the 7.8mn t/yr Gladstone LNG joint venture that began in 2016. Santos' gas will enable Whyalla to deploy direct reduced iron technology to process magnetite ore into low-carbon iron, chief executive Kevin Gallagher said on 20 February, cutting emissions by about 50pc compared to the former coal-fired blast furnace operations. The steelworks were forced into administration on 19 February 2025 after SA's government passed laws to remove control of the plant from UK-based GFG Alliance. Australian steelmaker BlueScope is leading a consortium hoping to acquire the works , while the aid of more than A$2.5bn ($1.76bn) in subsidies is aimed at moving the works towards a low-emissions facility. The 20 PJ/yr Whyalla will draw on is about 30pc of Santos' current gas production from the Cooper basin, the Adelaide-based firm said. SA's Labor government previously planned to build a green hydrogen sector based at Whyalla but last year abandoned plans for a 250MW electrolyser and 200MW hydrogen-fired power station and instead redirected unspent funds to saving the steelworks. Australian think-tank Climate Energy Finance has been sceptical of the gas-led steel output strategy backed by the federal and state governments, due to Australia's uncompetitive domestic gas prices, it said. By Tom Major Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2026. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.
Australia’s APA to expand gas pipeline network
Australia’s APA to expand gas pipeline network
Sydney, 19 February (Argus) — Australian gas pipeline operator APA will progress works to expand capacity on its gas network in the eastern states, increasing transmission between Australia's gas-rich northeast and relatively poorer southeast, where shortfalls are expected later this decade. Stage 3 of the East Coast Gas Grid (ECGG) expansion will go ahead, APA said in its results for the half-year to 31 December 2025 on 19 February, with A$480mn ($339mn) to go towards new compressors boosting capacity ahead of the 2028 winter months. The plan was first funded a year ago when A$35mn was earmarked for early works on stages 3, 4 and 5 of the ECGG expansion. Under ECGG expansion 3A, APA will build new compressors and undertake debottlenecking works on the 512 TJ/d (13.7mn m³/d) South West Queensland pipeline (SWQP) and the 590 TJ/d Moomba-Sydney pipeline (MSP). Capacity on the SWQP will rise by about 58 TJ/d, MSP by around 10 TJ/d and APA will deliver an expansion increasing the Young-Culcairn section's lateral capacity by about 39 TJ/d. A further A$220mn will be spent on ECGG 3B to buy pipe and progress a works programme for the proposed 340km, 800 TJ/d Bulloo Interlink, connecting the SWQP and the MSP between Queensland and New South Wales. The project is estimated to cost a total of A$800mn. But a final investment decision for ECGG 3B will depend on policy settings, Canberra's final response to the Gas Market Review and board approval. The projects align with identified market needs, APA said, and also support a necessary increase in gas-fired power generation to support the energy transitions. LNG vs pipeline The company's ambition to pipe more gas southwards may conflict with plans for LNG imports in southern Australia from next year. There are three proposed terminals, plus the Port Kembla Energy Terminal built by Squadron Energy aiming to bridge the identified gap in supply via seaborne imports. APA modelling shows gas delivered from Queensland into southern markets is "materially below the cost of imported LNG," the firm said, proposing that expanding pipelines and increasing northern Australia's output is a better solution than importing LNG. Argus ' Gladstone fob price, an LNG netback indicator calculated by subtracting freight and costs associated with production from the delivered price of LNG to Asia-Pacific, was A$13.65/GJ ($10.25/mn Btu) on 12 February, lower from A$24.46/GJ a year earlier. The AVX, the Argus assessment for month-ahead spot gas deliveries to Victoria, stood at A$11.367/GJ, down by about A$0.07/GJ on the week. Other companies are investing in projects designed to offset the predicted shortfall in southern states, particularly in Victoria where gas exploration spending rose by more than five-fold on the year in July-September 2025. Australian utility Origin this month pledged a further A$25mn for a planned gas storage facility in Victoria APA's revenue for July-December totalled A$1.614bn, slightly down from A$1.621bn over July-December 2024. Underlying net profit after tax was A$126mn, up from A$122mn a year earlier. By Tom Major APA's ECGG expansion plans Project Status Year complete Investment Capacity increase SWQP + MSP compression complete 2023-2024 A$300mn 25% increase across ECGG north to south MSEP conversion complete 2025 A$40mn 20 TJ/d from Moomba to Victoria or 25 TJ/d to Sydney MSP off-peak capacity expansion underway 2026 80–120 TJ/d summer capacity ECGG 3A FID taken Jun-Aug 2028 A$260mn SWQP: 58 TJ/d, MSP: 10 TJ/d, Young-Culcairn lateral: 39 TJ/d ECGG 3B pre-FID 2028 A$800mn 800 TJ/d north-south Future stages pre-FID 2029+ tba 450 TJ/d northern gas to Victoria, 500TJ storage — APA Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2026. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.
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