Lockdowns across Europe as countries attempt to slow down the spread of the Covid-19 pandemic have resulted in domestic biodiesel producers struggling against negative margins, in some cases leading them to shut down operations.
With European-produced rapeseed methyl ester (RME) spot values settling around record spot price lows and its feedstock somewhat resisting declines on lower estimated yields, imports and production, prompt fob Dutch mill crude rapeseed oil (RSO) has closed higher in value than the end product in recent sessions.
In France, where falling demand and refinery shutdowns have filled diesel storage, one of Europe's largest RME producers Groupe Avril has decided to keep its 250,000 t/yr biodiesel esterification unit at Rouen, France, closed. The unit has been shuttered following a fire since mid-March.
More broadly, RME producers are considering temporarily halting operations and instead purchasing spot volumes in the ARA hub to fulfill existing contracts.
Prompt RSO fob Dutch mill prices were in the range of $770.91-788.36/t on 6-14 April and were on average $9.30/t higher than fob ARA range RME spot prices. RME spot prices slipped below the RSO prompt price for the first time on 23-24 March, before recovering somewhat. The feedstock value surpassed the RME spot price again on 6-8 April and yesterday, with the two products trading at parity on 9 April.
EU imports of rapeseed fell to just 446t or 0.36pc of the running weekly average for the 2019-20 crop season in the 30 March-5 April period, causing a 6pc increase in average RSO prices in the week of 6 April compared with a week earlier. Even though EU rapeseed imports increased again to above the weekly average of the current crop season in the week of 6 April, prompt RSO prices on 14-15 April remain almost unchanged on the week.
In the context of thinner feedstock demand from the biodiesel complex, European rapeseed crushers and mill operators are now switching their feedstock to soybeans to produce soybean meal that can be sold as compound feed to livestock farmers, reducing European RSO output.
Beyond the short term, harvest forecasts for this year are uncertain as dry April weather in countries in the Black Sea region including Ukraine, the EU's largest rapeseed supplier for the current season with a near-60pc share, may hamper yields in May and June.

