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UK proposes to increase RTFO buyout price from 2021

  • Spanish Market: Biofuels
  • 28/07/20

The UK government has proposed increasing the Renewable Transport Fuel Obligation (RTFO) buyout price for fuel suppliers from the 2021 compliance year, to ensure continued supply of biofuels and other renewable fuels.

The UK's transport department DFT said recent increases in the cost of biofuels, compared with their fossil-fuel equivalents, means there is a risk of fuel suppliers buying out of their obligations to supply renewable transport fuel.

The RTFO aims at reducing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from transport fuel by setting annual biofuel blending obligations for fuel suppliers. This obligation is 9.75pc this year, and it will increase incrementally to 12.4pc by 2032.

A supplier can meet this by physically supplying biofuels or by purchasing Renewable Transport Fuel Certificates (RTFCs) from others. RTFCs are issued for every litre of sustainable and renewable fuels blended. Fuel from certain wastes or residues, fuel from dedicated energy crops, and renewable fuels of non-biological origins (RFNBOs) are incentivised by awarding double the RTFCs per litre or kilogram supplied.

If a supplier cannot or does not wish to do either of these things, it can buy itself out of the system at 30p/litre, a level that has stood since the RTFO was launched in 2008. Since then there has been no significant buyout, because it has always been cheaper either to blend and supply biofuels or to buy RTFCs. The mechanism is to protect motorists from paying the costs of the renewables policy, by capping the maximum that can be passed on.

Fuel suppliers are only likely to pay the buyout if the cost of RTFCs regularly exceeds 30p/l. In January, offers for RTFCs for the 2020 compliance year were 30.25p, and since the beginning of July offers have regularly been higher, most recently at 31.50p for the week ending 24 July. Offers for the 2021 RTFCs are at the same level.

So, the UK government has proposed lifting the buyout price to either 40p/l or 50p/l, and said the latter is preferred. Raising to 40p/l would result in a maximum additional cost of 1p/l to the motorist, and an increase to 50p/l would result in a maximum additional cost of 2p/l. The The DFT said that no action could result in the loss of 6.3mn-6.5mn t of CO2e savings a year between 2021 and 2030.

The government aims to introduce the new charge by 1 January 2021, but the short timescale mean there is a risk that may not be possible until 1 January 2022. The consultation will close on 11 August.


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