US to rejoin Paris climate agreement

  • Spanish Market: Coal, Crude oil, Electricity, Emissions, Natural gas, Oil products
  • 20/01/21

US president Joe Biden today is moving to put the country back in the Paris climate agreement, taking one of his first steps in setting a new direction for US climate policy.

In one of his first acts in office Biden will sign an instrument to rejoin the global climate accord, which will be submitted to the UN today, his transition office said. That means the US will formally become a party to the agreement again in 30 days.

"The United States will be back in position to exercise global leadership in advancing the objectives of the agreement," the Biden transition office said shortly before his inauguration today.

The swift move to re-join the agreement is being welcome by many environmental and clean energy advocates, who hope it portends more aggressive action by the US under the new administration.

"For the world to overcome this challenge, our country must do more than simply play a part; we must lead," said Heather Zichal, chief executive of industry group the American Clean Power Association, who served as a climate policy adviser to former-president Barack Obama.

The US under Obama had pledged to cut its greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by 26-28pc from 2005 levels to help achieve the Paris agreement's end goal of keeping global temperatures from rising more than 2°C above pre-industrial levels. The US is the world's second largest emitter of GHGs. When the US rejoins, it will likely have to come up with a new, more aggressive target, as countries under the Paris agreement are expected to update their national commitments every five years.

The return of the US to the Paris agreement is also being welcome by officials in other countries, who say they are looking forward to working with a more agreeable US administration when it comes to climate policy.

"This will be a very strong starting point for our renewed cooperation," European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen said today while addressing the European Parliament.

Von der Leyen also said she hopes for more cooperation with the US on related issues such as emissions trading and carbon pricing.

The US formally exited the Paris accord on 4 November 2020, the day after the presidential election. President Donald Trump had called the agreement a bad deal for the US economy, a view still shared by many Republicans in Congress.

"The Paris climate agreement is based on the backward idea that the United States is a culprit here, when in reality the United States is the leading driver of climate solutions," US senator John Barrasso (R-Wyoming) said.

But a growing number of US companies and business groups are backing the global climate effort.

The US Chamber of Commerce, which just a few years ago had questioned the cost of the Paris agreement, today applauded Biden and said it is "critical that the United States restore its leadership role in international efforts to address the climate challenge."

Last year the Business Roundtable, which represents top executives at many of the largest companies in the US, endorsed the goals of the Paris agreement and called for increased US leadership on the global stage.

Biden is also starting off his term with a number of other steps to re-shape federal climate policy, including signing an executive order that aims to overturn Trump's weakening of rules affecting oil, gas and coal.

The order also calls for reconvening an inter-agency working group on the social cost of carbon and directing it to issue an interim cost schedule to ensure that federal agencies account for the "full costs of GHG emissions, including climate risk, environmental justice and intergenerational equity" in their work.

Former president Barack Obama's administration first set the federal carbon cost to inform agency decisions in 2010. It would have been at $50/metric tonne last year, but the Trump administration substantially lowered the value to help justify its rollback of Obama-era CO2 regulations for power plants and new cars.


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15/05/24

Eni cuts scope 1, 2 upstream emissions by 40pc in 2023

Eni cuts scope 1, 2 upstream emissions by 40pc in 2023

Edinburgh, 15 May (Argus) — Italy's Eni said today that it has cut its net scope 1 and 2 emissions in the upstream sector by 40pc in 2023, compared with a 2018 baseline. Eni has also cut scope 1 and 2 emissions by 30pc for the whole business during the same period, it said. Scope 1 refers to emissions directly stemming from an organisation's activity, while scope 2 refers to indirect emissions from purchased energy. The firm has a target to be net zero upstream for scope 1 and 2 emissions by 2030, and by 2035 for the whole company. It also has a goal of being net zero across all its businesses, including scope 3 emissions that are generated by use of its products, by 2050. Eni said it agrees with the UN Cop 28 deal struck by almost 200 countries in Dubai last year, and for "the need for the energy transition to take place in a fair, orderly, just and pragmatic manner". But it added that this includes expanding its gas portfolio, as well as investing to reduce emissions from oil and gas output. It said investing in gas is "a bridging vector in the energy transition pathway", citing the acquisition of Neptune Energy and the start of LNG production in Congo (Brazzaville). Eni completed the purchase of assets of gas-focused UK-based independent Neptune Energy in January. The Cop 28 agreement acknowledges the need to transition away from fossil fuels in energy systems "so as to achieve net zero by 2050 in keeping with the science", but it also "recognises that transitional fuels can play a role in facilitating the energy transition while ensuring energy security". Some climate non-governmental organisations and countries particularly vulnerable to the effect of climate change have warned that this could create loopholes benefiting the development of fossil fuel resources, including natural gas. Eni in March said that it has cut its spending plans by around 20pc through to 2027 as it looks to focus on the quality of upstream projects and streamlined development to grow its oil and gas production by an annual 3-4pc. "Natural gas will continue expanding its share of production," Eni chief executive Claudio Descalzi said. The firm is also looking to raise its renewable energy capacity to 4GW this year from 3GW at the end of last year, and then double this to more than 8GW by 2027. By Caroline Varin Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

US inflation slows broadly in April


15/05/24
15/05/24

US inflation slows broadly in April

Houston, 15 May (Argus) — US consumer price gains eased in April, with core inflation posting the smallest gain in three years, signs the economy is slowing in the face of high borrowing costs. The consumer price index (CPI) rose by an annual 3.4pc in April, easing from 3.5pc over the prior 12-month period, the Labor Department reported on Wednesday. Core CPI, which strips out volatile food and energy, rose by 3.6pc, slowing from 3.8pc the prior month. The easing inflation comes as the Federal Reserve has pushed back the expected start of interest rate cuts after holding its target rate at a 23-year high since July 2023 as the US economy has continued to grow and generate jobs at greater than expected rates. Job growth however slowed to 175,000 in April, the lowest since October 2023, and job openings and wage gains have also slowed while a measure of manufacturing has contracted. The CME FedWatch tool boosted the probability of Fed rate cuts in September to about 72pc today from about 65pc on Tuesday. The energy index rose by 2.6pc over the 12 months ended in April, accelerating from 2.1pc. The gasoline index slowed to an annual 1.2pc in April from 1.3pc The food index rose by an annual 2.2pc, matching the prior month. Shelter slowed to 5.5pc from 5.7pc. Services less energy services slowed to 5.3pc from 5.4pc. Transportation services accelerated to an annual 11.2pc, led by insurance costs, from 10.7pc in the 12 months through March. On a monthly basis, CPI inflation slowed to 0.3pc in April from 0.4pc the prior two months. Core inflation slowed to 0.3pc from 0.4pc the prior three months. Energy held flat at a monthly 1.1pc. Services less energy services slowed to a monthly 0.4pc gain from 0.5pc. By Bob Willis Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

EBRD ‘green project’ funding hit €6.54bn in 2023


15/05/24
15/05/24

EBRD ‘green project’ funding hit €6.54bn in 2023

London, 15 May (Argus) — The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) hit a record level of investments in the "green economy" in 2023, at €6.54bn ($7.1bn) in 337 projects — up from €6.36bn in 2022. The multilateral development bank (MDB) again reached its target for at least 50pc of its total annual investment to go towards green projects. Of total investments, 50pc went to green projects — flat on the year. The EBRD initially set the goal for 2025, but hit it in 2021, with 51pc of its investment going to green projects. The EBRD's investments stood at €13.1bn in 2023 — a new record high — going towards 464 individual projects. The bank has since the beginning of 2023 ensured that all new investment projects are in line with the Paris climate agreement goals. The Paris agreement seeks to limit the rise in temperature to "well below" 2°C above pre-industrial levels, and preferably to 1.5°C. Countries' focus on MDBs and their role in delivering climate finance has intensified in recent years. Climate finance is set to dominate climate talks this year, including at the UN Cop 29 summit, set for November in Baku, Azerbaijan. Mukhtar Babayev, Cop president-designate, last month called on MDBs and parties to the Cop process to deliver on climate finance. The EBRD is owned by 73 shareholder governments, the EU and the European Investment Bank. By Georgia Gratton Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Chinese importers seek five LNG cargoes for Jun-Sep


15/05/24
15/05/24

Chinese importers seek five LNG cargoes for Jun-Sep

Shanghai, 15 May (Argus) — Five Chinese importers, mostly second-tier buyers, are each seeking one LNG cargo for June-September delivery, according to an official notice published by China's national pipeline operator PipeChina on 15 May. The five importers are PipeChina, Chinese independent ENN, Hong Kong-listed city gas firm China Resources Gas, Hong Kong-based Towngas and state-owned China Gas. PipeChina and ENN have indicated a target price of at most $9.50/mn Btu for their intended cargoes, both for delivery to PipeChina's 6mn t/yr Tianjin terminal. China Gas has indicated a target price of at most $9.30/mn Btu for delivery to PipeChina's 6mn t/yr Beihai termial. China Resources Gas and Towngas have both indicated a target price of at most $9/mn Btu for delivery to PipeChina's 2mn t/yr Yuedong and Tianjin terminals, respectively. This consolidated requirement came about because of a need for PipeChina to better leverage on its infrastructure advantages and, at the same time, meet the varying needs of gas importers and consumers in the country. But this requirement comes at a time when spot LNG prices are still somewhat higher than the importers' targeted prices. But the importers can choose not to buy if offers are not within their expectations. The front-half month of the ANEA, the Argus assessment for spot LNG deliveries to northeast Asia, was last assessed at $10.485/mn Btu on 15 May. Chinese importers mostly perceive spot prices below $9-9.50/mn Btu for June-September deliveries to be unattainable for now because there is strong buying interest from south and southeast Asia in particular. Indian state-controlled refiner IOC most recently bought LNG for delivery between 22 May and 15 June at around $10.60/mn Btu, through a tender that closed on 14 May. Thailand's state-controlled PTT most recently bought three deliveries for 9-10 July, 16-17 July and 22-23 July through a tender that closed on 13 May , at just slightly above $10.50/mn Btu. The most recent spot transaction was Japanese utility Tohoku Electric's purchase of a 10-30 June delivery at around $10.55/mn Btu through a tender that closed on 14 May . This is at least $1/mn Btu higher than Chinese importers' indications. Summer requirements have so far been muted but concerns among buyers about potential supply disruptions remain. Malaysia's 30mn t/yr Bintulu LNG export terminal suffered a power loss on 10 May, but this issue may have been resolved as of early on 15 May, according to offtakers. Some unspecified upstream issues may still be affecting production at the Bintulu facility, resulting in Malaysia's state-owned Petronas having to ask some of its buyers for cargo deferments, according to offtakers. Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Singapore’s bunker sales hit 10-month low in April


15/05/24
15/05/24

Singapore’s bunker sales hit 10-month low in April

Singapore, 15 May (Argus) — Singapore's April bunker sales fell to a 10-month low on weak very-low sulphur fuel oil (VLSFO) demand. But consumption of high-sulphur fuel oil (HSFO) and B24 biofuel bunkers remained firm. Singapore VLSFO bunker sales fell to at least a 15-month low of 2.25mn t in April, according to data from the Maritime and Port Authority of Singapore. This came because of slower demand as more buyers turned to lower-priced HSFO. Singapore HSFO sales accounted for a 42pc share of total fuel oil sales in April, up from a 31pc share a year earlier. Disruptions in the Red Sea led to increased fuel usage by ocean-going vessels with higher rates of scrubber technology adoption, raising demand for HSFO by a greater extent than for VLSFO. Consumption of bio-blended VLSFO, or B24, climbed by 61pc on the year because buying interest gained traction, but slipped by 10pc from strong consumption in March . LNG bunker sales rose by over sixfold on the year but edged down from a record high in March . By Cassia Teo and Asill Bardh Singapore bunker sales 000t Apr-24 m-o-m ± % y-o-y ± % Jan-Apr 2024 ± % Low-sulphur fuel oil (LSFO) 2,252 -6.9 -16 10,088 -2.2 Marine fuel oil (MFO) 1,600 0.0 31 6,466 32 Low-sulphur MGO (LSMGO) 277 -11.0 -11 1,201 -3.0 Bio-blended LSFO 60 -10.0 61 186 53 Liquified natural gas (LNG) 36 -7.9 582 111 N/A MGO 9.7 88.0 -37 43 -9.2 Marine diesel oil (MDO) 0.0 N/A N/A 0.0 N/A Bio-blended MDO 0.0 N/A N/A 0.0 N/A Bio-blended marine gasoil (MGO) 0.0 N/A N/A 0.0 N/A Bio-blended LSMGO 0.0 N/A N/A 0.0 N/A Bio-blended MFO 0.0 N/A -100 0.0 -100 Ultra low sulphur fuel oil (ULSFO) 0.0 N/A N/A 0.0 N/A Bio-blended ULSFO 0.0 N/A N/A 0.0 N/A Methanol 0.0 N/A N/A 0.0 N/A Total 4,235 -4.7 -0.6 18,096 8.9 Source: MPA Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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