Record prices stifle Malaysian October palm oil exports

  • Spanish Market: Agriculture, Biofuels, Fertilizers
  • 11/11/21

Malaysian palm oil exports continued to stutter in October as prices hit fresh highs amid tight global vegetable oil supplies.

Sales dropped by 15pc from October 2020 to 1.4mn t, according to data from the Malaysian Palm Oil Board (MPOB), despite biggest buyer India cutting import duties, as third-month palm oil futures on the Bursa Malaysia exchange broke through 5,000 ringgit/t ($1,201/t) for the first time.

Vegetable oil costs hit fresh highs across the board on the back of higher energy prices last month and subdued palm oil output in Malaysia, which continues to struggle with labour shortages.

Production was flat in October but fell by 8pc to 15mn t over the first eight months of this year compared with the same period in 2020. Foreign sales were down by 12pc to 12.7mn t over the same period.

Biodiesel exports were also hit by the higher feedstock costs, which largely priced palm-based grades out of the European market, especially given its warmer weather properties as consumer markets head into winter.

Malaysian palm oil data ('000t)
Oct '21Oct '20± % y-o-ySep '21± % m-o-mJan-Oct '21Jan-Oct '20± % y-o-y
Palm oil stocks1,8341,57317%1,7564%1,577 (avg.)1,785 (avg.)-12%
Palm oil production1,7261,7250%1,7031%15,03116,316-8%
Palm oil exports1,4181,674-15%1,597-11%12,67814,441-12%
Biodiesel exports1923-17%52-63%2923,315-91%

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03/05/24

Heavy rainfall floods Brazil's Rio Grande do Sul

Heavy rainfall floods Brazil's Rio Grande do Sul

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Brazil hydroelectric dam bursts under record rains


03/05/24
03/05/24

Brazil hydroelectric dam bursts under record rains

Sao Paulo, 3 May (Argus) — Brazilian power generation company Companhia Energetica Rio das Antas (Ceran) found a partial rupture in its 100MW 14 de Julho hydroelectric plant following record precipitation in Rio Grande do Sul state. Flooding from the record rains has left 37 dead and forced more than 23,000 people out of their homes, causing widespread damage across the state, including washed out bridges and roads across several cities. Ceron reported that the dam of the hydroelectric plant on the Antas River suffered a rupture under the heavy rains and the company implemented an emergency evacuation plan on 1 May. Ceron's 130MW Monte Claro and 130MW Castro Alves plants are under intense monitoring, the company said in a statement. Rio Grande do Sul state governor Eduardo Leite declared a state of emergency and the federal government promised to release funding for emergency disaster relief. Leite said the flooding will likely go down as the worst environmental disaster in the state's history. Brazil's southernmost state along the border with Argentina has been punished by record precipitation over the past year owing to the effects of the strong El Nino weather phenomenon, according to Rio Grande do Sul-based weather forecaster MetSul Meteorologia. Brazilian power company CPFL Energia controls Ceran with a 65pc equity stake. Energy company CEEE-GT, which is owned by steel manufacturer CSN, owns another 30pc, and Norway's Statkraft owns the remaining 5pc. The state had declared a state of emergency as recently as September 2023 because of unusually heavy rains that resulted in the death of more than 30 people. Weather forecasters expect El Nino conditions to abate in the coming months over the eastern Pacific. Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Dutch FincoEnergies supplies B100 biodiesel to HAL


03/05/24
03/05/24

Dutch FincoEnergies supplies B100 biodiesel to HAL

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US biofuel groups challenge EU SAF regulation


03/05/24
03/05/24

US biofuel groups challenge EU SAF regulation

London, 3 May (Argus) — US biofuel groups Renewable Fuels Association, Growth Energy and US Grains Council and ethanol-to-jet producer LanzaJet have joined European renewable ethanol producers in their challenge to the ReFuelEU aviation regulation. The legal challenge, launched by ePure and Pannonia Bio in February, demands an annulment of the sections that exclude crop-based biofuels from the definition of sustainable aviation fuel (SAF). The regulation allows for SAF produced from biofuels, referring to point 33 in Article 2 of the bloc's recast Renewable Energy Directive (RED III) which includes "liquid fuel for transport produced from biomass". But it excludes biofuels produced from "food and feed crops". The US groups have filed an "application for leave to intervene" before the General Court of the EU, arguing that the regulation would "have a detrimental effect on the US ethanol industry". "The contested provisions give rise to a de facto ban on the supply of crop-based biofuels to the aviation sector in the EU" the associations said. Earlier this year ePure also challenged the bloc's FuelEU maritime regulation, which aims to boost the use of green bunker fuels, for excluding food and feed crop-based fuels from its certification process. By Evelina Lungu Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Canada rail strike to affect grains, industry says


03/05/24
03/05/24

Canada rail strike to affect grains, industry says

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