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Australia’s NSW may revise renewable fuels strategy

  • Spanish Market: Biofuels, Hydrogen, Oil products
  • 02/08/24

Australia's New South Wales (NSW) state could revise its renewable fuels strategy, in a move to help the state achieve its emission reduction goals and reach net zero by 2050.

The Labor party-led state government has released a discussion paper, seeking input on whether it should set or redesign existing mandates for using fuels like renewable diesel, sustainable aviation fuel and green hydrogen and its derivatives. Currently, the ethanol and biodiesel mandates state that volume fuel retailers must ensure that 6pc and 2pc of the total volume of petrol and diesel sold is ethanol and biodiesel, respectively.

Renewable fuels will be used in hard-to-abate sectors like aviation, manufacturing and heavy road transport as a replacement for fossil fuels. The government has opened the consultation with industry participants until 30 August, it said in a press release.

Renewable fuel producers have long argued that the poor enforcement of the mandates, coupled with poor loopholes, has hindered the sector's growth in both NSW and Queensland states.

The renewable fuels strategy will build on the existing NSW hydrogen strategy, the government said, to maintain support for hydrogen as a long-term abatement option while "expanding consideration to other renewable fuels for short and medium-term abatement."

Expanding the renewable fuel scheme (RFS)beyond green hydrogen may further boost the sector, by creating a market-based certificate scheme for other fuels that require liable parties to purchase certificates representing each gigajoule of fuel produced.

At present, the RFS legislates annual targets beginning at 7,417 t/yr in 2026, rising to 66,667 t/yr of green hydrogen by 2030. Gas retailers and large gas users that buy directly from producers must procure and surrender certificates to meet their share of the RFS's target or pay a penalty for a certificate shortfall, according to government policy.

Mandates for green ammonia use in mining operations and biodiesel blending for the transport sector may also form part of the renewable fuels strategy, the paper said, while the government could set requirements for renewable fuel purchases by its own departments.

NSW has ambitious plans for its green hydrogen industry, aiming for 2GW of electrolyser capacity by 2030, backed by electricity network charge concessions to decarbonise its ammonia, heavy transport and the agricultural sectors initially.

The government accepted planning applications for Australian utility Origin Energy's planned a 55MW Hunter Valley hydrogen hub near the city of Newcastle, which would sell 80pc of its output to Australian chemical and explosives firm Orica's nearby ammonium nitrate plant.

Origin plans to make a final investment decision on the project by late 2024.

The federal government is also funding studies into assisting the low-carbon liquid fuel industry, including options for production incentives and other measures to help its growth.

The NSW government plans to reduce emissions by 50pc of 2005 levels by 2030, 70pc by 2035 and net zero by 2050.


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06/11/25

Airports named for planned US flight cancellations

Airports named for planned US flight cancellations

Houston, 6 November (Argus) — Forty North American airports will see traffic cut by 10pc starting Friday if no deal is reached to reopen the federal government, US transportation secretary Sean Duffy said today as the shutdown hit its 37th day. Airports that would see flights cancelled include Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International, George Bush Houston Intercontinental, Los Angeles International Airport, Newark Liberty International Airport and Ontario International Airport in Canada ( see table ). Since 1 November, total flight cancellations within, to and out of US airports totaled more than 870 flights as of 11:20 ET today, while more than 25,900 flights have been delayed, according to flight-tracking company FlightAware. The count includes mechanical, weather, and other incidents. United Airlines said today that its long-haul international and hub-to-hub flights will not be impacted by the planned traffic cancellations, but rather regional and domestic mainline flights that are not between hub airports will be the focus of cancellations. Air traffic controllers and Transportation Security Administration (TSA) agents have been working without pay since the partial US government shutdown started on 1 October. Staffing shortages prompted the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) to periodically issue temporary ground stops at some airports because of a lack of air traffic controllers, while TSA staff shortages led to hours-long security check-ins. Even before the shutdown the FAA has been far short of its targeted number of air traffic control employees. Controllers have seen a 3,800 worker shortage during the shutdown, National Air Traffic Controllers Association president Nick Daniels said late last month. Earlier this week Duffy blamed the shutdown on Democrats, warning if they did not vote to reopen the government within a week, the country would see "massive cancellations." "We are going to proactively make decisions to keep the airspace safe," Duffy said in a press conference on Wednesday. By Hunter Fite US/Canada airports subject to 10pc traffic cuts Anchorage International Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Los Angeles International Portland International, Oregon Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Newark Liberty International New York LaGuardia Philadelphia International Boston Logan International Fort Lauderdale/Hollywood International Orlando International Phoenix Sky Harbor International Baltimore/Washington International Honolulu International Chicago Midway San Diego International Charlotte Douglas International Houston Hobby Memphis International Louisville International Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Washington Dulles International Miami International Seattle/Tacoma International Dallas Love George Bush Houston Intercontinental Minneapolis/St Paul International San Francisco International Ronald Reagan Washington National Indianapolis International Oakland International Salt Lake City International Denver International New York John F Kennedy International Ontario International Teterboro Dallas/Fort Worth International Las Vegas Harry Reid International Chicago O`Hare International Tampa International US transportation secretary Sean Duffy Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Australia backs Vopak’s CO2 import project


06/11/25
06/11/25

Australia backs Vopak’s CO2 import project

Sydney, 6 November (Argus) — Australia's Northern Territory (NT) government has backed Dutch infrastructure developer Royal Vopak's proposed 5mn t/yr Middle Arm liquid CO2 import facility in Darwin through a not-to-deal commitment. NT's government will not partner with other liquid CO2 import terminal developers under its commitment. The pledge gives Vopak the certainty it needs to accelerate work on the project, which is set to open in the 2030s, the government said in a statement on 6 November. Vopak signed an initial agreement with NT to develop the terminal in August 2024. It will take CO2 from industrial plants and other countries, supporting carbon capture and storage (CCS) projects. The company already operates in Australia. It runs petroleum import terminals in Darwin and Sydney, which also accept biodiesel, ethanol, vegetable oil, and bitumen shipments. Vopak's common user CO2 facility could support Japanese producer Inpex. Inpex plans to inject captured CO2 from Japan into its developing 10mn t/yr Bonaparte CCS project in NT from 2030. Australia's federal government passed laws to permit CO2 imports for CCS in 2023. It also gave Inpex's development major project status in July, which will help to streamline approvals. By Avinash Govind Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

US to cut 10pc of flights at some airports: Duffy


05/11/25
05/11/25

US to cut 10pc of flights at some airports: Duffy

Houston, 5 November (Argus) — The US will begin to cut airline traffic by 10pc at high volume airports starting this Friday if no deal is reached to reopen the federal government, US transportation secretary Sean Duffy said today as the shutdown hit its 36th day. During a press conference Duffy said that the 10pc cut in airline traffic will be applied to 40 different airports, which will be named tomorrow. The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) will hold meetings with airlines and airports tonight to collaborate on the schedule reductions. Air traffic controllers and Transportation Security Administration (TSA) agents have been working without pay since the partial US government shutdown started on 1 October. Staffing shortages prompted the FAA to periodically issue temporary ground stops at some airports because of a lack of air traffic controllers, while TSA staff shortages led to hours-long security check-ins. Even before the shutdown the FAA has been far short of its targeted number of air traffic control employees. Controllers have seen a 3,800 worker shortage during the shutdown, National Air Traffic Controllers Association president Nick Daniels said late last month. Earlier this week Duffy blamed the shutdown on Democrats, warning if they did not vote to reopen the government within a week, the country would see "massive cancellations." Since 1 November, total flight cancellations within, to and out of US airports totaled more than 795 flights as of 4pm ET today, while more than 21,600 flights have been delayed, according to flight-tracking company FlightAware. The count includes mechanical, weather, and other incidents. "We are going to proactively make decisions to keep the airspace safe," Duffy said. If the pressures continue to build through the shutdown, additional measures will be necessary, FAA administrator Bryan Bedford said. By Hunter Fite Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

EU-Minister einigen sich auf verzögerten ETS 2-Start


05/11/25
05/11/25

EU-Minister einigen sich auf verzögerten ETS 2-Start

Hamburg, 5 November (Argus) — Die Umweltminister der EU-Mitgliedstaaten planen, den Start des international Emissionshandel für den Verkehr- und den Gebäudesektor um ein Jahr auf 2028 zu verschieben. Dies ist Teil einer Einigung der Ministerien bezüglich des Klimaziels bis 2040 vom 5. November. Ursprünglich hätte der internationale Emissionshandel (ETS 2), welcher die nationale CO2-Abgabe ablösen soll, bereits 2027 starten sollen. Deutschland führt daher als Übergangsregelung für 2026 eine auktionsbasierte CO2-Abgabe ein, da auch im ETS 2 die CO2-Zertifikate versteigert werden sollen. Allerdings sieht die europäische Richtlinie für das ETS 2 die Option vor, ein Jahr später zu starten, sollten die durchschnittlichen Gas- oder Rohölpreise außergewöhnlich hoch sein. Die EU-Kommission hätte bis zum 15. Juli 2026 Zeit, dies zu evaluieren und zu entscheiden. Da die Minister jedoch vorschlagen, die Verschiebung des Starts des ETS 2 im Rahmen des Gesetzes zu verabschieden, welches auch die Klimaziele bis 2040 festlegt, müsste dies durch das EU-Parlament beschlossen werden. Dieser Beschluss wird bis Ende des Jahres erwartet. Die Initiative ging von Polen aus. Sollte die Verzögerung eintreten — sei es durch den Beschluss des EU-Parlaments auf Basis des Vorschlages der EU-Umweltminister oder aufgrund der Energiepreisklausel — würde der nationale Emissionshandel in seiner am 31. Dezember 2026 gültigen Form fortgesetzt werden. Aktuell bedeutet dies, dass Unternehmen dann zwischen 55 € und 65 € pro Zertifikat bei Auktionen bieten müssen, mit der Möglichkeit, zu einem Festpreis von 68 € pro Zertifikat nach Abverkauf der Versteigerungsmenge Zertifikate nachzukaufen. Inverkehrbringer von Heizöl, Diesel und Benzin stellt dies vor die Hürde, nicht genau zu wissen, wie hoch die CO2-Abgabe für sie ausfallen wird, da sie den Zuschlagspreis der Auktionen nicht vorhersagen können. Somit ist es für sie schwieriger, die CO2-Kosten in ihren Preiskalkulationen zu berücksichtigen. Die Minister haben sich darüber hinaus darauf geeinigt, dass die EU-Staaten ihre Treibhausgasemissionen bis 2040 um 90 % reduzieren müssen gegenüber dem Niveau von 1990. Bis zu 5 Prozentpunkte der Minderungen der gesamten EU dürfen dabei über die Anrechnung hochqualitativer internationaler Zertifikate erreicht werden. Ab 2036 soll die Anrechnung der Zertifikate möglich sein; bereits ab 2031 soll ein Pilotmarkt für den Handel mit diesen Zertifikaten initiiert werden. Deutschland — vertreten durch Bundesumweltminister Carsten Schneider — hat sich gemeinsam mit den Niederlanden dafür eingesetzt, dass maximal 3 Prozentpunkte durch Zertifikate erreicht werden können. Von Max Steinhau & Dafydd ab Iago Senden Sie Kommentare und fordern Sie weitere Informationen an feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . Alle Rechte vorbehalten.

Tanzania's Dar Es Salaam port reopens


05/11/25
05/11/25

Tanzania's Dar Es Salaam port reopens

London, 5 November (Argus) — Tanzania's major bulk port of Dar Es Salaam has reopened and was expected to be fully operational by the afternoon of 5 November. Fertilizer storage and logistics company C.Steinweg said its facilities at the port are fully operational and that the port's immediate focus is on the movement of import cargo from the terminal to free up space. It added that export containers will start being accepted from 6 November. The roads around the port remain partially blocked, limiting truck movements in and out of the area. Fuel supply challenges also persist, although public transport availability is gradually improving. The port had been closed since 30 October due to nationwide unrest following recent general elections in Tanzania. Bulk vessels had started to build up outside the port waiting to discharge and load cargoes, and the congestion will take some time to clear. By Fenella Rhodes Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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