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Guyana seeking to market carbon credits to airlines

  • Spanish Market: Biofuels, Emissions, Oil products
  • 05/08/24

Growing oil producer Guyana has started discussions with several airlines for the sale of its carbon credits, saying other efforts to transact its forest carbon are progressing slowly.

The heavily forested country in northern South America will use a compliance market in Singapore to trade its certified carbon credits with airlines, vice president Bharrat Jagdeo said.

The country faced the prospect of not being able to sell its credits after being proactive in establishing a low carbon development strategy and getting its credits certified, he said.

"We have been fighting to get our carbon sold into a compliance market, and there is a Singapore-based market that allows trading in forest carbon for airlines," Jagdeo said. "We have started discussions to see whether we can sell our certified carbon to some of the airlines and hopefully the prices will be good."

The government did not identify the potential buyers.

Guyana aims to monetize its forests' climate and ecosystem services while promoting low-carbon economic development that is guided by its low carbon development strategy, the government said.

Guyana's low-carbon development strategy is aimed at combating climate change globally, it said.

"Guyana has set out a vision for monetizing the climate and ecosystem services provided by our standing forest, while accelerating the country's economic development along a low carbon trajectory," it said.

Guyana has secured 7.14mn carbon units from Architecture for REDD+ Transaction (ART) for its low deforestation rate along with sustaining high levels of forest coverage. ART is a global initiative that encourages governments to reduce forest degradation and to restore forests.

"This achievement made Guyana the first country to be issued carbon credits eligible for use by airline operators in their efforts to reduce carbon emissions," the government said.

The credits were issued "in recognition of Guyana's successful efforts to reduce emissions from forest loss and degradation and maintain one of the world's most intact tropical forests," ART said.

Heavily forested Guyana has a population of 750,000. It is a carbon sink with forests covering an area the size of England and storing 19.5 gigatons of carbon, the government said. Guyana's deforestation rate is less than 0.05pc, it said.

Airlines have been working towards their targets in the 2024-2026 phase of the International Civil Aviation Organization's carbon offsetting and reduction scheme.

"There are some new standards required for the aviation sector and in those new standards there will have to be carbon credit offtake," Guyana's president Irfaan Ali said.

ART issued 33.47mn TREES credits in December 2022 to Guyana for 2016-2020. The credits are ART's standard for measuring and quantifying greenhouse gas emission reductions.

Guyana has had some success in transacting its carbon credits. It negotiated an agreement with Hess Corporation to sell carbon credits for $750mn. It received the first $150mn in 2023.

Hess is part of an ExxonMobil-led consortium that started producing crude offshore Guyana in 2019.

US major Chevron's planned takeover of Hess will not affect the agreement, Jagdeo said.

Norway had earlier committed to providing Guyana up to $250mn for avoided deforestation once certain performance indicators were met.

Guyana started negotiating with airlines after failing to get the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNfccc) and some non-governmental organizations to add forest carbon to a compliance market, the government said.

But it made "no significant" progress" in the discussions, Jagdeo said.

"The UNfccc is treating the tropical countries badly," he said. "If we didn't branch out on our own since 2009, and set up our low carbon development strategy that gave us the $250mn deal with Norway, then the $750mn agreement with Hess, we would be left back like some other countries."

Guyana forest credit payments$
Credit yearsPayment$/ton
2016-2020187.515
2021-2025250.020
2026-2030312.525
Payment by Hess, for approximately 30pc or 37.5mn of Guyana's ART TREES credits

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08/10/24

September was second hottest: EU's Copernicus

September was second hottest: EU's Copernicus

London, 8 October (Argus) — Last month was the second hottest September on record globally, after September 2023, with average temperatures 0.73°C higher than the 1991-2020 average for the month, according to data from the EU climate-monitoring service Copernicus. Last month's average temperatures globally were 1.54°C above pre-industrial (1850-1900) levels and September's average was the 14th month in a 15-month period when the global average surface air temperature was more than 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels. The global average temperature for the 12 months to September was the second highest on record for any 12-month period — 0.74°C above the 1991-2020 average, and an estimated 1.62°C above the 1850-1900 pre-industrial average. The January–September 2024 global-average temperature was 0.71°C above the 1991-2020 average, the highest on record for the period and 0.19°C warmer than the same period in 2023. It is almost certain that 2024 will turn out to be the warmest year on record, Copernicus said. The average temperature over European land for September 2024 was 1.74°C above the 1991-2020 average for September, making it the second warmest September on record for Europe after September 2023, which was 2.51°C above average. Last month also had exceptionally high rainfall levels across much of the continent, with widespread floods across central Europe. Last year was the hottest on record , averaging 1.45°C above pre-industrial temperatures. By Gavin Attridge Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Kinder Morgan to shut Tampa terminals Tuesday


07/10/24
07/10/24

Kinder Morgan to shut Tampa terminals Tuesday

Houston, 7 October (Argus) — Kinder Morgan is planning to shut its terminals and fuel racks in Tampa, Florida, on Tuesday as the region prepares for Hurricane Milton to make landfall Wednesday evening . "We will continue to monitor the storm's path and make any adjustments as needed," Kinder Morgan said in a statement on Monday. Kinder operates the Port Sutton, Tampa Bay Stevedores and Tampaplex terminals in Tampa's Hillsborough Bay and the Port Manatee terminal further south in the Tampa Bay. The terminals handle a wide range of bulk products including fertilizers, scrap metal, petroleum coke and coal according to Kinder Morgan's website. Kinder's Tampa refined products terminal has 1.8mn bls of storage and is connected to the Central Florida Pipeline (CFPL) which transports gasoline, diesel, ethanol and jet fuel to Orlando, including to Orlando International Airport. The airport said today that it will cease operations the morning of 9 October in advance of the hurricane. By Nathan Risser Hurricane Milton projected path Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Trump, Harris run on competing visions for energy


07/10/24
07/10/24

Trump, Harris run on competing visions for energy

Washington, 7 October (Argus) — Energy has emerged as a centrepiece in the US presidential race between Republican candidate former president Donald Trump and Democratic candidate vice-president Kamala Harris, who have repeatedly fought over whose policies would keep domestic energy prices affordable now and in the future. Trump has promised a return to the policies he championed during his first presidential term, when he opened vast tracts of federal land to oil and gas leasing, scrapped rules that would support electric vehicles (EVs), and halted any serious attempts for the federal government to respond to climate change. Trump has embraced "drill, baby, drill" as a core policy plank, which he argues will be an elixir to voters frustrated with inflation and high prices. Vice-president Harris backs an "all-of-the-above" energy policy, her running mate Tim Walz says, and has a further goal to turn the US into a global powerhouse for the types of clean energy manufacturing and EVs that will be needed to make a difference on climate change. But Harris' remark in 2019 that there is "no question I'm in favour of banning fracking" has come to haunt her campaign, despite saying she has dropped that position. Harris says her experience serving as vice-president has shown her that banning fracking was not needed to support a clean energy economy. "As vice-president, I did not ban fracking. As president, I will not ban fracking," she says. Even so, Trump has tried to sow doubts among voters that Harris is sincere in her new position, which he hopes will cost her in the battleground state of Pennsylvania, a key shale gas producer that accounts for 20pc of US natural gas output. "If she won the election, the day after that election, they'll go back to destroying our country and oil will be dead," Trump says. But Trump's promises on oil and gas — and his attacks on the policies of the Biden-Harris administration — have at times borne little resemblance to reality. Trump claims that if he had won a second term in 2020, oil production would be "four times, five times higher", translating into US crude production in excess of 50mn b/d, or more than half of global production. Trump also says that, if elected, he would cut the price of energy "in half or more within a year of taking office", double electricity production and bring gasoline prices below $2/USG. He will do this through "a national emergency declaration" that will cause a "massive increase" in energy supply, Trump says, although energy analysts say his promises are technically and economically unachievable. Trump's oft-repeated claim that US oil and gas production crashed after he left office is also undercut by basic energy statistics, as is his claim that the US has lost the "energy dominance" it had during his term. The US hit record-high production this year, in excess of 13mn b/d of crude and 100bn ft³/d (1 trillion m³/yr) of gas, while US net petroleum exports climbed to a record high of 1.7mn b/d last year. Regulatory rollback Trump has campaigned heavily on rolling back regulations and cutting energy prices, which he says will persuade manufacturers to "pack up and move their production to America". For every new regulation, he promises to remove "10 old and burdensome regulations from the books", echoing an earlier "two-for-one" regulatory repeal policy he attempted to enforce during his first term in office. Trump has shown particular zeal for eliminating policies he sees as part of the "Green New Scam", a blanket term he uses for clean energy spending under President Joe Biden's signature climate legislation, the Inflation Reduction Act, and climate-related regulations. If Trump's first term serves as a guide, he will again seek to repeal regulations that restrict methane emissions from US oil and gas production, weaken CO2 emission limits for power plants and block tailpipe rules that encourage EVs. "I will end the insane EV mandates," Trump says. Faster permitting will be another top priority, Trump says, after his efforts to pass comprehensive permitting legislation collapsed during his first term. A Harris victory, in contrast, would be key to implementing dozens of climate-related regulations issued under the Biden administration and defending them in court. Expediting federal permitting and "cutting red tape" will also be a priority for a Harris administration, given the impediments it can create for clean energy projects and other infrastructure, according to campaign documents. "No-one can tell me we can't build quickly," Harris says. Federal oil and gas leasing has plunged under Biden, who was unable to carry out campaign promises to ban new leasing but was still able to limit onshore lease sales to 210,000 acres/yr (850 km²/yr) in 2022-23, down from more than 6mn acres/yr in 2018-19 under Trump. Oil and gas groups say expanded federal leasing, particularly in the US Gulf of Mexico, is a top policy priority. Trump has vowed to expand federal oil and gas development if he wins, particularly by enabling drilling in Alaska's Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR), which he opened to leasing in 2017 but has been held up in reviews since Biden took office. "I'll put ANWR back in play," Trump says. Less clear is how Trump would handle offshore leasing, an issue that backfired in his first term when his push for drilling offshore Florida prompted fury from political leaders in the Republican-led state. Harris has yet to explicitly embrace federal drilling, but she has touted the "record energy production" the US has achieved under the Biden-Harris administration, and supports further growth "so that we never again have to rely on foreign oil", according to campaign documents. A recent bipartisan bill from US senator Joe Manchin suggests there is flexibility from the Democrats on the issue, by offering more federal oil leasing in exchange for fast-tracking electric transmission development. LNG pause in balance Biden's decision earlier this year to pause the licensing of newly-built LNG export terminals has fuelled uncertainty for projects such as Venture Global's 28mn t/yr CP2 project in Louisiana. But the pause is only set to last until early 2025, when the US Department of Energy (DOE) will finish work on a study into whether further exports are in the "public interest" based on factors such as climate change and domestic energy prices. Trump says as soon as he takes office he will approve pending LNG export terminals, which he says are "good for the environment, not bad, and good for our country". Harris has yet to describe her approach to licensing more LNG terminals, the approval of which environmental activists say would be a "climate bomb". But Manchin's permitting bill suggests there is some room for manoeuvre, by requiring the DOE to decide on LNG export licences within 90 days. Oil industry officials are preparing for a fight to retain the existing corporate tax rate of 21pc enacted under Trump in 2017, as Congress is heading towards a "tax cliff" at the end of 2025 that will cost more than $4 trillion to avert. Harris has called for Congress to raise the corporate tax rate to 28pc, but wants new tax credits for industries such as manufacturing. Trump has proposed a lower corporate tax rate of 15pc only "for those who make their product in America". At the same time, Trump's push for an across-the-board import tariff of up to 20pc has alarmed industry officials, who say such a policy would raise consumer prices and potentially trigger a disruptive trade war. By Chris Knight Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Fossil fuel cars phase-out comes up again in Brussels


07/10/24
07/10/24

Fossil fuel cars phase-out comes up again in Brussels

Brussels, 7 October (Argus) — The European parliament will this week debate a "crisis" facing the EU's automotive industry which could lead to "potential" plant closures, putting discussions on already-decided CO2 standards for vehicles on the forefront. Members have faced increased efforts by industry arguing for or against speedy review of the EU's regulation on CO2 emission standards for cars and vans. The regulation sets a 2035 phase-out target for new fossil fuel cars. The European commission is expected to give a statement to parliament, but a spokesperson told Argus that any change to the EU CO2 standards for cars and light vehicles would require a legal proposal by the commission to both parliament and EU member states. The priority, the spokesperson said, is on meeting 2025 targets for fleet CO2 reductions, agreed in 2019, but the commission is aware of "different opinions" in industry. Automakers association Acea has been calling for a "substantive and holistic" review of the CO2 regulation. The transition to zero-emission vehicles must be made "more manageable", assessing real-world progress against the ambition level. On the other hand, European power industry association Eurelectric today told members of parliament that bringing forward a review of the EU's regulation on CO2 standards for cars and vans to the start of 2025 would only encourage carmakers to hold off on making lower-priced and smaller electric vehicles (EV). The next CO2 target for car fleets is set to take effect in 2025. It requires a 15pc cut in emissions for newly registered cars. Some member states view the CO2 target cuts, and phase-out of the internal combustion engine (ICE) by 2035, as contentious. The regulation was only approved after a delay to normally formal approval. And parliament's largest centre-right EPP group is calling for a revision of CO2 standards for new cars to allow for alternative zero-emission fuels beyond 2035. As a counterweight to such pressure, Austrian, Belgian, Dutch and Irish ministers today called on commission president Ursula von der Leyen to step up EU action to push decarbonisation of company vehicles, notably light duty vehicles. "We need to consider action on the demand side in order to push zero-emission vehicles sales. Corporate fleets are the EU's most important market segment," the four ministers told von der Leyen. By Dafydd ab Iago Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Concerns remain over plans of firm tapped to run Citgo


07/10/24
07/10/24

Concerns remain over plans of firm tapped to run Citgo

London, 7 October (Argus) — The top bidder in the auction for Venezuelan state-run PdV's US refining subsidiary, Citgo, says it plans to reinvest in its 804,000 b/d of refining capacity, but concerns remain over the private equity-backed buyer's intentions. Amber Energy was selected on 27 September as the top bidder in an auction for the seventh-largest US refiner, with a bid of $7.3bn. The company, backed by investors including Elliott Investment Management, says it would focus on "enhancing the value of its [Citgo's] core assets" by prioritising "operational excellence", reinvesting in the business and pursuing "strategic investments". Amber is led by industry veterans Gregory Goff and Jeff Stevens. The latter was chief executive of Western Refining from 2010-17, while Goff ran refiner Andeavor from 2010-18, during which time it changed its name from Tesoro, bought Stevens' Western Refining and was then bought by Marathon Petroleum. Goff and Stevens' refining pedigree has not allayed concerns in the market that one of their investors, Elliott, and other undisclosed backers, want to split up the assets and sell them for a combined price higher than the investment group's $7.3bn bid. Elliott's track record of activist investing in North American refiners shows a clear preference for improving the core business of processing crude into fuels, with little interest in what the investment firm views as non-core assets. Elliott pushed Canadian integrated energy company Suncor in 2022 for board changes and divestment of its 1,500 retail stores, which it ultimately did not sell. The firm had more luck with Marathon, which agreed to sell its 3,900-store Speedway network in 2019, the year after it bought Andeavor. Last year, Elliott purchased a $1bn stake in Phillips 66 and called for the company to refocus on its refining business and reduce operating costs. Phillips 66 divested some of its retail network and pipelines this year. The investment group, which started out trading in the 1970s but has since expanded into a multi-strategy hedge fund and private equity firm, has shown a clear preference for merchant refiners within its activist investments, and criticised the strategy of integrated refining companies. It is not clear whether that preference carries through to its private-markets investment in Amber, which could also be eyeing an initial public offering for the assets down the line. Elliott did not respond to requests for comment on its strategy. A spokesperson for Amber declined to discuss details of the company's strategy on the record. Seeking closure Amber said it expects the sale to close in mid-2025, pending regulatory approval and a final recommendation by the US Court for the District of Delaware. But investors involved in the auction process and other downstream operators told Argus that higher bids from other refiners or groups are likely, as Amber's bid is considered relatively low for what are widely viewed as attractive refining assets. The auction comes at a time of flatlining domestic demand for road fuels such as gasoline, and ongoing worries about the future of the US refining industry, where smaller and less profitable plants are the most likely to shutter operations. But Citgo's two Gulf coast assets — a 455,000 b/d refinery in Louisiana and a 165,000 b/d plant in Texas — are large, complex refineries that could benefit from access to export markets as domestic demand wanes and the Gulf coast readies for the 2025 closure of LyondellBasell's 264,000 b/d Houston plant. Citgo's 184,000 b/d Lemont refinery in Illinois could gain access to cheap Canadian heavy crude and sell products to the US market when major plants such as ExxonMobil's 252,000 b/d Joliet refinery in Illinois and BP's 435,000 b/d Whiting facility in Indiana are off line owing to outages or maintenance. By Nathan Risser Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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