Generic Hero BannerGeneric Hero Banner
Latest market news

H2 groups, environmentalists disappointed by IMO deal

  • : E-fuels, Fertilizers, Hydrogen
  • 25/04/14

The International Maritime Organization's (IMO) global greenhouse gas (GHG) pricing mechanism may be insufficient to stimulate short-term uptake of clean hydrogen-based marine fuels and threatens decarbonisation targets, hydrogen industry associations and environmental groups said.

Delegates approved a proposed mechanism at the IMO's 83rd Marine Environment Protection Committee (MEPC) meeting on 11 April. The proposal will be put to an adoption vote at the next MEPC in October after which the rules could enter into force in 2027.

The IMO said its "net-zero framework is the first in the world to combine mandatory emissions limits and GHG pricing across an entire sector".

But the agreement does not go far enough to drive extensive uptake of clean hydrogen and derivatives, such as ammonia and e-methanol, as the mechanism's design will encourage use of LNG and biofuels instead, at least in the short-term, according to industry participants and environmental bodies.

"Delegates have agreed a measure that may lock in the use of environmentally destructive biofuels and LNG" instead of providing the incentives necessary "to jump start the transition" to e-fuels based on renewable hydrogen, said the Skies and Seas Hydrogen-fuels Accelerator Coalition's (Sasha) founder Aoife O'Leary.

Brussels-based environmental group Transport & Environment (T&E) took a similar stance. While the IMO's agreement "creates a momentum for alternative marine fuels… it is the forest-destroying first generation biofuels that will get the biggest push for the next decade," the group's shipping director Faig Abbasov said. "Without better incentives for sustainable e-fuels from green hydrogen, it is impossible to decarbonise this heavy polluting industry."

The criticism is directed primarily at the CO2 prices set under the two-tier system. The tier 2 price of $380/t of CO2 equivalent (CO2e) could encourage a shift away from diesel or other "high-emission fuels", but this would likely be to "relatively affordable biofuels" rather than "significantly cleaner alternatives such as green hydrogen-derived fuels", T&E said.

Industry body the Green Hydrogen Organisation (GH2) noted that reducing the penalties to $100/t CO2e price for vessels that meet "base" targets could encourage companies using "LNG and more carbon intensive fuels" to "pay to pollute rather than comply over the next few years". The group criticised the lack of "a universal levy with a meaningful carbon price".

It will be key to ensure that all emissions, including methane leakage, are comprehensively accounted for and that "direct and indirect land-use change from biofuels" is factored in, GH2 said.

But despite the criticism, GH2 said the agreement "sends an important signal to green fuels producers to go forward with their projects".

"The greenest fuels will be able to generate credits… which they can sell," the group said, adding that the IMO will agree "a mechanism to reward zero or near-zero emission ships by March 2027".

This could drive an increase in orders for dual-fuel vessels that could eventually transition to hydrogen-based fuels, it said.

Off target

Some groups, including T&E, the Clean Shipping Coalition and the Global Maritime Forum, argue that the shipping industry will fail to meet emissions reduction targets with the proposed framework.

The measures will "at best" provide emissions reductions of 10pc by 2030 and 60pc by 2040, far below the IMO's 2023 commitments to 30pc and 80pc, respectively, T&E said.

The failure to send stronger signals for uptake of hydrogen-based fuels puts at risk a target of reaching 5pc fuel use that is zero- or near-zero emission by 2030 and the industry's entire 2050 net-zero goal, the Global Maritime Forum said.

Other International shipping organisations, such as the International Chamber of Shipping and the European Community Shipowners Association, voiced support for the agreement although they acknowledged that it is "not perfect".


Related news posts

Argus illuminates the markets by putting a lens on the areas that matter most to you. The market news and commentary we publish reveals vital insights that enable you to make stronger, well-informed decisions. Explore a selection of news stories related to this one.

25/05/22

Brazil senate passes environmental licensing bill

Brazil senate passes environmental licensing bill

Sao Paulo, 22 May (Argus) — Brazil's senate approved a bill that aims to standardize and, in some cases, speed up environmental licensing that the oil industry has blamed for slowing exploration projects . The bill, which the senate approved Wednesday in a 54 to-13 vote, aims to create national standards for environmental licensing, with the goal of simplifying the process for projects that have a limited environmental impact. The bill also aims to create a new type of environmental license for projects that are considered government priorities. These projects would be subject to a more simplified licensing process that would take one year at most. The creation of a new type of licensing for these projects would potentially facilitate oil exploration in the Amazon, the senate said. The change comes as state-controlled Petrobras pushes to begin offshore drilling in the environmentally sensitive Foz do Amazonas offshore basin . The bill would also exempt agricultural projects from obtaining environmental licensing but would continue to require farmers to obtain authorization to remove native vegetation. It also allows small- and medium-sized projects to self-declare their environmental commitments, without the need to have a proper license. Senator Eliziane Gama criticized that proposal, using the disaster in the Brumadinho dam — which burst in 2019 and was considered a medium-sized project — as an example. Brazilian energy think tank Instituto Acende called the bill an important milestone for Brazil, adding that if approved, it would "reduce legal uncertainty, administrative inefficiencies, and obstacles to sustainable development". Environmentalists slammed the proposal, with Observatorio do Clima calling it the "greatest attack on environmental legislation in four decades". The legislation would approve nearly all new projects without environmental impact studies, the group said. The bill will now return to the lower house because senators altered the original text. Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

India's Kribhco buys Saudi DAP


25/05/22
25/05/22

India's Kribhco buys Saudi DAP

London, 22 May (Argus) — Indian importer Kribhco has bought 40,000t of DAP at around $738/t cfr from Saudi Arabian producer Ma'aden. The cargo will load in June and the price nets back to around $724/t fob Ras al-Khair. This follows Ma'aden's sale of 40,000t of DAP to another Indian importer at the same price, also for loading in June, reported earlier today . By Tom Hampson Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

European Parliament adopts carbon border changes


25/05/22
25/05/22

European Parliament adopts carbon border changes

Brussels, 22 May (Argus) — The European Parliament today approved changes to the bloc's carbon border adjustment mechanism (CBAM) that are estimated to exempt 90pc of importers from the measure, linked to the EU emissions trading system (ETS), although a final legal text still needs to be agreed with EU member states. The parliament adopted by a large majority the European Commission's proposal, with a minor amendment to clarify that CBAM covers electricity importers but not power generated "entirely" in the European Economic Area (EEA) countries Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway and imported to the EU. These countries are covered by the EU ETS. The adopted text also confirms the start date for CBAM certificate sales as 1 February 2027, pushed back from 2026 previously, to "address significant uncertainties related to the year 2026". Parliament said the new de minimis mass threshold of 50t would exempt 90pc of importers from the CBAM. The commission designed the changes to continue to cover the bulk of CO2 emissions from imports of iron, steel, aluminium, cement and fertilisers. Most fertiliser imported to the EU is in the form of bulk shipments, which are well above 50t. Russia earlier this week launched a formal dispute procedure at the World Trade Organisation against CBAM as an "alleged export subsidy". By Dafydd ab Iago Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Dry conditions cut South Australian fertilizer use


25/05/21
25/05/21

Dry conditions cut South Australian fertilizer use

Sydney, 21 May (Argus) — Around half of the growers in South Australia (SA) are using less fertilizer this season on the back of very dry weather conditions, according to a seeding intentions survey by Grain Producers South Australia (GPSA). The survey also showed seeding has been delayed, with 64pc of growers saying they had not started seeding by Anzac Day on 25 April, historically seen as the benchmark to have seeding completed or at least started. Urea imports into South Australia were 329,091t last year, according to data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics, breaching 300,000t for the first time since records began. Urea imports in the first quarter of this year were 54,220t, slightly lower than the same period of last year. Most of South Australia's urea imports occur in the second quarter of each year, with 201,763t arriving in that period last year. Projections from the Australian Bureau of Meteorology (BoM) show there is less than a 50pc chance of above-average rainfall in most regions of Australia in May-June . South and Western Australia have been particularly dry this season. "Growers are taking a conservative approach to fertilizer," said GPSA chief executive Brad Perry. A grain producer commented in the survey that "not only is the season tough but there is no let up on input costs either." A similar situation is unfolding in the state of Victoria, where the market remains slow and growers are concerned about getting seeds in the ground. Market participants said the lack of rainfall could impact top-dressing urea application and lower demand across the state by 5-20pc. Buy and sell side indications for local granular urea prices have diverged since the start of May, and transactions have become limited. Granular urea was last assessed at A$765-780/t fca Geelong (see graph) . The BoM is forecasting rainfall across southeastern Victoria, most of South Australia and the southeastern coast in June, which should boost demand for urea and prices. By Susannah Cornford and Tom Woodlock Granular urea fca Geelong (A$/t) Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Infinium takes FID on 100MW Texas e-fuels plant


25/05/19
25/05/19

Infinium takes FID on 100MW Texas e-fuels plant

London, 19 May (Argus) — US project developer Infinium has taken a final investment decision (FID) on an e-fuels production plant in Texas, and has selected compatriot Electric Hydrogen to provide 100MW of proton exchange membrane (PEM) electrolyser capacity. Construction of Project Roadrunner, at Pecos, west Texas is underway, with commercial production due to start in 2027, Infinium said. The facility will make 23,000 t/yr of synthetic aviation fuels (e-SAF) and other e-fuels, specifically e-diesel for trucking and maritime industries and e-naphtha. This will make it the largest e-fuels facility in the world, Infinium said. Supply will be sold domestically and exported to international markets, it said. Infinium last year struck a 10-year offtake deal with UK-based International Airlines Group (IAG) for delivery of 75,000t of e-SAF to any of the group's airlines: Aer Lingus, BA, Iberia, Level and Vueling. The UK will introduce mandatory e-SAF quotas for the aviation sector from 2028, with the EU to follow suit in 2030. The 7,500 t/yr deal with IAG would cover roughly one-third of Project Roadrunner's expected output. Infinium also has a supply agreement with American Airlines, the developer said. Project Roadrunner will be fed with 150MW of wind power generation capacity from a subsidiary of Florida-headquartered NextEra Energy Resources, via a long-term power purchase agreement. Infinium said Electric Hydrogen's integrated 100MW PEM plant "will not only produce hydrogen for the e-SAF facility but will also have capacity to support future hydrogen offtake opportunities." Canadian asset management Brookfield in 2024 agreed to invest $200mn in Infinium, and specifically Project Roadrunner, in the short term, with potential further investments of $850mn for future projects. Project Roadrunner previously received conditional funding commitment of $75mn from the Bill Gates-founded Breakthrough Energy Catalyst. Infinium has not specified whether it intends to avail itself of the 45V hydrogen production tax credits, which could yield up to $3/kg of hydrogen. Start of construction would leave this possibility open even if a bill proposed by Republicans in the US House of Representatives goes through. The proposed bill foresees that tax credits would only be available for projects that start construction before the start of 2026. By Alexandra Luca Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Generic Hero Banner

Business intelligence reports

Get concise, trustworthy and unbiased analysis of the latest trends and developments in oil and energy markets. These reports are specially created for decision makers who don’t have time to track markets day-by-day, minute-by-minute.

Learn more