Indonesia mulls future of B30 biodiesel mandate

  • : Biofuels
  • 20/05/18

Indonesia may scale back its 30pc biodiesel mandate (B30) for transport as it struggles to amass funding, according to the US Department of Agriculture.

Jakarta has been resolute in its desire to maintain the B30, which was introduced in January, though it faces headwinds from low crude prices and reduced biodiesel demand amid Covid-19 closures.

Indonesia's oil palm plantation fund management agency (BPDPKS) supports the mandate by bridging the gap between prices of diesel and locally produced palm-based biodiesel. But the price difference between these two products has grown exponentially to nearly 4,000 rupiah/litre ($300/t) in April, from an average of Rs444/l in 2019.

BPDPKS distributed around $157mn last year but at the current rate will require more than $2bn to fulfil its requirement, according to the USDA.

Money for the subsidies comes from a crude palm oil (CPO) export levy of $25/t when prices are between $570-619/t. The levy rises to $50/t when prices exceed $619/t. But prices fell to just Rp8,153/kg ($548/t) between 15 March-14 April as the pandemic curbed demand for CPO, so funds are increasing.

Coffers are swiftly being depleted as a result and will be drained completely before the end of the year.

The government is left with either scaling back the higher mandate, revising the calculation on how subsidies are paid or finding additional reserves, but the last option will be difficult while CPO export demand and prices remain low.

The Indonesian biodiesel association pegged biodiesel use at 2.23mn kilolitres (2mn t) during the first quarter of 2020, down by 13pc on forecasts because of lower diesel consumption amid the pandemic. The government has already canned plans to increase the mandate to B40 next year.


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24/04/26

Lyondell Houston refinery to run at 95pc in 2Q

Lyondell Houston refinery to run at 95pc in 2Q

Houston, 26 April (Argus) — LyondellBasell plans to run its 264,000 b/d Houston, Texas, refinery at average utilization rates of 95pc in the second quarter and may convert its hydrotreaters to petrochemical production when the plant shuts down in early 2025. The company's sole crude refinery ran at an average 79pc utilization rate in the first quarter due to planned maintenance on a coking unit , the company said in earnings released today . "We are evaluating options for the potential reuse of the hydrotreaters at our Houston refinery to purify recycled and renewable cracker feedstocks," chief executive Peter Vanacker said on a conference call today discussing earnings. Lyondell said last year a conversion would feed the company's two 930,000 metric tonnes (t)/yr steam crackers at its Channelview petrochemicals complex. The company today said it plans to make a final investment decision on the conversion in 2025. Hydrotreater conversions — such as one Chevron completed last year at its 269,000 b/d El Segundo, California, refinery — allow the unit to produce renewable diesel, which creates renewable naphtha as a byproduct. Renewable naphtha can be used as a gasoline blending component, steam cracker feed or feed for hydrogen producing units, according to engineering firm Topsoe. Lyondell last year said the Houston refinery will continue to run until early 2025, delaying a previously announced plan to stop crude processing by the end of 2023. By Nathan Risser Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

EU adopts Net-Zero Industry Act


24/04/26
24/04/26

EU adopts Net-Zero Industry Act

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New technologies aim to boost SAF production


24/04/26
24/04/26

New technologies aim to boost SAF production

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Be8 quer ISCC de etanol para SAF em nova usina


24/04/25
24/04/25

Be8 quer ISCC de etanol para SAF em nova usina

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Etanol de milho deve compensar parte da queda da cana


24/04/25
24/04/25

Etanol de milho deve compensar parte da queda da cana

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