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EU, UK to ‘work towards’ linking carbon markets

  • Market: Electricity, Emissions, Hydrogen, Natural gas
  • 19/05/25

The EU and UK agreed to work towards linking their respective emissions trading systems (ETS), as part of their common understanding agreement concluded at a summit in London today.

"The European Commission and the United Kingdom share the view that a functioning link between carbon markets would address many of the issues raised in respect of trade and a level playing field," the agreement states.

A linking agreement should exempt both jurisdictions from their respective carbon border adjustment mechanisms, according to the common understanding, and the linked systems should cover power and industrial heat generation, and domestic and international maritime and aviation emissions.

The statement specifically states that any link "should not constrain the European Union and the United Kingdom from pursuing higher environmental ambition". It also underlines that the UK ETS's supply cap and its emissions reduction pathway are "guided by" the country's Climate Change Act and nationally determined contributions to the Paris climate agreement, and that these should be "at least as ambitious" as the EU's.

The UK has legally binding targets to cut its greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by at least 68pc by 2030 and 81pc by 2035, both compared with 1990 levels. The EU aims to cut its net GHG emissions by 55pc by 2030, and is yet to set a 2035 target. Both jurisdictions are targeting net zero emissions by 2050, while they share the "same interests" in addressing climate change, commission president Ursula von der Leyen said today.

Linking the systems would "save British businesses £800mn in EU carbon taxes", UK prime minister Keir Starmer said today, without specifying a timeframe for the savings.

A study commissioned by a range of utilities and published last week found that linking the two systems would save up to €1.2bn on lower hedging costs resulting from improved market liquidity and lower bid-offer spreads.

Today's agreement provides no timeline for linking the systems. The process to negotiate and link the Swiss ETS to the EU's scheme took almost 10 years.

Alongside plans to work towards linking the EU and UK ETS, the jurisdictions also alluded in the agreement to continuing "technical regulatory exchanges" on energy technologies including hydrogen, carbon capture and storage and biomethane.

And they will "explore in detail the necessary parameters" for the UK's potential participation in the EU's internal power market.


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12/06/25

EPA draft biofuel blend mandate expected Friday: Update

EPA draft biofuel blend mandate expected Friday: Update

Updates with changes throughout New York, 12 June (Argus) — President Donald Trump's administration plans to release draft biofuel blend mandates for 2026 and 2027 on Friday, according to three people familiar with the matter. The draft quotas, in addition to a separate final rule cutting cellulosic biofuel mandates for last year, exited White House interagency review on Wednesday, the last step before major regulations can be released. The Trump administration has meetings with legislative stakeholders on Friday morning ahead of the public release, three people said. Previously scheduled meetings through the end of the month as part of the interagency review process appear to have been cancelled, another signal that the rules' release is imminent. The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has said it wants to get the frequently delayed Renewable Fuel Standard program back on its statutory timeline, which would require volumes for 2027 to be finalized before November this year. Any proposal will have to go through the typical public comment process and could be changed. EPA said the rules will be posted on its website once they are signed by Lee Zeldin, the agency's administrator. A coalition of biofuel-producing groups and feedstock suppliers, including the American Petroleum Institute, has pushed EPA to set a biomass-based diesel mandate of 5.25bn USG for 2026, hoping that a record-high target will support biorefineries that have struggled this year. Many plants have idled or run less recently, as uncertainty about future blend mandates, the halting rollout of a new clean fuel tax credit, and tariffs that up feedstock costs all hurt margins. US senator Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) said Thursday that closed biodiesel plants in his state needed a 5.25bn mandate to reopen. Meanwhile, a coalition of independent and small refiners that have long lamented the costs of the program wrote to EPA this week asking for less-aspirational future mandates, including for the conventional category mostly met by corn ethanol. RIN markets were volatile today, trading higher in the morning before slipping lower on fears the mandates would not meet industry expectations. Current year ethanol D6 RINs traded as high as 99¢/RIN before falling as low as 90¢/RIN. Current year biomass-based diesel D4 RINs ended Thursday at 102.5¢/RIN, equal to their close the prior day. Small refinery exemptions loom Zeldin told a House subcommittee last month the agency wanted "to get caught up as quickly as we can" on a backlog of small refiner requests for program exemptions. Courts took issue with EPA's exemption policy during Trump's first term and again during President Joe Biden's tenure, leaving officials now with dozens of waiver requests covering 10 compliance years still pending. It is unclear whether the rule will provide much clarity on EPA's plans for program waivers, but biofuel groups have worried that widespread exemptions would curb demand for their products. The price of Renewable Identification Number (RIN) credits used for program compliance have been volatile this year on rumors about these exemptions, which EPA has called market manipulation. In both the Trump and Biden administrations, EPA estimated future exempted volumes when calculating the percentage of biofuels individual refiners had to blend, effectively requiring those with obligations to shoulder more of the burden to meet high-level volume targets. The agency could continue that approach, but it would be more legally treacherous for the agency to similarly "reallocate" exempted volumes from past years into future standards, lawyers said. EPA by law also has to consult on exemption decisions with the Department of Energy, which a person familiar said was "still going through the scoring process" for assessing some small refinery applications, making quick resolution of the issue unlikely. Unresolved court cases, including a Supreme Court case about the proper venue for small refinery waiver disputes, could also give regulators pause until they know more. Tax credit clarity expected soon Senate committees this week have been releasing their versions of key parts of the major Republican spending bill, and the Senate Finance Committee is expected to do so soon, potentially as early as Friday according to people familiar. The incentive is crucial for biofuel production margins and thus for the viability of EPA mandates too. The version that passed the House last month would extend the "45Z" clean fuel production credit through 2031, bar regulators from considering indirect land use emissions, and restrict eligibility to fuels from North American feedstocks. While various ideas have circulated this year, lobbyists expect the Senate to preserve the general structure of the credit, which throttles benefits based on carbon intensity, rather than reinvent a new subsidy. Still, some Republicans have expressed concern with the House's phaseout of tax credit "transferability", which benefits smaller companies without much tax liability. And major oil refiners with renewable diesel plants reliant on Asian used cooking oil and South American tallow have lobbied for more flexibility around foreign feedstocks. Any changes that up the credit's costs could be controversial too among conservatives worried about the bill's impacts on a mounting federal budget deficit. And the complex tax credit will ultimately need final regulations from the US Department of Treasury clarifying eligibility. At a Senate hearing Thursday, Treasury secretary Scott Bessent said that the Trump administration planned to implement the credit in a way to "not allow for foreign actors to have a back door into the program." By Cole Martin and Matthew Cope Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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Brazil backs R32mn to counter wildfires in Amazon


12/06/25
News
12/06/25

Brazil backs R32mn to counter wildfires in Amazon

Sao Paulo, 12 June (Argus) — Brazil opened a public call to finance R32mn ($5.7mn) to combat wildfires in the Amazon rainforest and in the central-western Pantanal biome. The resources come from Brazilian environment ministry's FNMA fund and the federal collective rights' fund FDD, which is under the justice and public security ministry's umbrella. Projects submitted must be between R800,000-1mn and must be finished in up to two years, according to the government. Projects regarding machinery, equipment and fire-adapted light vehicle acquisitions are eligible. The investment does not comprise construction projects. The initiative aims to counter environmental damages from wildfires. Brazil is working to eliminate deforestation — both legal and illegal — by 2030, in an effort to meet its emissions reductions targets under the Paris climate agreement. Deforestation is one of Brazil's flagship issues for the UN Cop 30 summit , which it will host in northern Para state in November this year. The Amazon biome lost over 774,000ha to wildfires in the first quarter, a 72pc drop from a year earlier, while it accounted for almost 52pc of burnt areas in March. Burnt areas in the Pantanal biome, or tropical wetland, fell by 86pc in the first quarter to 10,900 hectares. By Maria Frazatto Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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US Senate looking at ways to save 45V: Cornyn


12/06/25
News
12/06/25

US Senate looking at ways to save 45V: Cornyn

Houston, 12 June (Argus) — The US Senate is considering ways to reinstate the 45V hydrogen production tax credit that the House voted to terminate by the end of this year, said a key Republican official. "That's on the table," said Senator John Cornyn (R-Texas), who serves on the Senate's tax writing committee, in response to a reporter asking him in Washington DC this week whether there's any effort to "reinstate the hydrogen tax credit." A spokeswoman for Cornyn confirmed the exchange in an email to Argus . The lucrative credit was part of a raft of clean energy incentives originating from President Joe Biden's signature climate bill that House Republicans voted to repeal to offset President Donald Trump's more than $4 trillion tax cut. If the House version of the bill passes it would effectively end billions of dollars worth of projects to produce cleaner hydrogen either from electrolysis powered by renewables or natural gas with carbon capture and storage. Green energy advocates and fossil fuel producers have combined efforts to lobby the Senate to extend the credit's lifetime. The American Petroleum Institute, the Fuel Cell & Hydrogen Energy Association and multiple Chambers of Commerce representing cities along the US Gulf coast, which stand to benefit from blue hydrogen projects, asked the Senate in a letter this month to preserve the credit until 2029. By Jasmina Kelemen Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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Spanish May industrial gas use hits multi-year low


12/06/25
News
12/06/25

Spanish May industrial gas use hits multi-year low

London, 12 June (Argus) — Spanish industrial gas burn last month was higher than in April but the lowest for May in at least nine years, the latest data from grid operator Enagas show. Industrial gas demand of 449 GWh/d in May edged up from 441 GWh/d in April, but remained lower than the 465 GWh/d a year earlier and was the weakest for May since at least 2016, when Enagas' public dataset begins. Before last month, the lowest industrial demand for May over the past nine years occurred in 2024, when Mibgas day-ahead reference prices averaged €32/MWh. Spanish industries last month also consumed less gas than in May 2022, when day-ahead reference prices on the Mibgas exchange averaged €77/MWh, more than double the Argus -assessed €34/MWh day-ahead average last month. Spanish industrial demand has remained lower on the year every month so far in 2025, largely because of limited gas use by refineries. Spanish refiners last month consumed 84 GWh/d, down from 100 GWh/d in May 2024, but the sector still accounted for the largest single portion of industrial demand. There was also a significant decline in demand from the food sector, which decreased by 13pc on the year, combined heat and power (CHP) plants (11pc drop) and the paper sector, which fell by 7pc on the year. Gas burn by CHPs last month held lower on the year, despite overall demand for Spanish power generation holding more or less stable and Spanish renewables and nuclear plants contributing less to the mix. That change may at least partly relate to stronger competition from combined-cycle gas turbines, which generated 4.4GW last month, 63pc higher than a year earlier. The metal, chemical and construction sectors all used marginally more gas on the year, but that change only partially offset the decline in other sectors ( see table ). By Iris Petrillo Spanish gas demand by sector GWh/d May-25 May-24 Refineries 84 98 Chemical and pharma 61 59 Construction 61 60 CHPs 51 58 Food 44 50 Other 36 39 Metals 36 35 Paper 31 33 Services 29 29 Textiles 5 5 Enagas Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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EPA readies new biofuel blend mandate proposal


12/06/25
News
12/06/25

EPA readies new biofuel blend mandate proposal

New York, 12 June (Argus) — President Donald Trump's administration is close to releasing two regulations informing oil refiners how much biofuel they must blend into the conventional fuel supply. The two rules — proposed biofuel blend mandates for at least 2026 and most likely for 2027 as well as a separate final rule cutting cellulosic fuel mandates for last year — exited White House review on Wednesday, the last step before major regulations can be released. Previously scheduled meetings as part of the process appear to have been cancelled, another signal that the rules' release is imminent. The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has said it wants to get the frequently delayed Renewable Fuel Standard program back on its statutory timeline, which would require volumes for 2027 to be finalized before November this year. Any proposal will have to go through the typical public comment process and could be changed. A coalition of biofuel-producing groups and feedstock suppliers, including the American Petroleum Institute, has pushed EPA to set a biomass-based diesel mandate of 5.25bn USG for 2026, hoping that a record-high target will support biorefineries that have struggled this year. Many plants have idled or run less recently, as uncertainty about future blend mandates, the halting rollout of a new clean fuel tax credit, and tariffs that up feedstock costs all hurt margins. EPA administrator Lee Zeldin also told a House subcommittee last month the agency wanted "to get caught up as quickly as we can" on a backlog of small refiner requests for program exemptions. Courts took issue with EPA's exemption policy during Trump's first term and again during President Joe Biden's tenure, leaving officials now with dozens of waiver requests covering multiple compliance years still pending. It is unclear whether the rule will provide clarity on EPA's plans for program waivers — including whether the agency will up obligations on other parties to make up for exempt small refiners — but biofuel groups have worried that widespread exemptions would curb demand for their products. The price of Renewable Identification Number (RIN) credits used for program compliance have been volatile this year on rumors about these exemptions, which EPA has called market manipulation. RIN trading picked up and prices rose on the news as Thursday's session began. Bids and offers for 2025 ethanol D6 RINs, the most prevalent type currently trading, began the day at 96¢/RIN and 98¢/RIN, respectively. Deals were struck shortly after at 98¢/RIN and 99¢/RIN, with seller interest at one point reaching 100¢/RIN — well above a 95.5¢/RIN settle on Wednesday. Biomass-based diesel D4 RINs with concurrent vintage followed the same path with sellers holding ground as high as 107¢/RIN. By Cole Martin and Matthew Cope Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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