Several hard to abate sector’s associations have welcomed the publication of the drafts for the outstanding RED II Delegated Acts on Article 27.3 and Article 28.5 and appreciated the European Commission’s call for feedback. They wrote “For meeting the climate neutrality targets set by the European Green Deal, several sectors crucially depend on the large-scale availability of renewable fuels of non-biological origin RFNBOs, supplied cost-competitively and securely across Europe. The signatories strongly support avoiding the double counting of renewable electricity or emitted greenhouse gases through appropriate certification mechanisms and the establishment of viable sustainability criteria though the RED II Delegated Acts. These shall ensure a clear and certain framework for investments. Achieving the Commission's increased ambition levels such as RFNBOs sub-quotas as outlined in the REPowerEU Plan, European Hydrogen Strategy, revision of the Renewable Energy Directive, ReFuelEU Aviation or discussed in FuelEU Maritime require a safe investment environment and sufficient planning certainty for the rapid scale-up of renewable fuels of non-biological origin, hydrogen derivatives such as synthetic fuels, and underlying technologies such as Carbon Capture and Utilisation.”They wrote “Overly restrictive requirements, the absence of clear guarantees on the availability of renewable electricity and relevant dedicated infrastructure have the opposite effect of curtailing investments in production capacity and imposing undue administrative burdens. The signatories therefore propose the following changes to the draft acts, which are necessary to enable the market ramp-up and fast decarbonisation.”Art. 27.3 – ‘Additionality’ Delegated Act:1. Prolong the proposed transitional period and grandfathering to at least 2030.2. Extend the geographical correlation beyond the proposed concept, provided there is sufficient or potential interconnection capacity between bidding zones.3. Set at least the proposed monthly temporal correlation as a default. A change to a more granular correlation should be subject to a corresponding Impact Assessment by the Commission.Art. 28.5 – GHG methodology/threshold for RFNBO/RCF Delegated Act:1. Reconsider restrictions on industrial CO2 use.2. Broaden the definition of possible CO2 sources limited by carbon pricing requirements.3. Allow RCFs producer to use PPA’s and other measures to replace the electricity displaced by the production of an RCF and RFNBO instead of national average grid GHG factors.SignatoriesThe European Cerrer Association EMBUREAUThe European Ceramic Industry Association CerarGniiThe Chemical Industry in Europe CeficThe European Cement Association CembureauThe European Ceramic Industry Association Cerame-UnieCO2 Value EuropeEuropean Lime Association EuLAEuropean Confederation of Fuel Distributois ECFDThe European Steel Association EuroferEurogasEurominesFertilizers EuropeFuels EuropeInternational Association of Oil & Gas ProducersHydrogen EuropeInternational Federation of Industrial Energy Consumers IFIEC EuropeInternational Association of Oil & Gas Producers IOGPMethanol InstituteEurope's independent Fuel Suppliers UPEIArbeitsgemeinschaft Power-to-X for Applications VDMA
Several hard to abate sector’s associations have welcomed the publication of the drafts for the outstanding RED II Delegated Acts on Article 27.3 and Article 28.5 and appreciated the European Commission’s call for feedback. They wrote “For meeting the climate neutrality targets set by the European Green Deal, several sectors crucially depend on the large-scale availability of renewable fuels of non-biological origin RFNBOs, supplied cost-competitively and securely across Europe. The signatories strongly support avoiding the double counting of renewable electricity or emitted greenhouse gases through appropriate certification mechanisms and the establishment of viable sustainability criteria though the RED II Delegated Acts. These shall ensure a clear and certain framework for investments. Achieving the Commission's increased ambition levels such as RFNBOs sub-quotas as outlined in the REPowerEU Plan, European Hydrogen Strategy, revision of the Renewable Energy Directive, ReFuelEU Aviation or discussed in FuelEU Maritime require a safe investment environment and sufficient planning certainty for the rapid scale-up of renewable fuels of non-biological origin, hydrogen derivatives such as synthetic fuels, and underlying technologies such as Carbon Capture and Utilisation.”They wrote “Overly restrictive requirements, the absence of clear guarantees on the availability of renewable electricity and relevant dedicated infrastructure have the opposite effect of curtailing investments in production capacity and imposing undue administrative burdens. The signatories therefore propose the following changes to the draft acts, which are necessary to enable the market ramp-up and fast decarbonisation.”Art. 27.3 – ‘Additionality’ Delegated Act:1. Prolong the proposed transitional period and grandfathering to at least 2030.2. Extend the geographical correlation beyond the proposed concept, provided there is sufficient or potential interconnection capacity between bidding zones.3. Set at least the proposed monthly temporal correlation as a default. A change to a more granular correlation should be subject to a corresponding Impact Assessment by the Commission.Art. 28.5 – GHG methodology/threshold for RFNBO/RCF Delegated Act:1. Reconsider restrictions on industrial CO2 use.2. Broaden the definition of possible CO2 sources limited by carbon pricing requirements.3. Allow RCFs producer to use PPA’s and other measures to replace the electricity displaced by the production of an RCF and RFNBO instead of national average grid GHG factors.SignatoriesThe European Cerrer Association EMBUREAUThe European Ceramic Industry Association CerarGniiThe Chemical Industry in Europe CeficThe European Cement Association CembureauThe European Ceramic Industry Association Cerame-UnieCO2 Value EuropeEuropean Lime Association EuLAEuropean Confederation of Fuel Distributois ECFDThe European Steel Association EuroferEurogasEurominesFertilizers EuropeFuels EuropeInternational Association of Oil & Gas ProducersHydrogen EuropeInternational Federation of Industrial Energy Consumers IFIEC EuropeInternational Association of Oil & Gas Producers IOGPMethanol InstituteEurope's independent Fuel Suppliers UPEIArbeitsgemeinschaft Power-to-X for Applications VDMA