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European airlines are at the forefront of global Sustainable Aviation Fuel (SAF) blending on flights but still need to accelerate quickly to meet the EU’s ambitious targets. The ReFuelEU aviation directive’s feedstock requirements are more restrictive than elsewhere, and the bloc is still likely to continue to rely on imports.
European air passenger traffic accounts for 27% of global aviation, making it the second-largest aviation market after Asia-Pacific. In 2023, this translated to a jet fuel consumption of approximately 1.38 million barrels per day (65 million tonnes), a figure expected to rise as traffic volumes recover this year.
Europe is often viewed as a pioneer in climate policy and energy transition. The overarching ‘Green Deal’ and the ‘Fit for 55’ package are driving the aviation sector and its fuel suppliers towards greater sustainability. Here are the key policies within this framework:
The Renewable Energy Directive (RED III) establishes a comprehensive framework for the energy supply sector, mandating that 42.5% of energy must come from renewable sources by 2030. For the transport sector, it sets a renewable energy target of 14%. Additionally, RED III outlines the eligible Sustainable Aviation Fuel (SAF) resources under the Refuel Aviation directive, specifically excluding food and feed crops as feedstocks.
The ReFuel Aviation Directive mandates that all airlines use a 6% Sustainable Aviation Fuel (SAF) blend for flights departing from EU airports by 2030. Additionally, it requires aircraft to refuel at least 90% of the necessary volume to prevent tankering, which involves sourcing fuel from other locations for return flights. The UK has set an even more ambitious target, aiming for a 10% SAF blend by 2030
Intra-European flight traffic falls under the Emission Trading Scheme (ETS). As part of the ‘Fit for 55’ climate policy package, the free allowances for the aviation sector under the ETS are being gradually phased out. The system will be fully implemented by 2026, with a 75% reduction in free allowances in 2024 and a 50% reduction in 2025. Consequently, airlines will be fully accountable for their CO2 emissions, which will increase fuel costs. The use of Sustainable Aviation Fuels (SAFs) reduces the number of credits airlines need to obtain under the ETS, thereby benefiting the SAF business case.
According to data from BNEF and IATA, the blend rate in Europe is expected to reach just over 0.6% in 2024, falling short of the 2% target set by the ReFuel aviation directive for 2025. BNEF predicts that airlines may only achieve an average blend rate of around 1.25%. This shortfall could result in fines unless airlines purchase blend certificates. Additionally, airlines face challenges with governance clarity, particularly regarding bunkering outside of Europe and the use of SAF certificates to meet targets and avoid potential sanctions.
European production of Sustainable Aviation Fuel (SAF) is expected to accelerate in the coming years, driven by offtake agreements secured by European airlines. Several agreements are in place to deliver SAF, including significant contracts between Air France-KLM and Neste (until 2030) and Total Energies (until 2035). DHL and Lufthansa have also disclosed offtake agreements.
To enhance future sourcing, substantial volumes have been agreed upon under Memorandums of Understanding (MOUs). Other suppliers in Europe include OMV and Shell. Additionally, IAG has secured the largest offtake agreement for synthetic SAF to date, covering the period from 2024 to 2039. However, the secured supply alone is insufficient to meet the 2025 requirements, necessitating reliance on the spot market and/or SAF certificates to fulfil the remaining demand.
If all planned capacity is realised as expected, there will be enough to meet the required demand and fulfil the 2030 mandate, according to SKY-NRG. However, past delays suggest that new capacity is rarely completed on schedule, meaning the scaling-up process may take longer than anticipated.
Earlier this year, we saw setbacks in capacity realisation. The construction of one of the largest Biodiesel/SAF facilities in Rotterdam was temporarily halted. Similarly, BP announced it would scale back its SAF production plans in Rotterdam, citing challenging market conditions with lower prices. This could impact offtake agreements and spot market supply. Short-term oversupply might be a factor, as more production capacity in the US and Asia comes online and flows to Europe. A sluggish phase leading up to the 2% obligation in 2025 could also contribute to this.
Despite these setbacks, new announcements continue to emerge, such as Neste’s plans in Rotterdam. Complicating matters, refinery margins could shift due to competition with renewable diesel (HVO-100), as facilities can often switch output without significant cost. Given the global nature of the market, Europe will not be able to fully meet its own SAF demand and will need to rely on imports from North America or Asia, with this deficit expected to grow over time.
The domestic supply of agricultural and waste feedstocks in Europe is quite limited compared to the mandated amount of SAF required by 2030. Additionally, EU criteria for qualifying feedstocks are generally stricter than those in North America or Asia, further reducing the potential supply pool. For animal fats and used cooking oil (UCO), collection and distribution networks in Europe are well-established, ensuring available resources are converted into biofuels.
However, there may be a shift from using these feedstocks in road transport to aviation. Unlocking additional feedstocks, such as cover and intermediate crops, holds some potential but requires developing and scaling up the necessary supply chains.
To meet its blending mandates, Europe will continue to rely on importing various feedstocks and SAFs. Historically, the EU has sourced feedstocks from the East, but some companies have also started establishing supply chains based on agricultural inputs from Africa. Trade flows have been turbulent over the past three years. For instance, UCO imports into the EU dropped by 30% in 2023 due to concerns about the authenticity of imports, particularly from China. However, data from the first half of 2024 show that UCO imports have been picking up again, indicating a strong business case for UCO.
Thailand's underperforming US$77 billion (RM318.1 billion) social security fund will invest US$11.6 billion in a new foray into global private assets, an executive told Reuters, part of a strategic overhaul to address its poor returns amid rising demand from an ageing population.
Thailand's biggest state fund, which supports healthcare, unemployment benefits and pensions for 25 million workers, has seen an average return of under 3% over the past 10 years, far below its potential, and seeks to rectify that from next year by diversifying away from its domestic-focused strategy, investment board member Petch Vergara said in an interview.
Petch, a former executive director at Goldman Sachs who managed private wealth for ultra-high-net-worth individuals for almost a decade, said the fund's high concentration of domestic and low-risk investments was unsustainable.
"At this rate, the fund could go bankrupt by 2051," said Petch, who joined the Social Security Fund earlier this year.
"The current investment portfolio of the fund is overly concentrated in Thai assets," she said, adding "the low-risk investments may look safe in the short term but it damages potential long-term returns."
The shift comes as Thailand's population grows older, with one-fifth of its 66 million people aged over 60 at the end of last year, compared to 10% two decades ago, according to the Department of Older Persons at the Social Development and Human Security ministry.
The over-60 population has doubled from 6.2 million in 2004 to 13 million in December 2023, the data shows.
The more aggressive strategy follows a recent change in the composition of the fund's board after some members were elected to their roles for the first time ever in December. Before that, most members were appointed by the generals who seized power in a 2014 coup.
Last year, two-thirds of the 21-member board were elected. Many were nominated by labour groups and by the progressive party that won last year's general election on promises of major institutional reforms, but was blocked from forming a government by conservative lawmakers allied with the royalist military.
The new board has approved an investment framework starting in 2025 that will lower the fund's weighting of low-risk assets from 70% to 60%, and increase the concentration of higher-risk investments to 40% from the current 30% over the next 2-1/2-years, Petch said.
The aim was for a 50-50 split by mid-2027, she added.
Of the higher-risk investments, 15%, or 375 billion baht will be allocated towards investment in global private assets, such as in private equity, private credit and hedge funds, by mid-2027, said Petch.
"The idea is to make the portfolio more global to find more returns in the long term," she added.
A 2023 study by the non-profit Thinking Ahead Institute on global pension assets across 22 major pension markets showed an average annual return of 7.7% over the past five years for pension funds with investment portfolios that consisted of 60% global equities and 40% global bonds.
By comparison, the portfolio of the social security fund in Thailand, Southeast Asia's second-biggest economy, has seen an average return of just 2.7% in the past five years.
Analysts have long advocated a change in tack to meet swelling demands from the population, but point to trust issues and a lack of public faith due to the fund's history of mismanagement, high operating costs and underperformance.
According to Worawan Chandoevwit, an adviser on social security at the Thailand Development Research Institute, 700,000 retired workers are currently eligible for pensions from the fund but that number is set to increase significantly.
Based on independent research, there will be more people drawing out money than contributing to the fund and there will be a clear deficit by 2045, she said.
"We will soon have more people utilising the pension and they will also live longer," Worawan said, "So the money going in and coming out is a very different amount."
"High return is key in the long term to ensure the long-term viability of the fund," she said. "Long-term good governance on the fund's investments is key."
Waves of sanctions imposed by the Biden administration after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine haven’t inflicted the devastating blow to Moscow’s economy that some had expected. In a new report, two researchers are offering reasons why.
Oleg Itskhoki of Harvard University and Elina Ribakova of the Peterson Institute for International Economics argue that the sanctions should have been imposed more forcefully immediately after the invasion rather than in a piecemeal manner.
“In retrospect, it is evident that there was no reason not to have imposed all possible decisive measures against Russia from the outset once Russia launched the full scale invasion in February 2022,” the authors state in the paper. Still, “the critical takeaway is that sanctions are not a silver bullet,” Ribakova said on a call with reporters, to preview the study.
The researchers say Russia was able to brace for the financial penalties because of the lessons learned from sanctions imposed in 2014 after it invaded Crimea. Also, the impact was weakened by the failure to get more countries to participate in sanctions, with economic powers like China and India not included.
The report says that “while the count of sanctions is high, the tangible impact on Russia’s economy is less clear,” and “global cooperation is indispensable.”
The question of what makes sanctions effective or not is important beyond the Russia-Ukraine war. Sanctions have become critical tools for the United States and other Western nations to pressure adversaries to reverse actions and change policies while stopping short of direct military conflict.
The limited impact of sanctions on Russia has been clear for some time. But the report provides a more detailed picture of how Russia adapted to the sanctions and what it could mean for US sanctions’ effectiveness in the future.
Since the beginning of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, the US has sanctioned more than 4,000 people and businesses, including 80 percent of Russia’s banking sector by assets.
The Biden administration acknowledges that sanctions alone cannot stop Russia’s invasion — it has also sent roughly $56 billion in military assistance to Ukraine since the 2022 invasion. And many policy experts say the sanctions are not strong enough, as evidenced by the growth of the Russian economy. US officials have said Russia has turned to China for machine tools, microelectronics and other technology that Moscow is using to produce missiles, tanks, aircraft and other weaponry for use in the war.
A Treasury representative pointed to Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen’s remarks in July during the Group of 20 finance ministers meetings, where she called actions against Russia “unprecedented.”
“We continue cracking down on Russian sanctions evasion and have strengthened and expanded our ability to target foreign financial institutions and anyone else around the world supporting Russia’s war machine,” she said.
Still, Russia has been able to evade a $60 price cap on its oil exports imposed by the US and the other Group of Seven democracies supporting Ukraine. The cap is enforced by barring Western insurers and shipping companies from handling oil above the cap. Russia has been able to dodge the cap by assembling its own fleet of aging, used tankers that do not use Western services and transport 90 percent of its oil.
The US pushed for the price cap as a way of cutting into Moscow’s oil profits without knocking large amounts of Russian oil off the global market and pushing up oil prices, gasoline prices and inflation. Similar concerns kept the European Union from imposing a boycott on most Russian oil for almost a year after Russia invaded Ukraine.
G-7 leaders have agreed to engineer a $50 billion loan to help Ukraine, paid for by the interest earned on profits from Russia’s frozen central bank assets sitting mostly in Europe as collateral. However, the allies have not agreed on how to structure the loan.
The Bank of Korea's (BOK) climate policy ranked 16th among the Group of 20 members' central banks, a drop of three positions from two years ago, a report showed.
In its recent report, "The Green Central Banking Scorecard," Positive Money, a London-based nonprofit organization, placed the BOK 16th regarding climate policies out of the 20 central banks, assigning it a grade of D-.
France, Germany and Italy, all part of the European Union, secured the top three spots, with the European Central Bank coming in fourth. Brazil and China's central banks ranked fifth and sixth, respectively. Despite the global significance, the U.S. Federal Reserve's ranking fell from 16th to 17th.
This indicates that the BOK's initiatives are perceived as falling short of global standards despite its recent efforts, according to Solutions for Our Climate (SFOC), a Seoul-based nonprofit.
In 2021, the BOK issued a paper titled "Bank of Korea's Response to Climate Change" to outline its approach to addressing the issue and made various formal commitments.
This February, the central bank created an office for sustainable growth and pursued policies such as promoting related research, expanding environmental, social and corporate governance investments and limiting investments in coal and fossil fuels in foreign assets.
However, the report refuted the BOK's claim that the development of the related strategy was "constrained due to the lack of green certification procedures and the scarce availability of green bonds."
It stated that the Korean Green Taxonomy includes guidelines on issuing green bonds, the most commonly issued securities by corporations and financial institutions in Korea.
The research emerged as climate change has increasingly become a critical responsibility for central banks. It drives up the cost of living and hinders economic activities due to natural disasters.
According to the BOK's separate report published in August, the BOK projects that about 10 percent of Korea's inflation since last year can be attributed to extreme weather events like heat waves and heavy rainfall. These events have also reduced the nation's industrial production growth rate by an average of 0.6 percentage points per year.
"The emphasis on climate action by central banks worldwide is clear evidence of the growing impact of climate change on inflation and economic growth," said Go Dong-hyun, head of the SFOC's climate finance team.
Experts agree that the BOK's efforts should go further.
Choi Gi-won, senior researcher at the Institute for Green Transformation, noted that the bank "should actively consider and implement monetary policy tools such as green finance intermediary support loans, climate impact assessments for its collateral and lending and green bond purchase programs."
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