The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Transport (Anthony
Browne) I beg to move, That the Committee has considered the draft
Renewable Transport Fuel Obligations (Amendment) Order 2024. The
legislation amends the Renewable Transport Fuel Obligations Order
2007 so that recycled carbon fuels—RCFs—are eligible for support
under the renewable transport fuel obligation scheme. The RTFO
scheme places an obligation on fuel suppliers to drive the supply
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The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Transport ()
I beg to move,
That the Committee has considered the draft Renewable Transport
Fuel Obligations (Amendment) Order 2024.
The legislation amends the Renewable Transport Fuel Obligations
Order 2007 so that recycled carbon fuels—RCFs—are eligible for
support under the renewable transport fuel obligation scheme. The
RTFO scheme places an obligation on fuel suppliers to drive the
supply of renewable fuels. In practical terms, it helps deliver
the E10 in petrol and biodiesels.
The amount of renewable fuel that should be supplied is a
percentage of the volume of relevant fossil fuel supplied in a
calendar year. That obligation is met by acquiring certificates
that are issued for the supply of sustainable renewable fuels.
Those certificates can be redeemed at the end of an obligation
period, as well as traded between parties. The value of the
certificates provides a revenue stream for producers of renewable
fuels and provides demand for their products in the fuel market.
The RTFO scheme has operated successfully since 2008, but it is
important that it continues to adapt as new technologies and
opportunities for emission-reducing fuels are developed.
We committed to supporting RCFs in the Government's transport
decarbonisation plan and this statutory instrument delivers on
that goal. It is the product of two consultations with industry
and in-depth working with industry experts and across Government
Departments. By broadening the available feedstocks for eligible
fuels, the instrument will help to maximise the greenhouse gas
savings that can be achieved under the RTFO scheme and encourage
the development of a new industry.
What are these new fuels? RCFs are fuels produced from fossil
wastes that cannot be avoided, reused or recycled, and that have
the potential to reduce greenhouse gas emissions relative to
petrol, diesel or kerosene. To date, the RTFO scheme has only
supported purely renewable fuels, but emerging technologies and
production methods mean that it is possible for fuels produced
from fossil wastes to contribute to emissions reductions to a
similar degree as renewable fuels.
For example, municipal solid waste—such as the greasy pizza boxes
that we all know, or dirty yoghurt pots—can be processed using
advanced techniques to form alternatives to fossil diesel and jet
fuel. Producing those fuels can be a more sustainable and green
way of utilising the wastes compared with their alternative
end-of-life fate, which would usually be incineration in an
energy-from-waste plant or being sent to landfill. The UK is
leading the way in developing many of the technologies required
to create those fuels, supported by grant funding from the
Department for Transport via the future fuels for flight and
freight competition, and more recently the advanced fuels
fund.
Renewable fuels already contribute one third of transport's
emission reductions from the current carbon budget. Widening
eligibility to include RCFs will ensure that such fuels continue
to make that important contribution as part of the transition to
the electrification of road vehicles.
The Government have also committed to introducing a mandate for
sustainable aviation fuel. That will come into effect from 1
January 2025 and will operate in a similar way to the RTFO scheme
but for the aviation sector. Introducing RCFs into the RTFO
scheme now sets a helpful precedent for the forthcoming mandate,
and including RCFs in both schemes is important as production
processes mean that many facilities will produce road fuel and
SAF at the same time.
Supporting RCFs under the RTFO scheme will also increase the
range of feedstocks eligible for support and encourage the
innovation needed to increase deployment of low carbon fuels in
harder-to-decarbonise vehicles, such as heavy goods vehicles. RCF
production utilises many of the same processes and technologies
that need to be developed to increase the efficiency and
capability of chemical recycling. Providing extra investment into
those processes will lead to wider waste management benefits in
future.
Recent amendments to the Energy Act 2004, made via the Energy Act
2023, permit RCFs to be included in the RTFO scheme—as well as in
other renewable transport support schemes, such as the
forthcoming mandate for sustainable aviation fuels—provided that
they cause or contribute to a reduction in carbon emissions. The
change to the 2004 Act recognised that RCFs can play an important
role in decarbonising different transport modes, including
harder-to-electrify vehicles such as heavy goods vehicles and
airliners.
On the statutory instrument's specific content, it amends the
RTFO order to add wastes of fossil origin as an eligible
feedstock for fuel production. Importantly, it also designates
RCFs as development fuels, which can be used to fill a sub-target
within the RTFO scheme designed to encourage the supply of novel
and strategically important emerging technologies for fuel
production. As a development fuel, qualifying RCFs must also meet
additional eligibility criteria that ensure that only fuels that
comply with existing fuel standards can qualify. That mitigates
any air-quality or compatibility concerns, as the fuels will
essentially be chemically comparable with transport fuels that
are already in use today—indeed, they will often be
indistinguishable from them.
The measure will allow RCFs to claim one development fuel
certificate per litre of fuel supplied, which is half the amount
for similar eligible renewable fuels. That recognises the fact
that truly renewable fuels remain more valuable, while still
rewarding emission savings from RCFs. To ensure that we mitigate
any unintended consequences, the measures also introduce detailed
sustainability criteria that ensure that support is provided only
to fuels that are produced from genuine, non-recyclable wastes,
and that they provide carbon emissions savings of at least 50%
compared with traditional fossil fuels such as petrol or diesel.
The criteria ensure that the policy complements the waste
hierarchy and avoids incentivising the creation of wastes, while
still delivering emissions savings compared with the alternative
likely end-of-life fate for different waste streams.
In conclusion, as I have said, fuels supplied under the RTFO
scheme currently deliver about one third of all domestic
transport carbon savings under the current carbon budgets.
However, it is vital that we expand the range of feedstocks that
we use if we are to continue to grow their contribution and meet
our net zero goal. RCFs have the potential to deliver emissions
savings across the transport sector while also supporting the
efficient handling of waste, and provide an opportunity for a
valuable, emerging UK industry, which we should all support. I
commend the statutory instrument to the House.
4.37pm
Simon Lightwood (Wakefield) (Lab/Co-op)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Rosindell.
I thank the Minister for introducing this delegated legislation.
As we all know, transport has the highest carbon emissions of any
sector, so decarbonisation should be a key priority. The
Government first consulted on the amendment in this order in
2021, so why has it taken until today for us to consider it?
Nevertheless, Labour supports this legislation.
The RTFO order is a key policy for reducing greenhouse gas
emissions in transport—and, might I add, it was introduced by a
Labour Government. The extension of the order to include recycled
carbon fuels is welcome; after all, RCFs can be as much as 50%
less polluting compared with fossil fuels. By 2033, the change is
projected to result in the supply of more than 1 billion litres
of additional low-carbon fuel, resulting in a saving of more than
15 million tonnes of greenhouse carbon dioxide equivalents.
Crucially, the increase in the number of qualifying fuels in the
RTFO order will contribute to lower costs for general road fuel
consumers.
I welcome the caveats for RCFs in the order; thankfully, the
Government recognise that they are not renewable. I am glad that
RCFs will receive only rate 1 certificates per litre of fuel,
rather than full credits, and to see the publication of the
technical guidance on the specifics of how fuel suppliers can
fulfil their obligations.
The exemption of small businesses that employ fewer than 50
people is welcome, but it raises a number of questions on which I
seek the Minister's clarification. Are the Government confident
that recycled carbon fuels can perform the same action as
ethanol, or are they to be diverted exclusively to sustainable
aviation fuel? If the latter, what are the Government's
intentions for the RTFO-supported fuels that currently go into
petrol? What assessment have the Government made of the impact of
the change on UK fuel products that trade internationally?
More widely, why is there a nuanced understanding of the
necessity to decarbonise here, but not in the recently published
national networks national policy statement, which allows the
inclusion of residual emissions in new projects? Why has the
Prime Minister rowed back on the Government's commitment to
vehicle electrification by moving the petrol and diesel vehicle
ban back to 2035? Where is the Government's commitment to rail
freight, hydrogen and biogas?
Overall, Labour supports this delegated legislation and the
necessary wider decarbonisation of our public transport, but we
must ensure that the Government have assessed the impact on the
UK's wider fuel sector.
> Gavin Newlands (Paisley
and Renfrewshire North) (SNP)
It is a pleasure to see you in the Chair, Mr Rosindell.
It has taken far too long, but I welcome this move by the
Government. If there are to be incentives for producing renewable
fuels, they should apply to as broad a range of mechanisms and
technologies for producing said fuels as possible. Expanding the
eligibility to include recycled carbon fuels is a logical step,
especially given how much the technology has advanced and is
advancing all the time in that field.
Reducing the amount of waste going to landfill at the same time
as reducing the carbon footprint of the energy used in the
transport sector is, on the face of it, a no-brainer,
particularly for hard-pressed local authorities in England that
have seen their budget for waste management slashed over the last
decade. The Lords debate on this SI last month saw several points
raised about the inclusion of such feedstocks under the RTFO
scheme, which would help with the development of sustainable
aviation fuels.
I will not repeat the points that have already been made about
SAF, but the consultation on a price support mechanism for SAF
must start soon—in fact, it is a legal requirement on the
Government under the Energy Act 2023, which states that it must
open within six months of Royal Assent. To date, we have had no
word on when that consultation will begin, unless it has been
published today and I am none the wiser—I apologise if I am. I
have submitted a named day question asking when they plan to meet
their obligations, and if the Minister wants to reveal that in
his response, I will happily withdraw the question at the Table
Office.
We need SAF because aviation is not going away any time soon; I
should say that I represent Glasgow airport and many of the
23,000 people whose livelihoods depend on it. We must do more to
encourage modal shift on to rail and public transport, but no one
is building a tunnel under the Atlantic any time soon—although
perhaps the former Member for Uxbridge and South Ruislip could
add that to his bridge or tunnel over or under the North channel.
We need to develop the fuels of the future, and the SNP very much
support that, in line with the SAF mandate that the Government
are going to bring forward.
In addition to the questions raised by the hon. Member for
Wakefield and my point about a cost-based support mechanism, I
did not hear the Minister talk about maritime. I would be keen to
explore how maritime can gain from renewable transport fuel
obligations, if not now, then in the near future. As a sector, it
is almost as difficult to decarbonise as the aviation sector, so
I am keen to hear about it.
On that basis, and unless the Minister says something
extraordinarily poorly in response, the SNP will be voting for
this statutory instrument.
4.43pm
Anthony Browne
I will try to avoid saying something so terrible that the
Opposition parties change their mind on this legislation. I am
glad that there is cross-party support for the measure, and I
thank the hon. Member for Wakefield and the hon. Member for
Paisley and Renfrewshire North for that. I can answer some of the
questions that have been raised, but some of the answers they
will have to wait for.
Both hon. Members asked why the SI has taken so long. It is a
very complicated policy. We had to ensure that there were no
unintended consequences and work with the industry on the details
of it, because there are interplays between different types of
fuel that have impacts in other areas. We had to analyse all
that, but we finally got there and we are introducing the measure
today.
The hon. Member for Wakefield asked whether RCFs can be used for
SAF or road fuel. They can be used for both sectors; indeed, as I
said in my introductory remarks, if we speak to the oil
producers, the production technology is very similar, so it is
much easier for them to co-produce those fuels.
The hon. Member for Paisley and Renfrewshire North asked a lot of
questions about sustainable aviation fuel. I am the Minister for
sustainable aviation fuel as well, and the legal requirement is
to publish the revenue certainty mechanism by 26 April, which is
next Friday. I do not think Governments should break the law— I
will just put it like that.
The answers to many of the other questions that were asked will
come out of forthcoming strategies. We have one on the low-carbon
fuel strategy that will come out later this year, which looks at
the whole range of low-carbon fuels, the interactions between
them and how we maximise their benefits across all modes of
transport and indeed other uses. There will also be a strategy
published later this year—it is no secret; it is public
knowledge—on how we decarbonise the maritime sector, which is a
complex sector with many different uses. Many of the more
detailed questions that the hon. Gentleman asked on maritime will
be covered in that strategy, rather than in this Committee.
I think I have answered all the questions; if there are others, I
encourage hon. Members to ask them. I should have said at the
beginning, Mr Rosindell, that it is an absolute pleasure to serve
under your chairmanship—it is great to see you here. I thank the
Committee members for their time and consideration, and I thank
the Clerks and the staff for the work they have done.
Question put and agreed to.
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