The Committee consisted of the following Members: Chair: Siobhain
McDonagh † Badenoch, Mrs Kemi (Saffron Walden) (Con) † Churchill,
Jo (Bury St Edmunds) (Con) † Fysh, Mr Marcus (Yeovil) (Con)
Gaffney, Hugh (Coatbridge, Chryston and Bellshill) (Lab) † Grant,
Mrs Helen (Maidstone and The Weald) (Con) † Hayes, Mr John (South
Holland and The Deepings) (Con) † Heappey, James (Wells) (Con) †
Jack, Mr Alister (Dumfries and Galloway) (Con)...Request free trial
The Committee consisted of the following Members:
Chair:
† Badenoch, Mrs Kemi (Saffron Walden) (Con)
† Churchill, Jo (Bury St Edmunds) (Con)
† Fysh, Mr Marcus (Yeovil) (Con)
Gaffney, Hugh (Coatbridge, Chryston and Bellshill) (Lab)
† Grant, Mrs Helen (Maidstone and The Weald) (Con)
† Hayes, Mr John (South Holland and The Deepings) (Con)
† Heappey, James (Wells) (Con)
† Jack, Mr Alister (Dumfries and Galloway) (Con)
Kendall, Liz (Leicester West) (Lab)
† Mc Nally, John (Falkirk) (SNP)
Malhotra, Seema (Feltham and Heston) (Lab/Co-op)
† Norman, Jesse (Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for
Transport)
† Peacock, Stephanie (Barnsley East) (Lab)
† Rowley, Lee (North East Derbyshire) (Con)
† Turner, Karl (Kingston upon Hull East) (Lab)
Western, Matt (Warwick and Leamington) (Lab)
† Williamson, Chris (Derby North) (Lab)
Peter Stam, Committee Clerk
† attended the Committee
First Delegated Legislation Committee
Monday 26 February 2018
[Siobhain McDonagh in the Chair]
Draft Renewable Transport Fuels and Greenhouse Gas Emissions
Regulations 2018
4.30 pm
-
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Transport
(Jesse Norman)
I beg to move,
That the Committee has considered the draft Renewable
Transport Fuels and Greenhouse Gas Emissions Regulations
2018.
It is a delight to serve under your chairmanship, Ms
McDonagh. The regulations contain important changes to two
existing schemes that place requirements on suppliers of
fuels. The schemes are provided for by the Renewable
Transport Fuel Obligations Order 2007 and the Motor Fuel
(Road Vehicle and Mobile Machinery) Greenhouse Gas
Emissions Reporting Regulations 2012. Those require
suppliers to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from fuels
supplied in relation to transport, including through the
supply of biofuels, and to report those reductions
accurately.
The proposals before us today are the result of extensive
consultation and input from industry, fuel experts and
environmental organisations. In 2015 my Department and the
low-carbon vehicle partnership’s transport energy
taskforce, comprising more than 50 organisations, reported
on how the UK might meet its EU 2020 greenhouse gas
emissions reduction and renewable transport fuel targets.
The taskforce’s report also considered how low-carbon fuels
could help to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from UK
transport in the period to 2030 and beyond. That work
informed public consultations on the proposed amendments.
In September 2017 the Government set out a 15-year strategy
for renewable transport fuels, including biofuels. I want
to pay particular tribute to my colleague, my right hon.
Friend the Member for South Holland and The Deepings, who I
hope will make a barnstorming intervention from the Back
Benches, for his contribution as the Minister responsible
for that work. The strategy will support investment to
develop sustainable advanced fuels for the automotive,
aviation and road freight sectors. It also aligns with UK
carbon budget commitments. The regulations are the product
of that strategy and are crucial to its implementation, and
would also align UK schemes with the requirement in EU
legislation.
It may be helpful if I provide an overview of the
regulatory framework that we propose to amend. Under
the RTFO order, suppliers of fossil
fuels have an obligation to ensure that a percentage of
their fuel supply comes from renewable sources. The
obligation is currently equivalent to 4.75% of the volume
of fossil fuel that is supplied for use in road transport
and non-road mobile machinery. There are built-in
protections for smaller suppliers in that the obligation
applies only to volumes above a 450,000-litre threshold,
and there is a deduction for the first 10 million litres of
relevant fuel.
Suppliers of biofuel meeting the sustainability criteria
are rewarded with certificates. Those renewable transport
fuel certificates can be traded on the open market.
Biofuels made from wastes and residues are awarded twice
the number of RTFCs given to biofuels from crops. Under
the RTFO scheme, motorists are
protected from exceptional spikes in the cost of supplying
biofuel through a mechanism that enables suppliers to pay a
buy-out rather than having to acquire certificates. That
effectively caps the cost of the obligation.
The greenhouse gas reporting regulations currently require
designated fuel suppliers to report the amount and type of
fuel that they supply, and its greenhouse gas intensity.
The regulations operate in parallel with the RTFO scheme. As a consequence,
information reported by suppliers under the RTFO order is for the most part
sufficient to discharge a supplier’s obligation to report.
Since the RTFO was introduced in 2008, the
greenhouse gas emissions savings of the renewable fuels
supplied have improved year on year. Last year the average
greenhouse gas saving of a litre of renewable fuel was 71%
compared with petrol and diesel. That is in no small part
due to the approach that the Government have taken to
encourage the supply of renewable fuels from wastes and
residues. The most recent statistics show that 66% of
biofuels supplied in the UK were made from a waste or
residue, and so they did not compete for land with food
crops.
The draft regulations before us would build on that
success. They would amend the RTFO order to increase the targets
for renewable fuels to 9.75% of fuel supplied in 2020, with
further incremental increases to 12.4% by 2032, providing
long-term policy stability to industry and investors. They
would also set sub-targets, starting in 2019, for the
supply of renewable fuels classified as “development
fuels”. That would increase incentives to supply new types
of advanced fuels that are of strategic future importance
to the UK. In line with that strategy, the draft
regulations make certain renewable aviation fuels,
renewable fuels from non-biological feedstocks, and
renewable hydrogen eligible for reward under
the RTFO order. They mitigate the risk
that biofuels supplied will not deliver reductions in
greenhouse gas emissions by placing a limit on the
contribution that biofuels produced from food crops can
make to meeting targets to supply renewable fuels. That
limit is set at 4% in 2018, 3% in 2026, and 2% in 2032.
Finally, they ensure that wastes that would be disposed of
are eligible for greater incentives than those with other
productive uses.
The draft regulations propose extensive changes to
greenhouse gas reporting regulations in order to create a
new GHG credit trading scheme. The new scheme will be
familiar to suppliers as it copies many aspects of
the RTFO scheme. The two schemes will
be administered jointly, and the Department is aligning
much of the reporting required so as to minimise burdens on
suppliers.
The new GHG credit trading scheme will replicate the
protections afforded under the RTFO scheme, both to smaller
suppliers through equivalent deductions in obligation, and
to motorists through a buy-out mechanism. Key features of
the new GHG credit trader scheme include a greenhouse gas
emissions reduction obligation on suppliers of fuel and
energy for use in road transport and non-road mobile
machinery, and suppliers will be required to reduce the
overall greenhouse gas emissions of the fuel they supply,
compared with 2010 levels. They must achieve a 4% reduction
in 2019, and a 6% reduction in 2020. The scheme also
provides incentives to suppliers by rewarding GHG credits
for the supply of renewable and fossil fuels that have
lower greenhouse gas emissions than ordinary petrol and
diesel, for electricity use and electric road vehicles, and
for reductions in upstream emissions from the extraction of
crude oils. The GHG trading scheme aligns with the
strategic objectives of the RTFO by offering rewards for the
supply of renewable fuels used in aviation.
The Department has taken on board consultation responses in
modifying the targets proposed in the regulations, which
have been extensively reviewed and discussed. In
particular, it has addressed concerns that it should set
longer-term, more ambitious targets by proposing that
the RTFO will reach 12.4% in 2032. The
Department has also adjusted proposals to limit the
contribution that biofuels made from crops will make
towards the targets. That limit is also referred to as the
“crop cap”. Rather than set a 2% cap from the outset as per
the consultation, the regulations propose to set that cap
at 4% in 2018, and reduce it gradually from 2021 onwards to
3% in 2026, and 2% in 2032—I am beginning to get a sense of
what the Chancellor has to put up with on Budget day, when
he or she has to read out these numbers.
It is the Department’s intention that that will provide the
sector with flexibility to meet the 2020 obligations, while
providing a clear signal for future investments in the
biofuel industry as we make the transition to more
sustainable renewable fuels. The Secondary Legislation
Scrutiny Committee has noted that Vivergo Fuels made a
representation on these regulations. Vivergo supports the
increase in the RTFO, but it is concerned that demand
for its ethanol may be constrained by the crop cap, and
that there may be further constraints if the Government do
not mandate the move to E10 fuel.
Let me address those concerns. The crop cap is designed to
mitigate the risk that biofuels that cause indirect land
use change will be supplied in the UK. Due to those
concerns, the Department is focusing further growth in that
sector on the most sustainable fuels made from waste that
do not compete with land use for fuel. We therefore propose
a cap that balances the risk to land use with the needs of
the ethanol industry. In the UK, the RTFO scheme has been successful in
promoting waste-derived biofuels. We have therefore been
able to propose a cap that is below the maximum 7% level,
and below that in many states where higher proportions of
crops are currently used. To put those numbers into
perspective, total UK bioethanol production capacity is
equal to a little over 1% of transport energy, and the
current proportion of crops used in biofuels is less than
2% of UK fuel supply—significantly lower than the 4% cap
proposed for 2020. The changes proposed in the regulations
do not reduce the size of the market for bioethanol made
from crops—indeed, they continue support for it.
Secondly, the draft regulations will increase the level of
obligation under the RTFO order, which drives a market
for all renewable fuels, including bioethanol. That will
increase potential demand for E10 among obligated
suppliers.
The draft regulations do not mandate E10, in the sense of
requiring that 10% bioethanol must be blended in petrol.
Instead, they allow fuel suppliers to determine how best to
meet their obligations. Moving to E10 fuel could make
achieving our renewable energy targets easier and provide
an economic boost to domestic producers of bioethanol and
UK farmers in the supply chain. The Department therefore
remains committed to working with industry to ensure that
any future introduction of E10 is managed carefully, and
that E5 remains available for vehicles that are not
compatible with E10.
To round up, the draft regulations will begin the
implementation of the ambitious strategy for renewable
fuels that the Government set out last September. That
strategy seeks to accelerate the delivery of sustainable
alternative fuels for aviation and other sectors that are
hard to decarbonise, thus enabling the UK to lead in
developing and deploying those fuels. The draft regulations
also take into account the wider economic importance of
existing UK biofuel production and seek to maintain that
market. I therefore commend them to the Committee.
4.41 pm
-
(Kingston upon Hull East)
(Lab)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairship, Ms
McDonagh. The Labour party is supportive of the draft
regulations and very much welcomes them.
The Minister and I met briefly before the Christmas recess,
I think it was, and I lobbied him very hard. I am grateful
to him for doing what he said he would, which was to work
hard to ensure that the draft regulations were brought
forward swiftly. That is very much what has happened. The
draft regulations are a step in the right direction for the
UK to decarbonise transport. As hon. Members will know,
transport is the single largest greenhouse-gas-emitting
sector. This is a worrying issue, and we must deal with it
as soon as we can.
However, this legislation has been delayed for several
years—already at least three—which has caused real worry in
our renewable fuel industry. In the UK, an estimated 50,000
premature deaths each year are linked to this issue, so it
is crucial that the legislation is brought into effect by
April.
The Opposition support the growth and development of our
renewable industry, in order to support high-skill,
high-wage jobs across the UK, particularly in the north,
where there are already various renewable fuel producers,
in areas such as Hedon, which is very close to my
constituency, and in Teesside. Our renewable transport
fuels industry is worth £1.5 billion to our economy each
year, and the Government need to support it to turn the
northern powerhouse into a reality. Actions speak louder
than words.
The draft regulations set out to increase the target level
for renewables to just under 10% in 2020 and well over 12%
by 2032. That will satisfy existing renewable fuel
providers. However, I think it is fair to say that the
proposals lack ambition. Perhaps the Government can look at
further increasing the targets in the very near future.
They aim to incentivise the development and take-up of new
types of green fuels, as well as revising a crop cap for
these types of biofuels. We are aware that the Government
have taken that decision because these fuels could
eventually result in a net increase in greenhouse gas
emissions. The Opposition would therefore like the
Government to answer some brief questions and
clarifications that I will place on the record. I do not
expect the Minister to respond fully today; perhaps he
could do so in writing.
I will briefly mention why this has caused concern for our
biofuel industry in the medium term and why it believes the
Government should regularly review the cap. The industry
has raised particular concerns about the steadily declining
crop cap; the proposed cap would be the lowest in the EU.
It may restrict UK industry and farmers when we should be
supporting and encouraging domestic industry as much as
possible. I am aware that the regulations provide for a
review and further amendments could be proposed later down
the line.
I would also like to hear from the Minister about what the
Government are doing to support the introduction of E10. He
mentioned it briefly in his opening speech, but what are
they doing to support the introduction of E10 and when will
it be moving forward? It is already used successfully in
other countries. We should be at the forefront of adopting
new, environmentally friendly fuels in order to tackle
climate change, but the Government seem to be dragging
their feet on that important issue. Currently, the option
of adopting E10 is open to suppliers in meeting their
targets under the obligations. Previous Governments have
shown the way in mandating unleaded petrol and low-sulphur
fuels. Perhaps the Government should look at that model.
To conclude, there are areas in which the regulations can
be improved, but we are supportive on the basis that they
are a step in the right direction. I hope that some of the
brief concerns that I have raised are considered very
carefully by the Minister further down the line after the
instrument is implemented.
4.46 pm
-
Mr (South Holland and
The Deepings) (Con)
It is a delight to serve on this Committee, Ms McDonagh,
and to contribute briefly to the consideration of these
regulations, which, as the Minister generously reminded the
Committee, I was involved with as a Minister at the
Department for Transport. The anxiety that he expressed to
get this right, which was reflected by the shadow
Minister’s words, is why the Government consulted widely
and considered this over a considerable time.
It is right that we address emissions from transport—as the
shadow Minister said, they are significant—and the
principal way of doing so is to move to low or
zero-emission vehicles. However, there is a strong case for
biofuels, and it is perfectly possible to continue with our
ambition to encourage the purchase of low or zero-emission
vehicles—electric vehicles being the obvious case in
point—while taking a generous view about the contribution
that biofuels can make. That is not only because the
biofuels industry is, as has already been said, significant
in particular places, but because it is increasingly well
established and invested.
I want to add only three things, given the broad agreement
about those principles. First, it is important that we make
this case in a way that has the most powerful resonance.
For me, that is about the welfare of people who have to
deal with emissions as they go about their daily lives. I
spend considerably more time thinking about the air that
children breathe, particularly in congested parts of our
country—cities and so on—than about the rather more
ethereal, remote and distant matters that sometimes
dominate in the debate about gases and emissions. It is in
those bread-and-butter terms, those fundamental terms—the
quality of life that comes from the air that we
breathe—that we should have this debate and conduct this
argument. When we do so, suddenly people realise just why
this matters so much and why the Government—alongside
others; the Opposition have been just as forceful—are
devoting so much time to these issues.
Secondly, thinking about the detail of the regulations, I
was keen that there was a step change and that it took
place over time. Indeed, the regulations now reflect just
such an approach in respect of the production of biofuels
from crops. That was because the industry is geared up to
deliver biofuels by certain means and has invested
accordingly, and it is important that we do not make a
radical change that does irreparable harm to the biofuels
industry. That step change will allow the industry to
adjust in a practical way. However, it is really important
that we look, with ever closer attention, at the production
of biofuels from waste. The ability to turn waste into
biofuels requires both technology and investment, but the
industry is making that. I was able to visit some of the
companies concerned and saw how they were taking waste and
turning it into fuel. There is nothing more efficacious,
because simultaeneously the waste is dealt with and people
benefit from that.
We need to do much more of that, but I have to say to the
Minister that that will require a really close association
between our waste policy and our energy policy. At the
heart of that will be the work done by his Department, the
Department for Business and Energy—I cannot quite remember
what it is called; hon. Members know what I am getting
at—and the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local
Government. I am not sure that, historically, that
collaboration has been well enough co-ordinated or as
effective as it might have been. Waste policy can drive the
alternative means of producing biofuel: obtaining it
through crops.
With all that in mind, it is important that the Government
understand that they can make all this happen only by
working in partnership with the people who will deliver it
on the ground; working with the biofuels industry and the
manufacturers so that we can achieve the objectives of the
draft regulations through a close association between what
they want to achieve, their commercial interests and the
interests of the Government in protecting the welfare of
the people. Disraeli said that the Government have no
greater purpose than the welfare of the people, and the
welfare of the people is at the heart of the draft
regulations.
Government can be a force for good, but only really when it
is bold enough to know what needs to be done and modest
enough to know that it can achieve what can be done only if
it works with others. I know that the Minister both
embodies—indeed, epitomises—that boldness and personifies
that modesty.
4.52 pm
-
I am grateful to the shadow Minister and my right hon. Friend
the Member for South Holland and The Deepings for their
useful, important and valuable contributions. I will respond
to them in turn.
The shadow Minister raises the questions of whether we lack
ambition, whether the target should be increased and whether
there should be regular reviews of the cap on crop usage and
the like. Let me say a variety of things. There is always a
balance involved in legislation of this type, as he will
absolutely appreciate. There is a risk to land use and there
is a desire to stimulate the use of biofuels from all
possible sources. Of course, an attempt is made to take that
balance in the right way.
As he will know, this has been the product of—and is
reflected in the delay he describes—considerable months of
consultation in reaching the draft regulations and the
balance that they strike. As he will be aware, the draft
regulations have changed, as regards the crop cap; it has
gone from being 2% to, as my right hon. Friend said, a
stepped process, from 4% to 3% to 2% over time. I have had
assurances, as I think has the industry, that given the level
of utilisation at the moment, the draft regulations will not
act as any kind of constraint on the growth of biofuels well
into the next decade. Of course, they are being regularly
reviewed, and we can look at that in further detail if such a
constraint applies.
On the introduction of E10, I absolutely understand that it
is a live and important issue, and my officials continue to
work closely with the industry, as the shadow Minister will
know. The taskforce did not recommend a mandate. There are
conflicting views on these issues, as he will appreciate. It
is important that we do not fetter suppliers even further,
having done so a little bit in order to support the industry
as we have done through the fuel obligation. One lesson from
looking at international experience is that it is not merely,
in some cases, an argument that there may be value from a
mandate, but that the clear projection of information is
important. We continue to look closely at that. It would
require legislation, which raises a further question about
how that consultation would take place and when legislation
could be introduced. For all those reasons, we are not minded
at the moment to move further in the direction that the
shadow Minister described, but it is a matter for continued
consultation and discussion.
With regards to the comments of my beloved colleague, my
right hon. Friend the Member for South Holland and The
Deepings, he is absolutely right to focus on the people who
work most closely with those fuels and who are most directly
affected by them. He rightly mentioned the step change that
he engineered in the crop cap and pointed to the need for
continued co-ordination across Departments. I hope he agrees
that that has significantly improved in recent years. Whether
on air quality, clean growth, connected and autonomous
vehicles or ultra low emission vehicles, we continue to work
closely with the Department for Environment, Food and Rural
Affairs, the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial
Strategy and the Ministry of Houseing, Communities and Local
Government.
-
Mr Hayes
I certainly acknowledge that—our work on air quality is
evidence of it—but I am not yet convinced that we have waste
right. I am not sure that across national and local
government, in co-operation between local authorities or in
collaborations between Departments, we are yet far enough
advanced to ensure that waste policy ties to what the
Minister has very sensibly set out today.
-
I take my right hon. Friend’s point, which has landed well
with my officials. It is a two-dimensional problem: there is
the question of whether Departments are co-operating and the
question of how they interact with local authorities. I thank
him for that. My officials have taken it on board and we will
actively pursue it.
These regulations begin the implementation of a 15-year
strategy for renewable transport fuels, which is designed to
support investment in sustainable advanced fuels for
automotive, aviation, road freight and other sectors; to
maximise the industrial opportunities to be gained for the
UK; to maintain public confidence in the value of renewable
fuels; to provide certainty to UK producers and to the farms
that supply them that their existing installed plant capacity
for biofuels from crops will be fully utilised; and to
continue to support the transformation of wastes into fuel
where that gives the greatest economic and environmental
benefits. That is no small challenge.
So far, UK suppliers have responded to the challenge by
supplying renewable fuels that have increasingly higher
greenhouse gas reduction benefits and are sustainable. My
Department is confident that suppliers will also respond to
the opportunities presented by these regulations.
We recognise that policy in this area is not without
controversy and that the gestation period for these
regulations has been long, as the shadow Minister mentioned.
The proposed changes are not a surprise to industry—how could
they be after such a period of time?—and there is broad
agreement about the direction that these regulations will
set, which emerged from extensive consultation. The debate
has been very useful and I thank hon. Members for their
contributions.
Question put and agreed to.
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