February 4, 2019
BY UFOP
According to Germany’s Union for the Promotion of Oil and Protein Plants (UFOP), European oilseed producers are the losers in the Jan. 30 decision of the representatives of the EU member states in the Trade Defense Instruments Committee (TDI). The association criticizes the committee’s approval of the Argentine government’s proposal for a so-called “price undertaking” agreement, which will allow Argentina’s biodiesel producers to export around 1.2 million metric tons (approximately 360 million gallons) of biodiesel duty-free to the EU every year.
This amount of biodiesel accounts for 10 percent of total biodiesel consumption in the European Union. This market access is coupled with compliance with a minimum import price, which is to be calculated on the basis of monthly average soybean oil prices. The concrete and legally binding calculation procedure will be announced in the EU Official Journal. UFOP fears that as a result of the procedure for setting the minimum import price, which is not yet known in detail, market access will be ensured through a price level that will have an overall negative effect on the EU biodiesel price and consequently on oilseed producer prices. Biodiesel quantities that exceed this import quota are subject to company-specific countervailing duties between 25 and 33.4 percent.
In this context, UFOP refers to the pending case against Indonesia. Perhaps the agreement concluded with Argentina is a blueprint for an analogous agreement with the Indonesian government. This would undermine the political decision of the European Parliament, which had argued in favor of a palm oil ban, and thus the issue of regulating indirect land-use change.
Another reason for UFOP’s critical assessment is the fact that the recast Renewable Energy Directive (2018/1999/EC) re-authorizes member states to lower the capping limit of 7 percent set by EU law below the national capping limit for biofuels from cultivated biomass in the upcoming national implementation. What the respective national implementation will look like is not yet known. It is clear, however, that in the worst case, the import base of 1.2 million tons of biodiesel from Argentina will remain in a shrinking market for this commodity.
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From UFOP’s point of view, it is incomprehensible that the definition of this import volume did not take into account the disappearance of the U.K.’s consumption share due to Brexit, along with the share of biodiesel from waste oils and fats. In 2017, the consumption of biodiesel from these waste materials in Germany alone amounted to about 0.84 million tons or 38 percent of the total consumption of 2.21 million tons of biodiesel.
UFOP notes that politics is currently unable to answer the question of which measures can be used to secure oilseed production in the European Union as the most important source of genetically modified-free protein feed for the future. In this sense, Argentina is a double winner because the possibly reduced cultivation of rapeseed in the European Union means that more soybean meal needs to be imported. An environmental policy strategy cannot be identified in this agreement.
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