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Governmental use of sustainability standards: examples & lessons from the UK RTFO ISEAL conference, Zurich, 8 June 2011 Dr Keeley Bignal - Sustainability.

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Presentation on theme: "Governmental use of sustainability standards: examples & lessons from the UK RTFO ISEAL conference, Zurich, 8 June 2011 Dr Keeley Bignal - Sustainability."— Presentation transcript:

1 Governmental use of sustainability standards: examples & lessons from the UK RTFO ISEAL conference, Zurich, 8 June 2011 Dr Keeley Bignal - Sustainability Technical Guidance Specialist RTFO Unit, Low Carbon Fuels, UK Department for Transport

2 Overview UK biofuel policy C&S reporting RTFO Biofuel Sustainability Meta-standard Benchmarks of sustainability schemes against the Meta-standard Benchmarks against the RED carbon stock and biodiversity criteria Uptake of standards by suppliers of biofuel to the UK Lessons learnt

3 UK biofuels policy: the Road Transport Fuel Obligation Introduced in 2008 Duty point obligation 2.5% biofuel volume rising to 5% 2013 Tradable certificates & buy-out option (30ppl) Carbon & sustainability reporting

4 Carbon & sustainability reporting scope

5 Company targets2008- 2009 2009- 2010 2010- 2011 Percentage of feedstock meeting the ‘Qualifying’ Environmental Standard 30%50%80% GHG saving40%45%50% Data provision50%70%90% Carbon & sustainability reporting overview To claim RTFCs C&S reports must be supplied C&S data must be independently verified Annual targets for company performance (no penalty for failing to achieve)

6 C&S reporting - the 'RED-ready' approach RTFO C&S reporting adapted to be as consistent as possible with the EC requirements from the start of the third year of the RTFO on 15 April 2010 Aim to help UK industry best prepare for the RED Aim to be transparent about which batches of fuel are indicatively RED-ready RTFO continues to require C&S reporting rather than mandatory minimum performance until RED implementation

7 Benchmarks of sustainability assurance schemes against the RTFO Meta-Standard Environmental PrincipleBonsucroRSPORTRSRed Tractor RSBSA8000Pro- terra Conservation of carbon Conservation of biodiversity Soil conservation Sustainable water use Air quality Social Workers rights Land rights

8 The norm for Qualifying Standards Qualifying Environmental Standard: –Full compliance with all criteria referring to compliance with national legislation (2.1, 3.1, 4.1, 5.1); –On all principles one ‘partial compliance’ criterion is permitted per principle, with a maximum of three in total. Qualifying Social Standard: –On principle 6, seven of the 11 criteria must be fully complied with; –On principle 7 on land right issues and community relations, one partial compliance is permitted.

9 The norm for audit quality

10 Benchmarks of sustainability schemes against the RTFO Meta-Standard Environmental PrincipleBon sucro RSPORTRSRed Tractor RSBSA8000Pro- terra Conservation of carbon Conservation of biodiversity Soil conservation Sustainable water use Air quality Social Workers rights QS Land rights Not qualifying standards Qualifying standards

11 Indicative RED Benchmark Red TractorFSCGenesisLEAF RSB +REDRSPO RTRS (draft) SAN/ RA Ref date (biodiversity) Primary forest Nature protection Ecosystem protection Natural grassland Species rich non- natural grassland Ref date (carbon) Wetlands Continuous forest 10-30% canopy forest Ref date (peatland) Peatland

12 Key gaps & challenges No operational sustainability schemes currently assess GHG savings – though some are in development At time of RFA assessment only two schemes were strong enough on LUC to meet RED criteria on preservation of carbon stocks – some have now developed EU ‘add-on’ modules to cover this Many key biofuel feedstocks are not covered by an operational sustainability scheme Few cover the chain of custody – some are in development

13 Monthly reporting format – using sustainability standards to identify RED- readiness

14 Moving sustainability forward RFA contacted standards bodies with recommendations - ‘simple’ updates in many cases to align with RED: –inclusion of reference date for LUC –aligning reference date with Jan 2008 –more explicit and specific on carbon conservation requirements Several schemes are progressing quickly to cover key feedstocks – e.g. RTRS, BSI, ISCC, RSB Several schemes are developing EU market access/ RED add-ons in response to market demand/regulatory framework RTFO Meta-Standard can be used in absence of operational assurance schemes

15 Biofuels supplied under the RTFO † - performance against the targets Year One = 15 April 2008 – 14 April 2009 Year Two = 15 April 2009 – 14 April 2010 Year Three = 15 April 2010 - 14 April 2011 Annual supplier targetYear 3Year 2Year 1 TargetActualTargetActualTargetActual % of road transport fuel3.5%3.29%3.25%3.33%2.5%2.7% % of feedstock meeting a Qualifying Environmental Standard 80%49%50%31%30%20% Annual GHG saving50%55%45%51%40%46% Data capture90%82%70%72%50%64%

16 Environmental sustainability Year One Year Two Year Three

17 Environmental sustainability by company Company performance – Year One

18 Environmental sustainability by company Company performance – Year Two

19 Environmental sustainability by company Company performance – Year Three

20 Key RED sustainability features 35% GHG savings Cross-compliance High carbon stock protection* –Wetlands –Peatlands –Continuous forest High biodiversity protection* –Undisturbed primary forest –Conservation areas –Biodiverse grassland *Post Jan 2008 First 9 months of Yr 3 71% of biofuel met the 35% GHG saving threshold (may not have met all sustainability criteria e.g. unknown land use) 13% from unknown land use 49% met an environmental standard RTFO data – are we ready for RED?

21 Lessons learnt The standard must be fit for purpose e.g. a scheme may be designed for food safety but not for environmental sustainability Engage the standard owner –Inform them of process and purpose of benchmarking –Ensure you have the latest (and all) documentation –Inform them of the results before finalising –Can work with the standard owners to drive sustainability Consult with experts and stakeholders on benchmark results Be realistic – set the ‘standard’ you are aiming for but recognise that there may be interim steps to get there Get ‘buy-in’ from stakeholders – need the fuel suppliers and supply chain to provide the demand for sustainability schemes

22 Lessons learnt Voluntary C&S reporting works –Uptake of sustainability schemes has increased over time –Providing public access to data has driven individual companies to improve performance Voluntary reporting can provide a ‘stepping stone’ to mandatory sustainability


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