Moved by Lord Hendy of Richmond Hill That the Grand Committee do
consider the Renewable Transport Fuel Obligations (Sustainable
Aviation Fuel) Order 2024. Relevant document: 1st Report from the
Secondary Legislation Scrutiny Committee The Minister of State,
Department for Transport (Lord Hendy of Richmond Hill) (Lab) My
Lords, the order was laid in draft before this House on 24 July
2024. It will ensure that sustainable aviation fuel, also known as
SAF—I...Request free trial
Moved by
of Richmond Hill
That the Grand Committee do consider the Renewable Transport Fuel
Obligations (Sustainable Aviation Fuel) Order 2024.
Relevant document: 1st Report from the Secondary Legislation
Scrutiny Committee
The Minister of State, Department for Transport ( of Richmond Hill) (Lab)
My Lords, the order was laid in draft before this House on 24
July 2024. It will ensure that sustainable aviation fuel, also
known as SAF—I hope that your Lordships will tolerate the use of
that acronym—makes up an increasing proportion of the jet fuel
supplied to the UK each year. As a consequence, the greenhouse
gas impact of flying will be significantly reduced. The draft
order, referred to as the SAF mandate, will contribute to
fulfilling our manifesto commitment to secure the UK aviation
industry's long-term future and it has received significant
cross-party parliamentary support to this point. No issues were
raised on the draft order at the Secondary Legislation Scrutiny
Committee or the Statutory Instruments Joint Committee.
The SAF mandate is a bespoke mechanism for guaranteeing demand
for SAF in the UK. It will send a strong signal to industry that
SAF will play a pivotal role in the future of UK aviation and
will provide an incentive for SAF to be supplied. However, it is
just one pillar of a wider approach to capitalise on the
environmental and economic opportunities that SAF offers. The UK
will also lay legislation to support SAF production in the UK by
providing revenue certainty. This will strengthen the UK's
leadership in SAF production, improving its fuel security while
fostering industrial development and generating green jobs.
We are pleased to see SAF starting to be brought to the UK market
in small but increasing volumes. The SAF mandate will help to
address barriers to widespread adoption and realise the full
potential of this technology. The United Kingdom has a rich
history of being at the forefront of aviation innovation and we
will continue to show leadership by introducing one the world's
most ambitious frameworks to drive demand for SAF.
SAF is blended with conventional kerosene to be used in existing
aircraft and engines without modification. It is a low-carbon
fuel that uses sustainable feedstocks instead of crude oil, which
achieves greenhouse gas savings across its lifecycle production
and use. It can be derived from a wide range of sources that
achieve carbon savings relative to fossil fuel in different ways.
They include biomass derived from wastes and residues; fossil
wastes that cannot be avoided, reused or recycled; and renewable
and nuclear energy. This means that we can draw on resources that
would otherwise be discarded, such as agricultural residues and
black binbag waste, to make jet fuel. The existing renewable
transport fuel obligation, or RTFO, rewards the supply of SAF but
does not obligate aviation fuel supply. By introducing a specific
obligation on aviation fuel, we will guarantee a minimum supply
of SAF.
I turn to the specific content of the statutory instrument. It
introduces two obligations on suppliers of fossil jet fuel: a
main obligation and a power-to-liquid obligation. The obligations
are placed on jet fuel suppliers at the point at which their fuel
can be supplied only to UK aviation. Each obligation period is
one year in length and runs on a calendar year basis. To fulfil
the obligations, suppliers must redeem SAF certificates at the
end of the obligation period. Certificates are awarded to
suppliers of SAF that meets the sustainability criteria. The
number of certificates that a supplier receives is in proportion
to the greenhouse gas savings that it achieves.
Power-to-liquid fuel, a type of SAF made from carbon dioxide and
renewable or nuclear power and heat, will be rewarded with
specific certificates that can be used to meet the
power-to-liquid obligation. This will specifically incentivise
the supply of these fuels, given their potential for higher
greenhouse gas emissions reduction and lower risk of
environmental impacts.
SAF made from segregated oil and fats, such as used cooking oil,
commonly called HEFA, will also receive separate certificates.
Suppliers can use these certificates to meet their main
obligation, but the amount will be capped, starting from 2027, to
allow market space for novel technologies. All other types of SAF
are rewarded with standard certificates, which can be used to
meet the main obligation. All certificates can be traded between
account holders for a price determined by the market. The value
of these certificates therefore provides a revenue stream for
producers of renewable fuels and demand for their products in the
fuel market.
Where a supplier has a shortfall in certificates to meet the
obligations, a supplier must pay the buyout, which is a fixed
price per unit of energy. The purpose of a buyout mechanism is to
provide a way for suppliers to discharge their mandate obligation
in cases where they are unable to secure a supply of SAF,
preventing excessive costs from being passed on to consumers.
This price is set to be higher than the expected cost of
producing and supplying the same unit of SAF under normal market
conditions, thus incentivising the supply of SAF.
The instrument also sets out the criteria that SAF must meet in
order to be eligible, to ensure that we maintain the highest
sustainability credentials. The order makes provision for the
administration and management of accounts for suppliers to ensure
that a record is kept of obligations and certificates. It also
sets out appropriate processes for the revocation of certificates
and issuing penalties where certain provisions are
contravened.
Renewable fuels already contribute one-third of transport's
emission reductions from the current carbon budget. However, this
is almost exclusively in the road fuel sector. Introducing the
SAF mandate will broaden the use of low-carbon fuels into
aviation and secure the long-term future of this transport mode.
It is projected that, between 2025 and 2040, the SAF mandate
could deliver up to 25 million tonnes of SAF, securing a saving
of up to 54 million tonnes of carbon dioxide.
To conclude, we must act now to address the global challenge of
climate change. Historically, the aviation industry has faced
difficulty in achieving carbon reductions. However, SAF
represents an immediate opportunity to change this. The
technology has been proven to achieve significant greenhouse gas
savings and it can be used in aircraft today.
3.52pm
Sitting suspended for a Division in the House.
4.05pm
of Richmond Hill (Lab)
My Lords, with permission, I shall start the concluding paragraph
again.
To conclude, we must act now to address the global challenge of
climate change. Historically, the aviation industry has faced
difficulty in achieving carbon reductions. However, SAF
represents an immediate opportunity to change this. The
technology has been proven to achieve significant greenhouse gas
savings and it can be used in aircraft today. The proposed
instrument will facilitate the adoption of this technology on a
large scale, which is essential for achieving net zero and
delivering on the manifesto commitment to secure the future of
aviation.
(LD)
My Lords, I thank the Minister for his explanation. There is no
doubt about the need for action in relation to aviation. UK
aviation fuel use more than doubled between 1990 and 2020,
despite efficiency improvements in aeroplane design. By 2050,
aviation will be one of our largest emitters. The technological
advances are not looking optimistic in relation to battery and
hydrogen-powered aircraft. Such flights are a long way off
becoming long-distance or even medium-distance in terms of
practicality. Combine this with the fact that the lifespan of an
aircraft is 30-plus years and this is a huge challenge for us.
SAF is far from a perfect answer, but it is all we have and it is
welcome to see this draft SI here.
I have obediently read this complex and lengthy document and I
have some fairly basic questions for the Minister. First, the
consultation took place in 2022, I think. Why has it taken so
long to get from the consultation process to this SI? I am aware,
when I ask that question, that it is deeply unfair, because this
was the previous Government's problem, but I notice that, at the
top of the front page, it says that this draft SI replaces one
produced on 20 May this year. Is it substantially different in
terms of its impact, or is the difference simply that a couple of
mistakes have been ironed out? The length of time it has taken is
disappointing, because the previous Government announced “jet
zero” with a great fanfare several years ago, and therefore the
slowdown is a problem.
Secondly, have the new Government changed the plans for the
operation of the new system? They might have changed the SI, but
have they changed their plans to any practical extent? Thirdly,
the aviation industry has been pressing us for government action
to stimulate production of SAF for many months or even years. It
has been telling us that, if the Government did not take action
rapidly, SAF production would take off, if I can use that term,
in our competitor countries, we would fall behind and we would
not therefore be a leader in SAF production. I am referring here
to the manufacture rather than the use of SAF.
Although this SI seems to encourage the use of SAF, it does not
seem to directly provide a mechanism to encourage and support the
manufacture of SAF, along the lines of the mechanism that we have
been pressed by the aviation industry to adopt. Can the Minister
explain whether anything in the Budget will help encourage the
production of SAF? I noted that money was available for the
aerospace industry and was unsure whether that would cover this
sort of thing.
Finally, there is good SAF and not so good SAF, which is referred
to in this Explanatory Memorandum. Can the Minister explain how
industry checks, and government process checks, will ensure that
the SAF manufactured and used in the UK is up to the highest
environmental standards?
(Con)
I apologise to your Lordships for not being in my place when we
resumed following the Division.
I have a simple question for the Minister. Can he say whether all
this applies to general aviation, in particular aviation
involving smaller aircraft which very often run on aviation
gasoline and not the fuel that forms part of this agreement? This
is important because the price of fuel is a critical part of
operators' costing, they need to know where and when they can get
it and that it will be available when required. In essence, the
question is, does this apply to general aviation and to smaller
aircraft running on gasoline, as well as to larger ones running
on turbine fuel?
(Con)
My Lords, I am grateful to the Minister for arranging a briefing
with officials so that I could better understand this complex
proposal. The briefing was indeed helpful and I learned a great
deal.
I find this a troubling statutory instrument not because I have
any objection to the use of SAF by aircraft—indeed, I welcome
that—but because of the chosen mechanism. We are still meant to
be a free-market country and the normal means of market operation
in this country is that, where there is a demand for something, a
supply is forthcoming.
We are told that, despite the fact that SAF is estimated to cost
between three times and seven times as much as standard
kerosene-based fuel, there is a genuine and strong demand for it
from airlines, not because they enjoy paying more for their fuel
necessarily but because from their own reputational point of view
they wish to do as much as they can to decarbonise the operation
of their fleets. SAF is the principal technique available to them
for doing that at the moment, as the noble Baroness, Lady
Randerson, pointed out, so the demand undoubtedly exists. Why is
the supply therefore not forthcoming? Why is it that they would
have to go somewhere else to buy SAF—which is the implication of
their position—when the demand exists here and we are home to
major suppliers? Nobody seems to have explained this.
We have decided, despite the fact that we allegedly operate a
market economy, that the Government are going to intervene so as
to mandate the supply of this fuel. The means of mandating it is
through this instrument —through the mandate—and that will not
only oblige it to be produced but oblige it to be sold in certain
quantities that will increase every year.
That addresses only the standard available type of SAF—the
HEFA-type SAF that the Minister referred to. There are other,
more exotic means of producing SAF not yet available, some of
them perhaps even undreamt of. They will be subject to a separate
mandate so that, to fulfil the mandate, it will be obligatory to
produce some SAF by these alternative methods. That graph
continues to grow over a period, as illustrated in the table on
page 7 of the statutory instrument. What I would really like to
know is: why can this not be done by the market?
4.15pm
Why is it that we have not only to mandate the production of
SAF—although not actually mandating the purchase, as I understand
it—but to do so, as the Minister referred to, by giving a
guaranteed price to suppliers and a guaranteed return to
investors? I had understood, as a consequence of the briefing,
that the guaranteed return was incorporated in this instrument. I
may have got that wrong and it may have been an assumption on my
part—I do not mean to criticise officials when I say
that—because, as I understood the Minister, he seemed to say that
separate legislation would be brought forward to provide the
guaranteed return to investors. If that is so, perhaps my ensuing
comments refer more to that separate legislation, but for the
moment I will take it all as one instrument and one package
I ask myself: why would you have private investors who need and
deserve a guaranteed return? Since that guarantee will
effectively be a UK government guarantee, why would the investors
be deserving of a return that was greater than gilts? When I
asked in the briefing whether it would be greater than gilts, I
was told that it would be, although the amount has not been
settled at this stage. It seems that the investors are the group
driving the complexity of the market intervention required by
this instrument. As I say, I find this troubling to some extent.
For how long will those prices and that return be guaranteed? I
would very much like to know the answer to these questions.
If the Minister cannot answer them due to my own fault of
understanding and they are not part of this instrument then I
will understand, because I will have made a mistake, but they
seem to be crucial things for us to know. In a sense, they go to
the heart of the distortion that we are introducing into our own
markets. It is a microcosm of the way in which the state is
increasingly taking over our industrial sector. Of course, a lot
of this is being done with the collusion and welcome of the
industrial sector. Who would not welcome guaranteed production
prices or guaranteed returns? I completely understand that, but
it is not the heart of a beating, competitive capitalism of the
sort that produces a competitive, growing and increasingly
productive economy. It troubles me that we are in this
position.
I would like to know the answers to some questions. I second the
questions asked by the noble Baroness, Lady Randerson, and by my
noble friend , but I have my own questions
to add. Has an assessment been made of the cost implication for
airlines of this mandate? What are the cost implications for the
passenger of this mandate as it increases? I do not mean
necessarily in its first year, when a very small admixture of SAF
to the kerosene-based fuel is hardly likely to be noticed, but
the mandate is very demanding as it stretches out over future
years—and not very many future years. It ramps up quite
dramatically.
What impact is this likely to have on passenger numbers? The
airline industry is forecasting quite a significant fall in
those, as a result of decarbonisation. One may dispute whether
those estimates are excessive—the industry may be putting too
high a figure on it—but it is hard to believe that there will not
be some fall in numbers as a result of this sort of measure. Has
the department estimated that and can the Minister tell us how
many ordinary, working people—if I may call them that—will find
that they are simply priced out of their holidays, as a result of
this measure and those like it?
Finally, I would very much like to know what return will be
offered to investors. The figure may not be available at the
moment, but how much above gilts is it likely to be? What
justification is there for a risk-free return greater than the
return that could be achieved on government bonds?
I will be brief in wrapping up, but that last point has nothing
whatever to do with climate change; it is about Treasury
orthodoxy. Only 30 years ago, the Treasury orthodoxy was that if
the Government want to undertake a project, they should finance
it through either taxes or borrowing. If through borrowing, the
reason was that the Government were always the cheapest and most
favourable borrower in the market. They could borrow more cheaply
than the private sector could. Why have we determined to
outsource this funding requirement, when we admittedly know that
it would cost us more than if the Government were to do it
themselves?
of Richmond Hill (Lab)
I thank all noble Lords for their contributions to this debate. I
will take the questions from the noble Baroness, Lady Randerson,
first. Her first questions were about the length of time that it
has taken to bring this statutory instrument together.
We have engaged extensively with industry in this area. Two
consultations have been completed and, in both cases, industry
was generally supportive of our proposals. The most recent
consultation, in March 2023, received 104 responses and the
government response to this was published in April 2024. We
received responses from a range of stakeholders, including fuel
suppliers, airlines and NGOs, so it has been extensively
consulted on. This statutory instrument replaces the previous one
tabled, because there has been a change of Government; the
current one was therefore tabled by the new Government.
The noble Baroness asked whether this is good SAF and what good
SAF is. The Government have been clear that the mandate must
deliver fuels with the highest sustainability credentials. We are
therefore putting in place strict sustainability criteria that
SAF must meet to be eligible under the mandate. SAF must be made
from sustainable waste or residues, such as used cooking oil or
forestry residues; recycled carbon fuels, such as unrecyclable
plastics; or power-to-liquid fuels made using low-carbon,
renewable or nuclear energy. SAF produced from food, feed or
energy crops will not be allowed. We will continue to monitor the
sustainability of SAF pathways to ensure that high sustainability
standards are maintained.
The noble Lord, , asked whether this applies
to general aviation. I have been referred to a very complex
answer, but I am not sure that I can do full justice to his
question. If the noble Lord will indulge me, I will write to him
fully on that.
Lastly, the noble Lord, , raised some questions. He
asked about the cost implications for passengers. I am assured
that, although SAF will be more expensive than traditional jet
fuel, it must be right that the costs of decarbonising the fuel
are borne by those that produce the emissions. Providing that
sufficient SAF is available, increases in average airfares will
fall within the range of their annual variations, seen
historically, from which it is not difficult to deduce that the
effect on passenger numbers will be quite small.
The noble Lord, , is correct that the
guaranteed return is not in this instrument. That is why the
Government have committed to a revenue certainty mechanism.
If there are any questions that I have failed to answer
completely, I will write to noble Lords and the noble Baroness
about them.
(Con)
May I briefly ask the Minister something? There seem to be two
guarantees going on here. Might the Minister be able to inform
your Lordships about how they will interact? One is a guaranteed
price mechanism. As I understand it, although I am happy to be
corrected, the suppliers will be guaranteed a price for the SAF,
the suppliers being the large companies that supply this type of
fuel—the BPs and so on of this world. The other is a guaranteed
return to the investors. The investors are presumably the people
who will pay for the construction of the facilities that will
produce this material, source it and so on—that is, the
infrastructure required to generate it. Can the Minister say how
those two guarantees interact, both legislatively and
financially? Is the Minister saying that one is being legislated
for in this instrument and one is to come later? Noble Lords
would be interested to understand that, I think.
of Richmond Hill (Lab)
I thank the noble Lord for his intervention. He is right that
there are two mechanisms. The revenue support mechanism Bill will
introduce revenue certainty for SAF producers looking to invest
in new plants in the UK. Together with the SAF mandate, those
measures will give the investment community confidence to invest
in these novel and innovative technologies.
The revenue certainty mechanism aims to boost greener flying and
support an industry estimated to add more than £1.8 billion to
the economy. This will help secure the supply of SAF for UK
airlines. The legislation for a revenue certainty mechanism will
be in place by the end of 2026. If the noble Lord would like me
to explain further how those two mechanisms interact, I would be
absolutely delighted to write to him.
To conclude, greener transport is central to the delivery of the
UK's cross-economy climate targets. It directly supports the
Prime Minister's mission to make Britain a clean energy
superpower and accelerate our journey to net zero. SAF is one of
the key technologies that will facilitate this change.
Introducing the SAF mandate will allow the UK to capitalise on
the opportunity that SAF presents for decarbonising the aviation
sector and will support the transition to net zero.
Motion agreed.
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