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Document 52014PC0748
COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT pursuant to Article 294(6) of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union concerning the position of the Council at the first reading on the adoption of a Directive of the European Parliament and of the Council amending Directive 98/70/EC relating to the quality of petrol and diesel fuels and amending Directive 2009/28/EC on the promotion of the use of energy from renewable sources (COM(2012) 595 final- 2012/0288 (COD))
COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT pursuant to Article 294(6) of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union concerning the position of the Council at the first reading on the adoption of a Directive of the European Parliament and of the Council amending Directive 98/70/EC relating to the quality of petrol and diesel fuels and amending Directive 2009/28/EC on the promotion of the use of energy from renewable sources (COM(2012) 595 final- 2012/0288 (COD))
COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT pursuant to Article 294(6) of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union concerning the position of the Council at the first reading on the adoption of a Directive of the European Parliament and of the Council amending Directive 98/70/EC relating to the quality of petrol and diesel fuels and amending Directive 2009/28/EC on the promotion of the use of energy from renewable sources (COM(2012) 595 final- 2012/0288 (COD))
/* COM/2014/0748 final - 2012/0288 (COD) */
COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT pursuant to Article 294(6) of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union concerning the position of the Council at the first reading on the adoption of a Directive of the European Parliament and of the Council amending Directive 98/70/EC relating to the quality of petrol and diesel fuels and amending Directive 2009/28/EC on the promotion of the use of energy from renewable sources (COM(2012) 595 final- 2012/0288 (COD)) /* COM/2014/0748 final - 2012/0288 (COD) */
2012/0288 (COD) COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION
TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT
pursuant to Article 294(6) of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European
Union
concerning the position of the Council at the first
reading on the adoption of a
Directive of the European Parliament and of the Council amending Directive
98/70/EC relating to the quality of petrol and diesel fuels and amending
Directive 2009/28/EC on the promotion of the use of energy from renewable
sources (COM(2012) 595 final- 2012/0288 (COD)) 1. Background Date of transmission of the proposal to the European Parliament and the Council: || 18 October 2012 Date of the position of the European Parliament, first reading || 11 September 2013 Date of the opinion of the Economic and Social Committee || 17 April 2013 Date of the opinion of the Committee of the Regions || No opinion issued Date of political agreement and formal adoption of the position at first reading by the Council (by qualified majority) || 13 June 2014 (political agreement), 9 December 2014 (formal adoption) 2. Objective of the proposal
from the Commission The aim of the Commission proposal is to start
the transition to biofuels that deliver substantial greenhouse gas savings when
also estimated indirect land-use change (ILUC) emissions are reported. While
existing investments should be protected, the aims of the current proposal are
to: –
limit the contribution that conventional
biofuels (with a risk of ILUC emissions) make towards attainment of the targets
in the Renewable Energy Directive; –
improve the greenhouse gas performance of
biofuel production processes (reducing associated emissions) by raising the
greenhouse gas saving threshold for new installations subject to protecting
installations[1]
already in operation on 1st July 2014; –
encourage a greater market penetration of
advanced (low-ILUC) biofuels by allowing such fuels to contribute more to the
targets in the Renewable Energy Directive than conventional biofuels; –
improve the reporting of greenhouse gas
emissions by obliging Member States and fuel suppliers to report the estimated
indirect land-use change emissions of biofuels. 3. Comments on the position
of the Council 3.1. General comments on the Council
Position: The Commission regrets that, with regards
to its original proposal, the Council position at first reading has
significantly lowered the level of environmental ambition and contains no
significant incentives for the transition towards advanced biofuels and other
low-ILUC (or non-ILUC) options for using renewable energy in transport. The elements in the Council
text which jointly lead to a significantly lower level of environmental
ambition are: ·
increasing the cap for conventional biofuels to
7%[2] ·
new multipliers for renewable electricity in rail ·
reduced incentives for using advanced (low-ILUC)
biofuels ·
weakening the ILUC reporting requirements The Commission also regrets, and strongly
objects to, modifications introduced by the Council which reduce the level of
environmental ambition of the overall renewable energy target set by the
Renewable Energy Directive. Furthermore, the Council text removes a
series of delegated acts, and converts others into implementing acts which is
of serious concern for the Commission. 3.2. European Parliament's amendments
at first reading: The Council explicitly considered some, but
not all, of the European Parliament's amendments. The Commission's views on the
European Parliament's amendments are below and, where appropriate, we have
indicated the Council's position. 1. Use estimated ILUC
values for Fuel Quality Directive accounting from 2020; delete ILUC reporting
from Renewable Energy Directive (Amendments 60 and 164). Rejected by Commission ILUC values,
based on the best available science, should be reported in both the Renewable Energy
Directive and Fuel Quality Directive but not used for accounting in the Fuel
Quality Directive. They should be reported in order to increase transparency
about the real greenhouse gas performance of food and feed crop based biofuels
and improve knowledge about the scope of the issue. The Council text does not
introduce ILUC values for Fuel Quality Directive accounting and maintains ILUC
reporting for both the Fuel Quality Directive and Renewable Energy Directive,
albeit in an amended form. 2. Capping/limiting the
use of conventional biofuels by removing sustainability status (Amendment 89).
Rejected by the Commission The Commission
proposed to limit the contribution which biofuels with a risk of causing ILUC
can make towards the 10% Renewable Energy Directive target. This provides an
incentive for Member States to adjust their support schemes and mandates
accordingly, but does not restrict the overall use of such biofuels, thus
giving Member States some degree of flexibility. The Council text also sets out
that only the contribution towards the 10% target should be limited and that
the sustainability status of “additional” conventional biofuels should not be
touched upon. 3. Capping/limiting the
use of conventional biofuels under the Fuel Quality Directive (Amendment
184/REV). Accepted by the Commission. The Parliament also
wants to apply the cap to the Fuel Quality Directive target. Although the
Commission didn't propose a cap for the Fuel Quality Directive, this provision is
one element which could contribute to improving the level of environmental
ambition of the overall text. The Council text states that only the
contribution towards the 10% Renewable Energy Directive target should be
limited. 4. Extending the scope
of the cap to energy crops (Amendment 181). Partly accepted by the Commission Energy crops
grown on cropland may have ILUC effects. This proposal by the European
Parliament is thus one element which could strengthen the environmental
ambition and ILUC mitigation effect of the text. The Commission can accept the
change of scope of the cap. The Council retains the coverage of the Commission
proposal (food and feed crops). 5. Introduce a binding
subtarget for advanced biofuels of 0.5% in 2016 and 2.5% in 2020 (Amendment 181
and 152/REV). Partly accepted by the Commission The Commission
could be open, in the context of an overall compromise, to considering the
principle of introducing a binding sub-target as it has potential to raise the
level of environmental ambition. While, at this stage, the Commission is not in
a position to give a view on a precise percentage, 2.5% seems extremely
ambitious, given that biofuels with low ILUC risk (Used Cooking Oil and Tallow),
which are currently available at commercial scale would be excluded and given
that the biofuels eligible for the sub-target would just be counted once
towards targets. The Council proposes a non-binding subtarget with much lower
volumes (reference 0.5 p.p.) 6. Sub-target of 7.5%
for bioethanol (Amendment 152/REV). Rejected by the Commission. The European
Parliament has proposed that there should be a 7.5% sub-target for ethanol
blended into petrol. The Commission considers that this unduly restricts the
flexibility of Member States to meet the transport target in accordance with
their national conditions. In addition it would require ethanol to be supplied
at higher levels than could be blended into fuel for conventional vehicles and
so would mandate some 'high blend' use for which Member States may not have the
infrastructure. 7. Amendments to the
contribution that different biofuels make to the transport sub-target
(amendments 185 and 186). Partly accepted by the Commission The original
Commission proposal sought to incentivise advanced (low-ILUC) biofuels through
increasing the contribution they make to the transport sub-target. Under the
proposal the most advanced biofuels would count four times while used cooking
oil and tallow would count twice. The European Parliament wants to amend this
by severely restricting the list of biofuel feedstocks that would count four
times and instead having the majority of feedstocks count only once. The
Commission's view is that this creates a contradictory incentive regime for
advanced biofuels as the result of the change is that biofuels that are already
being made with used cooking oil and animal fat, using simple technologies,
would receive twice the incentive of biofuels using novel technologies that are
much more expensive to produce. In addition changes to the lists should be
fully consistent with the overall scope of the Directives, with the scope of
the cap, with introducing/removing accounting multipliers as well as with
definitions of feedstocks. 3.3. The Council has inserted a number
of new provisions into the text some of which the Commission can accept and
others of which significantly weaken the proposal and to which the Commission
objects. These changes are as follows: 1. Increasing the cap
to 7%. The
5% cap on the contribution of conventional biofuels towards the Renewable
Energy Directive targets is the central element of the Commission proposal and
the Commission has strongly defended it, as a higher cap would reduce ILUC
mitigation. That said, the Commission has recognised that some flexibility
towards a higher cap may be required to reach an overall compromise between the
Council and the European Parliament. However, the Commission has also been
clear that, should it be necessary to show flexibility on the cap, the
Commission will endeavour to preserve the overall level of environmental
ambition in the proposal. The 7% cap as proposed by the Council does not
sufficiently limit ILUC nor does it create enough incentives for low-ILUC
options in transport. The Commission also regrets the deletion of recitals
indicating its views for the post-2020 period. The Commission could support a
7% cap, if the text is strengthened on the following elements (i) changing the
scope of the cap in accordance with the European Parliament amendments (181) already
accepted by the Commission so as to include all land-using biofuels and
extending the cap also to the Fuel Quality Directive (184/REV); (ii) providing
clarity on the political message of a transition to advanced biofuels (by
bringing back the recital on post-2020 and adding a mandatory sub-target of
0.5% for advanced biofuels to at least cover and protect existing investments),
(iii) re-instate certain delegations of power or secure transitional clauses
for these provisions (iv) the multiplier for renewable electricity in rail is
deleted and (v) double counting for the overall Renewable Energy Directive target
is deleted. 2. Extension of
multiple counting of advanced biofuels that currently applies only to the 10%
transport target to the overall Renewable Energy Directive target. The
Commission is strongly opposed to the idea of applying double counting for
advanced biofuels towards the overall 20% Renewable Energy Directive target and
includes this position in its statements to the minutes (see below). Although
the impacts on the deployment of RES as stated above are expected to be low,
this would open a very problematic political precedent as we approach 2020 -
there is no reason to lower the level of ambition for a key headline target of
the 2008 energy and climate package. At the March European Council this year, Member
States confirmed their commitments to reach the 2020 targets. The 2008 package offers enough flexibility to
Member States to avoid excessive compliance costs. Through applying multipliers
in various instances less 'real' energy is required and so the transport target
shrinks significantly. Instead,
if there is a need to further reduce compliance costs while limiting ILUC
within the transport target, the Commission considers the European Parliament
amendments 153 and 154, which would take into account additional efforts to
improve energy efficiency and energy savings in transport, more appropriate. 3. Accounting
multiplier of 5 for renewable electricity in electric road vehicles and one of
2.5 for electric trains. The
Commission did not include accounting multipliers for electric vehicles and
electric trains in its proposal. However, the Commission could, as part of an
overall compromise, agree with the establishment of an accounting multiplier of
5 in road vehicles. The Commission opposes the introduction of an accounting
multiplier for renewable electricity in trains, as it would substantially lower
the level of ambition of the transport target and not create an additional
incentive for low carbon transport. The European Parliament, as in the
Commission proposal, does not introduce new or increased multipliers. 4. Introduction of a non-binding
sub-target for biofuels produced from feedstocks listed in Part A of Annex IX. As discussed above,
the Council text introduced a requirement for Member States to set a
non-binding sub-target for biofuels produced from certain feedstocks for 2020
with a reference value of 0.5 percentage points in energy terms, i.e. before
double counting. However, Member States can deviate from this reference value
using a range of justifications and there is no sanction for non-compliance. In
the overall context of the Council text, this provision provides little
incentive to move to advanced biofuels as non-ILUC options in transport. The
Commission favours strengthening this element and, in principle, welcomes the
corresponding European Parliament amendment (181) but has already signalled
that the sub-target in the European Parliament amendment seems to be overly
ambitious and will likely to be very costly to achieve. 5. Additional
feedstocks added into the list in Annex IX. The Commission's proposal included a list of feedstocks that should
receive additional incentives when supplied as biofuel. The Council position
includes a number of additional feedstocks and it will be important to ensure
that these can be considered advanced (low-ILUC) biofuel feedstocks and that
this is consistent with other elements of the final text (i.e. what substances
are included under the cap). 6. Additional
feedstocks beyond the list in Annex IX. The Council position
includes a provision that "biofuels made from feedstocks not listed in
Annex IX that were determined to be wastes, residues, non-food cellulosic
material or ligno-cellulosic material by the competent national authorities and
are used in existing installations prior to the adoption of this Directive"
would also be counted towards the sub-target mentioned in point 4 above. The
Commission considers that this provision is too broad in scope, involves the
risk of inconsistent application across the EU and goes beyond grandfathering
existing investments as it allows changes until the adoption of the ILUC
Directive. Furthermore, such a provision seems to give the ‘competent national
authorities’ the right of the ultimate interpretation of the corresponding
part of the Renewable Energy Directive – against the legal rule which generally
applies for the interpretation of an European Union directive. 7- Weakened ILUC
reporting provisions. The Commission's
proposal included a requirement for Member States to report the estimated ILUC
emissions of the biofuels supplied to meet their domestic targets, using
estimated values from the IFPRI modelling. The Council has changed this
requirement such that Member States report only the biofuel feedstock and the
Commission produces a report on Member States' biofuel consumption adding ILUC
values, also meaning this information will be provided later than if provided
by Member States. In addition the Council has added language stressing the
provisional and uncertain character of the ILUC values. The Commission favours
the reintroduction of its original reporting requirements. See also the
Commission's position on the European Parliament's amendments 60 and 164. 8. Extension of 'statistical
transfers' of renewable energy to include the transport sub-target. The Council text introduces the ability to
make statistical transfers towards meeting the transport target, something
already allowed for the overall Renewable Energy Directive target. While the
Commission does not see this change as necessary given that transport fuels can
be easily traded between Member States, the Commission also acknowledges the
potential to lower the cost of compliance. 9. Mutual recognition
of Voluntary Schemes. According to the Commission, the concept
of mutual recognition between Voluntary Schemes approved by the Commission
pursuant to Renewable Energy Directive Article 18(6) is redundant in light of
Article 18(7). The latter ensures that verification through such Voluntary
Schemes must be recognised in Member States without requiring further evidence
for compliance. Mutual recognition between Voluntary Schemes approved by the Commission
pursuant to Article 18(6) is also detrimental to the idea that they may certify
further sustainability aspects beyond the harmonised criteria in accordance to
Art 18(4). The Commission welcomes the Council text in so far as it introduces
the possibility for the Commission to assess and explicitly approve a national
scheme. The legal consequence, however, should be the same level of
recognition as for Voluntary Schemes pursuant to Article 18(6). See also
European Parliament amendment 102 which would establish mutual recognition
between all verification schemes. The Commission supports the idea of mutual
recognition between national systems; Voluntary Schemes should not be forced to
recognise national systems. 10. Enhanced reporting by
and on Voluntary Schemes. According to the
Council text, Voluntary Schemes are required to report on a regular basis,
these reports will be made public by the Commission and the Commission has to
review how the Voluntary Schemes work. To the Commission, this text is
acceptable but legal clarification is needed regarding whether these changes
can be applied to existing Voluntary Schemes. The European Parliament
(amendments 58 and 103) wants the Commission to report on the functioning of Voluntary
Schemes and to make a proposal if appropriate which the Commission could accept
in principle (further improvements and clarifications needed). 11. Degraded land bonus. The Council text
keeps the degraded land bonus for greenhouse gas saving calculations. The
Commission has deleted this element from the greenhouse gas calculation as it
is inconsistent with the greenhouse gas methodology and ILUC reporting and as
it seems difficult to identify this type of land. The Commission can accept
keeping this element in the context of an overall satisfactory compromise but
would prefer provisions are made for the safe physical segregation of crops
grown on heavily contaminated land. The European Parliament accepted the
deletion of this element in the Commission text. 12. Merge land-use
categories "cropland" and "perennial cropland". The Council text merges the land-use categories
"cropland" and "perennial cropland" for the purpose of the
calculation of greenhouse gas savings. This is in order to address a potential
issue with the greenhouse gas accounting methodology when 'cropland' is
converted to 'perennial cropland' and back again. While the Commission could
accept the Council’s proposed changes in the context of an overall satisfactory
compromise the Commission remains seriously concerned about the possible
impacts on third country biofuel sustainability and believes this issue could
be addressed in a different way. (This element is not contained in either the
Commission or European Parliament texts). 13. Review clause. According to the
Council text, the Commission would have to report one year after the entry into
force of the Directive on advanced biofuels, ILUC science and the
identification and certification of low-ILUC biofuels. The Commission would
have to report in 2017 on ILUC measures including again on certification of
low-ILUC biofuels, fraud prevention, and Voluntary Schemes. The Commission
strongly suggests having one review in 2017 for all items. The Commission also
questions the usefulness of introducing any legal definitions for low-ILUC risk
biofuels before such review is conducted. Furthermore, the Council adds text
regarding the “provisional” character of the estimated ILUC values to be used
for reporting. The review clause should clarify what the next steps should be,
i.e. whether the “provisional” values should be retained until 2020 or “final”
values should be suggested. According to the Commission, European Parliament
amendments 107, 189 and 190 (if made consistent) could provide useful
orientation. 14. Concept of 'Low-ILUC
risk' biofuels. As mentioned above,
the Council text introduced a definition of 'Low-ILUC risk' biofuels and a
requirement for the Commission to provide a report which will 'set out criteria
for the identification and certification of low-ILUC risk biofuels' in the
review clause. The Council text's definition distinguishes these types of
biofuels from biofuels made from feedstocks in part A of Annex IX. While the
Commission could accept further work in this area (with the caveat that it
should be conducted as one piece of work in 2017) a cautious approach should be
taken to ensure that any feedstocks determined to be 'low-ILUC risk' genuinely
are low risk. Neither the Commission nor the European Parliament have referred
to this category of biofuels. 15. Fraud prevention. The Council text
calls for better cooperation amongst national systems and between voluntary
schemes and national systems, Member States shall encourage the development and
use of track and trace systems, Member States have to report on their
anti-fraud measures, and, in 2017, the Commission has to assess the
effectiveness of these measures and submit a proposal if appropriate. The
Commission can accept the Council’s proposed additions. The European Parliament
is also concerned about fraud (amendment 185). 16. Removal of delegated
acts. In
the Council text, delegated acts with limited scope are only kept for adding
default values to Annexes IV of the Fuel Quality Directive and V of the
Renewable Energy Directive, and for adding feedstocks to Annex IX of the
Renewable Energy Directive. The Council has introduced the no-opinion clause in
Article 11(4) of Directive 98/70/EC and in Article 25, paragraphs 3 and 4 of
Directive 2009/28/EC for the adoption of implementing acts. (a)
The Commission is of the view that the
Directives need to be updated in line with scientific progress and new
technological developments. Doing this through the ordinary legislative
procedure would be too cumbersome and too slow and does not adequately ensure
the need for flexibility/efficiency in dealing with adaptation of strictly
technical aspects in the Fuel Quality and Renewable Energy Directives
reflecting scientific progress in view of the achievement of their
environmental objectives (reduction of greenhouse gas in transport sector).
Most of the proposed delegated acts are intended to replace acts adopted
under the former regulatory procedure with scrutiny contained in the Directives
("Lisbonisation"). In the Commission's view the approach, recently
proposed by the Presidency, of repealing conferral of powers on the Commission
for adoption of delegated acts/implementing acts and including all the
provisions in the legislative act risks to compromise the distinction between
the modification/adaptation of non-essential and essential elements of the
Directives. The technical adaptation obviously belongs to the first category.
Where appropriate, the Commission will explore compromise texts, keeping
consistency with its approach on conferral of powers under the treaty rules,
which is that the scope of Articles 290 and 291 TFEU is mutually exclusive. The
Commission welcomes the position of the European Parliament which fully
supports the Commission’s view and continues to seek compromises that grant use
of delegated acts. (b)
The Commission strongly opposes any removal of
delegated powers affecting ongoing procedures under Decision 1999/468/EC or
procedures starting on [date to be determined by Commission] at the latest
supplementing both Directives. Alternatively, a transition period for applying
procedures under Regulation (EU) 182/2011 must be incorporated. (c)
Furthermore, the
Council has introduced the no-opinion clause for the adoption of
implementing acts. The Commission considers that there
is no specific justification for the inclusion of the non-opinion clause and
asks for a recital justifying the introduction of such a clause. If at the end
of the process, such a recital were not to be accepted, the Commission will
make the standard statement in relation to this issue. 4. Conclusion/General
Observations Although it considers that the Council's political
agreement at first reading does not meet some of the essential aims of its
initial proposal, the Commission perceives that the only way of allowing the
ordinary legislative procedure to continue is to refrain from opposing it. The Commission aims to keep the elements of the proposal
which can contribute to mitigate the ILUC impacts and preserve the
overall level of environmental ambition of biofuels use in transport, including
some of the elements which are part of the position at first reading of the
European Parliament. 5. STATEMENTS BY THE
COMMISSION The Commission has drafted a statement to
be included in the Council minutes as follows: Statement from the Commission on the Council's position at first
reading on the ILUC proposal [Proposal for a Directive of the European Parliament and of the
Council amending Directive 98/70/EC relating to the quality of petrol and
diesel fuels and amending Directive 2009/28/EC on the promotion of the use of
energy from renewable sources] COM(2012) 595 final - 2012/0288 (COD) The Commission
regrets that, with regard to its original proposal, the Council position at
first reading has significantly lowered the level of ambition in mitigating the
ILUC impacts of conventional biofuels and contains no significant incentives
for the transition towards advanced biofuels and other non-ILUC options for
using renewable energy in transport. The Commission also regrets that
modifications introduced by the Council reduce the level of environmental
ambition of the overall renewable energy target set by the Renewable Energy
Directive[3].
However, in order
to allow the legislative process to move forward, the Commission will not
oppose the Council's position at first reading. The Commission will therefore continue to closely cooperate with the
co-legislators in the next steps of the legislative procedure. The Commission
aims at keeping the elements of the proposal which can contribute to mitigate
the ILUC impacts and preserve the overall level of
environmental ambition of biofuels use in transport, including some of the
elements which are part of the position at first reading of the European
Parliament. The Commission will do so in the hope that a solution reflecting
the European interest in combating negative environmental effects of
conventional biofuels can be found. [1] As defined in paragraph 3.1.1 of C 160 (2010) [2] The limit to the contribution that conventional
biofuels make towards attainment of the targets in the Renewable Energy
Directive [3] 2009/28/EC