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Analysis: Europe struggles to stem biodiesel import flood

Reuters  |  PARIS 

By de La Hamaide

PARIS (Reuters) - Rising biodiesel imports from and an expected surge in shipments from threaten to cripple output in the European Union, the world's top of the renewable fuel.

The slashed import duties on Argentine biodiesel last September after mounted a successful challenge at the World Trade Organisation, weeks after the imposed steep duties on the fuel.

The bloc is now considering whether to cut duties on Indonesian biodiesel.

Argentine soybean-based fuel is now entering the EU at much lower prices than rapeseed oil, the main material used by European producers, who say they cannot compete and in some cases are being pushed to the verge of bankruptcy.

Between August last year and January, 852,000 tonnes of biodiesel - around four times the capacity of a large EU plant - worth $617 million, were exported from to the bloc, customs data showed. Earlier in 2017, nearly all exports were heading to the

Raffaello Garofalo, of the (EBB), said the impact of Argentine imports was already worse than expected.

"There is huge economic damage and we risk seeing many European renewable fuel producers close down in the face of these unfair import floods," he said.

The EU is the world's largest and consumer of biodiesel, a fuel made mostly from vegetable oils, which is renewable and aimed at reducing carbon emissions.

EU production of biodiesel was 11.9 million tonnes in 2017, up from 11.7 million a year earlier. But consultancy Strategie Grains, which initially said output would be stable this year, has cut its 2018 estimate to 11.6 million tonnes because of the Argentine imports.

Imports of Argentine biodiesel into the EU could hit 1.5 million tonnes in 2018, with a similar volume from if the EU cuts its duties, said.

DOUBLE WHAMMY

The rise in imports comes as several producers in the are being pressed hard by internal competition and low margins.

The EU's top producer, Saipol, part of group Avril, said it would cut production by nearly half this year, with around 250 out of 600 staff working reduced hours, mainly because of imports of Argentine biodiesel.

"There is a double impact, on our sales but also on the biodiesel market, where prices are weighed down by the arrival of cheap products," Kristell Guizouarn, of France's group Esterifrance, said.

Both and impose a higher export duty on the raw material - soybeans and respectively - than on biodiesel. This allows biodiesel producers in the two countries to "dump" products abroad at unfairly low prices, EU producers say.

Since September, European have fallen 12 percent but are still about 25 percent higher than Argentine delivered to the bloc.

SPANISH BIODIESEL

The EU was Argentina's largest biodiesel market until the tariffs were implemented in 2013.

The Spanish could be hard hit. There would be no need to produce the fuel in if cheap biodiesel is available from Argentina, said Christophe Cogny, at Strategie Grains, adding that Spanish companies were already facing severe overcapacity.

Germany, the EU's largest producing country, warned of a massive fall in output this year due to what it called unfairly subsidised imports.

"Immediate measures should be taken by the EU to restrain the imports in order to prevent this threat to the very existence of the German biodiesel industry," Elmar Baumann, of the German Industry Association VDB, said.

COUNTER-MEASURES

The EU opened an anti-subsidy investigation into Argentine biodiesel at the end of January, after a complaint by the EBB, potentially offering a way to impose duties on imported biodiesel.

Argentine producers accused the EU of protectionism.

"We are confident that we have a very clear and strong case to defend ourselves," said Luis Zubizarreta, of Carbio, Argentina's industry chamber.

If the investigation finds that benefited from unfair subsidies, provisional duties could be imposed late this year.

The scope of such duties is unknown.

In the meantime, pressured by the industry, adopted stricter environmental rules for imported biofuels, a measure intended to restrict inflows from

But since most shipments enter the EU via the or and are then distributed internally, it will be hard to track the impact of the French action.

The imposed steep duties on Argentine and Indonesian biodiesel last August, saying the fuel was unfairly subsidised. Argentine producers said the move meant an immediate halt in exports on the U. S. markets.

And last month the imposed more import duties on biodiesel from both countries, making it virtually certain that biodiesel from and will not be sold in the U. S. market.

(Reporting by de La Hamaide in Paris, Hugh Bronstein, Maximilian Heath and Maximiliano Rizzi in Buenos Aires, Jose Elias Rodriguez in Madrid, Michael Hogan in Hamburg, Emily Chow in Kuala Lumpur and Fergus Jensen in Jakarta; Editing by and Giles Elgood)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, March 07 2018. 22:23 IST
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