China’s biodiesel producers seek new outlets as hefty EU tariffs bite

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By Chen Aizhu

SINGAPORE- Chinese biodiesel producers are seeking new outlets in Asia for their exports and exploring producing other biofuels as supply to the European Union, their biggest buyer, dries up ahead of anti-dumping tariffs, biofuel executives and analysts said.

The EU will impose provisional anti-dumping duties of between 12.8 percent and 36.4 percent on Chinese biodiesel from Friday, hitting over 40 companies including leading producers Zhejiang Jiaao, Henan Junheng and Longyan Zhuoyue Group in an export business that was worth $2.3 billion last year.

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Some larger producers are eyeing the marine fuel market in China and Singapore, the world’s top marine fuel hub, as they seek to offset already falling biodiesel exports to the EU, biofuel executives said.

Exports to the bloc have fallen sharply since mid-2023 amid investigations. Volumes in the first six months of this year plunged 51 percent from a year earlier to 567,440 tons, Chinese customs data showed.

June shipments shrank to just over 50,000 tons, the lowest since mid-2019, according to customs data.

At their peak, exports to the EU reached a record 1.8 million tons in 2023, representing 90 percent of all Chinese biodiesel exports that year. The Netherlands was the top importer in 2023, soaking in 84 percent of China’s biodiesel shipments to the EU, followed by Belgium and Spain, Chinese customs figures showed.

Chinese producers of biodiesel have enjoyed fat profits in recent years, making the most of the EU’s green energy policy that grants subsidies to companies that are using biodiesel as a sustainable transport fuel such as Repsol, Shell and Neste.

Many of China’s biodiesel producers are privately-run small plants employing scores of workers processing waste oil collected from millions of Chinese restaurants. Before the biodiesel export boom, they were making lower-value goods like soaps and processing leather products.

However, the boom was short-lived. The EU began in August last year investigating Indonesian biodiesel that was suspected of circumventing duties by going through China and Britain, followed by a 14-month anti-dumping probe into Chinese biodiesel believed to be priced artificially low and undercutting local producers.

Anticipating the tariffs, traders stocked up on used cooking oil (UCO), lifting prices of the feedstock, while prices of biodiesel sank in view of shrinking demand for the Chinese supply.

“With hefty prices of UCO partly supported by strong US and European demand, and free-falling product prices, companies are having a tough time surviving,” said Gary Shan, chief marketing officer of Henan Junheng.

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