EU biofuel proposals risk discriminating against firms from outside the bloc: China’s EcoCeres



EcoCeres, a Chinese producer of biofuels, said a European Union (EU) proposal aimed at combating fraud in the industry could discriminate against companies from outside the region.

In January, the European Biodiesel Board (EBB), which represents 34 firms that produce 75 per cent of Europe’s output of the cleaner-burning alternative to fossil diesel, published proposals that it said would improve the EU’s system for quality verification.

The proposals included annual on-site audits and called on the EU to impose effective sanctions, including retroactive invalidations of certificates, to compel all players in the space to exercise due diligence.

For biofuel that is imported into the EU, the board recommended mandatory content tests to determine sustainability, with results logged in an EU database.

EcoCeres CEO Matti Lievonen said the content tests for imports could be discriminatory against outside firms.

“There should not be a battle between EU and non-EU producers,” he said. “The focus of any reform should be on ensuring a level playing field.”

  • Related Posts

    Chinese firms with success in go-global efforts poised to reap profit rewards

    Overseas expansion and a commodity boom have put Chinese companies trading on the mainland in a position to beat their offshore-listed peers in earnings, cementing the outperformance of yuan-denominated stocks…

    Continue reading
    China issues new safety rules for OpenClaw. Here are the dos and don’ts

    A unit of China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) has issued guidelines on best practices and prohibitions for adopting and using OpenClaw, the popular artificial intelligence agent that…

    Continue reading

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *