Energy Transition Digest: 2-15 September 2024
1. The Long-Awaited Expansion
China’s national emission trading system will expand at the end of this year to cover iron & steel, aluminium, and cement.
So what? The compliance carbon market is an important tool to achieve China’s decarbonization targets. ETS was designed to expand from the beginning, but the expansion was delayed because of data quality issues. Now, it’s finally happening.
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2. UK Offshore Wind Auctions Back on Track
Nine contracts for difference were awarded to offshore wind farms in the UK’s latest allocation round.
So what? The industry is recovering from challenging years marked by project cancellations because of rising costs. Last year, no bids were submitted, and no projects were selected for support in the offshore wind sector. This year, the regulator increased funding and raised the price cap, leading to a successful outcome.
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3. New Uranium Enrichment Capacity Coming in the US
阿海珐 will build a uranium enrichment facility in Tennessee, US, aiming to start operation in the early 2030s.
So what? The US has imposed an import ban on enriched uranium from Russia and needs to build domestic capacity to compensate for it. Furthermore, the US government is funding procurement from new projects. Orano seems to be taking advantage of the opportunity.
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4. China Wants to Prevent EV Technology Export
The Chinese government strongly advised domestic EV manufacturers to avoid exporting key technologies.
So what? Chinese OEMs face increasing trade barriers with tariffs in place in the US and announced in the EU and Canada. Carmakers find themselves in a tight spot: unable to avoid the tariffs without sufficient localization levels and unable to localize manufacturing because of the home government's policy. On the other hand, EU tariffs might still be reversed – Germany, Spain, and some other countries want to avoid a trade war with China.
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5. Draghi Proposes Reforms to Fuel EU's Growth
Mario Draghi presented a report on European competitiveness calling for reforms to support sustainable growth.
In essence:
Bottom line: €750-800bn additional investments annually are needed to finance the proposed measures. To mobilize these investments, the EU must simplify its rules and implement governance reforms focusing on resource consolidation and coordinated action.
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