All subjects
Opinion & Commentary

Stronger sensitive product safeguards for ethanol needed

Stronger sensitive product safeguards for ethanol needed
The largest of its kind in the Nordic region, Lantmännen Agroetanol's facility in Norrköping, Sweden, is a conventional grain ethanol plant that uses grain to produce ethanol, animal feed, and green carbon dioxide (CO2) for the beverage industry.

European renewable ethanol producers are calling for increased safeguards in the EU’s proposed revision of the Generalised Scheme of Preferences (GSP) for trade, which grants preferential tariffs to certain countries.

According to the European Renewable Ethanol Association (ePURE) the provisional agreement reached by the European Council and the European Parliament in December 2025 introduces several positive changes for the ethanol sector, securing a more stable market for EU producers.

While the proposed revision would strengthen safeguards for sensitive products such as renewable ethanol by lowering the threshold of increased volumes of imports from 57 percent to 45 percent, the European Parliament now has the opportunity to enhance these safeguards.

ePURE believes this should be tightened further for highly sensitive products to 20 percent, citing that European farmers and renewable ethanol producers face mounting challenges from the EU’s trade deal with Mercosur and from inconsistent EU biofuels policies.

These safeguards will be more important than ever to ensuring the viability of the European renewable ethanol industry, a strategic domestic asset that contributes to achieving EU ambitions for climate change mitigation, energy independence, food security, and agricultural competitiveness, the statement said.

Undenatured ethyl alcohol (CN 2207 10) and denatured ethyl alcohol (CN 2207 20) are particularly sensitive products for the EU biofuels and renewable ethanol sector.

Import surges can occur rapidly and have a significant impact on the EU market, affecting domestic producers who operate under strict sustainability and environmental requirements that competitors in other countries are not required to comply with.

For example, volumes of ethanol imports from Pakistan skyrocketed by 197 percent in 2022 compared to 2021, and by 2024, import volumes had already risen 32 percent above 2021 levels.

A lower safeguard trigger would allow the Commission to react more swiftly to sudden increases in imports, ensuring a more effective and proportionate protection mechanism while preserving the overall objectives of the GSP scheme. This targeted adjustment would therefore help maintain fair competition and market stability for EU renewable ethanol producers, the statement ended.

Most read on Bioenergy International

Get the latest news about Bioenergy

Subscribe for free to our newsletter
Sending request
I accept that Bioenergy International stores and handles my information.
Read more about our integritypolicy here