Mass Balance Requirements

Similar documents
ISCC PLUS SAI Gold. SAI Gold ISCC PLUS V 1.0

ISCC PLUS. Version 3.0

ISCC 204 AUDIT REQUIREMENTS AND RISK MANAGEMENT. Version 3.0

Waste fuels and renewable fuels of non-biological

Electricity and Heat from Biogas Plants

ISCC for Non GMO food and feed

Regulations to issue Proofs of Compliance with Sustainability

ISCC PLUS 256 Group Certification. Group Certification ISCC PLUS 256 V 1.0

Consumables of a Production Process

Green Gold Label Program

Green Gold Label Program

RSB Standard for Certification of Smallholder Groups

Overview about different certification systems

Green Gold Label Program

Implementing New GHG Requirements under the RED in Europe

NEPCon Generic Chain of Custody Standard

Wilhelmstraße 54 Tel.: / Berlin, Germany Fax: /

version 4.1 october 2016 BONSUCRO/BONSUCRO EU RED MASS BALANCE COC STANDARD

Supplementary System Basics for the certification of liquid and gaseous biofuels under the 36th BImSchV

MSC Chain of Custody Standard: Default Version

RULES FOR THE ISSUE OF CERTIFICATION OF SUSTAINABILITY OF BIOFUELS AND BIOLIQUIDS, FOOD AND FEED, TECHNICAL/CHEMICAL AND BIOENERGY APPLICATIONS

Grown in Britain Standard

ENSUS VOLUNTARY SCHEME UNDER RED FOR ENSUS BIOETHANOL PRODUCTION

RSB ROUNDTABLE ON SUSTAINABLE BIOMATERIALS. RSB Standard for the Certification of Bio-Based Products and Bio-Based Processes. Version 2.

Chain of Custody Standard

MSC Chain of Custody Standard: Group Version

MSC Chain of Custody Standard: Consumer-Facing Organisation (CFO) Version

Sustainable Fiber Specification Version C

Introduction of GHG calculation and ISCC Certification System

AUSTRALIAN CERTIFIED NON-GMO STANDARD. Version 1.0, 2016, Australian Organic Limited

A GUIDE TO RSB CERTIFICATION

Organic Supply Chain Ensuring organic integrity through the Organic Control System. USDA Agricultural Marketing Service National Organic Program

Checklist. For verifying KRAV s extra requirements in the KRAV standards chapter 16 (edition 2018).

SGF INTERNATIONAL E.V. IMPLEMENTING PROVISIONS VOLUNTARY CONTROL SYSTEM (VCS) STATUS: 2007 SURE-GLOBAL-FAIR FOR THE

Implication of New EU RED GHG requirements

Global Recycle Standard, Version 2.1 (March 2012)

Summary of differences between Bonsucro/Bonsucro EU RED mass balance CoC standard and Draft of revised Bonsucro CoC standard 16 October 2018

Scope: 71 SD Revision: September 2016

FSC CHAIN OF CUSTODY REVISION CROSSWALK (D3-0) Date: 15 June 2016

Certification Evaluation Report

Biofuel Sustainability Advisory Services

ifeu - Institut für Energie- und Umweltforschung Heidelberg GmbH 3. BioGrace calculation rules

Code of good practice for the monitoring of Mycotoxin in maize and maize co- products (feed materials) derived thereof

RSB Standard for EU market access

The sustainability criteria for biofuels in the Renewable Energy Directive and the Fuel Quality Directive

Verification of CI and Prevention of Land Use Change in Global Biofuel Supply

FSC CHAIN OF CUSTODY CROSSWALK V3-0 and V2-1 Date: January 1, 2017

TOOL 2 BETTER COTTON CHAIN OF CUSTODY GUIDELINES

Announcement of the Ministry of Agriculture of People's Republic of China

Alaska Responsible Fisheries Management (RFM) Chain of Custody Standard Issue 2.4 November 2015

ISCC Sustainability Certification for Palm Oil

RSB ROUNDTABLE ON SUSTAINABLE BIOMATERIALS RSB Standard for EU market access. Version 3.2 Publication Date 15 February 2018

CHAIN OF CUSTODY GLOSSARY OF TERMS AND DEFINITIONS

FAQ GMP+ FRA certification

Chain of Custody Standard

Chain of Custody Certification at a Glance

by 3 rd Party Verification

Contents The Bonsucro Certification System How to become a Bonsucro approved Certification Body? How to become Bonsucro certified?

ERGaR: Cross-border transfer of environmental characteristics of biomethane GIE-ERGaR-CEDEC Workshop

FSC Chain of Custody Requirements Checklist. Meet FSC CoC certification requirements

UNILEVER SUSTAINABLE SOURCING PROGRAMME FOR AGRICULTURAL RAW MATERIALS SCHEME RULES SAC April 2018 v1.2

Chain of Custody of Forest-Based Products Guidance for Use

This document describes the level of sampling, data management, and verification audits required to support claims against FSA performance levels.

Rainforest Alliance Chain-of-Custody Standard for Forest. Management Enterprises (FMEs)

Group Forest Management Certification Requirements

Section 13 Operating Procedures for Importers

Feedstock Classification, its Implications and Double Counting in EU Member States

CERTIFICATION CONTACT LIST - June 2017

MSPO Implementation and Voluntary Schemes in Malaysia

FSC, A.C. All rights reserved. FSC-SECR of 14 TABLE OF CONTENTS. FSC Policy Series No P002

FSC STANDARD. Chain of Custody Evaluations. Forest Stewardship Council FSC-STD V2-0 EN ACCREDITATION

Application of EUTR Compatible Due Diligence in Sustainable Biomass Sourcing

GTP temporary monitoring for aflatoxin in maize crops. and maize co-products derived thereof in feed materials

Ease of Doing Business Duty Free Warehousing

PEFC contribution to the review. of the EU Timber Regulation

Marks and Spencer Group Plc. PAS 2060:2014 Specification for the demonstration of carbon neutrality

Table of Contents. CCS - Implementation Manual 2013 Textile Exchange. Introduction CCS Standard Interpretations... 4

Sustainable commodity traceability systems

Requirements for Certification Bodies operating Certification against the PEFC International Chain of Custody Standard

Qualifying Explanatory Statement for PAS 2060 Declaration of Achievement to Carbon Neutrality

Fresh wood based fiber sourcing policy

SECTION 4 SFI Standard

Final Proposal for Technical Working Group on Scope 2 Accounting and Reporting October I. Summary of Scope 2 Accounting and Reporting Steps

Status of Implementation of RED GHG Requirements

Checklist. For verifying KRAV s extra requirements in the KRAV standards chapter 16 (edition 2016 and 2017).

TRAINING MANUAL. Good Inside Portal Traceability System Member Area

Energy Efficiency Law

Understanding Organics and the Regulations Governing this Market By Brad Rush, Briess Malt & Ingredients Company, Chilton, Wisconsin

Better Cotton Chain of Custody Guidelines

RSB Standard on communications and claims

REA response to DECC Consultation on the Woodfuel guidance for providing bespoke evidence

SUPPLIER POLICIES AND PROCEDURES

Scope Change Audit.

A Guide to Chain of Custody

COC-Section. Audit Checklist PEFC COC. material/products. Guidance to auditor(s):

Featuring 100 % renewable cartons

azbil Group Guidelines for the Establishment of a Chemical Substances Management System For Suppliers Third Edition: March, 2015

Information sheet 64. Food safety guarantees in the food chain regarding the hazards of raw materials

Tat Smith. University of Toronto & IEA Bioenergy Task 43 Biomass Feedstocks for Energy Markets

ISCC Integrity Program

Transcription:

ISCC PLUS 204-01 Mass Balance Requirements Mass Balance Requirements ISCC PLUS 204-01 V 2.1

Copyright notice ISCC 2016 This ISCC document is protected by copyright. It is freely available from the ISCC website or upon request. No part of this copyrighted document might be changed or amended. The document might not be duplicated or copied in any form or by any means for commercial purpose without permission of ISCC. Document title: ISCC PLUS 204-01 Issue date: 28 June 2016 Mass Balance Requirements

Content 1 Definitions... 4 2 Introduction... 5 3 Scope... 5 4 Normative references... 5 5 Mass balance calculation methodology... 6 5.1 General requirements... 6 5.2 Calculation of conversion factors... 7 5.3. Mass balance calculation methodology... 7 5.4 Mixture boundaries... 9 5.4.1 Definition of the periodical boundary... 10 5.4.2 Definition of the spatial boundary... 10 ISCC PLUS 204-01 Mass Balance Requirements 3 of 10

1 Definitions Raw material: Input material: Output material: Sustainability characteristics: ISCC COMPLIANT Sustainability declaration The primary feedstock in a production chain (e.g. rapeseed, corn, sugarcane etc.) The material, which the certified location receives from suppliers for storing, trading or processing The material, which the certified location has stored or produced and intends to sell and/or deliver to its customers Sustainability characteristics describe properties that are assigned to material that is handled under ISCC. Materials with different sets of sustainability characteristics have to be kept separately at least on a quantity bookkeeping basis. ISCC COMPLIANT means that the entire upstream supply chain, including the cultivation of the raw material is certified according to ISCC, and that the material used consists entirely of ISCC material, at least on a quantity bookkeeping basis. The sustainability declaration refers to the document, which must accompany the physical material and which includes all sustainability information requirements as referred to by ISCC. It can either be part of or an addition to the delivery note. Depending on the element in the supply chain, one can also refer to the sustainability declaration as weighbridge tickets, delivery notes or bill of lading. Further information on the sustainability declaration are provide in ISCC PLUS 203 Requirements for Traceability An amount of material with the same sustainability characteristics, which is delivered to a certified party or sold. For each batch, a sustainability declaration is issued. ISCC PLUS 204-01 Mass Balance Requirements 4 of 10

2 Introduction Different ISCC requirements for agricultural production and the downstream supply chain exist. While the agricultural producers must comply with ISCC PLUS 202 Sustainability Requirements for the Production of Biomass, the supply chain shall ensure the traceability of sustainability characteristics of material under ISCC. Therefore, all certified elements need to comply with the requirements of the ISCC PLUS 203 Requirements for Traceability and with at least one of the chain of custody options. The chain of custody option Mass balance allows the physical mixing of batches while the bookkeeping for different sustainability characteristics must be separated. This document describes all relevant requirements of quantity bookkeeping and the mass balance calculation methodology. 3 Scope The supply chain elements, for which the mass balance option might apply, are: (1) First gathering point (warehouses or traders which source (buy) sustainable biomass directly from farms or plantations with the aim to store, trade and/or process sustainable biomass) (2) Warehouse (Storage of sustainable biomass on demand of the first gathering point, i.e. the warehouse is located in the supply chain prior to the first gathering point and shall not buy biomass from farms and sell it to customers) (3) Conversion units for sustainable feedstock and products (e.g. oil mills, sugar mills refinery, saw mill) (4) Trader/warehouse (Storage and/or trade of sustainable biomass or bio-based products after the first gathering point) (5) Transport of sustainable products (e.g. with truck, train, barge or vessel) 4 Normative references As a basic principle, all relevant ISCC PLUS documents are valid for the scope. The normative references display the documents whose contents are linked and have to be considered as conjoint points. Relevant references: ISCC PLUS 201 System Basics ISCC PLUS 203 Requirements for Traceability ISCC PLUS 204-01 Mass Balance Requirements 5 of 10

5 Mass balance calculation methodology 5.1 General requirements The mass balance system is a chain of custody option where sustainability characteristics remain assigned to batches of material on a bookkeeping basis, while the physical material can be mixed. A mixture can have any form where batches would normally be in contact, such as in a container, processing or logistical facility or a conversion site. Sustainability characteristics can include information on the type and origin of the feedstock, the certification scheme of the material and relevant Add-ons. For material with different sustainability characteristics, the certified party must keep separate bookkeeping. The bookkeeping of an ISCC PLUS certified party must be separated according to: 1. Different types of input materials (also indicating the type of raw material) and countries of origin of the raw materials 2. Different sustainability characteristics a. One mass balance for all volumes of material compliant with ISCC. If the input material is acquired as ISCC COMPLIANT, the product can be sold as ISCC COMPLIANT 1 b. One mass balance for all volumes of input material that additionally fulfil voluntary Add-ons (e.g. 202-01, 202-02, 202-03, 202-03, 205-01) (one bookkeeping for each Add-on or different sets of Add-ons) c. One mass balance for input materials, whose country of origin of the raw material is Germany, and which are acquired as SAI GOLD COMPLIANT or SAI SILVER COMPLIANT but not as ISCC COMPLIANT. Products can be sold as SAI GOLD COMPLIANT or SAI SILVER COMPLIANT but not as ISCC COMPLIANT 3. If more than one chain of custody option is applied a. One mass balance for products under chain of custody option Physical Segregation referring to strictness of segregation (Hard IP or Soft IP: see also 204-02) b. One mass balance for products under chain of custody option Mass Balance Within the bookkeeping, batches of input materials, which are of the same type (same raw material), have the same sustainability characteristics and are handled under the same chain of custody option, can be merged. es of input materials, which are of different type, have different or no sustainability characteristics or are not handled under the same chain of custody option, must be kept separate in the bookkeeping. The relevant information must remain assigned to the mixture within the bookkeeping. If the input material is processed or subject to losses, appropriate conversion factors must be used to adjust the size of a batch accordingly. Conversion factors and the resulting changes in amounts have to be document- 1 Or as SAI SILVER COMPLIANT ISCC PLUS 204-01 Mass Balance Requirements 6 of 10

ed and shall be subject to verification during the audit. Further requirements on the calculation of a conversion factor are provided in chapter 5.2. If a physical mixture is split up, the sustainability characteristics in the mass balance can be assigned to any physical batch. However, a prerequisite is that the sustainability characteristics attached to a certain batch of output material comply with the information on sustainability characteristics in the company s mass balance. Once, a certified party has treated material under the chain of custody approach Mass balance, the material can never be sold as physical segregated (see also 204-02). If both chain of custody options are applied in a certified party, it must be guaranteed that no material assigned to mass balance can enter a physically segregated value chain. 5.2 Calculation of conversion factors Within the mass balance calculation conversion factors have to be provided for all elements of the production and distribution chain where company internal processes include conversion/processing or losses. The conversion factor describes the loss during the conversion of an input material to an output material and is defined as follows: C (%) = Ao/Ai * 100 C: Conversion factor Ai: Amount of process input material Ao: Amount of output yielded by the internal process based on input Ai Under the framework of the mass balance calculation the amount of sold or withdrawn sustainable products within one mass balance period should not be larger than the product of the amount Ai going into the process multiplied by the conversion factor C. 5.3. Mass balance calculation methodology If the certified party wants to use the chain of custody option mass balance, the quantity credit methodology shall be used. es of sustainable (may have different sustainability characteristics materials and batches of non-sustainable materials can be physically mixed within a company internal process. However, they need to be kept strictly separated in the bookkeeping. ISCC PLUS 204-01 Mass Balance Requirements 7 of 10

ISCC$PLUS$cer+fied$party*$ Physical Physical)batches) with)different) sustainability) a3ributes) $123$ Rapessed$oil! $124$ Rapeseed$oil! $125$ Rapeseed$oil$ $ 127$ $128$ $129$ $130$ $131$ $132$ Physical)mixture)of) material)with) different) sustainability) a3ributes)and)non; sustainable) material) $126$ Rapeseed$oil$ *conversion)factor)=)1) $133$ Input Company internal process Output Bookkeeping No. Kind Attribute Amount (t) 123 1000 PLUS certified site, 202-01 124 Rapese 600 EU certified site, 202-01 ed oil 125 300 PLUS certified site 126 Non-sustain. 200 No. 127 Kind Rapes eed oil Attribute ISCC compliant, 202-01 Amount (t) * cf = 1 1600 1600 ISCC compliant 300 300 Non-sustain. 200 200 No. Kind Attribute Amount (t) 128 500 PLUS certified site, 202-01 129 600 PLUS certified site, 202-01 Rapese 130 500 ed oil PLUS certified site, 202-01 131 300 PLUS certified site 132 Non-sustain. 100 133 Non-sustain. 100 Total 2100 Total 2100 Total 2100 Figure 1: Quantity credit methodology (Cf=1) Any element in the supply chain, which is certified under ISCC PLUS can buy ISCC COM- PLIANT input material from any party certified under ISCC (DE, EU, PLUS) and can sell the output as ISCC COMPLIANT material under its ISCC PLUS certificate. Thus, as shown in figure 1, the ISCC COMPLIANT input materials from an ISCC PLUS certified party (batch 123) and from an ISCC EU certified party (batch 124) can be merged in the mass balance. 125 has different sustainability characteristics (does not fulfil Add-on 202-01) and thus cannot be merged with batches 123 and 124. Merging within the bookkeeping is only possible if the input materials have similar sustainability characteristics (see also figure 2). Within the mass balance period (see also chapter 5.4.1, batches of sustainable output materials with the same sustainability characteristics can be arbitrarily split within the bookkeeping as long as the total amount does not exceed the quantity credit (batch 128 133 in figure 2). Within the bookkeeping of figure 1, batches 132 and 133 (which are physically a mixture of sustainable and non sustainable material) are declared as non-sustainable. The outgoing batches 128 till 131 are declared as ISCC COMPLIANT. The sustainability characteristics have to be stated on the sustainability declaration of the output material. Figure 2 shows examples of bookkeeping of sustainable material with different sustainability characteristics of a party both certified under ISCC PLUS and ISCC EU. Such parties have to keep a separate mass balance for ISCC EU (the respective ISCC EU requirements apply). This mass balance shall at least comprise all ISCC EU material, which has not explicitly been claimed to be ISCC COMPLIANT. ISCC PLUS 204-01 Mass Balance Requirements 8 of 10

$123! ISCC$PLUS$and$ISCC$EU$cer/fied$party$ (Cf$=$1)$ $129! Physical Physical)batches) with)different) sustainability) a7ributes) $124! $125$ $126$ $ 128$ $130! $131$ $132$ Physical)mixture) of)material)with) different) sustainability) a7ributes) $127$ $133$ Input Company internal process Output No. Kind Attribute Amou nt (t) No. Kind Attribute Amou nt (t) *cf=1 No. Kind Attribute Amou nt (t) Bookkeeping 123 124 125 126 127 rapese ed oil PLUS certified site, 202-01 I EU certified site, 202-01 PLUS certified site, 205-01 EU certified site* Other EC-recognized RED scheme 1000 600 300 200 100 128 rapese ed oil ISCC PLUS, ISCC comp., 202-01 ISCC PLUS or ISCC EU, ISCC comp., 205-01 ISCC EU, ISCC comp.* 1600 1600 300 300 200 200 RED compliant 100 100 Total 2200 129 130 131 132 133 rape seed oil ISCC compliant under ISCC PLUS certificate, 202-01 ISCC compliant under ISCC PLUS certificate, 205-01 ISCC compliant under ISCC EU certificate.* RED compliant under ISCC EU certificate RED compliant under ISCC EU certificate 1600 400 100 50 50 Total 2200 Total 2200 * 126 has the same GHG value as batch 125 Figure 2: Assigning sustainability characteristics to outgoing batches at a party certified under ISCC PLUS and ISCC EU (Cf=1) In figure 2 batches 123 and 124 have the same sustainability characteristics. Thus they can be merged to one mass balance in the company s bookkeeping. ISCC EU material always fulfils GHG emission requirements (Add-on 205-01 under ISCC PLUS). As batch 126 has the same GHG value as batch 125, both fulfil the same requirements and could be merged. If both batches had different GHG values, they could not be merged in the mass balance. However, the highest GHG value could be used for both batches. In this case, one mass balance would be possible. If batches 125 and 126 are merged, they could only be sold under the ISCC PLUS certificate, as batch 125 comes from a PLUS certified party and thus, is not recognized under ISCC EU. If batch 126 shall be sold under the ISCC EU certificate, a merging of both batches in the mass balance would not be possible. On the output site, the ISCC EU certified party sells 100 t of the initial batch 126 under the ISCC EU certificate (batch 131). The other 100 t of batch 126 are sold under the ISCC PLUS certificate and merged with batches 125 to batch 130. For batch 127 a separate mass balance is required, as this batch is not ISCC COMPLIANT and thus cannot be integrated in the ISCC PLUS mass balance. However, it can be sold as RED COMPLIANT under the ISCC EU certificate (see batches 132 and 133). 5.4 Mixture boundaries If mass balance is applied as chain of custody option a physical mixture of sustainable and non-sustainable products is possible within certain periodical and spatial boundaries. The definition of the periodical and spatial boundary is of crucial importance for the mass balance calculation. The periodical boundary defines the timeframe in which the mass balance of sus- ISCC PLUS 204-01 Mass Balance Requirements 9 of 10

tainable in- and output material must be balanced. The spatial boundary defines for which spatial entity (location) the mass balance must be applied. 5.4.1 Definition of the periodical boundary The mass balance calculation requires the definition of the timeframe for which the outgoing batches of sustainable output material have to be balanced with the incoming batches of sustainable input material. The balance in the system can be continuous in time, in which case a deficit, i.e. that at any point in time more sustainable material has been withdrawn than has been added, is required not to occur. Alternatively the balance could be achieved over an appropriate period of time and regularly verified. The maximum timeframe (period) for the ISCC mass balance calculation is three months. Within the three months period the bookkeeping system does allow to go short of sustainable material. However, for the overall bookkeeping period, the amounts of incoming sustainable input material with specific sustainability characteristics and the amounts of outgoing sustainable output material with specific sustainability characteristics equivalent to the input material must be balanced. If more sustainable material (including existing inventory of sustainable material) was received within one mass balance period than was dispatched, the surplus of sustainable material in the bookkeeping is called the positive credit. If the physical inventory of sustainable and non-sustainable material at the end of the 3-month mass balancing period is lower than the positive credit, the credit can be fully transferred into the next mass balance period. This credit transfer is only possible for three subsequent mass balance periods (this means a maximum period of 12 months). Latest after the 4 th mass balance period, physical material inventory and credits must be balanced. If (after the 4th mass balance period) more credits than physical material are available, the surplus credits cannot be transferred into the next mass balance period (i.e. these credits expire). ISCC PLUS system users must document the starting date (and end date) of their mass balance periods. The auditor must verify the correct transfer of credits during the audit. 5.4.2 Definition of the spatial boundary Generally the mass balance must be site specific. Credits achieved within one site s mass balance cannot be transferred to another site s mass balance. However, conversion units and warehouses, which are certified under ISCC PLUS, are able to transfer positive credits to other conversion units or warehouses which are located either within national borders or located in a neighbouring country (sharing the same border). Only in this case the positive credit can be booked out of the mass balance of one unit and booked into the mass balance of another unit (other geographical location). The advantage of this procedure is significant reduction of material transport and related greenhouse gas emissions. ISCC PLUS 204-01 Mass Balance Requirements 10 of 10