Singapore, along with an international standard setter for energy attributes, has developed a draft framework that could facilitate the cross-border trading of renewable energy certificates (RECs) within Southeast Asia.
This means that corporates in Singapore will be able to buy RECs originating from renewable energy sources in its neighbouring countries, and make exclusive claims on their emissions arising from their purchase of electricity, known as Scope 2 emissions.
While companies can already buy overseas RECs, it is complicated to track their environmental attributes across borders due to differences in government regulations across ASEAN, said the Ministry of Trade and Industry (MTI), the Energy Market Authority, and the International Tracking Standard Foundation in a joint statement on Tuesday (28 Oct).
The framework aims to help countries standardise their approaches for the tracking and accounting of cross-border RECs in three areas.
The first involves tracking the physical flow of electricity and the corresponding RECs; the second is in identifying REC registries and instruments permitted for cross-border electricity trading transactions; and the third approach relates to calculating the electricity that remains in a country’s power system after all renewable energy tracked by RECs has been subtracted.
“This framework will give companies that purchase cross-border RECs greater confidence to make exclusive claims for their sustainability reporting, without concerns that the same unit of renewable electricity is being claimed by some other entity,” read the statement.
It can also serve as a pathfinder project to complement ongoing efforts by the ASEAN Centre of Energy to develop a regional REC framework by 2027.
When completed after an industry consultation, which is underway, the framework will provide a template for ASEAN countries to account for the RECs that have been bought and sold across borders.