RSB Issues RED III Compliance Guidance for Biofuel Certification Operators

RSB Issues RED III Compliance Guidance for Biofuel Certification Operators Photo via Unsplash
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RSB Issues RED III Compliance Guidance for Biofuel Certification Operators

RED IIIRSBbiofuel certificationReFuelEUEU regulation
June 01, 2026  •  2 min read
The Roundtable on Sustainable Biomaterials (RSB) has published comprehensive RED III compliance guidance for biofuel operators, establishing a certification framework that harmonises the EU’s revised Renewable Energy Directive with on-the-ground fuel production and verification procedures. Released on 30 April 2026, the guidance package marks a critical operational milestone for renewable fuel producers—including advanced biofuel, biogas, and synthetic e-fuel operators—seeking to demonstrate compliance with Europe’s updated sustainability criteria and greenhouse-gas-savings thresholds.
30 April 2026
RSB guidance publication date
RED III
Revised EU Renewable Energy Directive
RSB
Certification scheme publisher
Biofuel operators
Primary compliance audience

Operational bridge between RED III requirements and certification practice

The RSB guidance translates RED III’s legislative text into actionable certification procedures. Biofuel and renewable fuel operators must demonstrate compliance with sustainability criteria covering land-use-change risk, lifecycle greenhouse gas savings, and chain-of-custody traceability. The framework applies to both conventional biofuels and advanced renewable fuels, including hydrogen-derived e-fuels and synthetic hydrocarbons produced via Power-to-Liquid routes that incorporate renewable electricity and captured CO₂.

By issuing standardised verification protocols, RSB enables economic operators to align internal quality-management systems with RED III mandates before national transposition deadlines. The guidance is designed to interoperate with existing voluntary schemes recognised under the Directive, reducing audit duplication and streamlining the path to market for compliant batches of renewable jet fuel, marine fuels, and road-transport liquids.

ReFuelEU and maritime applications: convergence of certification regimes

Although the RSB document focuses on RED III, its implications extend to the ReFuelEU Aviation regulation and the FuelEU Maritime framework. Both sectoral mandates reference RED III sustainability criteria when defining eligible renewable fuels of non-biological origin (RFNBOs)—the regulatory term for green hydrogen and Power-to-Liquid e-fuels. Lloyd’s Register’s recent ‘The Future of Maritime Fuels’ report, published on 26 May 2026, underscores the rising importance of methanol and hydrogen-based fuels in shipping decarbonisation scenarios, all of which require robust lifecycle certification to qualify for compliance credit under FuelEU Maritime’s greenhouse-gas-intensity limits.

For e-methanol producers and SAF refiners, the RSB guidance offers a tested certification pathway that satisfies both RED III’s renewable-fuel criteria and the stringent traceability requirements embedded in aviation and maritime regulations. This convergence simplifies multi-sectoral compliance for integrated renewable-fuel projects serving aviation, shipping, and land transport simultaneously.

Strategic timing and industry readiness

The 30 April 2026 release positions the RSB framework well ahead of RED III’s full national implementation across EU member states. Early adopters gain a competitive advantage by front-loading audits, securing certified batches for 2027 and 2028 ReFuelEU mandate volumes, and locking in offtake agreements with airlines and fuel blenders that demand proof of compliance. As Power-to-Liquid projects scale and electrolyser capacity expands, harmonised certification reduces transaction costs and accelerates market liquidity for certified renewable fuels, reinforcing the business case for capital-intensive e-fuel investments.

Bottom Line
RSB’s RED III compliance guidance, released 30 April 2026, provides biofuel and e-fuel operators with a practical certification toolkit that bridges EU legislative mandates and operational verification, ensuring that Power-to-Liquid producers, e-methanol refiners, and advanced biofuel plants can demonstrate sustainability credentials across ReFuelEU Aviation, FuelEU Maritime, and national renewable-transport schemes, thereby de-risking investment and accelerating market access for certified low-carbon fuels.

Sources

Featured image via Unsplash.

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