Biofuel Plants Need More Than Just an MRV Solution
As IRS guidance around 45Z has firmed up and agricultural feedstock requirements continue to expand across other biofuel markets, producers are receiving a growing number of pitches for MRV solutions. That outreach naturally raises an important question: What is an MRV solution and is it actually necessary for biofuel compliance?
MRV stands for Monitoring, Reporting, and Verification. The concept comes from the voluntary carbon market, where projects must prove that claimed emissions benefits are real, additional, quantifiable, verified, and permanent. In that context, MRV is essential. It provides the evidentiary backbone that allows voluntary offsets—from soil carbon projects to clean cookstove programs—to be issued, marketed, and trusted.
Compliance fuel markets operate under a very different model. Rather than relying on project-specific proof, these markets are governed by prescriptive rules established by regulators. Quantification methodologies are defined by central authorities such as Argonne National Laboratory (ANL), Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC), or the EU Joint Research Centre (JRC). As a result, the market does not need independent systems to prove emissions outcomes—the rules already do that.
For biofuel producers, the real challenge is not generating bespoke measurements. It is satisfying multiple compliance standards simultaneously, often using the same feedstock, across most or all of their production. Those systems must be efficient, scalable, and auditable, while allowing attributes to move through the supply chain and support stacking across programs (where permitted). In this environment, noncompliance is simply not an option.
While voluntary and compliance markets may converge over time, applying a traditional MRV framework to today’s biofuel compliance needs can create unnecessary cost and complexity. In many cases, it does not effectively align with how these markets are designed to function—a square peg in a round hole.
Indigo has been working in biofuel markets for the past four years, actively participating with regulators, industry groups, and producers to help shape and implement emerging feedstock requirements. Since 2024, we have supported multiple biofuel plants and their suppliers in operating 45Z programs, and we are now helping additional customers meet California LCFS requirements more efficiently through technology enabled compliance.
Our approach is built around efficient compliance at scale, rather than standalone MRV programs:
- Support the full supply chain while enabling attribute transfer through systems that are designed to fully leverage the flexibility of mass balance
- Aggressively automate data capture and compliance workflows to reduce burden, including synthetic field boundaries, regenerative practice detection, and inferred yields
- Broadly manage compliance across the entire swath of a customer’s contracted grain, not just a narrow subset of enrolled acres
- Provide third-party auditors with dedicated software tools intended to make verification faster, cheaper, and more reliable
- Treat compliance standards as modular features rather than siloed programs, allowing attributes to be stacked and transferred, where program rules allow
As biofuel compliance requirements continue to evolve, producers should take a step back before defaulting to traditional MRV solutions. The right question is not whether an MRV solution exists—but whether it is the right tool for the job. Producers who want to understand what efficient, compliance focused systems look like in practice can reach out to explore how these capabilities are implemented.