The Six ISCC Principles
The ISCC Principles Refer to the Agricultural Production of Biomass
To reduce environmental impacts, use resources more efficiently, and improve the capacity to adapt to, mitigate, and build resilience to climate change, biomass used in food, feed, chemical and energy markets must be produced sustainably. This means that the production of biomass should follow best environmental, social and economic practices. Areas, which are biodiverse or rich in carbon, which serve to protect threatened or vulnerable species, or which are of other ecological or cultural importance, need to be protected and should not be degraded or destroyed for biomass production. ISCC’s goal is to implement exactly that.
While ISCC Principle 1 covers the legal sustainability requirements of the European Commissions recast Renewable Energy Directive (RED II), ISCC Principles 2 – 6 have been developed in our multi-stakeholder dialogue and go beyond legal requirements. Non-conformities with the ISCC Principle 1 make a farm ineligible for ISCC certification. Violations of principles 2-6 can be corrected under certain circumstances. Thus, ISCC certification directly affects the environmental, social and economic performance of farms and plantations that did not meet all ISCC requirements prior to their certification.
Further Information
ISCC EU 202-1 – Agricultural Biomass: ISCC Principle 1
Biomass used in food, feed, chemical and energy markets should be produced in a sustainable way. This document then explains how the production of biomass should follow best environmental, social and economic practices.
ISCC EU 202-2 – Agricultural Biomass: ISCC Principles 2-6
ISCC Principles 2-6 contribute to the sustainable
cultivation of biomass and their products to support the reduction of environmental impacts, more efficient resource use and an increasing capacity for climate change adaptation and mitigation as well as climate resilience.