EPA Scraps Detailed Plan To Force US Refiners To Blend More Biofuels

EPA Scraps Detailed Plan To Force US Refiners To Blend More Biofuels
The US EPA ditched a detailed plan that would have forced refiners to blend more biofuels into their gasoline and diesel in 2019.

Reuters

NEW YORK, July 11 (Reuters) - The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency ditched a detailed plan that would have forced refiners to blend more biofuels into their gasoline and diesel in 2019 to compensate for volumes likely to be exempted under the agency's small refinery hardship waiver program, according to newly released EPA documents.

The plan would have boosted the renewable fuel blending obligation for the refining industry to 11.76 percent from 10.88 percent to offset volumes lost under the waiver program, which has been expanded sharply under President Donald Trump's EPA, and keep overall blended volumes on target.

The idea was aimed at assuaging the powerful U.S. corn lobby which has accused Trump's EPA of undermining demand for biofuels like corn-based ethanol through the waiver program, but was scrapped amid intense protest from the refining industry.

"What this shows is the EPA acknowledges it has the authority and the ability to reallocate the volumes lost under the small refinery exemption program,” Geoff Cooper, an executive at the Renewable Fuels Association, said on Wednesday.

The EPA said the documents reflect the agency's process for administering the Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS), which is done in conjunction with the departments of Energy and Agriculture as well as the White House.

The move would have likely rallied compliance credit prices that have plunged to multi-year lows amid reports of the agency’s expansion of the waiver program.

Contentious Program

Under the RFS, the EPA must set annual requirements for the volume of renewable fuels that oil refiners and other fuel companies must blend with their petroleum-based products. The 2005 policy has been a source of contention between powerful corn and oil lobbies in Washington.

The agency also has the power to exempt smaller refineries from the blending requirements if they can prove that complying with the regulation would cause them financial stress.

The EPA, under recently-resigned director Scott Pruitt, has roughly tripled the number of exemptions granted to small refiners, angering Midwest farmers and their legislative backers who say he effectively lowered the annual biofuels mandate.

Exemptions representing some 2.25 million gallons worth of biofuel were granted for 2017 and 2016, according to the EPA. That includes waivers covering 1.46 million compliance credits, called RINs, in 2017, the EPA said.

Under the scrapped plan, the EPA would have estimated the number of gallons of gasoline and diesel that would likely be exempted in 2019 under the small refinery waiver program and force the larger refineries to make up the difference.

The EPA projected some 8.18 billion gallons of gasoline and 5.44 billion gallons of diesel produced by small refiners would be exempt from the requirements in 2019, the documents showed.

The documents were published by the EPA as part of requirements aimed at providing the public more insight into federal decision making. Reuters and other news outlets reported on the EPA's 2019 volumes proposal, but the documents provide new details about the agency's approach.

The proposed changes came in a June 19th email from Tia Sutton of the EPA to the White House Office of Management and Budget. Pruitt, who resigned amid ethics scandals last week, had just returned from a Midwest tour where he met with farmers angry over his expansion of the exemption program.


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