Yorkshire Post

MPs make plea for ‘greener’ fuel to be available by end of the year

- BEN BARNETT AGRICULTUR­AL CORRESPOND­ENT

A CROSS-PARTY group of influentia­l MPs is demanding an end to months of ministeria­l indecision by urging the Government to introduce a more environmen­tally friendly fuel by the end of the year.

E10 is a mixture of regular unleaded petrol blended with 10 per cent bioethanol, which is a lowcarbon renewable fuel that advocates claim would cut carbon emissions equivalent to taking 700,000 cars off the road if it was made available at the pumps.

The fuel is a ready-made solution to meeting emissions targets and of great benefit to farmers, MP Neil Parish said, as he joined colleagues in writing a joint letter to Transport Secretary Chris Grayling and Environmen­t Secretary Michael Gove, and others, urging them to make the fuel available by the end of 2018.

Mr Parish, chairman of the parliament­ary watchdog Environmen­t Select Committee, said: “Several Parliament­ary committees have expressed frustratio­n at the slow speed with which we are trying to tackle emissions from road transport whilst also reminding us of the need to keep carbon emissions reductions and air quality tightly bound together. Here we have a readyand-waiting solution which is also of huge benefit to British farmers and it’s about time we got on with implementi­ng it.”

Bioethanol is fermented from feed wheat which is grown by British farmers and is of a lower grade than that considered for human consumptio­n.

As well as the supply-chain benefits to farmers, a byproduct of the bioenthona­l production process is a protein-rich animal feed for livestock which displaces potentiall­y less sustainabl­e imported soy products.

About 2,000 farms across the UK rely on the domestic bioethanol market, which is worth about £150m to British agricultur­e.

Nearly 900 farms across the UK, including many in East Yorkshire, supply 1.1m tonnes of feed wheat a year to Hull-based bioethanol producer Vivergo. The business produces up to 420m litres of bioethanol annually, enough to meet about half of the UK’s current demand, but its £350m plant was shut down for four months last November due to poor market conditions and a lack of legislativ­e progress on E10.

Now, MPs and other signatorie­s of the letter to the Government, including Shadow Transport Minister Karl Turner, former Transport Minister Robert Goodwill, former Deputy Prime Minister Lord Prescott and East Yorkshire farmer Lord Haskins, want the Government to mandate E10’s introducti­on.

It is already widely used in France, Belgium and the USA and typically offers about 60 per cent carbon savings compared to standard petrol. Hull MP Karl Turner said “very good-quality jobs” at Vivergo must be protected as he went on to say: “It’s absolutely essential for farmers. They have been made promises as well and I don’t know why the Government won’t act.”

A Government spokespers­on said: “We are committed to reducing carbon emissions from transport to help tackle climate change, and to making the sector as sustainabl­e as possible.

“Last month we set out ambitious targets to double the use of renewable fuels, reduce our reliance on imported fossil diesel and deliver emissions savings equal to taking hundreds of thousands of cars off the road by 2032.” OTTRINGHAM:

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