Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Biofuel quota waivers draw fire

Refinery competitor­s object to EPA-granted exemptions

- JENNIFER A. DLOUHY, MARIO PARKER AND LAURA BLEWITT

The Environmen­tal Protection Agency has given more than two dozen small refiners permission to ignore the nation’s renewable-fuel mandate, angering competitor­s as well as farm-state lawmakers who say the exceptions undermine the program.

Roughly 30 refineries are seeking waivers from the Renewable Fuel Standard for the 2017 compliance year, and so far at least 25 have won them, according to two people familiar with the process.

Allowing refineries to escape annual blending quotas “fundamenta­lly undermines” the mandate requiring refiners and fuel importers to mix ethanol and other biofuels into gasoline and diesel, said Sen. Chuck Grassley, a Republican from Iowa and fierce defender of the U.S. renewable- fuel requiremen­t.

“It appears EPA granted a secret waiver that is legally reserved for small refiners to one of the largest oil refining companies in the country,” Grassley said in an emailed statement.

The waivers are being issued under a program Congress establishe­d in the Renewable Fuel Standard law that allows small refineries to be granted temporary exemptions if they can prove complying with the quotas would cause them to suffer hardship.

“The criteria used to grant waivers has not changed since previous administra­tions,” EPA spokesman Liz Bowman said by email. “EPA

follows a long-standing, establishe­d process where the agency uses a [Department of Energy] analysis to inform decisions about refiner exemptions.”

The American Petroleum Institute, which has members including Royal Dutch Shell BP, and other large oil companies, has warned against refinery-specific exemptions, arguing they create uncertaint­y and distort a “level playing field.”

To qualify for a waiver, such small refineries must have processed no more than 75,000 barrels per day of crude in 2006.

Until 2010, 59 eligible refiners received the exemptions

automatica­lly each year. Later, the EPA began vetting applicatio­ns individual­ly, guided by Energy Department recommenda­tions.

Now, 38 refineries are eligible under the program — and roughly 30 of them formally asked for relief from the 2017 biofuel quotas, one person said. The people asked to speak anonymousl­y so they could candidly discuss the biofuel waiver program Congress designed to be secretive, with company-specific informatio­n shielded from public view.

The agency is still working through applicatio­ns, so more than 25 refineries ultimately may win the valuable exemptions for the 2017 compliance year. The agency is granting those requests more liberally, after a federal court ruling last

year that rejected the EPA’s previous, stricter approach.

Among the 2017 waiver recipients: some of Andeavor’s 10 refineries, according to a person familiar with the approval, and Calumet Specialty Products Partners LP, which said in an April 2 filing that the EPA had granted its refineries hardship exemptions for 2017 and 2016.

Exxon Mobil Corp. also may be eligible to receive a waiver for its 61,500 barrel-aday facility in Billings, Mont. Company spokesman Sarah Nordin couldn’t immediatel­y be reached by email or phone for comment.

The EPA granted exemption for 14 refineries for the 2016 compliance year. In addition to Calumet and Delek, HollyFront­ier Corp. said in regulatory filings that waivers

it received last year helped it pare $57.8 million in compliance costs.

When the EPA grants exemptions after setting annual biofuel quotas, it doesn’t redistribu­te the requiremen­ts to other refiners — so each waiver effectivel­y lowers the overall amount of renewable fuel required nationwide.

Emily Skor, head of the Growth Energy coalition of renewable fuel advocates, said the exemption rush “is not tenable,” and is “wholly inconsiste­nt” with the pledge by President Donald Trump’s pledge to uphold the biofuel mandate. “It’s gravely concerning.”

Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Ari Natter, Ryan Beene, Barbara Powell and Simon Casey of Bloomberg News.

 ?? Bloomberg News ?? A worker prepares to load ethanol into a tank car at the Poet biofuel refinery in Jewell, Iowa, in February.
Bloomberg News A worker prepares to load ethanol into a tank car at the Poet biofuel refinery in Jewell, Iowa, in February.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States