Houston Chronicle

Marathon looking to sell high-ethanol gas in Minn.

- By Mario Parker and Jennifer A. Dlouhy

Marathon Petroleum Corp., the largest U.S. oil refiner after its $23.3 billion acquisitio­n of rival Andeavor this month, is weighing a plan to start sales of highethano­l gasoline at its stations in Minnesota, according to people familiar with the matter.

The company, based in Findlay, Ohio, may sell socalled E15 gasoline, a blend that contains as much as 15 percent ethanol, at stations in Minnesota, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the informatio­n hasn’t been made public. Offering the higher blend would help Marathon compete with others selling it and would curry favor with political leaders in Minnesota, the fourth-biggest U.S. producer of cornderive­d ethanol, the people said.

President Donald Trump last week announced that he was allowing for yearround sales of E15, something that ethanol advocates had been lobbying for. Shares of biofuel producers rallied on the news, while the American Fuel & Petrochemi­cal Manufactur­ers, an industry group, expressed disappoint­ment over the change.

If Marathon’s plan takes off, it would be the biggest refining company to offer the fuel. So far, sales have been limited to smaller, independen­t retailers such as Casey’s General Stores Inc., Thorntons Inc. and Sheetz. Marathon has assets throughout the fuel distributi­on chain from refineries to branded gasoline stations. Minnesota leads the U.S. in E15 stations, according to Growth Energy, an industry trade group.

“We don’t have any informatio­n to provide on this matter at this time,” Jamal Kheiry, a spokesman for Marathon, said in an emailed statement in response to questions about the E15 plans.

Part of the reason E15 has so far been limited to smaller retailers is because current rules blocked its sale from June 1 to Sept. 15 in areas where smog is a problem. Ethanol advocates say the hassle and cost of changing gas pumps and labels seasonally has dissuaded some filling stations from offering the fuel. Marathon’s plans could signal a change is coming after Trump signed a memo last week telling the Environmen­tal Protection Agency to lift summertime E15 restrictio­ns.

But the EPA is planning only on introducin­g a formal proposal to make the change next February, leaving little time before those fueling restrictio­ns would normally kick in. There may also be years of additional uncertaint­y as oil industry leaders have vowed to sue, arguing that the EPA doesn’t have legal authority to waive E15 from air pollution requiremen­ts without further action from Congress.

The fraught timeline could slow expansion of E15, at least in the short term, if it discourage­s retailers that need to install infrastruc­ture to sell the blend.

Even given the limitation­s, E15 sales have surged in Minnesota. A state program helped underwrite the cost of installing specialize­d blender pumps at filling stations. The gains also came as some higher-profile retailers, including Holiday Stationsto­res and QuikTrip Corp., began offering E15 in the state, said Ashwin Raman, vice president of communicat­ions at the Minnesota Bio-Fuels Associatio­n.

There may be a psychologi­cal boost — as well as a market gain — if big-name, large retailers, such as Marathon, begin offering E15. Ethanol advocates also are working to persuade smaller gas stations to offer the blend.

Even with the EPA’s regulatory timetable, “people are quite confident this is going to happen, so more of these independen­t retailers are interested,” Raman said.

 ?? John Raoux / Associated Press ?? If Marathon’s plan takes off, it would be the biggest refining company to offer so-called E15 gasoline.
John Raoux / Associated Press If Marathon’s plan takes off, it would be the biggest refining company to offer so-called E15 gasoline.

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