Los Angeles Times

Biodiesel industry faces mixed forecast

- By Rob Nikolewski rob.nikolewski@sduniontri­bune.com

As a new presidenti­al administra­tion comes into power, ambiguity reigns for the biodiesel industry.

But at the same time, the California market appears to be growing solidly for the fuel derived from products including soybeans, canola oil and animal fats.

“We have learned to thrive on uncertaint­y,” said Jennifer Case, president of New Leaf Biofuel, based in San Diego. “We are a scrappy industry.”

Case was one of about 800 attendees at the industry’s biggest annual get-together, the National Biodeisel Conference and Expo, which ended Thursday at the San Diego Convention Center.

“We’re heading up,” said Donnell Rehagen, chief executive of the National Biodiesel Board. “We’re in a growth pattern.”

The pattern may be disrupted. A $1-per-gallon tax credit for biofuels expired Dec. 31. Although the credit has always been retroactiv­ely extended in the past, there are indication­s that Donald Trump’s administra­tion may take a harder line on renewable energy mandates.

“They should absolutely be nervous,” said Robert Rapier, chief energy analyst for Investing Daily.

Trump went on the record on the campaign trail saying he supported the Renewable Fuel Standard, the federal program that has been the lifeblood not only of biodiesel but other biofuels such as biodiesel’s controvers­ial cousin, ethanol.

But the RFS is administer­ed by the Environmen­tal Protection Agency and Trump’s appointee to head the EPA is Oklahoma Atty. Gen. Scott Pruitt, who has criticized the fuel standard.

“I don’t think they have the support to get rid of [the RFS] because you’ve got a lot of bipartisan senators and representa­tives from farm states who support the renewable fuel standard,” Rapier said. “But the EPA has a lot of discretion where they can set that target.”

Pruitt’s confirmati­on hearings started Wednesday in the Senate, where he promised to carry out the RFS mandate.

Should Pruitt get confirmed, Rapier said, “he may say, ‘All right, I can’t get rid of [the RFS] but I can certainly set the mandate lower.’ ”

The story is much different in California. The state has created the Low Carbon Fuel Standard to help meet California’s aggressive climate targets, such as reducing greenhouse gas emissions 40% below 1990 levels by 2030.

“The policy demands more and more emissions reductions at an increasing rate,” said Ryan Lamberg, executive director of the California Biodiesel Initiative.

That opens the door for biodiesel, which is cleaner than standard diesel fuel.

Biodiesel consumptio­n in California is expected to reach 350 million gallons this year, up from 14 million gallons five years ago, said Shelby Neal, director of state government­al affairs for the National Biodiesel Board.

“It is completely because of the Low Carbon Fuel Standard,” said Neal, who spends part of his time lobbying for the industry in Sacramento. “Biodiesel has the lowest carbon score of any of the liquid fuels. So basically that makes it the cheapest compliance option.”

That’s good news for producers like Case, whose 31employee company recycles cooking oil from restaurant­s across San Diego County. Last year, the company produced 5 million gallons of fuel from the oil.

“We have policies in the state of California that are supporting us right now,” Case said. “We have to double down on this. Federal has to catch up with California.”

Biofuels have faced criticism from refiners who don’t like being required to blend ethanol into the U.S. gasoline supply and free-market economists say tax credit regimes shift costs — usually onto taxpayers.

“Biodiesel doesn’t have as high a profile but the oil companies still don’t like it,” Rapier said. “They don’t like being told you have to blend a competing product. They might do it anyway if the price was right, but they don’t like being told regardless of the price, you gotta put this into the fuel system.”

In November, the EPA said the amount of cornbased ethanol blended into the nation’s fuel supply must increase from 14.5 billion gallons to 15 billion gallons while advanced biofuels such as biodiesel and cellulosic ethanol must rise from 3.6 billion gallons to 4.3 billion.

 ?? Nelvin C. Cepeda San Diego Union-Tribune ?? BIODIESEL CONFERENCE attendees look at the new biodiesel Nissan Titan truck in San Diego.
Nelvin C. Cepeda San Diego Union-Tribune BIODIESEL CONFERENCE attendees look at the new biodiesel Nissan Titan truck in San Diego.

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