McDonald County Press

Fuel Mandates Raise Prices At Pump, Plate

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WASHINGTON, D.C. – The Environmen­tal Protection Agency in May released a proposed 2017 required volume obligation for biofuels under the renewable fuel standard (RFS) that will require refiners to blend up to 18.8 billion gallons of biofuels into the U.S. fuel supply next year. The mandate for convention­al corn-based ethanol was proposed to be 14.8 billion gallons, up from 14.5 billion gallons for 2016.

“EPA is proposing to guarantee a record domestic volume to ethanol producers for the fifth year in a row,” said Mike Brown, President of the National Chicken Council. Brown noted that the proposed volume equates to nearly 10.4 percent of projected total fuel use in 2017 according to the Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion’s projection­s. “In creating an artificial demand for corn based ethanol beyond what the fuel market can bear, the EPA’s proposal will certainly have unintended consequenc­es for other corn users who are not guaranteed market growth for their products,” continued Brown. “If the EPA proposal stays put, consumers will see higher prices at the pump and on the plate,” according to Brown.

Up to 70 percent of the cost of feed for the broiler industry is the cost of corn. Since the RFS was implemente­d, the broiler industry has faced $53 billion in higher actual feed costs. “The unrealisti­c volume for ethanol proposed today by the EPA ensures that the chicken industry, as well as all of animal agricultur­e, remains only one flood, freeze, or drought away from another crisis,” concluded Brown.

— National Chicken Council

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