Texarkana Gazette

EPA tells refiners to raise biofuel blending by 9.5%

- JENNIFER A. DLOUHY AND KIM CHIPMAN

WASHINGTON — The U.S. is ordering refiners to boost the use of biofuels such as corn-based ethanol, as the Biden administra­tion tries to strike a balance between competing political and economic pressures while gasoline prices soar.

The U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency is requiring refiners to mix 20.63 billion gallons of renewable fuels into gasoline and diesel this year — a 9.5% increase over last year’s target. In a final rule posted online Friday, the agency also said it was retroactiv­ely paring the 2020 biofuel-blending quota to 17.13 billion gallons and setting the overall 2021 target at 18.84 billion gallons to reflect actual consumptio­n.

The mandates come as President Joe Biden battles record-high gasoline prices, climbing food costs and inflationa­ry pressures that threaten the U.S. economic recovery as well as Democrats’ grip on Congress after the November midterm elections. The EPA said the moves were meant to help put the nation’s Renewable Fuel Standard program into a growth mode and propel market demand for alternativ­es to petroleum-based gasoline and diesel.

“We are laser-focused on providing more options for consumers at the pump, and today we are taking steps to increase the availabili­ty of homegrown biofuels,” EPA Administra­tor Michael S. Regan said in a statement. “Today’s actions will help to reduce our reliance on oil and put the [Renewable Fuel Standard] program back on track after years of challenges and mismanagem­ent.”

Refiners argued the 2022 target is so ambitious it would also boost industry compliance costs with some of the burden passed on to consumers. Refining advocates and their allies in Congress had unsuccessf­ully appealed to the administra­tion for a significan­t reduction, arguing the 2022 target is contingent on promised renewable diesel production coming online and will strain the available pool of tradable credits used to prove quotas have been fulfilled.

The 2022 quota “is bewilderin­g and contrary to the administra­tion’s claims to be doing everything in their power to provide relief to consumers,” said Chet Thompson, head of the American Fuel and Petrochemi­cal Manufactur­ers associatio­n. “Unachievab­le mandates will needlessly raise fuel production costs and further threaten the viability of U.S. small refineries, both at the expense of consumers.”

Biofuel producers, however, cheered the administra­tion’s approach for 2022, saying it recognizes the industry’s room for growth.

The plan for 2022 shows the Biden administra­tion intends to “lean in” on biofuels, said Emily Skor, head of the ethanol advocacy group Growth Energy. “We are finally getting to the place where the [fuel program] is starting to be administer­ed the way it is supposed to be administer­ed.”

The final 2022 target hews close to an earlier proposal advanced last year to require some 20.77 billion gallons of renewable fuels. As many as 15 billion gallons of the new target could be fulfilled with convention­al renewable fuels, such as ethanol, with advanced biofuels supplying at least 5.63 billion gallons. That reflects a decrease from the 5.77 billion gallon advanced biofuel target initially proposed for 2022.

In its analysis of the final rule, the EPA concluded the new targets would have a negligible impact on gasoline prices.

The EPA also rejected applicatio­ns from 69 small refineries seeking exemptions from earlier quotas spanning 2016 to 2021 — but is proposing to give small refineries more time to comply with those past targets.

Refiners and fuel importers also will be required to blend an additional 250 million gallons of biofuels this year on top of the quotas in an EPA bid to address a court-ordered rebuke of six-year-old targets.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States