Gulf Times

Trump’s ethanol plan: Hype now, legal fights later

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US President Donald Trump’s hyping of a plan to boost ethanol demand drew cheers at an Iowa rally on Tuesday, but the oil refining industry has promised a lawsuit to block the move, so victory for Midwest farmers is far from certain.

Trump indicated that the US Environmen­tal Protection Agency should allow for a waiver for higher-ethanol gasoline, known as E15, to be sold all year, which has been prohibited due to smog concerns.

He did not mention the threatened lawsuit and was not asked about it.

The hitch, according to industry experts as well as legal precedent, is that Trump needs an act of Congress to change the rule.

New Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh wrote in 2012 that EPA cannot change the rule unless congress changes the law, and the refining industry has promised to sue if the agency tries.

Still, some ethanol industry experts said Trump’s political support in farm states will give him enough cover to push either Congress or regulators to act. US gasoline sold in the summer contains 10% ethanol.

For years, the biofuel industry has sought to lift the summer ban on E15, with 15% ethanol, to boost domestic demand for corn-based ethanol.

Since Trump took office, there has been a tug of war over ethanol policy within his administra­tion.

Trump’s former adviser, billionair­e oilman Carl Icahn, led an effort to change rules requiring refiners to blend biofuels into gasoline or pay for credits for those who can.

The biofuels industry and Democrats blasted his efforts, saying his ownership in refining company CVR Energy created a conflict of interest. Icahn ultimately stepped aside as a presidenti­al adviser. Trump has tried to thread the needle between the rival corn and oil industries, seeking ways to boost overall ethanol demand while giving refiners relief from the cost.

The administra­tion could not secure assurances from the refining industry not to sue over lifting the ban on E15.

But with midterm elections looming, Trump moved ahead anyway, siding with Farm Belt supporters who helped secure his narrow 2016 election victory.

Several industry experts said the Clean Air Act forbids such a change without Congressio­nal action.

“EPA can’t change a rule that’s created by the Congress,” said Jonathan Lewis, senior counsel for Clean Air Task Force, a nonprofit working to reduce pollution. “They need the Congress to amend the Clean Air Act.”

Kavanaugh wrote in a 2012 case that was dismissed on procedural grounds: “The waiver might be good policy; if so, Congress has the power to enact a new law permitting E15. But under the statute as currently written, EPA lacks authority for the waiver.”

The refining industry has seized on this. “We are going to sue, and other organisati­ons are going to sue, and I think the case is pretty black-and-white that it’s against the law,” Chet Thompson, head of American Fuel and Petrochemi­cal Manufactur­ers, said.

Despite these headwinds, Trump hyped his plan at a rally on Tuesday in Council Bluffs, Iowa, part of a congressio­nal district where incumbent Republican US Representa­tive David Young faces a tough race.

“EPA can’t change a rule that’s created by the Congress”

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