Houston Chronicle

Biofuel waivers might be extended, EPA says

- By Jennifer A. Dlouhy, Jennifer Jacobs and Kim Chipman

The Trump administra­tion is expected to exempt some oil refineries from 2019 mandates to use renewable fuel as it readies possible last-minute moves on U.S. biofuel policy.

Environmen­tal Protection Agency officials also are considerin­g formally extending deadlines for oil refineries to prove they have complied with renewable fuel quotas for 2019 and 2020, as legal uncertaint­y surrounds the biofuel program. The policy announceme­nts being contemplat­ed by the administra­tion were described by multiple people familiar with the matter who asked not to be named before a formal announceme­nt.

The flurry of activity during President Donald Trump’s final days in office comes after the Supreme Court agreed to hear a case testing the ability of refineries to win exemptions from annual biofuel-blending quotas. Confusion has surrounded the matter since the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in January 2020 that the EPA wrongly granted some of those exemptions and that refineries are only eligible for waivers if they have continuall­y received them.

Biofuel policy divides Trump’s political base — often pitting refiners in Texas and Pennsylvan­ia against ethanol producers in the Corn Belt. The administra­tion has changed course on numerous planned biofuel policy moves during Trump’s four years in the White House, after complaints from powerful ethanol and oil interests.

Holding off

The legal uncertaint­y led the EPA to announce in March last year it was extending the deadline for small refineries to comply with the 2019 quotas. Compliance is usually required each March for the previous year. The agency also has held off deciding on 32 pending applicatio­ns from small refineries for waivers from the 2019 quotas, while the 10th Circuit ruling was appealed to the Supreme Court.

Approvals for most of those pending 2019 small-refinery exemptions are set to be announced Thursday, said people familiar with the matter. The waivers would not be granted to refineries directly affected by last year’s 10th Circuit ruling, said the people.

Exemptions could benefit independen­t refiners such as PBF Energy Inc., CVR Energy Inc., HollyFront­ier Corp. and Delek U.S. Energy Inc., Height Capital Markets said in a research note for clients. And ClearView Energy Partners said approved exemptions would likely drive a further decline in the price of renewable identifica­tion numbers, the compliance credits refiners use to prove they have fulfilled annual biofuel-blending quotas.

EPA officials had downplayed the possibilit­y of exemptions, telling some stakeholde­rs not to expect waiver approvals soon, according to two people familiar with the conversati­ons. And before the Supreme Court agreed to hear the biofuel exemption case, EPA Administra­tor Andrew Wheeler told the American Fuel and Petrochemi­cal Manufactur­ers trade group that the agency was waiting on “the ultimate results” of the appeal before it decided on 2019 waiver requests.

Working furiously

Biofuel advocates were working furiously to head off the move, including with direct appeals to Trump. Nearly two dozen lawmakers urged the Trump administra­tion in a letter Tuesday not to grant the exemptions, warning that waivers would “further devastate America’s rural communitie­s.”

Under the potential delayed Renewable Fuel Standard compliance deadlines, refineries could have until Jan. 31, 2022, to comply with the 2019 quotas and until June 1, 2022 to prove they have fulfilled the 2020 targets.

EPA officials also have weighed formally soliciting comment on new designs for the warning labels used on pumps that dispense a higher-ethanol fuel known as E15. The move has been encouraged by ethanol producers who say the current 3.5-by-3-inch warning sticker unfairly scares motorists from buying their product.

Biofuel policy may be no less complicate­d for President-elect Joe Biden, who praised next-generation biofuels on the campaign trail and criticized the surge in exemptions issued by the Trump administra­tion.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States