Lodi News-Sentinel

Trump administra­tion lifts restrictio­ns on higher ethanol gasoline

- By Elvina Nawaguna

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion Friday finalized at the eleventh hour a rule that would allow expanded sales of higher ethanol gasoline, even as the oil industry prepares to challenge the change in court.

The rule opening up year-round sales of gasoline containing 15% ethanol, or E15, would deliver a lifeline to soybean farmers hit hard by the president’s tariff war with China and by recent flooding in the Midwest that deluged farms.

“We’re doing this because it’s a very important presidenti­al priority,” EPA Assistant Administra­tor for the Office of Air and Radiation William Wherum told reporters in a telephone briefing. The finalized rule was rolled out just a day before E15 gasoline retailers are required by law to switch to lower ethanol blends for the busy summer driving season.

The EPA has until now restricted the use of the higher ethanol fuel between June 1 and Sept. 15 because it has in past administra­tions found that E15 contribute­s more to summer smog than the more commonly sold gasoline with 10% ethanol.

Friday’s rule was promised by the Trump administra­tion to Midwestern farmers and their lawmakers, including Iowa GOP Sens. Charles E. Grassley and Joni Ernst, who pressed President Donald Trump for the changes, which had hit a roadblock in Congress.

“By granting the sale of E15 yearround, we’ll see an economic ripple throughout farm country, rural communitie­s, and the entire nation,” Ernst said in a news release following the EPA’s announceme­nt.

A bill introduced by Sen. Deb Fischer, R-Neb., in 2017 to expand E15 sales never made it beyond a hearing at the Senate Environmen­t and Public Works Committee. The panel’s Republican Chairman John Barrasso hails from the nation’s eighth-largest oilproduci­ng state of Wyoming.

“We estimate this one change will generate over a billion new gallons of ethanol demand in the next five years,” said Emily Skor, CEO of Growth Energy, an associatio­n of biofuel producers, which lobbied hard for the change. “We appreciate the EPA’s efforts to get this rule over the finish line in time for the summer driving season.”

The EPA’s rule however is a blow to the oil industry that has for months described the move to lift E15 restrictio­ns as illegal.

“We repeatedly and consistent­ly have said that EPA lacks authority to extend the E10 volatility waiver to E15,” said Chet Thompson, president and CEO of American Fuel and Petrochemi­cal Manufactur­ers. “We will review the rule and weigh our options accordingl­y — but certainly pursuing a legal challenge is very much on the table.”

The American Petroleum Institute, which represents more than 600 oil and gas firms, has said it will sue the administra­tion.

API has argued that the renewable fuel standard, the nation’s policy that mandates minimum volumes of biofuels to be blended into the country’s motor oils each year, is broken and should be repealed or significan­tly overhauled. The group says higher ethanol blends damage some car and boat engines, an assertion the biofuel industry disputes, saying most cars on the road have newer engines that can run smoothly on E15.

“In addition to being bad for consumers, this proposal goes beyond EPA’s statutory authority. This proposal conflicts with the clear language of the Clean Air Act,” Frank Macchiarol­a, a vice president at API told reporters in an April call. “Attempts to cherry pick certain aspects of the RFS for reform provide more evidence that the entire program is a failure.”

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