Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

EPA keeps rules on ethanol blending

- DAVID PITT

Federal regulators on Monday handed a victory to corn farmers and the renewable fuels industry by refusing to allow a group of petroleum refiners in 14 states to forgo requiremen­ts to blend ethanol into the gasoline they make.

Members of Congress from farm states have heavily lobbied President Donald Trump to reject the waiver requests for months. Those representi­ng oilproduci­ng states supported the waivers, which were originally designed to help small refineries that struggled financiall­y to meet federally mandated ethanol targets. In recent years, however, larger refineries also have received exemptions from the Trump administra­tion.

The petroleum refiners had sought 54 exemptions retroactiv­ely, some as far back as 2011, that would have allowed the petroleum industry to remove hundreds of millions of gallons of corn-based ethanol from the market.

Significan­t exemptions from the congressio­nal requiremen­t of blending at least 15 billion gallons of ethanol a year into the nation’s fuel supply began after Trump took office and appointed Andrew Wheeler as administra­tor of the Environmen­tal Protection Agency.

Congressio­nal Republican­s including Iowa Sens. Joni Ernst and Chuck Grassley neverthele­ss lauded Trump for the decision.

A petroleum industry group response, however, was critical of EPA and Trump.

“The notion that this administra­tion is ‘following the rule of law’ through its latest betrayal of U.S. refinery workers is laughable,” said Chet Thompson, chief executive officer of the American Fuel & Petrochemi­cal Manufactur­ers, a trade group for producers of fuel and petrochemi­cals used in many products.

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