U.S. biofuel industry expects outgoing EPA to grant majority of 2019 refinery waivers
The U.S. biofuel industry expects the outgoing Trump administration to approve most of the waiver requests it has pending from the oil refining industry for 2019, three sources familiar with industry discussions said.
The waivers - which exempt refiners from their obligation to add ethanol to gasoline - have been at the center of a contentious debate between the oil and corn lobbies. Refiners say the waivers are needed for small cash-strapped facilities to reduce regulatory costs, but biofuels producers oppose the program, arguing it undermines biofuel demand.
The Environmental Protection Agency is likely to announce as early as Wednesday that it will grant waivers for the 2019 compliance year exempting refiners from blending at least 1.1 billion gallons of biofuels into their fuel mix, the sources said, asking not to be named discussing the matter.
That would amount to around 22 of the 32 pending waiver requests for the 2019 compliance year, they said.
They argue any such action would be premature because of ongoing legal challenges to the waiver program, which are due to be considered by the U.S. Supreme Court later this year.
Reuters on Monday reported EPA’s intention to grant some of the exemptions, though EPA has not responded to requests for comment to confirm the story.
But small facilities under financial stress can also seek waivers from the obligation, and the Trump administration has dramatically ramped up the number of such exemptions granted to the industry.
A bipartisan group of Congressional members sent a letter on Tuesday to President Donald Trump, asking him to direct EPA to reject pending waiver requests that are inconsistent with a court ruling on the program.
Iowa Senator Joni Ernst, a biofuels advocate, spoke on Tuesday with Michael Regan, President-elect Joe Biden’s expected nominee to lead EPA. They discussed the need for Biden’s administration to deny many of the pending waiver petitions for the 2019 and 2020 compliance years, Ernst’s office said.
Reporting by Stephanie Kelly; editing by Richard Valdmanis and Bernadette Baum
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