Bipartisan lawmakers urge Obama to maintain biodiesel Renewable Fuel Standard
WASHINGTON June 27, 2014 - A bipartisan group of 52
lawmakers wrote President Obama yesterday to encourage biodiesel production by
bucking an EPA proposal to lower the Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS).
In a letter
to President Obama, legislators expressed worry
that lowering the biofuel standard would cause biodiesel plants to close and
America to increase its dependence on foreign oil.
“Should the EPA choose not to raise biodiesel’s
volume above 1.28 billion gallons, we believe it will have a terrible impact on
the domestic biodiesel industry, and could lead to the closure of numerous
biodiesel plants, with smaller producers taking the largest impact,” lawmakers
wrote in the letter.
The letter was led by Reps. Collin Peterson,
D-Minn., and Adam Kinzinger, R-Ill., and lawmakers from 22 states.
A November EPA draft rule would lower the
biofuel RFS to 1.28 billion gallons. According to a LMC International
report, 2013 saw nearly 1.7 billion gallons
of biodiesel production, creating $16.8 billion in total economic impact and
supporting 62,000 jobs.
Biodiesel is the only commercial-scale fuel
produced in the U.S. that meets the EPA’s definition of an Advanced Biofuel. These are
fuels the EPA has identified as reducing greenhouse gas emissions by more than
50 percent compared to petroleum diesel.
“[Biodiesel]
is an RFS success story that is delivering tremendous benefits to the nation in
terms of cleaner air, jobs, and diversity in the fuels markets that is helping
consumers,” said Anne Steckel, National Biodiesel Board (NBB) vice
president of federal affairs. “We need consistent federal policy to continue
the progress we’ve made, and we are urging the Administration to finalize a
strong RFS volume as quickly as possible.”
As of April 2014, there are 96 biodiesel plants
in the U.S. with a capacity to produce 2.1 billion gallons per year.
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