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Coburn's proposal would also repeal a 54-cent-a-gallon tariff on imported ethanol, which restricts imports, mainly from Brazil. Coburn is trying to attach his proposal to a bill that would renew a federal economic development program. His amendment will require 60 votes to be successful, a tall order in a Senate that is deeply divided on tax issues. The ethanol tax credit is part of a package of business tax breaks that Congress usually renews each year. The current credit is scheduled to expire at the end of the year. Coburn's amendment would repeal it immediately. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack said Monday that the administration is open to redirecting some of the tax credit money to help the ethanol industry in other ways, but that cutting off the tax credit completely could threaten jobs and capital investment in rural communities that are already struggling. "We don't want to cut our way out of a growth opportunity," Vilsack said. The tax credit helped the ethanol industry take off in the 1990s. The industry also has been helped by a mandate from Congress that requires refiners to blend 36 billion gallons of biofuels, mostly ethanol, into auto fuel by 2022. Critics of the tax credit say the mandate is enough to keep the industry going.
[Associated
Press;
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