Trump to put biofuel reform push on ice,
for now: sources
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[April 11, 2018]
By Jarrett Renshaw
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The Trump
administration will delay any moves to reform the nation's biofuel
policy for about three months, according to three sources briefed on the
matter - a decision one of the sources said was meant to shield farmers
worried about a potential trade war with China.
The decision comes after President Donald Trump failed to broker a deal
between Big Oil and Big Corn during meetings over months about the
future of the U.S. Renewable Fuel Standard - a law broadly supported in
the U.S. heartland that requires oil refiners to add biofuels like
ethanol to the nation's gasoline.
"There's just a lot going on right now, so they decided to take a pause
and revisit in three months," one of the sources said, referring to
worries in the U.S. agriculture industry that an escalating trade
dispute between the United States and China could hurt U.S. commodity
exports.

The biofuel reforms threaten to weaken demand for corn-based ethanol,
compounding concerns from farmers about a loss of grain exports to China
due to the trade dispute. Rural voters are an important constituency for
President Donald Trump, helping propel his election victory in 2016, but
his support with this group has slipped. https://reut.rs/2ya8zRy
The RFS has created a 15-billion-gallon-a-year market for ethanol since
it was implemented more than a decade ago, a boon for U.S. farmers but a
headache for oil refiners that have increasingly complained about the
cost of complying.
Trump hosted the latest meeting on potential RFS reforms on Monday. In
that meeting, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Scott
Pruitt and Agricultural Secretary Sonny Perdue presented the president
with a list of potential options aimed at helping refiners without
undercutting ethanol demand.
Those options included capping the price of blending credits, called
RINs, that refiners must earn or purchase under the RFS while expanding
the sales of high-ethanol gasoline blends that are currently banned
during summer.
The price cap was a non-starter for most of the biofuel industry, a
group that includes corn farmers from deep-red states like Iowa and
Nebraska, who said it would erode investment in biofuels infrastructure.
Merchant refiners like Valero and PBF Energy, however, which do not have
blending facilities and must purchase RINs to prove compliance with the
RFS, would be among the biggest beneficiaries of an overhaul.
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Don Grady points to his new furnace which burns a mixture of biofuel
made from refined soybean oil and low sulfur heating oil in
Westwood, Massachusetts in this November 12, 2007 file photo.
REUTERS/Brian Snyder/Files

Trump was drawn into the divisive debate over the RFS by the
potential shutdown of oil refiner Philadelphia Energy Solutions.
PES, which employs a thousand people in politically important
Pennsylvania, has blamed its financial woes on the cost of
compliance credits under the RFS.
PRESSURE EASES
Some of the pressure to act has declined lately, however, as credit
prices have dropped to three-year lows.
The decline in RIN prices is due in part to news that the EPA has
significantly increased the number of small refiners it has exempted
from the program for financial reasons.
The EPA also agreed to allow PES to shed some $200 million worth of
RFS compliance costs, allowing the company to exit bankruptcy.
Trump had supported the idea of a price cap and expanded
high-ethanol gasoline sales but found it hard to find common ground
between the oil and corn lobbies on the issue.
Trump's advisers have urged him to punt the tricky issue to
Congress.


A White House spokeswoman, Kelly Love, did not respond to a request
for comment on the decision to delay action.
Biofuels advocates, meanwhile, want Trump to drop the issue
altogether, and for the EPA to suspend its use of waivers.
(Reporting By Jarrett Renshaw; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)
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