Trump pushes Big Corn and Big Oil to break biofuels
deadlock
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[March 02, 2018]
By Jarrett Renshaw
(Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump
urged representatives from the rival oil and corn industries on Thursday
to break a deadlock in talks over the future of the nation’s biofuels
policy by accepting a deal involving reforms sought by both sides.
Trump has arranged a series of talks between Big Corn and Big Oil since
late last year amid rising concern in the White House over the U.S.
Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS), a law requiring refiners to mix biofuels
such as corn-based ethanol into their fuel.
The decade-old policy was intended to help farmers and reduce petroleum
imports but has increasingly divided farmers and energy companies - two
of Trump’s most important constituencies. Refining company Philadelphia
Energy Solutions LLC in the key electoral state of Pennsylvania in
January blamed the RFS for its bankruptcy.
A source who attended Thursday’s meeting at the White House said Trump
told the gathering of lawmakers and corporate executives that he
supports a proposal from the refining industry to cap the price of
biofuels blending credits that refiners must acquire to comply with the
RFS.
Prices for the blending credits - which refiners must either earn or
purchase - have surged in recent years, upsetting companies that in some
cases are spending hundreds of millions of dollars on them.
The source, who asked not to be named because he is not authorized to
speak publicly on the discussion, said Trump also expressed support for
expanding sales of high-ethanol gasoline – a tweak long-sought by
ethanol producers.
The Environmental Protection Agency bans the use of gasoline containing
15 percent ethanol during the summer months, a move intended to reduce
ozone emissions and smog during the peak driving season.
The two ideas, combined, represented a "win-win" solution for the oil
and corn industries that could help them break their deadlock, Trump
told the meeting, according to the source.
Biofuel interests in the meeting tried to persuade Trump to approve the
so-called E15 waiver and see if that drives down credit prices, but
Trump rejected the request saying the industry needed immediate changes.
Trump told the parties that he wanted credit caps and greater use of
higher-ethanol blended gasoline and to come back in a week, the source
said. He then abruptly ended the meeting, stood and began to exit the
room, the source said.
Republican Senator Joni Ernst, of Iowa, asked for more time to study the
impact of the price cap, the source said.
"Take the deal, Joni," Trump said as he walked out of the room,
according to the source.
Ernst disagreed with the source's description.
"It’s not accurate. That exchange didn’t take place," an Ernst
spokeswoman said via email on Friday morning.
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U.S. President Donald
Trump meets with bi-partisan members of Congress at the White House
in Washington, U.S., February 28, 2018. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
The White House said after the meeting that talks on the issue would
continue: "Today’s meeting is a part of the ongoing effort to best
understand the many differing views on this issue, and the president
looks forward to continuing this discussion," it said in a statement.
Republican Senator Charles Grassley of corn state Iowa, who attended the
meeting, said the talks did not yield any final decisions, but that an
"emerging solution" could include allowing year-round sales of 15
percent ethanol fuel.
He added that he opposes a credit price cap, saying such a move could
put "thousands of jobs in rural America" at risk.
No specific price cap level was discussed at Thursday's meeting,
according to the source, but Republican Senator Ted Cruz of Texas, who
has been driving efforts to tweak the RFS on behalf of refiners and who
attended the meeting, has proposed limiting credit prices to 10 cents
each - a fraction of their current value.
Prices for the credits, called RINs, dropped 10 cents to 53 cents each
after the meeting, according to traders.
Cruz said in a statement with Republican Senator Pat Toomey of
Pennsylvania that he was "encouraged that President Trump recognizes the
importance of providing relief from crushing RINs costs and expanding
the potential market for ethanol."
'CONTINUE TO PLAY OUT'
The biofuels industry had mixed reaction to the meeting, generally
supporting the idea of year-round sales of high-ethanol blend gasoline
but worried by the proposed price cap for credits, which some in the
industry worry would curtail investment in new blending facilities.
"The president very clearly understands that the path forward is to
allow sales of E15 year-round, promote growth, and put more RINs on the
market," said Emily Skor, chief executive officer of biofuels producer
Growth Energy.
"Nothing new was discussed in this meeting. Removing accountability from
oil companies would deprive millions of Americans the freedom to choose
less expensive, homegrown biofuels and imperil countless jobs and family
farms across America’s heartland," said Jeff Broin, CEO of leading U.S.
ethanol producer POET. Ethanol producer Green Plains Inc also attended,
sources said.
Valero Energy Corp, Delta Air Lines' Monroe Energy, PBF Energy Inc, and
Philadelphia Energy Solutions were also at the session, sources said.
(Reporting by Jarrett Renshaw in New York; Editing by Peter Cooney and
Lisa Shumaker)
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