Trump to lay out biofuels plan in meeting with senators:
sources
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[May 08, 2018]
By Jarrett Renshaw
NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald
Trump is expected to lay out his plans for the nation's biofuel policy
on Tuesday in a closed door briefing with senators, after months of
hearing arguments about the hotly contested regulation, according to two
sources.
The meeting could bring to an end a tumultuous several months of talks
between Big Corn and Big Oil over the future of the U.S. Renewable Fuel
Standard, discussions that were mediated by the White House and intended
to help oil refiners cope with the costs of the regulation.
"The White House is saying this is the last meeting, so we are expecting
some type of resolution or some plan going forward," said one of the
sources.
Republican Senators Chuck Grassley and Joni Ernst of major corn growing
state Iowa will attend the meeting, along with Republican Senators Ted
Cruz of Texas and Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania, whose constituents include
big oil refining companies, the sources said on Monday, asking not to be
named.
The RFS requires refining companies to mix increasing amounts of
biofuels like corn-based ethanol into the nation's fuel each year, or
purchase credits from companies that do.
The policy is intended to help farmers and cut petroleum imports. But
some merchant refiners, like PBF Energy and Valero Energy Corp, say it
costs them hundreds of millions of dollars annually.
The Trump administration waded into the issue late last year after
fielding complaints from the refining sector, and hosted a series of
meetings with lawmakers and company executives representing both sides.
But the talks ended in dispute, with both sides complaining that they
were not getting what they wanted.
At one point, Trump threw his support behind a proposal from Cruz to cap
compliance credits at 10 cents apiece - a fraction of the current level
- to reduce refiner costs. But the administration backed off the idea
after corn states said it would weaken the incentive to blend biofuels.
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U.S. President Donald Trump delivers remarks during an 'Unleashing
American Energy' event at the Department of Energy in Washington,
U.S., June 29, 2017. To match Special Report USA-NUKES/PLUTONIUM
REUTERS/Carlos Barria/File Photo
Trump had also said he supports the idea of expanding sales of higher ethanol
blends of gasoline, a concession to the corn industry, but a drawback for the
oil industry which complains it would reduce petroleum's share of the fuel
market.
The sources familiar with Tuesday's meeting said they did not know what, if any,
new ideas Trump might propose.
Both the corn lobby and the merchant refining industry say a misstep could
threaten the same blue-collar jobs Trump has vowed to support. But pressure to
rein in regulatory costs has also softened in recent weeks as the price of
compliance credits have hit five-year lows of around 30 cents.
Those declines were driven mainly by news the Environmental Protection Agency
had granted more than two dozen hardship exemptions from the RFS to small
refineries that say compliance would have been too financially difficult.
In the past, the EPA has tended to give out less than ten such waivers annually,
according to former officials.
The expansion of the small refinery waiver program is due in part to a federal
court decision last year that said the EPA had been too stingy with the
exemptions in the past. But biofuel groups say the EPA is using the cover of the
court to gut the RFS.
(Reporting By Jarrett Renshaw, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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