Exclusive: EPA refinery biofuel waiver
program on hold pending review - sources
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[November 28, 2018]
By Humeyra Pamuk and Jarrett Renshaw
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The Trump
Administration has temporarily frozen a program meant to exempt small
oil refineries in financial distress from the U.S. biofuels law, as it
reviews the scoring system to evaluate applications, according to two
sources familiar with the matter.
The review means changes are likely to the program, which has become a
lightning rod of controversy between the rival oil and corn industries
since the Environmental Protection Agency vastly increased the number of
waivers for last year.
Under the U.S. Renewable Fuel Standard, oil refiners must increasingly
blend biofuels like corn-based ethanol into their fuel each year or
purchase blending credits from those that do. The regulation was passed
in 2005 to help farmers and cut fuel imports.
But small oil refineries can be exempted from the standard if they prove
that compliance would cause disproportionate hardship. The EPA granted
29 such waivers for the 2017 compliance year, up from 14 in 2015 and 20
in 2016.
The biofuels industry and lawmakers representing farm states have argued
that the expansion hurt farmers by eroding demand for ethanol and want
the program halted. But refiners consider the program a lifeline to
small facilities and have won lawsuits accusing the EPA of being too
stingy with waivers.
The two sources, who requested anonymity to discuss the matter, said
over the past week that the Trump administration was delaying
consideration of any new waivers while the Department of Energy reviews
its scoring system for applications. The department evaluates waiver
requests and provides recommendations to the EPA.
That has placed on hold seven applications for the 2017 compliance year,
and 15 applications for the 2018. Typically, the EPA waits until the
latter half of the year to begin reviewing applications because
applicants need to demonstrate financial hardship using hard figures for
their facilities.
An EPA official confirmed the review. "I think what DOE needs to do is
tighten up their approach and we need to do the same," said the
official, who asked not to be named. "I honestly don't know where
they'll end up and whether they're going to make any changes at all."
Whatever the outcome, it could have a dramatic impact on the
multi-billion-dollar credit trading market, which has been hard-hit by
the waiver expansion.
Credits, called Renewable Identification Numbers or RINs, have dropped
in value from over $1 to 10 cents this week as reports emerged of the
number of EPA waivers granted last year. Some of those went to
facilities owned by big, profitable companies like Chevron Corp and
Andeavor, which recently merged with Marathon Petroleum Corp, Reuters
has reported.
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A fuel nozzle from a bio diesel fuel pump is seen in this photo
illustration taken at a filling station in San Diego, California
January 8, 2015. REUTERS/Mike Blake
That cut in credit prices has saved merchant refiners that lack
enough biofuel blending facilities, like Valero Energy Corp, PBF
Energy Inc and Carl Icahn's CVR Energy Inc hundreds of millions of
dollars in compliance costs.
The issue has placed President Donald Trump in a tough spot between
two key constituencies, as he tries to support the agriculture
industry slammed by the impact of his trade war with China, and keep
costs down for the oil industry.
Biofuel supporters had argued the expansion of the waiver program
was politically driven by former EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt, an
Oklahoman considered an oil industry ally. Pruitt resigned in July
in a flurry of ethical scandals, and has been replaced by Andrew
Wheeler, a former coal lobbyist.
"Under the last EPA chief, the waiver program became a cookie jar
open to every well-connected refinery owner, and we're seeing the
results across rural America with biofuel plants closing their doors
or idling production," Brook Coleman, head of the Advanced Biofuels
Business Council, said.
The EPA has blamed the program's expansion on recent federal court
rulings, triggered by challenges filed by small refining companies
Holly Frontier and Sinclair, which said the agency was using too
strict of a test to determine disproportionate hardship.
All hardship applications are first handled by the Energy
Department, which determines whether compliance would lead to
disproportionate impact, or threaten a refinery's viability. The
final decision on applications rests with the EPA.
(Editing by Richard Valdmanis and Richard Chang)
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