'Very engaged' Trump talks biofuels policy with U.S. oil-state senators
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[September 20, 2019]
By Stephanie Kelly
NEW YORK (Reuters) - President Donald Trump
on Thursday discussed biofuels policy with senators from U.S. oil
states, including Louisiana Senator Bill Cassidy, who said the president
was engaged on the issue that has pitted Big Oil and Big Corn against
each other.
The oil industry is opposed to the Trump administration's tentative plan
to boost annual ethanol usage mandates.
Trump put forward the plan after a flurry of meetings in recent days
with biofuels and oil refining advocates where he tested ideas to
compensate the corn industry, a crucial political constituency, for his
administration's decision in August to exempt 31 oil refineries from
their blending requirements under the Renewable Fuel Standard.
That move was warmly welcomed by the oil industry but caused outrage in
the Farm Belt, and farmers and ethanol producers had warned Trump that
the decision could force them to pull their support for him in next
year's presidential election.
In Thursday's meeting, senators including Republicans Ted Cruz of Texas
and Pennsylvania's Pat Toomey were expected to make the case that
Trump's proposed plan could backfire by putting refineries out of
business and killing jobs in key 2020 battleground states, one source
familiar with the matter said.
"Just spoke with @realDonaldTrump on the renewable fuel standard - the
president is very engaged on the issue, and feels as if we can work
towards a solution which protects jobs," Cassidy wrote on Twitter.
Trump's outreach reflects the difficulty he has had in appeasing both
the oil and corn industries, which have clashed for years over U.S.
biofuels policy.
"The president is ready to get a decision and move forward. We hope that
could happen as of this afternoon," Secretary of Agriculture Sonny
Perdue told reporters earlier on Thursday.
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President Donald Trump speaks before presenting the Medal of Freedom
to former New York Yankees pitcher Mariano Rivera during a ceremony
in the East Room of the White House in Washington, U.S., September
16, 2019. REUTERS/Al Drago
Under the RFS, oil refineries must use billions of gallons of
biofuels like ethanol in their gasoline - a regulation intended to
help farmers and cut U.S. petroleum imports, but which the oil
industry says costs them a fortune.
Small refining facilities of 75,000 barrels per day or less can
secure waivers if they prove complying with the regulation would
cause them disproportionate financial hardship, and Trump's
administration has handed them out at a much higher rate than under
former President Barack Obama.
Corn farmers and ethanol producers say the Trump administration's
broad use of the refinery exemption program undermines demand for
ethanol at a time the industry is already suffering from a loss of
foreign markets due to the U.S. trade war with China. But the oil
industry says the exemptions help ensure that small refiners stay in
business and have no impact on the amount of ethanol they use.
Iowa Republican Senator Chuck Grassley, a biofuels advocate, tweeted
at Trump on Thursday, saying farmers were looking forward to good
news on the ethanol-related package.
(Reporting by Stephanie Kelly; Editing by Marguerita Choy and Tom
Brown)
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