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		Renewable diesel boom highlights challenges in clean-energy transition
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		 [March 03, 2021]  By 
		Rod Nickel, Stephanie Kelly and Karl Plume 
 (Reuters) - For 17 years, trucker Colin 
		Birch has been hitting the highways to collect used cooking oil from 
		restaurants.
 
 He works for Vancouver-based renderer West Coast Reduction Ltd, which 
		processes the grease into a material to make renewable diesel, a 
		clean-burning road fuel. That job has recently gotten much harder. Birch 
		is caught between soaring demand for the fuel - driven by U.S. and 
		Canadian government incentives - and scarce cooking oil supplies, 
		because fewer people are eating out during the coronavirus pandemic.
 
 "I just have to hustle more,” said Birch, who now sometimes travels 
		twice as far across British Columbia to collect half as much grease as 
		he once did.
 
 His search is a microcosm of the challenges facing the renewable diesel 
		industry, a niche corner of global road fuel production that refiners 
		and others are betting on for growth in a lower-carbon world. Their main 
		problem: a shortage of the ingredients needed to accelerate production 
		of the fuel.
 
		
		 
		
 Unlike other green fuels such as biodiesel, renewable diesel can power 
		conventional auto engines without being blended with diesel derived from 
		crude oil, making it attractive for refiners aiming to produce 
		low-pollution options. Refiners can produce renewable diesel from animal 
		fats and plant oils, in addition to used cooking oil.
 
 Production capacity is expected to nearly quintuple to about 2.65 
		billion gallons (63 million barrels) over the next three years, 
		investment bank Goldman Sachs said in an October report.
 
 Rising demand is creating both problems and opportunities across an 
		emerging supply chain for the fuel, one small example of how the larger 
		transition to green fuels is upending the energy economy. A renewable 
		diesel boom could also have a profound impact on the agricultural sector 
		by swelling demand for oilseeds like soybeans and canola that compete 
		with other crops for finite planting area, and by driving up food 
		prices.
 
 Local and federal governments in the United States and Canada have 
		created a mix of regulations, taxes or credits to stimulate more 
		production of cleaner fuels. President Joe Biden has promised to move 
		the United States toward net-zero emissions, and Canada's Clean Fuel 
		Standard requires lower carbon intensity starting in late 2022. 
		California currently has a low-carbon standard that provides tradable 
		credits to clean fuel producers.
 
 But the feedstock supply squeeze is constraining the industry's ability 
		to comply with those efforts.
 
 ‘SPINNING FAT INTO GOLD’
 
 Demand and prices for feedstocks from soybean oil to grease and animal 
		fat is soaring. Used cooking oil is worth 51 cents per pound, up about 
		half from last year's price, according to pricing service The Jacobsen.
 
 Tallow, made from cattle or sheep fat, sells for 47 cents per pound in 
		Chicago, up more than 30% from a year ago. That's boosting the fortunes 
		of renderers such as Texas-based Darling Ingredients Inc and meat 
		packers such as Tyson Foods Inc. Darling shares have about doubled in 
		the last six months.
 
 "They're spinning fat into gold," said Lonnie James, owner of South 
		Carolina fats and oil brokerage Gersony-Strauss. "The appetite for it is 
		amazing."
 
 Clean fuels could be a boon for North American refiners, among the 
		pandemic's hardest-hit businesses as grounded airlines and lockdowns 
		hammered fuel demand. Refiners Valero Energy Corp, PBF Energy Inc and 
		Marathon Petroleum Corp all lost billions in 2020.
 
 Valero’s renewable diesel segment, however, posted a profit, and the 
		company has announced plans to expand output. Marathon is seeking 
		permits to convert a California refinery to produce renewable fuels, 
		while PBF is considering a renewable diesel project at a Louisiana 
		refinery.
 
 The companies are among at least eight North American refineries that 
		have announced plans to produce renewable fuels, including Phillips 66, 
		which is reconfiguring a California refinery to produce 800 million 
		gallons of green fuels annually.
 
		
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			A West Coast Reduction worker inspects a shipment being delivered to 
			their location for export at the Port of Vancouver, British 
			Columbia, Canada in 2015. Picture taken in 2015. Rebecca Blissett/West 
			Coast Reduction Ltd/Handout via REUTERS 
            
			 
Once new renewable diesel production capacity comes online, feedstocks are 
likely to become more scarce, said Todd Becker, chief executive of Green Plains 
Inc, a biorefining company that helps produce feedstocks.
 Goldman Sachs estimates that an additional 1 billion gallons of total capacity 
could be added if not for issues with feedstock availability, permitting and 
financing.
 
 "Everybody in North America and around the world are all trying to buy low 
carbon-intensity feedstocks," said Barry Glotman, chief executive of West Coast 
Reduction.
 
 His customers include the world's biggest renewable diesel maker, Finland’s 
Neste. A spokesperson for Neste said the company sees more than enough feedstock 
supply to meet current demand and that development of new feedstocks can ensure 
supply in the future.
 
SOYBEAN, CANOLA BOOM
 Renewable diesel producers are increasingly counting on soybean and canola oil 
to run new plants.
 
 The U.S. Agriculture Department (USDA) is forecasting record-high soybean demand 
from domestic processors and exporters this season, largely because of soaring 
global demand for livestock and poultry feed.
 
 Crushers who produce oil from the crops are also scouring Western Canada for 
canola, helping to drive prices in February to a record futures high of C$852.10 
per tonne. Soybeans reached $14.45 per bushel in the United States last week, 
the highest level in more than six years.
 
 
Rising food prices are a concern if the predicted demand for crops to generate 
renewable diesel materializes, said USDA Chief Economist Seth Meyer. U.S. 
renewable diesel production could generate an extra 500 million pounds of demand 
for soyoil this year, Juan Luciano, chief executive of agricultural commodities 
trader Archer Daniels Midland Co, said in January. That would represent a 2% 
year-over-year increase in total consumption.
 Greg Heckman, CEO of agribusiness giant Bunge Ltd, in February called the 
renewable diesel expansion a long-term "structural shift" in demand for edible 
oils that will further tighten global supplies this year.
 
 By 2023, U.S. soybean oil demand could outstrip U.S. production by up to 8 
billion pounds annually if half the proposed new renewable diesel capacity is 
constructed, according to BMO Capital Markets.
 
 That same year, Canadian refiners and importers will face their first full year 
complying with new standards to lower the carbon intensity of fuel, accelerating 
demand for renewable diesel feedstocks, said Ian Thomson, president of industry 
group Advanced Biofuels Canada.
 
 Manitoba canola grower Clayton Harder said it is hard to envision a vast 
expansion of canola plantings because farmers need to rotate crops to keep soils 
healthy. Farmers may instead have to raise yields by improving agronomic 
practices and sowing better seed varieties, he said.
 
 British Columbia refiner Parkland Corp is hedging its bets on feedstock 
supplies. The company is securing canola oil through long-term contracts, but 
also exploring how to use forestry waste such as branches and foliage, said 
Senior Vice President Ryan Krogmeier.
 
 The competition to find new and sustainable biofuel feedstocks will be fierce, 
said Randall Stuewe, chief executive at Darling, the largest renderer and 
collector of waste oils.
 
 "If there is a feedstock war, so be it," he said.
 
 (Reporting by Rod Nickel in Winnipeg, Stephanie Kelly in New York and Karl Plume 
in Chicago; editing by David Gaffen, Simon Webb and Brian Thevenot)
 
				 
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