Analysis-U.S. oil refiners bet the farm Biden will back them on biofuels
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[November 11, 2021] By
Jarrett Renshaw and Stephanie Kelly
(Reuters) - U.S. merchant oil refiners like
Monroe Energy and PBF Energy Inc are playing chicken with the White
House, taking moves in the biofuels credit market that could force them
to close plants and fire union workers unless the Biden administration
bails them out by changing the rules on blending biofuels in gasoline.
Merchant refiners have long tried to dismantle a U.S. law requiring them
to blend biofuels like ethanol into their fuel or buy credits from
competitors who do.
But until very recently, they largely continued to participate in the
multibillion-dollar credit market by buying credits to offset their
production, a Reuters analysis of earnings releases shows. But, now,
some of these same refiners are building up record short positions in
the credits.
Behind the shift is a bet that U.S. President Joe Biden will ultimately
side with refiners and their powerful union supporters. But
significantly rolling back the law as they wish would anger the nation's
Farm Belt, experts interviewed by Reuters said.
Refiners have extra leverage right now because the White House is
battling rising fuel prices, which are hurting Biden's poll ratings.
"This is nothing more than a political shakedown," Brooke Coleman,
executive director of the Advanced Biofuels Business Council, told
Reuters. "These refineries are daring the Biden White House to make them
lie in the bed they made by intentionally running up massive short
positions," on biofuel credits.
LIABILITIES SKYROCKET
Refiners who had little outstanding biofuel credit liabilities a year
ago have let them climb to record highs https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-BIOFUELS/WHITE-HOUSE/znpnekxowvl/chart.png
in the third quarter, according to a review of their latest financial
filings.
* Monroe Energy, a subsidiary of Delta Airlines, , has increased its
potential biofuel liabilities to a company record of $547 million by the
end of the third quarter, up from just $68 million a year prior, the
latest filing shows
* PBF Energy Inc has amassed a $1.3 billion credit liability from
halting or slowing purchases, according to its third quarter filing, up
from $236 million a year earlier.
* CVR Energy, whose majority owner is billionaire Carl Ichan, has a $442
million credit liability, according to the company's third quarter
filing, up from $83 million a year earlier.
None of the companies responded to requests for comment.
In 2017, Carlyle Group-backed Philadelphia Energy Solutions (PES)
stopped buying compliance credits, eventually amassing a $350 million
outstanding obligation before it eventually filed bankruptcy. The U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), as part of the bankruptcy
hearings, waived about half of those costs.
The PES refinery eventually shut after a massive explosion in 2019.
“PES taught the market that you can play chicken with the EPA and win.
It’s a form of civil disobedience of the law,” said Ed Hirs, an energy
economist at the University of Houston.
Hirs said shorting the market is clearly a strategic play, but the
gambit carries great risk.
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Choices at the gas pump including ethanol or no ethanol gas are seen
in Des Moines, Iowa, U.S., January 29, 2020. REUTERS/Brian
Snyder/File Photo/File Photo
“If the administration doesn’t buckle, then these companies will have to pay
billions of dollars to comply. That could force PBF into bankruptcy and we will
see if Delta reaches into its pockets to bail out the refinery,” Hirs said.
HISTORIC YEAR FOR CREDITS
Refiners must turn in the compliance credits to the EPA by March for the
previous year, giving them plenty of flexibility on when they take these costs.
In the past, refiners purchased biofuel credits daily to match their production,
even though they could defer buying if they believe the prices are too high or
to manage cash flow.
Prices for the compliance credits, known as RINs, have traded erratically in a
historic year for the market. After hitting an all-time record in June at $2.00
each, renewable fuel (D6) credits traded at $1.08 on Wednesday. That level is
still above where they started the year at about 80 cents.
In September, Reuters reported that the Biden administration was considering big
cuts to the blending requirements. Such a move would anger farm-state voters, so
a decision has been delayed as Democratic lawmakers try to pass other big-ticket
bills.
DISRUPTIVE SHUTDOWN THREATENED
Refiners have argued to the White House that the higher RIN costs have boosted
prices for gasoline, which have hit above $3.40 per gallon. They have noted that
the plants, including ones in Biden's home state of Delaware, offer high-paying
union jobs.
Now at least one producer is threatening to shut a refinery over outstanding
biofuel liabilities the company has run up.
In recent weeks, Monroe Energy has made a presentation to various stakeholders,
including local politicians and labor leaders, painting a stark outlook for its
refinery outside Philadelphia, according to two sources who have seen the
documents.
The company presentation made clear that either the Biden administration
intervenes and rolls back U.S. biofuel laws or its around 200,000 barrel-per-day
refinery will be forced to shut its doors and lay off hundreds of union workers,
the sources said.
If the Biden administration fails to intervene and prices stay at current
levels, the Delta refinery would have to go into the market and settle a
significant portion of its $547 million liability in upcoming months.
The refinery recorded a $186 million loss in the first three quarters of 2021,
filings show.
"They made it clear that this is the hill they are preparing to die on," said a
source who has seen the presentation.
(Reporting By Jarrett Renshaw and Stephanie Kelly; Editing by David Gregorio)
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