The
Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) Biden signed on Tuesday
significantly expands tax credits for industrial projects that
capture emissions of carbon dioxide, the main gas blamed for
climate change, and either store it underground or use it as a
building block for other products.
The industry hopes to use carbon capture and storage (CCS)
technology, aided by a network of carbon transport pipelines
across the Midwest, to reach a goal of net zero emissions by
2050. The technology could help ethanol makers position their
product as a green fuel against the backdrop of transit
electrification.
Geoff Cooper, president and CEO of ethanol trade group the
Renewable Fuels Association, said the IRA is “the most
significant federal commitment to low-carbon biofuels since the
Renewable Fuel Standard was expanded 15 years ago.”
The IRA allows companies that own and operate CCS equipment to
collect as much as $85 per ton, up from $50, of captured carbon
that is stored underground, and $60 per ton, up from $35, of
captured carbon that is used in other manufacturing processes or
for oil recovery.
One set of projects that could benefit from the expanded credits
are a network of pipelines proposed in the Midwest to capture
and transport ethanol plant emissions.
Three companies - Summit Carbon Solutions, a subsidiary of
Iowa-based Summit Agricultural Group; Wolf Carbon Solutions, an
affiliate of Alberta-based Wolf Midstream; and Navigator CO2
Ventures, a subsidiary of Texas-based Navigator Energy Services
- hope to run more than 3,600 miles (5,800 km) of pipeline from
ethanol plants across six states to underground storage sites.
The projects could capture as much as 39 million tons of carbon
annually, according to the company websites, potentially making
them eligible for more than $3.3 billion in tax credits.
In statements to Reuters, the three companies cheered the IRA
and its inclusion of the expanded credits.
The pipelines are in varying stages of the permitting process in
each state. Widespread dissent among landowners along the
proposed pipeline routes could present an obstacle to the
projects as they proceed.
Ethanol production lends itself well to carbon capture projects
because the manufacturing process emits a pure stream of carbon
dioxide, said Jessie Stolark, public policy and member relations
manager at the Carbon Capture Coalition.
“They have been the first mover in a lot of ways,” Stolark said.
(Reporting by Leah Douglas in Washington; Editing by Timothy
Gardner and Matthew Lewis)
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