Biden administration leans on Tesla for guidance in renewable fuel
policy reform
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[June 23, 2022]
By Jarrett Renshaw and Stephanie Kelly
(Reuters) -U.S. President Joe Biden rarely
mentions electric car maker Tesla Inc in public. But privately his
administration has leaned on the company to help craft a new policy to
allow electric vehicles (EVs) to benefit from the nation's lucrative
renewable fuel subsidies, according to emails reviewed by Reuters.
The Biden administration contacted Tesla on its first day in office,
marking the start of a series of meetings on the topic between federal
officials and companies linked to the EV industry over the months that
followed, according to the emails.
The administration's early and extensive outreach reflects that
expanding the scope of the U.S. Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS) to make it
a tool for electrifying the nation's automobile fleet is one of Biden's
priorities in the fight against climate change.
The RFS, which dates back to 2005, is a federal program that requires
transportation fuel sold in the United States to contain a minimum
volume of renewable fuels. Until now, it has been primarily a subsidy
for corn-based ethanol.
The White House's outreach to Tesla also shows that, despite a public
grudge match between Biden and Tesla founder Elon Musk, the Biden team
tried early on to involve the carmaker in one of its key policy pushes.
Biden has set a target to make half of all new vehicles sold in 2030
zero-emissions vehicles.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, which administers the RFS, is
expected to unveil proposed changes to the policy sometime this year,
defining new winners and losers in a multibillion-dollar market for
credits, known as RINs, that has supported corn growers and biofuels
producers for more than a decade.
Early signs are that the administration is leaning toward a rule that
benefits carmakers like Tesla, giving them the greatest access to
so-called e-RINS, or electric RINs. But the reform could also spread the
subsidy to related industries too, like car charging companies and
landfills that supply renewable biogas to power plants, according to
industry players.
"We have heard through the grapevine that car companies are really,
really going to like this rule," said Maureen Walsh, director of federal
policy with the American Biogas Council, speaking at a conference in
May. But she added: "We have all been scrapping at that pile."
The idea of including electric vehicles in the RFS has been under
consideration for years, but gained steam as Biden's transition team
zeroed in on EVs as a job-friendly solution to the climate crisis.
Transport accounts for more than a quarter of U.S. greenhouse gas
emissions.
The White House did not respond to requests for comment.
The EPA said it was consulting "all interested stakeholders" in its RFS
policy review.
The current RFS requires oil refiners to blend ethanol and other
biofuels into the fuel pool or buy RINs from those who do. That policy
has spurred an economic boom in Farm Belt states. But it has also
angered environmental groups who say the extra corn production damages
land and water while prolonging the era of the internal-combustion
engine.
Friends of the Earth, an environmental group, has voiced disapproval
over an e-RIN program. The group sees the RFS as a policy that has
failed to increase production of new generation lower-carbon fuels,
while also harming the environment. It also sees expanding the program
as a slippery slope toward increasing the use of feedstocks for wood and
wood waste, which can generate electricity.
"The RFS should be reformed to tackle giveaways for dirty corn ethanol.
It shouldn't be expanded to include new giveaways for factory farming
and woody biomass," said Friends of the Earth spokesman Lukas Ross.
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Tesla electric vehicles are charged at a Tesla Supercharger charging
station in Hanam, South Korea, July 6, 2020. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji/File
Photo
TURN TO TESLA
On the morning of Biden's presidential inauguration in January 2021,
EPA staffer Dallas Burkholder emailed a top Tesla lobbyist, Rohan
Patel, to set up a meeting on how to incorporate electric cars into
the RFS, according to the documents reviewed by Reuters. They
scheduled a meeting for a week later, records show.
Since then, the Biden EPA has had additional meetings
on the topic with Tesla, groups representing biogas producers like
Waste Management Inc and Republic Services Inc and charging station
companies like ChargePoint Holdings Inc, according to the documents.
The EPA has also set up at least one meeting with White House staff
members, including climate adviser Ali Zaidi, to discuss the
reforms, according to the emails.
The Biden White House has been an unapologetic supporter of the EV
industry, pinning much of its climate hopes on getting more electric
cars on the road. The bipartisan infrastructure bill that passed
last year included $7.5 billion for new EV charging stations and
Biden has sought to reinstate expired tax credits to help consumers
pay for new vehicles.
Even so, Tesla's CEO, Musk, has often been at odds with the White
House, sending out harsh tweets directed at Biden. In February,
Biden publicly acknowledged the role of Tesla in EV manufacturing,
after Musk repeatedly complained about being ignored.
WHAT EVERYONE WANTS
Tesla is seeking changes to the RFS that will allow it to earn
renewable fuel credits based on kilowatt hours driven or similar
metrics, according to two sources familiar with the plan. The
company has also explored partnerships with biogas-producers to give
them leverage in whatever market emerges from the new rule, the
sources say.
Tesla did not respond to requests for comment for this story.
Members of the car-charging industry, meanwhile, are also pushing
for a share.
Matthew Nelson, a lobbyist with Electrify America, a charging
company trade group, wrote to the EPA in October and told them that
e-RINs would do more to enable Biden's 2030 goals of 500,000
charging stations and 50% EV sales than any other policy, according
to the emails. He added that charging companies need the credit to
compete with gasoline.
The United States currently has about 48,000 charging stations,
concentrated around coastal regions, according to Department of
Energy data.
Biogas producers, like landfills, also want credits, arguing they
provide renewable fuel to the grid that generates the power for
electric vehicles.
Biogas-derived electricity is already eligible for generating RINs.
But the EPA has never approved an application from the industry
because it has yet to determine the best way to trace the power
entering EVs back to its origin.
In 2020, landfill gas generated about 10 billion kilowatt hours of
electricity, or 0.3% of U.S. utility-scale power.
"We feel that implementing the electricity program in the RFS aligns
well with the Biden administration's climate goals,” Carrie Annand,
executive director of the Biomass Power Association, wrote to the
EPA, according to the documents.
(Reporting by Jarrett Renshaw in Philadelphia and Stephanie Kelly in
New YorkEditing by Richard Valdmanis and Matthew Lewis)
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