Lawsuits Likely as EPA Declares US Ethanol Blend Wall a ‘Reality’

Law­suits Like­ly as EPA Declares US Ethanol Blend Wall a ‘Real­i­ty’

- by Cezary Pod­kul, Octo­ber 11, 2013. Source: Reuters

With two words, the U.S. envi­ron­ment reg­u­la­tor may be hand­ing oil refin­ers the biggest win of a long bat­tle to beat back the seem­ing­ly inex­orable rise of ethanol fuel.

In a leaked pro­pos­al that would sig­nif­i­cant­ly scale back bio­fu­el blend­ing require­ments next year, the U.S. Envi­ron­men­tal Pro­tec­tion Agency (EPA) says the blend wall — the 10 per­cent thresh­old of ethanol-mixed gaso­line that is at the crux of the lob­by­ing war — is an “impor­tant reality”.

The agen­cy’s ratio­nale for a cut in the vol­ume of ethanol that must be blend­ed echoes an argu­ment the oil indus­try has been mak­ing for months: the U.S. fuel chain can­not absorb more ethanol.

Few retail­ers are able to sell ethanol blends beyond the 10 per­cent max­i­mum, or will­ing to take the legal risk that comes with it, they argue.

The words will cut deep for pro­po­nents of bio­fu­els. They have argued for years that the blend wall is large­ly a fic­tion con­struct­ed by an oil indus­try that does­n’t want to cede any more share of a shrink­ing U.S. gaso­line market.

If approved, the pro­posed cut in the bio­fu­el man­date in 2014 to 15.21 bil­lion gal­lons from 18.15 bil­lion would mark an his­toric retreat from the ambi­tious 2007 Renew­able Fuel Stan­dard (RFS) law that chart­ed a path toward ever-greater use of clean, home-grown fuel, which the bio­fu­el indus­try counts on to under­pin bank loans and new factories.

Even though the EPA pro­pos­al has not been pub­licly released or approved by the White House, both sides are gear­ing up to shift the fight over the future of the coun­try’s fuel sup­ply to a new venue: the courts.

This week two U.S. oil indus­try groups sued the EPA over its 2013 bio­fu­el tar­gets. On Thurs­day, their oppo­nents appeared to sig­nal a like­ly chal­lenge to the 2014 rule.

“Let me be clear: any plan to roll back the tar­gets … under the guise of address­ing the blend wall would be patent­ly unlaw­ful,” said Bob Din­neen, pres­i­dent of the Renew­able Fuels Asso­ci­a­tion, an indus­try group.

The EPA’s pro­pos­al puts ethanol pro­po­nents in a tough spot.

The Renew­able Fuels Asso­ci­a­tion has pre­vi­ous­ly argued that Con­gress need not amend the 2007 law because the EPA has enough flex­i­bil­i­ty under the law to make changes to reflect mar­ket real­i­ties. The agency is now exer­cis­ing some of that dis­cre­tion — but cer­tain­ly not as pro­po­nents would like.

The law has run up against an unex­pect­ed rever­sal in U.S. gaso­line use, an embold­ened oil indus­try sad­dled with soar­ing ethanol cred­it costs, and dif­fer­ences over what kind of fuel can be safe­ly used in today’s cars.

The EPA has ruled that gaso­line blend­ed with as much as 15 per­cent ethanol (E15) is safe for use in cars made after the 2001 mod­el year.

But most car war­ranties only cov­er use of up to 10 per­cent ethanol, or E10. And most ser­vice sta­tions don’t sell any­thing more than E10 due to a lack of infra­struc­ture to dis­trib­ute high­er blends or con­cerns over lia­bil­i­ty if motorists use the wrong pump.

‘INADEQUATE DOMESTIC SUPPLY’

The mech­a­nism for the EPA’s pro­posed roll­back is an escape hatch called a “gen­er­al waiv­er” that Con­gress built into the 2007 law. This can be used to reduce the vol­umes in two cas­es: if enforc­ing the law were to cause eco­nom­ic hard­ship; or if it were sim­ply not fea­si­ble due to “inad­e­quate domes­tic supply”.

The EPA has set a high bar for the eco­nom­ic hard­ship sce­nario. Last year, the worst drought in 50 years prompt­ed a waiv­er peti­tion from sev­er­al state gov­er­nors and food pro­duc­ers con­cerned about the soar­ing price of corn, the main ingre­di­ent for domes­tic ethanol pro­duc­tion. The EPA denied the request.

This year, with the blend wall con­cerns forc­ing a jump of almost 2,800 per­cent in the cost of cred­its used to enforce the ethanol man­date, the agency itself is propos­ing for the first time to use a waiv­er, cit­ing a lack of usable fuel.

Ethanol sup­ply is cer­tain­ly not the prob­lem. Bounc­ing back from last year’s drought, the corn indus­try is look­ing at a record crop this year. And pro­duc­tion of oth­er bio­fu­els, such as biodiesel — a kind of diesel that can be made from recy­cled cook­ing oil — is con­tin­u­ing at a healthy pace, EPA data shows.

Instead, the agency appears to be view­ing the blend wall as a fac­tor: “We inter­pret the term ‘inad­e­quate domes­tic sup­ply’ as it is used under the gen­er­al waiv­er author­i­ty to include con­sid­er­a­tion of fac­tors that affect con­sump­tion of renew­able fuel,” the agency wrote in the pro­posed rules.

“It’s a very loose inter­pre­ta­tion of the cri­te­ria,” said Dave Juday, a com­mod­i­ty mar­ket ana­lyst in Wash­ing­ton D.C. “I would not be sur­prised if it was challenged.”

Regard­less, accord­ing to an August 26 draft pro­pos­al seen by Reuters, the waiv­er has enabled the EPA to cut the amount of corn-based ethanol that would be required in 2014 to 13 bil­lion gallons.

That is about 6 per­cent less than this year and well short of the 14.4 bil­lion gal­lons required under the 2007 law, but it is in line with a waiv­er request from two oil groups to cap the ethanol vol­ume at 9.7 per­cent, about 12.88 bil­lion gallons.

An EPA spokes­woman was not able to com­ment on the pro­pos­al or con­firm the authen­tic­i­ty of the document.

The White House Office of Man­age­ment and Bud­get (OMB) must sign off on the EPA’s rules before they are released for pub­lic com­ment. It is expect­ed to do so only after the end of the par­tial gov­ern­ment shutdown.

LAWMAKERS COMING ALONG

The EPA also said its pro­pos­al set out a “durable method­ol­o­gy that could be used in 2015 and beyond to reduce mar­ket uncer­tain­ty”, by using indus­try esti­mates and Monte Car­lo options analy­sis to esti­mate usable supply.

That may be an acknowl­edge­ment that the orig­i­nal law, as writ­ten, could cause more problems.

The RFS was based on an assump­tion that gaso­line demand would con­tin­ue to rise, allow­ing the vol­ume of bio­fu­el to grow even if the over­all share did not.

Instead, the severe reces­sion and ris­ing vehi­cle fuel effi­cien­cy led to a sharp drop in gaso­line demand: 133 bil­lion gal­lons are now pro­ject­ed to be con­sumed in 2014, accord­ing to the Ener­gy Infor­ma­tion Admin­is­tra­tion (EIA), down from an esti­mate in 2007 of 154 billion.

The fall in demand means that the larg­er vol­umes of ethanol embed­ded in the 2007 law are being crammed into a shrink­ing gaso­line pool, rapid­ly expand­ing its share.

Law­mak­ers are attempt­ing to craft amend­ments to the law. The House Ener­gy and Com­merce Com­mit­tee is weigh­ing a pro­pos­al to cap the ethanol require­ment at below 10 per­cent for two or three years, accord­ing to a per­son close to the committee.

The pro­pos­al, which is not yet final­ized, would give the indus­try time to study the use of high­er ethanol blends dur­ing that time and then raise the tar­get above 10 per­cent, accord­ing to this source.

“Things are mov­ing, and they’re not mov­ing in the direc­tion that ‘big corn’ would like them to be mov­ing,” said Stephen Brown, vice pres­i­dent of fed­er­al gov­ern­ment affairs for refin­er Tesoro Corp. in Wash­ing­ton D.C.

“So it’s real­ly start­ing to become a ques­tion of ‘when’ the thing gets changed, not ‘if’,” Brown said.

(Report­ing By Cezary Pod­kul; Edit­ing by Jonathan Leff and Alan Raybould)


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