Canadian Manufacturing

U.S. EPA reduces amount of cellulosic biofuels required in gasoline

by Dina Cappiello, The Associated Press   

Cleantech Canada
Regulation Oil & Gas


Cuts reflect 2013 production of fuel made from nonfood plants, which was lower than projected

WASHINGTON—The Obama administration is significantly reducing the amount of cellulosic biofuels refiners will have to prove they blended into gasoline last year, acknowledging that the market lagged far behind government projections.

The United State Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) said it was basing its 2013 standard on the 810,185 ethanol-equivalent gallons produced with nonfood plants last year.

The EPA had initially predicted that 14 million ethanol-equivalent gallons would be produced last year, only to reduce it to six million gallons last summer.

The 2007 law creating the mandate envisioned one billion gallons of ethanol from cellulosic sources in 2013.

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Groups representing oil and refining industries petitioned the EPA to lower the number to match reality.

The EPA is proposing 17 million gallons as a target for 2014.

The law required 1.75 billion gallons.

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