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Growth Energy warns EPA against cutting cellulosic biofuel volumes

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Growth Energy has urged the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) not to retroactively reduce renewable volume obligations (RVOs) for cellulosic biofuels under the Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS).
In December, the EPA proposed a partial waiver that would reduce the requisite amount of cellulosic biofuels that needed to be blended into the nation’s fuel supply, as stipulated by the RFS, for the 2024 compliance year.
Growth Energy General Counsel Joe Kakesh warned that following through on the waiver could set a dangerous precedent for future retroactive reductions, and would undermine the growing market for cellulosic biofuels, which are biofuels produced from leftover plant parts like stems, leaves and other fibrous material.
“EPA’s proposal to partially waive 2024 cellulosic volume requirements is inconsistent with EPA’s recent RFS policies and with the RFS itself. While 2024 cellulosic volumes may not yet have achieved RVO targets, many biorefiners have nevertheless been making headway in cellulosic biofuel production, and we’ve seen more and more of their cellulosic registrations being approved by the agency,” said Kakesh.
“In any case, any waiver of 2024 cellulosic volume requirements here should not provide precedent for the future of the RFS program or suppress RFS program goals, which are to drive production and innovation of biofuels, including cellulosic biofuels, and not to passively track a biofuels marketplace without them,” he added.






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