Groups Urge EPA to Issue E15 Emergency Waiver

Cindy Zimmerman

With ongoing challenges to America’s energy security and summer just around the corner, advocates for agriculture and renewable fuels are urging the Environmental Protection Agency to authorize the summer sale of gasoline blended with up to 15 percent ethanol before May 1.

The Renewable Fuels Association, Growth Energy, National Corn Growers Association, American Farm Bureau Federation, National Farmers Union, and National Sorghum Producers sent a letter to EPA Administrator Michael Regan to act swiftly on an emergency waiver for E15 sales.

“New and ongoing conflicts across the globe continue to pose risks to the United States’ transportation energy supply. In addition to the conflict in Ukraine, now extending into its third year, the recent unrest and volatility in the Middle East present additional challenges to American energy security. In particular, attacks on shipping in the Red Sea have already had a disruptive effect on the transit of fuel in the region, raising the specter of constrained supply and increased gasoline prices at home,” the groups wrote.

Last month, EPA approved the long-delayed petition from eight Midwest governors allowing summertime sales of E15, but not until 2025, leaving this summer in limbo. When asked about it at Commodity Classic on March 1, EPA Administrator Regan said, “The record speaks for itself in terms of what we did in 2022 and 2023,” Regan said in response to a reporter question. “So I will approach this year the way I have in previous years.”

EPA Office of Agriculture and Rural Affairs director Rod Snyder elaborated further to ethanol supporters in Washington DC. “If you look at both 2022 and 2023, the market impacts from the war in Ukraine as well as other various global factors were really creating supply pressures that allowed us to justify those emergency waivers for two years in a row. It is too early for me to speculate exactly what we can or should do for 2024, but I want to reassure you that we are already talking with the Department of Energy about market conditions and how they compare to the prior years,” said Snyder.

E15, Ethanol, Ethanol News, Renewable Fuels Association, RFA