Whitefox Technologies Marks 25th Anniversary

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Whitefox CEO Gillian Harrison (center) received the 2025 Women in Ethanol Award

Whitefox Technologies celebrated its 25th anniversary last week at the 2025 Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo and honored their customers as the industry honored its CEO.

Gillian Harrison, CEO of Whitefox Technologies, received the 2025 Women in Ethanol Award for her visionary leadership in expanding Whitefox from a startup into a key player in the global ethanol market. “It’s a tremendous honor to receive this recognition from peers I deeply respect in a category with so many amazing women,” said Harrison. “This award belongs to our entire team, our partners, and the customers who continue to push boundaries with us.”

During a Customer Appreciation Event at FEW, Whitefox recognized those whose commitment to innovation made their anniversary possible, including:
• BGW – first ICE for sole membrane dehydration plant
• Chippewa Valley Ethanol Company – longest running cartridges in the US
• E Energy Adams – first ICM plant
• Kansas Ethanol – first ICE Flex plant
• Pine Lake Corn Processors – first plant in the US
• Redfield Energy – first ICE Plus
• Western Plains Energy – first ICE XL

Since its founding in 2000, Whitefox has been installed in 19 plants across 7 countries producing around 1 billion gallons of ethanol to date and saving the equivalent in carbon emissions to planting eight million trees.

Ethanol, Ethanol News, FEW

Clean Fuels Updates BQ-9000 Website

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Clean Fuels Alliance America recently unveiled a redesigned BQ-9000® website to better showcases the value of biodiesel quality assurance and the benefits of certification through the industry’s gold standard program.

Administered by the National Biodiesel Accreditation Commission and supported by Clean Fuels, the BQ-9000 program combines ASTM fuel standards with best practices for production, storage, handling, and distribution. The revamped website offers easy access to accreditation status for biodiesel producers, marketers, and laboratories, helping fuel buyers and fleets make informed, confident choices.

“In today’s competitive energy environment, trust and performance are everything,” said Scott Fenwick, Technical Director at Clean Fuels. “BQ-9000 accreditation is more than a label—it’s a mark of quality that leading engine manufacturers, fleets and fuel suppliers depend on.”

The new website includes a searchable directory of BQ-9000-accredited companies, downloadable certificates for each accredited facility, resources for fuel marketers and OEMs on how BQ-9000 supports engine performance and warranty compliance, and information on how to apply for accreditation.

Click here to check out the new website

Biodiesel, Clean Fuels Alliance

Industry Welcomes New Renewable Fuel Standards

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The renewable fuels industry welcomed new Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS) volume requirements for 2026 and 2027 announced by the Environmental Protection Agency on Friday.

EPA proposal includes a total Renewable Volume Obligation (RVO) of 24.02 billion gallons (bg) for 2026, including 15 bg for conventional renewable fuels like corn ethanol and 9.02 bg for advanced biofuels, with 5.61 bg of biomass-based diesel and 1.3 bg of cellulosic biofuel. For 2027, the total proposed RVO is 24.46 bg, of which 15 bg is conventional renewable fuel and 9.46 is advanced biofuel. In addition, EPA is proposing lower RIN values for imported fuels to ensure that U.S.-produced renewable fuels are prioritized under the RFS.

“We are creating a new system that benefits American farmers while mitigating the impact on gas prices and ensuring the continued existence of liquid fuels,” said EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin. “We can no longer afford to continue with the same system where Americans pay for foreign competitors.”

“President Trump recognizes how important the Renewable Fuel Standard is for American corn and soybean farmers. This move by Administrator Zeldin is the boldest proposal ever and will provide certainty in a much-needed market for our producers while delivering lower prices at the pump for consumers. USDA and EPA have never been more aligned on the need for more American grown biofuels. This is the highest ever Renewable Volume Obligation and it sends a strong signal to the U.S. biofuels industry that President Trump has their backs and gives them the incentive to invest in American products for American consumers and to export around the world. America’s national security depends on our energy security, and biofuels are a crucial asset that brings more jobs and helps farmers in rural America,” said Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins. “As the Trump Administration expands the domestic market for biofuels, at USDA we are working to break down tariff and non-tariff barriers for our American grown biofuels. President Trump’s landmark deal with the U.K. secured zero tariff access for over $700 million in ethanol exports. Not only can we be energy independent, we are unleashing American energy dominance abroad.”

Renewable Fuels Association President and CEO Geoff Cooper calls EPA’s draft rule a “very positive signal” for America’s ethanol industry and farmers. “This proposal sends a very positive and powerful signal to U.S. renewable fuel producers and farmers. It represents an excellent starting point for the 2026 and 2027 RVO discussion,” Cooper said. “We look forward to providing more feedback to EPA on the proposed volumes during the public comment period, and we’ll continue to underscore the vital importance of a strong RFS to America’s rural communities.” Cooper also noted that while the proposed rule does not specifically address 169 pending small refinery exemption (SRE) petitions, it includes a commitment from EPA to reallocate any SREs that may be granted in future actions.

American Coalition for Ethanol (ACE) CEO Brian Jennings said,”While we’re encouraged the Agency has indicated it intends to move quickly toward finalizing the 2026-2027 RVOs, ACE will continue urging EPA to use its statutory authority to ensure conventional biofuel volumes are well above 15-billion gallons to support a growing U.S. ethanol industry,” said Jennings. “Our forthcoming comments will also emphasize the importance of projecting and reallocating small refinery exemptions (SREs) to provide greater certainty and uphold the integrity of the RFS program, as well as stress the need for EPA to adopt the most current GREET model for accurately accounting lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions — emissions that continue to trend lower for ethanol.”

Clean Fuels Alliance America, which represents producers of biodiesel, renewable diesel, and sustainable aviation fuel, was especially pleased with the EPA proposal.

“The industry has made major investments in domestic production capacity and feedstocks to meet America’s energy needs and provide consumers affordable, cleaner fuels. We anticipate this will have a tremendous beneficial impact for American farmers and agricultural communities and we look forward to working with President Trump and EPA Administrator Zeldin to finalize this rule and fully unleash U.S. clean fuel producers,” said Kurt Kovarik, Clean Fuels’ Vice President of Federal Affairs. “Our industry supplied more than 5 billion gallons of biodiesel, renewable diesel and SAF to the U.S. market in 2024, and is poised to deliver more in 2026. The U.S. biomass-based diesel industry supports 107,400 jobs and generates $42.4 billion in economic activity. Continued market growth and stability through the RFS will enable more economic opportunities, create more jobs, and revitalize America’s agricultural sector.”

ACE, advanced biofuels, Biodiesel, biofuels, Clean Fuels Alliance, EPA, Ethanol, Ethanol News, Renewable Fuels Association, RFA, SAF

Chevron Opens Tech Center to Drive Innovation in Future Fuels

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Completion of Chevron’s new Ames Technology Center was celebrated with a ribbon cutting on June 10

Chevron Corporation celebrated the grand opening of the Ames Technology Center this week on the Chevron Renewable Energy Group (CREG) Campus.

The 45,000 square foot facility will expand the company’s lower carbon fuels technology development and advanced technical support capabilities by adding new analytical laboratory and R&D space, along with new offices.

“It’s inspiring to see so many people from all corners of the Iowa innovation ecosystem – industry, academia, government – join us as we demonstrate how the Ames Technology Center will help lead Chevron into the future with innovation,” said Jim Gable, Vice President, Innovation and President of Technology Ventures at Chevron. “The capabilities we advance here will be applied to other parts of Chevron in the renewable energy space and could be deployed at some of our biorefineries across the globe.”

Chevron operates nine biorefineries around the world, including two in Iowa, and is pursuing opportunities that generate a competitive return in biodiesel, renewable diesel, sustainable aviation fuel, renewable natural gas and other biofuels. To rapidly scale and commercialize these products, Chevron is advancing new catalytic technologies, partnering to develop lower carbon feedstocks, and leveraging its world-class fuel production expertise at existing facilities.

aviation biofuels, Biodiesel, biofuels

Land Use Change Study Author Moves to MSU

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Tyler Lark

The author of a 2022 land use change study out of the University of Wisconsin-Madison that caused negative headlines for the ethanol industry is moving to Michigan.

Tyler Lark will join the Michigan State University Department of Plant, Soil and Microbial Sciences in August as an assistant professor after spending the last six years as a scientist in the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s (UW-Madison) Center for Sustainability and the Global Environment.

At UW-Madison, Lark led research on U.S. agricultural land use change and its impacts on the nation’s land and water resources, including the 2022 study claiming the Renewable Fuel Standard increased corn prices by 30% and increased corn acreage by 8.7% between 2008 and 2016. The report was immediately refuted by the ethanol industry as being based on “a series of worst-case assumptions, cherry-picked data, and disparate results from previously debunked studies to create a completely fictional and erroneous account of the environmental impacts of the Renewable Fuel Standard,” and was debunked by the Department of Energy’s Argonne National Laboratory.

The UW-Madison study was still being used last year by the Center for Biological Diversity (CBD) in its lawsuit challenging EPA’s 2023-2025 Renewable Fuel Standard volumes. At the same time, Lark published another study on land use change that actually contradicted the previous one and showed that between 1986 and 2018 more than 30 million acres of U.S. cropland were abandoned and transitioned into grassland/permanent pasture, forest, shrubland, wetlands, urban areas, and other uses.

At MSU, Lark’s position is one of six new faculty roles hired through the Agricultural Resiliency Program, a partnership among MSU, the Michigan Plant Coalition, and the Michigan Department of Agriculture and Rural Development. The program, which is administered by MSU AgBioResearch and MSU Extension, was established in 2024 to address long-term plant agriculture issues related to extreme weather and water.

biofuels, Ethanol, Ethanol News, RFS

Iowa Governor Vetoes Pipeline Bill

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Gov. Reynolds at 2023 Iowa RFA Summit

Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds made corn growers and ethanol producers in her state happy today with her veto of a bill passed by the state legislature that would have limited the future for carbon sequestration pipelines.
In her explanation for vetoing the bill, Gov. Reynolds said the bill would set a troubling precedent.

“For example, the bill would block a major pipeline project that uses only voluntary easements,” wrote Reynolds. “Southwest Iowa Renewable Energy (SIRE) is in the final stages of connecting to a CO2 pipeline with not a single acre condemned. Yet new insurance mandates and an arbitrary 25-year limit that HF 639 places on CO2 pipelines would effectively kill the project-despite the millions that have already been spent on its development. There is no clear or logical basis for that time limit-and it would make it difficult for companies like SIRE to justify the additional investment.”

Gov. Reynolds continued, “Those who crafted the bill said they don’t want to stop CO2 pipelines that rely entirely on voluntary agreements. But that is exactly what the bill does. For that reason alone, I cannot sign it.”

The Iowa Renewable Fuels Association and Iowa Corn Growers Association were outspokenly opposed to the legislation along with trade unions, energy companies, the American Petroleum Institute, and landowners. IRFA Executive Director Monte Shaw thanked Gov. Reynolds for using her veto power. “This is a classic example of why our system of government has checks and balances. Any thoughtful review of this bill would determine that it would lead to higher energy prices for Iowans, hamper future economic development, hold back job creation, and stifle new markets for Iowa farmers.”

Carbon, Ethanol, Ethanol News, Iowa RFA

Awards Presented at #FEW25

Cindy Zimmerman

Several ethanol industry leaders were honored for their years of service and commitment during the awards presentation at the 2025 International Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo Tuesday.

Rick Schwarck, president and cofounder of Absolute Energy, received the Distinguished Service Award for a career defined by advocacy and innovation. A longstanding leader in the ethanol sector, Schwarck has earned accolades including the TOBI Award (2012, 2013), ACE Grassroots Award (2016), and the Renewable Fuels Association Industry Award (2024). Known for uniting the industry during turbulent times, Schwarck has collaborated with researchers to spotlight the dangers of toxic gasoline compounds and the health benefits of ethanol. He has served on numerous boards supporting state, national and international efforts to promote renewable fuels.

Mike Jerke, CEO of Southwest Iowa Renewable Energy, was honored with the High Octane Award for his enduring commitment to ethanol. With over two decades of industry experience, Jerke has held leadership roles at five ethanol firms and was a founding board member of the Iowa Renewable Fuels Association. He has consistently championed ethanol policy, participating in fly-ins to Washington, D.C., and welcoming national leaders—including President Trump—to advocate for year-round E15 sales and fewer refinery exemptions. Jerke’s leadership has ensured that ethanol remains a powerful economic engine for farmers and rural communities.

Gillian Harrison, CEO of Whitefox Technologies, received the Women in Ethanol Award for her visionary leadership in expanding Whitefox from a startup into a key player in the global ethanol market.

Steffen Mueller, principal economist at the University of Illinois at Chicago, received the Award of Excellence for his academic and policy-shaping contributions.

Kathy Bryan Memorial Scholarship Recipients are Isaac Harder of Plainview High School, Nebraska, who will attend Northeast Community College to study pre-engineering, and Claire Weibye, a graduate of Lincoln East High School, Nebraska, will begin her studies in chemical engineering at Iowa State University this fall.

Ethanol, Ethanol News, FEW

RFA CEO Calls for Unleashing American Ethanol

Cindy Zimmerman

In keynote remarks today at the International Fuel Ethanol Workshop and Expo in Omaha, Renewable Fuels Association President and CEO Geoff Cooper stressed the need to “unleash” American ethanol for energy independence and the rural farm economy.

“If there was ever an energy sector that needs to be let off the leash and allowed to run free, it is today’s ethanol industry,” Cooper said. “For far too long, bureaucratic barriers, regulatory indecision, and policy uncertainty have been holding the U.S. ethanol industry back and preventing us from reaching our full potential. The industry could be doing so much more: More to deliver lower-cost, cleaner-burning fuel to consumers around the world. More to expand into new markets like aviation and maritime and other heavy-duty uses. And more to stimulate demand for America’s farmers.”

Cooper says RFA has a five-point plan for unleashing American ethanol:
Secure strong Renewable Fuel Standard volumes for 2026 and beyond
Pass year-round E15 legislation and remove regulatory burdens
Remove trade barriers and secure expanded market access for ethanol exports
Establish a level playing field for clean liquid-fueled vehicles, not only EVs
Provide certainty and clarity regarding the 45Z Clean Fuel Production Credit

Geoff Cooper, President Trump, and SIRE CEO Mike Jerke – June 11, 2019

In his remarks, Cooper stressed the Trump administration’s Day One commitment that recognized ethanol as a key driver of energy independence. He reflected that, while the same event was taking place six years ago, in 2019, Trump himself was visiting RFA member producer Southwest Iowa Renewable Energy.

“A lot has changed since President Trump visited SIRE six years ago. But what hasn’t changed is the power of ethanol to reduce fuel costs for consumers, enhance energy security, and boost demand for hard-hit farmers. And President Trump and leaders in his administration seem to get it. They seem to understand that opening the marketplace to larger volumes of ethanol can help achieve our nation’s energy, agriculture, and economic goals. Now is the time to Unleash American Ethanol!”

Cooper discussed some of the issues he addressed in his remarks today in the latest Ethanol Report podcast.
6:13 – the One Big Beautiful Bill and 45Z
10:41 – California bill to allow E15
18:59 – Where is EPA with RVOs?

Ethanol, Ethanol News, FEW, Renewable Fuels Association, RFA

SAF Company Goes Public on Nasdaq

Cindy Zimmerman

XCF Global, Inc., a Texas-based Synthetic Aviation Fuel (SAF) company, went public this week on the Nasdaq Capital Market under the ticker symbol “SAFX.” The announcement follows the closing of XCF’s business combination with Focus Impact BH3 Acquisition Company last week.

“We’re proud to begin our journey as a public company and to raise awareness to the growing need for low-carbon aviation solutions,” said Mihir Dange, Chief Executive Officer of XCF. “The public listing enables us to accelerate development of our SAF platform and expand production to meet the aviation sector’s growing demand for low-carbon fuel solutions. Our public debut aligns with a new era of growing demand and transformative opportunity – a mission that has never been more urgent.”

XCF Global began commercial production of neat SAF in February 2025 at its New Rise Reno facility with a nameplate production capacity of 38 million gallons per year and the first customer deliveries of neat SAF were completed in March 2025. The company is advancing a pipeline of production sites in Nevada, North Carolina, and Florida to expand SAF capacity and support long-term growth.

aviation biofuels, biofuels, SAF

Iowa Renewable Fuel Infrastructure Grants Hit Record

Cindy Zimmerman

The Iowa Renewable Fuels Infrastructure Program (RFIP) last week awarded $1 million in cost-share grants to support the installation of E15 at 91 additional retail fuel sites across Iowa. This milestone brings the total number of E15 projects awarded this fiscal year to a record 388, by far the most grants in a year since RFIP’s inception.

RFIP has awarded over $11 million in grants since July 1, 2024, funding 388 E15 projects and 39 biodiesel projects. In total, since the program’s founding, more than $59 million in state grants have been awarded through RFIP, helping fund ethanol and biodiesel infrastructure.

“It is clear the Governor’s E15 Access Standard is working and on pace for implementation on January 1 next year,” said Monte Shaw, Executive Director of the Iowa Renewable Fuels Association (IRFA).

The Iowa Legislature recently approved an additional $10 million in funding for the program for the upcoming fiscal year.

E15, Ethanol, Ethanol News, Iowa RFA