The $1-a-gallon tax credit that biodiesel now enjoys… but is set to expire at the end of this year… could have new life if a new piece of legislation makes it through Congress this year.
According to the Northwest Arkansas News, Sen. Blanche Lincoln (D-Ark.) has introduced legislation that will promote several renewable energy options, including the biodiesel credit:
Lincoln said she introduced legislation to do the following:
· Provide parity in the value of the credit for all renewable energy resources, increasing the value of the credit to full credit level for those resources that now get only a partial credit;
· Encourage innovation and entrepreneurship through alternative energy and conservation incentives; and
· Allow electricity from biomass used on-site to qualify for a tax credit – the Renewable Electricity Production Tax Credit.
Alternative energy sources, such as biomass and biofuels, offer job-creation opportunities for new and expanding small businesses, and she is pushing for incentives to help build a strong alternative-energy industry in the state
The article goes on to say that Lincoln feels these incentives are necessary to sustain the renewable fuels market.


Pacific Ethanol, Inc
Valero
In addition to the Valero investment, the company recently received $2 million in U.S. government appropriations towards a pilot plant it plans to open this summer in Springfield, Mass. This is one of several grants they have received from the U.S. Department of Energy. The company has also received funding from Venrock, Battery Ventures, BP, and Soros Fund Management.
Looking to take an eco-friendly vacation? Well, your resort options just got bigger with the announcement that
The original public comment period was to end on May 21 and will now end on July 20.
The Renewable Fuel Standard Improvement Act (H.R. 2409) was introduced by House Agriculture Committee Chairman Collin Peterson (D-MN) and Ranking Member Frank Lucas (R-OK) along with a bipartisan group of 42 other members of Congress.
Lucas says the most important provision in the bill is the expansion of the acreage eligible to produce biomass feedstock. “This will ease pressure on the current corn production system and it will open the way for more rapid development of next generation ethanol,” he added.
Those are impressive numbers, but not an electron of electricity has been produced yet. BrightSource now faces the challenge of licensing, financing billions of dollars in construction costs and then building nearly a dozen large-scale solar power plants to meet a 2016 deadline for the Southern California Edison (EIX) contract and a 2017 completion date for PG&E (PCG). (The big wild card is whether transmission lines will be available to connect the power plants to the grid.) The first PG&E project is set to go online in 2012 with the first SoCal Edison solar farm to begin generating electricity the next year. Those first two power plants are part of a 400-megawatt complex BrightSource is planning for the Ivanpah Valley on the California-Nevada border.
A joint venture by ConocoPhillips and Tyson that would have the fuel giant turning the meat giant’s animal fat waste into biodiesel has folded because of the halving of a key federal tax credit.