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What would it take to cut petroleum use by at least 85 percent in the near term? What vehicle powertrain can use two renewable sources of energy and on one fill provide a range greater than 450 miles? It’s the plug-in flex fuel hybrid vehicle.
As California and other states, including Minnesota, explore the role of ultra low emission vehicles in cutting harmful greenhouse gas emissions, it’s time for a closer look at the plug-in flex fuel hybrid, which is built on existing powertrain technology.
This vehicle is comprised of three key components.
The plug-in component enables this vehicle to charge a traction battery and operate in electric vehicle mode. An electric vehicle range of approximately 30 miles, according to research from the University of Southern California, Davis, is sufficient for commutes in certain metro areas. To make the EV power component truly green and low emission, the electricity used for charging the battery should be generated with only renewable energy sources such as that from wind or solar photovoltaic systems.
Then there is the flex fuel component of this vehicle that can use E85. When a driver exhausts the EV mode, the flex fuel powered engine operates the powertrain. This dual energy combination (from the plug-in and ethanol) significantly extends the range of travel. The dual energy arrangement is especially well suited for those climate zones where greater amounts of energy are required to provide vehicle cabin cooling and heating.
The hybrid component mirrors that in vehicles with traditional hybrid powertrain systems. In typical braking systems, the brakes convert vehicle momentum into heat which is lost to the environment. A hybrid system, however, captures the energy from braking to charge the traction battery.
Moreover, as noted above, carmakers won’t have to make significant investments to offer plug-in flex fuel hybrid powertrains in their vehicles. Plug-in hybrids and flex fuel vehicles already exist in the market. In fact, in 2017, Toyota introduced a flex fuel hybrid vehicle in South America.
With the right signals from regulators and consumers, carmakers will be compelled to offer plug-in flex fuel hybrids to the market in the near term and improve energy security by cutting dependence on one energy source and dramatically reduce greenhouse gas emissions in the transportation sector.
The Governor’s Council on Biofuels, earlier this month, set forth some constructive recommendations for attaining at least 25 percent volume ethanol in Minnesota by 2025, stimulating enhanced production efficiency of biofuels and helping to reduce Greenhouse Gas emissions in the transportation sector. These recommendations, when taken as a package, chart a very positive future for ethanol in Minnesota.
Five key recommendations of the Council, if fully implemented, hold the potential to boost the agriculture sector, significantly increase demand for renewable ethanol over more carbon intensive petroleum and renew Minnesota’s leadership role on ethanol issues.
One of the recommendations calls for making the transition from the standard E10 fuel to E15. Most notable in these recommendations is the realization that many fuel retailers will need some type of financial assistance to properly upgrade their fuel storage and dispensing systems to offer the better emission reduction E15 to Minnesotans. Interestingly, the Council also calls for equipment standards that will enable fuel retailers to offer even E25 at some point in time.
In its wisdom and foresight, the Council also set the course for work on a Clean Fuels Program. Absent action by the Minnesota Legislature in the 2021 session, the recommendation calls for the use of a working group to chart a course of action. If properly constructed, a CFP holds the potential to stimulate further reductions in transportation sector GHG emissions while giving a boost to Minnesota agriculture. Agriculture holds tremendous potential for reducing and sequestering GHG emissions. Therein rests an important tool and economic opportunity for farmers.
While it seems straightforward, there are a number of hurdles to getting E85 and E15 into state fleet vehicles. Council recommendations call for the Governor to use an Executive Order to make biofuels a priority for use in State vehicles. This is where the Minnesota Bio-Fuels Association biofuel locator app can of service - rather than paper documents in vehicles, state employees can simply use the app to find the nearest fuel retailer that offers E15 and higher bends.
Most of us know the level of disinformation that surrounds ethanol. Given the challenges on this front, the Council calls for a coordinated communications and education program to provide Minnesotans with the facts about homegrown and produced ethanol and to provided a stable source of funding.
Lastly, the Council calls for increased funding to the bioincentive program. This is a sure path to boosting the production of advanced biofuels and further lowering their carbon intensity thereby making it an even greater value to Minnesotans.
Although the Minnesota ethanol industry is confronted with some short-term challenges due to the Covid-19 crisis, implementation of the Councils recommendations suggest a positive future and some new paths for renewable ethanol in Minnesota to boost the economy and reduce GHG emissions.
In the past few weeks, we have been working with state lawmakers to advance a bill that would provide partial funding for fuel retailers to make the necessary infrastructure upgrades to offer E15. This initiative holds the potential to strengthen market signals to speed the adoption of E15 in Minnesota.
Let’s be clear, MN Bio-Fuels has long held the position that it is the duty and obligation of the petroleum industry to provide the necessary fueling systems to offer at least E15 to Minnesotans.
But 13 years after the RFS and the Minnesota Petroleum Replacement Law (which calls for 30 percent biofuel by 2025) and the availability of E15 for eight years, only 10 percent of fuel retailers offer E15.
Rather than make the necessary infrastructure investments, big name fuel brands have divested many retail stores and shifted the costly infrastructure burden to the local retailers. So, despite the higher standards called for in the laws mentioned above, fuel retailers have not significantly increased access to renewable ethanol.
In the first Biofuel Infrastructure Partnership under the USDA, the fuel retailers that participated in the program did upgrade their storage and dispensing equipment to offer E15 and higher blends. With the better value E15 at these retailers, some competitors in a stronger financial position adapted their existing fuel systems so they could compete by offering E15.
But, there are only 384 fuel retailers, out of about 3,300, offering E15 in Minnesota. To put a finer point on this matter, based on the National Renewable Energy Laboratory’s study on E15 market penetration, Minnesota needs approximately 660 stations offering E15 to attain an adequate market presence to make E15 the new standard. By providing some infrastructure funding assistance to fuel retailers through this proposed bill, we could get closer to that number.
As for the previous EPA’s proposed rule to change underground storage tank rules, does the proposed rule actually remove the barriers to E15? We are in the process of ascertaining the potential effect of the rule given the prevalence of secondary containment systems for underground storage tanks and pipes in Minnesota.
Moreover, the underground storage tank is only one part of the fuel distribution system. The compatibility of dispensers must still be addressed. If the underground storage tank is eliminated as a barrier to E15, dispensers will still need to be brought into compliance.
As such, in light of the ambiguity in the proposed rule by the EPA and other existing barriers in the market, the aforementioned infrastructure bill is essential to expanding access to E15 in Minnesota. And this initiative can augment all efforts to make E15 the new standard in Minnesota.
The recently released Climate-Smart Agriculture Progress Report from the USDA is a good first step in compiling initial conversations and recommendations for a unified strategy to build climate resilience and cut greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions.
The report explores various “themes” that emerged from comments and stakeholder process, including the role of voluntary environmental markets and concerns about at-the-farm level policies or programs.
Moreover, it is an excellent first step in a very complex process of building on the strengths of the agricultural sector and its role in fighting climate change. That role, through voluntary incentives, could involve direct on the farm actions to increase energy efficiency as well as to green the biomass supply used to produce biofuels. Many herculean and creative efforts will indeed be needed to timely and effectively tackle climate change.
E15 and higher ethanol blends are tools which are already reducing GHG emissions in the Minnesota transportation sector. Even more can be done with those tools to further reduce GHG emissions. One action, for instance, is to give biofuels greater access to the marketplace via additional storage and dispensing infrastructure. The result will be reduced carbon intensity of liquid transportation fuel.
While ethanol producers strive to use the latest technology and processes to reduce the carbon intensity of their renewable fuel, even more can be done to reduce the carbon intensity of the biomass supply chain.
While the report covers many issues, as part of the ongoing dialogue with stakeholders, we welcome the opportunity to explore how voluntary incentives could be used to more rapidly “green” the biomass supply chain. For biofuel producers in particular, the foundational issues are whether the biomass supply chain is actually made “greener” (lower carbon intensity) and the carbon accounting method is robust and accurate.
The report and what it reflects is certainly a step in the right direction but it is missing clear goals and timelines for action and results. Now is the time to build upon the strengths in the agriculture sector so as to foster the rapid adoption of GHG reduction practices and buy-in to voluntary environmental markets. The data, information, science and evidence is crystal clear on climate change: time is of the essence when it comes to drastically cutting GHG emissions.
On June 26, Gov. Walz signed into law the Agriculture Omnibus Bill (Chapter 3, House File 8). The bill contains a variety of provisions, but the ones of special interest to biofuel stakeholders are those with specific policy language and funding for biofuel infrastructure. Read in conjunction with the recommendations of the Governor’s Council on Biofuels, this is a bridge funding package to expand access to E15. The provisions of this law will enable more retailers to upgrade their storage and dispensing systems now while new policy is shaped to create a robust and enduring funding mechanism so hundreds more fuel retailers can cross over to E15.
The law, at Section 2, subdivision 4, addresses both the funding and policy factors. Grants, totaling $6 million, will be available through June 2023. Fuel retailers will be eligible for the grants if they have 10 or fewer stations located in Minnesota and their equipment is unable to handle E25. The grants can be used to upgrade dispensers, fuel storage tanks and other dispensing system equipment. With a maximum grant award of $200,000, at least 30 fuel retailers will be able to upgrade their storage and dispensing systems to offer E15 and higher ethanol blends. In cases where, for instance, only the fuel dispensers need to be upgraded, the available funds will enable even more fuel retailers to offer E15.
This grant program is an excellent first step in building the bridge to get us from about 400 fuel retailers who now offer E15 to many hundreds more offering at least E15 across Minnesota. Based on recent interviews with fuel retailers, MN Bio-Fuels estimates that nearly 80 are ready to apply for grant funding so they can offer Minnesotans E15 and higher ethanol blends.
Since the interest in the E15 grant funding is so popular, the next step would be the adoption of the recommendations of the Governor’s Council on Biofuels that call for the development of “a state funding package with a dedicated funding source, modeled after the Petrofund.... Funds could be used to leverage federal funds and funds from private sources through public/private partnership with biofuel interests and other vested parties.”
That said, this grant program will further accelerate the momentum for E15. Rep. Sundin, Sen. Westrom and Gov. Walz are to be commended for their leadership on this issue and their commitment to fulfilling the Petroleum Replacement Promotion Law (Minn. Stat. 239.7911) by enabling more fuel retailers to offer E15. As we use more homegrown fuel in Minnesota, we will further boost the economy, decrease our dependence on petroleum and cut more greenhouse gas emissions in the transportation sector. These are real wins for Minnesotans.
By Brian Werner, Executive Director.
Besides perhaps for Prince, if there’s one thing for which our state is known, it is our reputation of being “Minnesota Nice.” You’ve heard this a million times, right? When I introduce myself at out-of-town receptions as a Minnesotan, it’s always one of the first questions I’m asked (often in the Fargo accent). What is MinnesOOOta Nice?
While there are many ways to define this cultural stereotype, most people would say it is a proclivity toward being passive-aggressive, possessing mild-mannerisms, or having the urge to not stand out from the crowd.
All that being true, when I first started working on biofuel and agriculture policy for Minnesota public servants like U.S. Senator Amy Klobuchar and former U.S. Representative and House Agriculture Committee Chairman Collin Peterson, I was surprised to learn the prominent role that our state played in establishing the ethanol industry. Often referred to as the “Minnesota Model,” the ethanol industry’s foundations began here in the Upper Midwest with the dedicated, grassroots efforts of our farmers, and the partnerships they formed with one another and private and public entities.
If kick-starting the homegrown energy renaissance wasn’t enough, Minnesota doubled down on ethanol policy in the subsequent years. To start, we became the first state in the nation to mandate the use of ethanol in our fuel supply. Second, we started selling E15 or Unleaded 88 at Penn Minnoco in south Minneapolis in October 2013 and today, in just under ten years, you can find E15/U88 at 422 Minnesota retail locations. Lastly, if you take a flex-fuel vehicle out for a drive around Minnesota this fall, you’ll have access to more E85 fueling locations than anywhere else in the nation.
When it comes to ethanol, Minnesota stands out.
That is why I am honored and excited to assume the role of Executive Director of the Minnesota Biofuels Association. Minnesota has a wonderful story to tell about developing and fostering a homegrown source of transportation fuel that is better for consumers, better for the environment, and better for rural economies. We shouldn’t be shy about telling that story.
But while we should absolutely tout our successes more often, we can’t afford to rest on our laurels. As the critical need to decarbonize transportation, reduce dependence on imported oil, and save consumers money at the pump grows, the leadership opportunities for ethanol grow, too.
Minnesota’s leadership on biofuel policy is needed now more than ever. I look forward to working with all of you to strengthen the voice of the Minnesota Biofuels Association and the biofuels industry as a whole to ensure that ethanol’s best days have only just begun.
Last week, Minnesota Governor Tim Walz released his budget proposal for Fiscal Years (FY) 2024 – 2025 and incorporated several important priorities for the bio-economy. But if you didn’t read all the way to page 63 of the agriculture recommendations, you may have missed this important sentence: “E15/Unleaded 88 appears to be on its way to becoming the ‘new normal’….”
It is undeniably true that we are well on our way to meeting an ethanol blend rate of 15 percent. According to recent data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration, Minnesota led the nation in 2021 with an ethanol consumption rate of 12.58 percent. Because ethanol cuts carbon emissions by nearly 50 percent compared to gasoline and is cheaper at the pump (E15 saves consumers an average of $0.10/gal), the higher we go, the higher the benefit to Minnesota’s environment and economy.
As this legislative session continues, the Minnesota Bio-Fuels Association will be working to secure biofuel infrastructure investment and the removal of regulatory barriers for higher ethanol blends because certainty in agriculture markets, lower fuel prices, and cleaner air should be the “new normal” in Minnesota.
Much like a successful “March Madness” basketball team, a successful legislative strategy needs to combine an efficient offense with a lock-down defense.
Offense
Legislative Committees in Minnesota must act favorably on major appropriation and finance bills covering the next biennium (fiscal years 2024 and 2025) by next Tuesday, April 4. Ahead of this deadline, we have been actively working to advance key funding priorities to assist ethanol producers in Minnesota.
- Biofuel Infrastructure. Legislation has been introduced in both chambers (SF 1246 – Kupec; HF 1474 – Frederick) to provide grant funding for upgrading or replacing infrastructure at fuel retail locations to offer higher biofuel blends. We testified in support of both bills and, this week, both committees included biofuel infrastructure funding in their respective omnibus finance bills. The Senate bill matches Governor Walz’s budget proposal at $9 million ($4.5 million per year), while the House proposes $6 million ($3 million per year).
- Bioincentive payments. Legislation to provide funding to reimburse biofuel producers for the commercial-scale production of advanced biofuels has been introduced in both chambers (SF 1178 – Hauschild; HF 1477 – Tabke). We provided supportive testimony and when the House and Senate Agriculture committees released their omnibus bills this week they included strong Bioincentive funding. The Senate bill provides $12 million ($6 million per year), while the House provides $13.5 million ($6.75 million per year), of which $1 million per year is set-aside to backfill claims from previous fiscal years.
Defense
Many bills have been introduced this session that would subject ethanol production plants to duplicative or unnecessary administrative and environmental reporting, monitoring, and testing requirements.
- Biofuel Monitoring & Testing for PFAS and Treated Seeds. Legislation has been introduced (HF 2761 – Hansen) and included in the House Environment committee’s omnibus bill to require biofuel facilities to monitor and test for neonicotinoids and PFAS. We testified against the bill because no ethanol plant in the state of Minnesota uses treated seed as a feedstock. If they proposed to do so, they would need a new permit from MPCA.
- Disclosure of Sensitive Business Information. Legislation has been introduced (HF 475 – Hansen) and included in the House Agriculture committee’s omnibus bill to require Bioincentive program participants to disclose sensitive business information in order to qualify. No other program administered by the Minnesota Department of Agriculture requires such disclosure, and changing program requirements midstream would undermine the goal of attracting investment in advanced biofuels with carbon reductions 70 percent lower than petroleum.
Neither of the above bills have been included in Senate omnibus bills and MN Bio-Fuels will be working to keep them out of any final conference committee agreement while working in the long-term to educate members of the DFL majority about the ethanol production and permitting process.
MN Bio-Fuels will continue to advocate on behalf of Minnesota’s ethanol industry and ensure that a balanced offensive and defensive strategy leads to legislative success.
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The 93rd Minnesota Legislative Session officially closed on Monday, May 22. By any objective measure, it was a historic session that saw the enactment of significant legislation related to the budget, infrastructure bonding, taxation, and employment and workforce law. The $72 billion two-year budget signed by Governor Walz represents an increase of nearly 40 percent as compared to the last biennium.
Despite a lower budget target for agriculture overall and the need for significant outreach and education to members of the DFL majority on biofuels specifically, we were able to secure several policy and budget “wins” that will serve to strengthen Minnesota’s biofuel industry.
- Biofuel Infrastructure: $6.75 million
- The investments in biofuel infrastructure for 2024 and 2025 will increase the number of retailers in Minnesota offering higher blends of ethanol like E15 (Unleaded 88), which will lower costs for consumers and improve air quality through lower greenhouse gas emissions. With the help of this strong investment, we will soon surpass 500 retail stations selling E15 (Unleaded 88) in the state.
- Bioincentive Program: $11.5 million
- Minnesota ethanol plants are producing next-generation, advanced biofuels that further reduce greenhouse gas emissions. The investments in the bioincentive program for 2024 and 2025 will help to spur development of new low-carbon fuels while promoting rural economic development.
- Intermediate Blends Reporting: More data = better research
- Minnesota is the only state that reports monthly E15 (Unleaded 88) sales. The enactment of a provision to require more retail stations to report the gross number of gallons of intermediate blends (between 10 and 50 percent) sold will improve data collection efforts and allow us to better track sales growth and consumers savings.
- Clean Transportation Standard Working Group: Biofuel representation in the formation of a Minnesota Clean Transportation Standard
- If crafted properly and combined with complementary policies – a clean transportation standard in Minnesota offers the potential to lower greenhouse gas emissions from our transportation sector and support rural, agricultural communities. A working group authorized to study and report recommendations to the legislature will include representatives from the biofuel industry.
- Sustainable Aviation Fuel Tax Credit: $1.50 per gallon
- Providing tax incentives for the development and production of Sustainable Aviation Fuel in Minnesota will help spur new markets and new uses for biofuel and biofuel co-products like corn oil.
- EPA Emergency Waiver for E15 Summer Sales: Lower Prices All Summer Long
- EPA provided certainty to fuel producers and retailers by approving an emergency waiver allowing the sale of E15 this summer. The benefits of E15 will remain available to Minnesota consumers all summer long.
One of the most overwrought narratives in energy and transportation policy today is the idea that liquid biofuels and Electric Vehicles (EVs) are battling “American Gladiator-style” in a zero-sum game over the future of the domestic automobile market.
Predictably, this narrative is fueled - energy pun intended - in large part by partisan politics and special interest groups that either have a personal stake in securing total victory for their preferred transportation option or want to use the issue as a wedge in the next campaign.
As with most public policy problems, the solution to decarbonizing our transportation sector isn’t quite as black-and-white as this worn-out narrative suggests. The reality is we need a strategy that utilizes an all-of-the-above approach to level the playing field for proven technologies and fuels that have a track record of quickly lowering emissions. To successfully reach our carbon reduction goals, this strategy must also carefully consider current market and supply chain trends.
False Narrative #1: An All-Electric Future
Shortly after his election, President Biden issued an executive order outlining a goal that by 2030 50 percent of all light-duty vehicle sales would be zero-tailpipe emissions vehicles (ZEVs). The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) recently doubled down on this goal by releasing a proposed regulation for tailpipe emissions that would guarantee that 67 percent of new light-duty vehicle sales are EVs by 2032.
As I wrote in our comments to the EPA on the proposed rule earlier this month, the rule effectively compels automakers to produce battery electric vehicles to the detriment of similar technologies that can achieve the same or better environmental performance. Utilizing low-carbon liquid fuels in existing vehicles can achieve greenhouse gas reductions faster than new EVs can displace the existing fleet.
There are currently 278 million registered cars, vans, SUVs, pickups, and motorcycles in the U.S., of which about 1.2 percent are battery or plug-in hybrid EVs. EVs accounted for 5.8 percent of new light-duty vehicle sales in 2022. That means, under the proposed rule, a gap of 61.2 percent in EV sales needs to be filled in less than 10 years.
Such a rapid build-out of EV sales ignores the challenges associated with charging infrastructure availability, tax credit eligibility, consumer preference, critical mineral supply and demand, and battery range and performance.
False Narrative #2: War on Electric Vehicles
A recent campaign video from former President Trump referred to EV mandates as “a ridiculous Green New Deal crusade [that] is causing car prices to skyrocket while setting the stage for the destruction of American auto production.”
While we may agree that a top-down approach that picks winners and losers among zero-emissions technologies is the wrong approach, over-the-top political rhetoric like this feeds the narrative that the existence of EVs in the marketplace means that liquid biofuels will somehow become obsolete.
According to data from Oak Ridge National Laboratory, the average age of vehicles on the road is approximately 15 years, and 16 percent of passenger cars and 32 percent of light-duty trucks remain on the road for more than 20 years. We need to seek carbon reduction solutions for the hundreds of millions of cars operating on liquid fuels today.
For some consumers, that may mean trading in their internal-combustion engine vehicles in favor of an EV for short-range and urban-only travel. For many others, that may mean utilizing higher blends of ethanol, which reduce GHG emissions by 47 percent as compared to gasoline.
We cannot ignore that there has been significant government investment in the manufacture of EVs, batteries, and EV chargers, and many auto companies have announced similar investment in domestic EV manufacturing.
Instead of fighting to roll back or disincentivize these public and private investments, we should be pushing for a level playing field for all technologies and fuels moving forward, which will be the key to reaching net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by mid-century. EVs and liquid biofuels can and should be working in tandem to provide consumers with low-carbon transportation options.
Solution: Teaming Up on Clean Vehicles
The ethanol industry is working to break down these false narratives.
Our partners at the Renewable Fuels Association (RFA) recently debuted the first-ever Plug-in Hybrid Electric Flex Fuel Vehicle, which offers the best of both worlds. The vehicle has a range of 430 miles given a full tank of E85 and a full battery charge. Additionally, it has been shown to reduce emissions by about 80 percent compared to a vehicle running on gasoline.
This doesn’t need to be a zero-sum game whereby EVs win only if ethanol loses, and vice-versa. This innovative technological solution that marries ethanol and electricity shows that the two can work together to offer consumers an environmentally friendly option that maintains flexibility and reliability.
The Minnesota Bio-Fuels Association will continue working to ensure that Minnesota-grown, Minnesota-made biofuels are in a position to bring about meaningful and achievable reductions in greenhouse gas emissions from transportation.
Whether we face droughts, floods, blizzards, or tornadoes, Minnesotans expect agriculture to always “be there” — producing ample and affordable crops to meet demand.
Agriculture has nearly limitless capacity to deliver for Minnesotans but often faces regulatory uncertainty that hinders the ability to scale up operations. Providing clear market and regulatory signals of potential new uses for products — such as sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) produced here in the United States — could help overcome these barriers, enhance the resiliency of Minnesota agriculture and address the climate crisis.
Minnesota biofuel producers stand ready to produce SAF, but their ability to do so depends on policy outcomes in Washington and St. Paul. The federal Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) in 2022 and the state Omnibus Transportation law in 2023 both created tax credits for SAF, but it’s still unclear how a biofuel producer can measure the carbon intensity of their product or permit the technologies needed to ensure they can qualify for the credits.
Thankfully, Gov. Tim Walz, Agriculture Commissioner Thom Petersen, and U.S. Department of Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack are working to ensure biofuel producers and farmers can play a role in helping decarbonize aviation.
The Biden administration will soon clarify which carbon accounting model and method determines eligibility for IRA credits. Should the administration choose to implement the U.S. Department of Energy’s Argonne GREET model, the latest data from federal agencies and academic institutions on crop and biofuel production will be incorporated into lifecycle analyses. Leveraging the latest science rewards farmers embracing lower-carbon production practices and ensures accuracy in carbon accounting. Congress required the use of GREET for lifecycle analyses of non-aviation fuels under separate IRA provisions, so also adopting it for SAF provides consistency across tax structures.
The alternative is to only allow an international framework called CORSIA – which uses antiquated European emissions estimates of corn and biofuel production. Adopting CORSIA would make it extremely challenging, if not impossible, for many biofuels to qualify for SAF tax credits.
Carbon accounting regulations will provide a path forward, and biofuel producers in Minnesota need greater certainty and timeliness in environmental permitting if SAF is to achieve lift-off.
Many businesses have moved outside of Minnesota due to permitting delays. Unpredictable permitting timelines limit investment and delay the installation of new equipment, technologies, and processes needed to reach net zero.
SAF has the potential to significantly reduce aviation’s carbon emissions. Minnesota farmers and biofuels producers have already helped produce transportation fuel that lowers greenhouse gas emissions by between 44 to 52% compared to traditional gasoline. They stand ready to meet the challenge on aviation fuel.
Minnesota is a top five producer of corn and ethanol, with the latter topping 15 billion gallons nationwide in 2022. These crops and fuels will be critical to the SAF movement, as farmers sell them as feedstocks to ethanol plants to produce the sustainable fuel needed to reduce aviation’s carbon emissions.
In Minnesota, that means making more than 20,000 farmers eligible to sell their feedstocks to the state’s 19 ethanol plants.
If the country is to meet the administration’s “Grand Challenge” of producing 35 billion gallons of SAF per year by 2050 — sustainably produced, lower-carbon biofuels must be eligible for the newly created SAF tax structure under the IRA.
In Minnesota, ethanol plants also need clearly defined timelines and permitting requirements for the state to become a hub for SAF and to help achieve the administration’s goal.
I applaud Gov. Walz, Commissioner Petersen, and Secretary Vilsack’s efforts to advocate on behalf of American biofuel producers and farmers who are eager to help achieve the SAF Grand Challenge’s goals, especially when it comes to Minnesota’s permitting process.
I urge the Biden administration to turn to us to get the job done in scaling up a cleaner aviation industry.
The Oct. 2 commentary discussing the climate impacts of Minnesota agriculture included several misleading statements and cherry-picked science to assert that ethanol is not a clean fuel ("Big Ag must be part of climate crisis solution").
If 4 out of 5 doctors agree that eating vegetables and regular exercise is good for your health, we wouldn't take seriously the outlier who recommends a Snickers bar and eight hours of television.
The National Academy of Sciences study cited as the basis to claim that ethanol emits more carbon than gasoline doesn't hold up to peer review. It uses "questionable assumptions" and an "overestimation of the [greenhouse gas] emissions of corn ethanol" according to research from the Department of Energy's Argonne National Laboratory.
Other research conducted by Argonne, the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the Environmental Protection Agency, the California Air Resources Board, and major universities including Harvard have consistently demonstrated that ethanol is a low-carbon biofuel with 40 to 50% fewer emissions than petroleum on a life cycle basis, even when accounting for hypothetical land use change scenarios.
These hypothetical "land use changes" are used by the author to assert that ethanol has driven an increase in corn acreage even though EPA's annual estimates of cropland cleared or cultivated since 2007 has shown reductions from the original baseline of 402 million acres. Our farmers are using less land to produce higher yields through productivity gains.
If 4 out of 5 researchers say ethanol is good for the climate, we shouldn't take seriously the outlier who says it's worse than petroleum.
By Brian Werner
When greenhouse gases (GHGs) from transportation became the single largest source of emissions contributing to climate change, both in Minnesota and nationally, state lawmakers rightly began examining policy options that could reduce GHG emissions, improve air quality, and provide statewide economic benefits.
Those efforts ramped up this past year with the formation of the Minnesota Clean Transportation Standard (CTS) Work Group. This legislatively-established, Governor-appointed Work Group included a wide range of businesses and nonprofits that were tasked with preparing consensus recommendations for developing and implementing performance-based incentives to reduce the carbon intensity (CI) of all fuels used for transportation in Minnesota.
As a member of the Work Group, I had the opportunity to serve as one of 40 members charged with making recommendations to the state legislature on a CTS policy that could be successfully implemented in our diverse state. We made that recommendation earlier this month with 36 of the 40 participants doing the hard work of reaching a compromise that is best for all of Minnesota. It was disappointing to see so much focus upon release of the final report on the four dissenting organizations that pointed their fingers at rural communities and biofuels while refusing to make the necessary compromises to reach a consensus.
The majority consensus results of the Work Group report were clear: we cannot meet CTS targets for GHG emissions reductions without the use of biofuels. That’s because Minnesota’s farmers and biofuel producers already produce a readily available, lower carbon transportation fuel that is reducing emissions from vehicles on the road today. And as higher blends like E15 and E85 become more commonplace in the market, biofuels will contribute to an increasingly larger share of emissions reductions.
Despite the outlier studies cited by the four dissenting organizations, the overwhelming majority of research conducted by USDA, U.S. Department of Energy, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Harvard University, and the California Air Resources Board all confirm that ethanol lowers greenhouse gas emissions by between 44 to 52 percent compared to traditional gasoline.
And when it comes to GHG reductions from biofuel, we’re only scratching the surface. With the increased adoption of low-carbon farming practices, incorporation of renewable electricity and energy efficiency at biofuel production facilities, and the use of carbon capture technologies, the renewable fuels industry in Minnesota is rapidly on a path to net-zero or net-negative carbon emissions by 2050.
Any approach that insists on only one fuel or technology as a silver bullet risks leaving air quality benefits on the table. If we want to be serious about addressing carbon emissions from transportation, we need to lean into realistic solutions that recognize the fact that large numbers of internal combustion vehicles will remain on the road for decades to come. As U.S. Department of Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack said, “We’re going to have cars that use ethanol for a long, long time.”
To prevent the worst impacts of climate change, we need more low-carbon options, not less. A Minnesota CTS program may or may not be signed into law this year, but either way Minnesota’s renewable fuel producers will be helping to deliver a lower-carbon transportation future.
This column first appeared as a Letter to the Editor in the Worthington Daily Globe.
The work of the Minnesota Bio-Fuels Association – especially during the spring and summer season - often tracks closely with notable events on the calendar: the end of Minnesota’s legislative session in May, the annual Fuel Ethanol Workshop in June, ethanol lobby days in Washington, D.C. in July, and the U.S. Congressional recess and Minnesota Farm Fest in August.
Last week’s summer solstice represents a good time within that calendar of events to look back at the recently adjourned Minnesota legislature and preview what is always a busy Minnesota summer.
Minnesota Legislative Session 2024
In even-numbered years, the legislature shifts its attention to passing a bonding bill that supports infrastructure projects across the state. Having secured funding in the state budget last year for biofuel-related programs like the Minnesota Department of Agriculture’s Biofuels Infrastructure Grant program, MBA’s primary focus was on the consideration of a Clean Transportation Standard.
We testified before the Senate Transportation Committee on the importance of a technology and fuel neutral standard that would support all low-carbon transportation options and published op-eds stressing the importance of biofuels in meeting emissions reduction targets that would be established in such a standard.
While neither a bonding bill nor a Clean Transportation Standard were ultimately enacted in the closely divided legislature, our efforts proved vital in educating legislators and staff, signaling the importance of rural, agricultural, and biofuel voices, and setting the table for future consideration.
Pounding the Pavement
Minnesota Bio-Fuels has been pounding the pavement in recent weeks to host guests at producer member facilities, participate in feedstock grower meetings about the pending 45Z tax credit guidance, give presentations at local conferences about opportunities and challenges for ethanol in the energy transition, and promote higher blends like Unleaded 88 to motorists at Twin Cities retailers.
One throughline in all these discussions and activities has been the critical process of analyzing and benchmarking the lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions of biofuels.
We know that the renewable fuels being produced at Minnesota ethanol plants are already lowering GHG emissions from light- and medium-duty vehicles by nearly half. And we also know that with additional technologies and practices like renewable electricity, carbon capture utilization and sequestration, and climate smart agriculture, Minnesota ethanol plants will be net-zero by 2050.
Achieving those goals will require accurate, science-based GHG measurement tools like the Argonne National Laboratory’s GREET model, as well as more up-to-date data on input criteria included in the GREET model like the climate-smart agricultural practices and land use changes due to biofuel demand, both of which are less robust and therefore more difficult to model.
Two recent items underscore that point – 1) USDA’s announcement of a Request for Information (RFI) on the production of biofuel feedstocks using climate-smart practices and 2) a blog post from the Renewable Fuels Association’s CEO, Geoff Cooper, on new research around land-use changes.
While MN Bio-Fuels has been hitting the road this summer FOR biofuel by educating, promoting, and advocating; most important of all, we’ve been hitting the road WITH biofuel and saving – anecdotally – $0.31 and $0.56 per gallon.
Picture Caption: Kwik Trip Burnsville
Picture Caption: Kwik Trip in Chanhassen
Lastly, with the recent torrential rains and widespread flooding across much of southern Minnesota, the thoughts and concerns of our entire team here at MN Bio-Fuels go out to those who are struggling with flooded fields, wet basements, and damaged infrastructure.
I read with interest a recent article in the Minnesota Star Tribune examining the increasing popularity of Kwik Trip gas stations throughout the upper Midwest (“How Kwik Trip created a cult-like following in the Midwest”, September 28, 2024).
According to the author, the growth of Kwik Trip can be explained by its ubiquitous footprint, large stores, affordable groceries, signature snacks, and friendly workforce.
The Minnesota Bio-Fuels Association hosts fuel promotion events at gas stations around the Twin Cities metro area each year to educate drivers about the economic and environmental benefits of higher blends of ethanol in gasoline, including E15 (often marketed as Unleaded 88) and E85. When we talk to consumers about the criteria they seek in a convenience store, they rarely mention the reasons cited in the article.
According to a consumer survey conducted by the National Association of Convenience Stores (NACS) in 2024, 66 percent of consumers would drive five minutes out of their way to save five cents per gallon on fuel. Moreover, when NACS asked consumers why they prefer a specific gas station or chain, 56 percent of respondents cited lower prices.
As a gas station, Kwik Trip has leaned into the sale of higher blends of ethanol like E15. Why? Because they know that it offers them a competitive advantage in bringing in consumers.
Unleaded 88 averages a $0.16 discount compared to regular E10 and the price gap between these two fuels can be as large as $0.30 - $0.40 in some locations. With the economy and inflation ranking as top issues on voters’ minds in the upcoming election, consumers are increasingly looking for fuel that is easier on their pocketbooks. Unleaded 88 can save them between $4.00 and $5.00 every time they fill up.
Convenience stores and gas stations around the state would be well served by following Kwik Trip’s example in providing consumer choice and affordability in fuel options.
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