[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 58 (Friday, March 26, 2010)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 14670-14904]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-3851]
[[Page 14669]]
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Part II
Book 2 of 2 Books
Pages 14669-15320
Environmental Protection Agency
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40 CFR Part 80
Regulation of Fuels and Fuel Additives: Changes to Renewable Fuel
Standard Program; Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 58 / Friday, March 26, 2010 / Rules
and Regulations
[[Page 14670]]
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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 80
[EPA-HQ-OAR-2005-0161; FRL-9112-3]
RIN 2060-A081
Regulation of Fuels and Fuel Additives: Changes to Renewable Fuel
Standard Program
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
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SUMMARY: Under the Clean Air Act Section 211(o), as amended by the
Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007 (EISA), the Environmental
Protection Agency is required to promulgate regulations implementing
changes to the Renewable Fuel Standard program. The revised statutory
requirements specify the volumes of cellulosic biofuel, biomass-based
diesel, advanced biofuel, and total renewable fuel that must be used in
transportation fuel. This action finalizes the regulations that
implement the requirements of EISA, including the cellulosic, biomass-
based diesel, advanced biofuel, and renewable fuel standards that will
apply to all gasoline and diesel produced or imported in 2010. The
final regulations make a number of changes to the current Renewable
Fuel Standard program while retaining many elements of the compliance
and trading system already in place. This final rule also implements
the revised statutory definitions and criteria, most notably the new
greenhouse gas emission thresholds for renewable fuels and new limits
on renewable biomass feedstocks. This rulemaking marks the first time
that greenhouse gas emission performance is being applied in a
regulatory context for a nationwide program. As mandated by the
statute, our greenhouse gas emission assessments consider the full
lifecycle emission impacts of fuel production from both direct and
indirect emissions, including significant emissions from land use
changes. In carrying out our lifecycle analysis we have taken steps to
ensure that the lifecycle estimates are based on the latest and most
up-to-date science. The lifecycle greenhouse gas assessments reflected
in this rulemaking represent significant improvements in analysis based
on information and data received since the proposal. However, we also
recognize that lifecycle GHG assessment of biofuels is an evolving
discipline and will continue to revisit our lifecycle analyses in the
future as new information becomes available. EPA plans to ask the
National Academy of Sciences for assistance as we move forward. Based
on current analyses we have determined that ethanol from corn starch
will be able to comply with the required greenhouse gas (GHG) threshold
for renewable fuel. Similarly, biodiesel can be produced to comply with
the 50% threshold for biomass-based diesel, sugarcane with the 50%
threshold for advanced biofuel and multiple cellulosic-based fuels with
their 60% threshold. Additional fuel pathways have also been determined
to comply with their thresholds. The assessment for this rulemaking
also indicates the increased use of renewable fuels will have important
environmental, energy and economic impacts for our Nation.
DATES: This final rule is effective on July 1, 2010, and the percentage
standards apply to all gasoline and diesel produced or imported in
2010. The incorporation by reference of certain publications listed in
the rule is approved by the Director of the Federal Register as of July
1, 2010.
ADDRESSES: EPA has established a docket for this action under Docket ID
No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2005-0161. All documents in the docket are listed in the
http://www.regulations.gov Web site. Although listed in the index, some
information is not publicly available, e.g., confidential business
information (CBI) or other information whose disclosure is restricted
by statute. Certain other material, such as copyrighted material, is
not placed on the Internet and will be publicly available only in hard
copy form. Publicly available docket materials are available either
electronically through http://www.regulations.gov or in hard copy at
the Air and Radiation Docket and Information Center, EPA/DC, EPA West,
Room 3334, 1301 Constitution Ave., NW., Washington, DC. The Public
Reading Room is open from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through
Friday, excluding legal holidays. The telephone number for the Public
Reading Room is (202) 566-1744, and the telephone number for the Air
Docket is (202) 566-1742.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Julia MacAllister, Office of
Transportation and Air Quality, Assessment and Standards Division,
Environmental Protection Agency, 2000 Traverwood Drive, Ann Arbor, MI
48105; Telephone number: 734-214-4131; Fax number: 734-214-4816; E-mail
address: [email protected], or Assessment and Standards
Division Hotline; telephone number (734) 214-4636; E-mail address
[email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
General Information
I. Does This Final Rule Apply to Me?
Entities potentially affected by this final rule are those involved
with the production, distribution, and sale of transportation fuels,
including gasoline and diesel fuel or renewable fuels such as ethanol
and biodiesel. Regulated categories include:
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NAICS \1\
Category codes SIC \2\ codes Examples of potentially regulated entities
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Industry.............................. 324110 2911 Petroleum Refineries.
Industry.............................. 325193 2869 Ethyl alcohol manufacturing.
Industry.............................. 325199 2869 Other basic organic chemical manufacturing.
Industry.............................. 424690 5169 Chemical and allied products merchant wholesalers.
Industry.............................. 424710 5171 Petroleum bulk stations and terminals.
Industry.............................. 424720 5172 Petroleum and petroleum products merchant wholesalers.
Industry.............................. 454319 5989 Other fuel dealers
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\1\ North American Industry Classification System (NAICS)
\2\ Standard Industrial Classification (SIC) system code.
This table is not intended to be exhaustive, but rather provides a
guide for readers regarding entities likely to be regulated by this
final action. This table lists the types of entities that EPA is now
aware could potentially be regulated by this final action. Other types
of entities not listed in the table could also be regulated. To
determine whether your activities would be regulated by this final
action, you should carefully examine the applicability criteria in 40
CFR part 80. If you have any questions regarding the applicability of
this final action to a
[[Page 14671]]
particular entity, consult the person listed in the preceding section.
Outline of This Preamble
I. Executive Summary
A. Summary of New Provisions of the RFS Program
1. Required Volumes of Renewable Fuel
2. Standards for 2010 and Effective Date for New Requirements
a. 2010 Standards
b. Effective Date
3. Analysis of Lifecycle Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Thresholds
for Renewable Fuels
a. Background and Conclusions
b. Fuel Pathways Considered and Key Model Updates Since the
Proposal
c. Consideration of Fuel Pathways Not Yet Modeled
4. Compliance with Renewable Biomass Provision
5. EPA-Moderated Transaction System
6. Other Changes to the RFS Program
B. Impacts of Increasing Volume Requirements in the RFS2 Program
II. Description of the Regulatory Provisions
A. Renewable Identification Numbers (RINs)
B. New Eligibility Requirements for Renewable Fuels
1. Changes in Renewable Fuel Definitions
a. Renewable Fuel
b. Advanced Biofuel
c. Cellulosic Biofuel
d. Biomass-Based Diesel
e. Additional Renewable Fuel
f. Cellulosic Diesel
2. Lifecycle GHG Thresholds
3. Renewable Fuel Exempt From 20 Percent GHG Threshold
a. General Background of the Exemption Requirement
b. Definition of Commenced Construction
c. Definition of Facility Boundary
d. Proposed Approaches and Consideration of Comments
i. Comments on the Proposed Basic Approach
ii. Comments on the Expiration of Grandfathered Status
e. Final Grandfathering Provisions
i. Increases in Volume of Renewable Fuel Produced at
Grandfathered Facilities Due to Expansion
ii. Replacements of Equipment
iii. Registration, Recordkeeping and Reporting
4. New Renewable Biomass Definition and Land Restrictions
a. Definitions of Terms
i. Planted Crops and Crop Residue
ii. Planted Trees and Tree Residue
iii. Slash and Pre-Commercial Thinnings
iv. Biomass Obtained From Certain Areas at Risk From Wildfire
v. Algae
b. Implementation of Renewable Biomass Requirements
i. Ensuring That RINs Are Generated Only For Fuels Made From
Renewable Biomass
ii. Whether RINs Must Be Generated For All Qualifying Renewable
Fuel
c. Implementation Approaches for Domestic Renewable Fuel
i. Recordkeeping and Reporting for Feedstocks
ii. Approaches for Foreign Producers of Renewable Fuel
(1) RIN-Generating importers
(2) RIN-Generating foreign producers
iii. Aggregate Compliance Approach for Planted Crops and Crop
Residue From Agricultural Land
(1) Analysis of Total Agricultural Land in 2007
(2) Aggregate Agricultural Land Trends Over Time
(3) Aggregate Compliance Determination
d. Treatment of Municipal Solid Waste (MSW)
C. Expanded Registration Process for Producers and Importers
1. Domestic Renewable Fuel Producers
2. Foreign Renewable Fuel Producers
3. Renewable Fuel Importers
4. Process and Timing
D. Generation of RINs
1. Equivalence Values
2. Fuel Pathways and Assignment of D Codes
a. Producers
b. Importers
c. Additional Provisions for Foreign Producers
3. Facilities With Multiple Applicable Pathways
4. Facilities That Co-Process Renewable Biomass and Fossil Fuels
5. Facilities That Process Municipal Solid Waste
6. RINless Biofuel
E. Applicable Standards
1. Calculation of Standards
a. How Are the Standards Calculated?
b. Standards for 2010
2. Treatment of Biomass-Based Diesel in 2009 and 2010
a. Shift in 2009 Biomass-Based Diesel Compliance Demonstration
to 2010
b. Treatment of Deficit Carryovers, RIN Rollover, and RIN Valid
Life For Adjusted 2010 Biomass-Based Diesel Requirement
3. Future Standards
F. Fuels That Are Subject to the Standards
1. Gasoline
2. Diesel
3. Other Transportation Fuels
G. Renewable Volume Obligations (RVOs)
1. Designation of Obligated Parties
2. Determination of RVOs Corresponding to the Four Standards
3. RINs Eligible To Meet Each RVO
4. Treatment of RFS1 RINs Under RFS2
a. Use of RFS1 RINs To Meet Standards Under RFS2
b. Deficit Carryovers From the RFS1 Program to RFS2
H. Separation of RINs
1. Nonroad
2. Heating Oil and Jet Fuel
3. Exporters
4. Requirement to Transfer RINs With Volume
5. Neat Renewable Fuel and Renewable Fuel Blends Designated as
Transportation Fuel, Heating Oil, or Jet Fuel
I. Treatment of Cellulosic Biofuel
1. Cellulosic Biofuel Standard
2. EPA Cellulosic Biofuel Waiver Credits for Cellulosic Biofuel
3. Application of Cellulosic Biofuel Waiver Credits
J. Changes to Recordkeeping and Reporting Requirements
1. Recordkeeping
2. Reporting
3. Additional Requirements for Producers of Renewable Natural
Gas, Electricity, and Propane
4. Attest Engagements
K. Production Outlook Reports
L. What Acts Are Prohibited and Who Is Liable for Violations?
III. Other Program Changes
A. The EPA Moderated Transaction System (EMTS)
1. Need for the EPA Moderated Transaction System
2. Implementation of the EPA Moderated Transaction System
3. How EMTS Will Work
4. A Sample EMTS Transaction
B. Upward Delegation of RIN-Separating Responsibilities
C. Small Producer Exemption
D. 20% Rollover Cap
E. Small Refinery and Small Refiner Flexibilities
1. Background--RFS1
a. Small Refinery Exemption
b. Small Refiner Exemption
2. Statutory Options for Extending Relief
3. The DOE Study/DOE Study Results
4. Ability To Grant Relief Beyond 211(o)(9)
5. Congress-Requested Revised DOE Study
6. What We're Finalizing
a. Small Refinery and Small Refiner Temporary Exemptions
b. Case-by-Case Hardship for Small Refineries and Small Refiners
c. Program Review
7. Other Flexibilities Considered for Small Refiners
a. Extensions of the RFS1 Temporary Exemption for Small Refiners
b. Phase-in
c. RIN-Related Flexibilities
F. Retail Dispenser Labeling for Gasoline With Greater Than 10
Percent Ethanol
G. Biodiesel Temperature Standardization
IV. Renewable Fuel Production and Use
A. Overview of Renewable Fuel Volumes
1. Reference Cases
2. Primary Control Case
a. Cellulosic Biofuel
b. Biomass-Based Diesel
c. Other Advanced Biofuel
d. Other Renewable Fuel
3. Additional Control Cases Considered
B. Renewable Fuel Production
1. Corn/Starch Ethanol
a. Historic/Current Production
b. Forecasted Production Under RFS2
2. Imported Ethanol
3. Cellulosic Biofuel
a. Current State of the Industry
b. Setting the 2010 Cellulosic Biofuel Standard
c. Current Production Outlook for 2011 and Beyond
d. Feedstock Availability
i. Urban Waste
ii. Agricultural and Forestry Residues
iii. Dedicated Energy Crops
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iv. Summary of Cellulosic Feedstocks for 2022
4. Biodiesel & Renewable Diesel
a. Historic and Projected Production
i. Biodiesel
ii. Renewable Diesel
b. Feedstock Availability
C. Biofuel Distribution
1. Biofuel Shipment to Petroleum Terminals
2. Petroleum Terminal Accommodations
3. Potential Need for Special Blendstocks at Petroleum Terminals
for E85
4. Need for Additional E85 Retail Facilities
D. Ethanol Consumption
1. Historic/Current Ethanol Consumption
2. Increased Ethanol Use Under RFS2
a. Projected Gasoline Energy Demand
b. Projected Growth in Flexible Fuel Vehicles
c. Projected Growth in E85 Access
d. Required Increase in E85 Refueling Rates
e. Market Pricing of E85 Versus Gasoline
3. Consideration of >10% Ethanol Blends
V. Lifecycle Analysis of Greenhouse Gas Emissions
A. Introduction
1. Open and Science-Based Approach to EPA's Analysis
2. Addressing Uncertainty
B. Methodology
1. Scope of Analysis
a. Inclusion of Indirect Land Use Change
b. Models Used
c. Scenarios Modeled
2. Biofuel Modeling Framework & Methodology for Lifecycle
Analysis Components
a. Feedstock Production
i. Domestic Agricultural Sector Impacts
ii. International Agricultural Sector Impacts
b. Land Use Change
i. Amount of Land Area Converted and Where
ii. Type of Land Converted
iii. GHG Emissions Associated With Conversion
(1) Domestic Emissions
(2) International Emissions
iv. Timeframe of Emission Analysis
v. GTAP and Other Models
c. Feedstock Transport
d. Biofuel Processing
e. Fuel Transportation
f. Vehicle Tailpipe Emissions
3. Petroleum Baseline
C. Threshold Determination and Assignment of Pathways
D. Total GHG Reductions
E. Effects of GHG Emission Reductions and Changes in Global
Temperature and Sea Level
VI. How Would the Proposal Impact Criteria and Toxic Pollutant
Emissions and Their Associated Effects?
A. Overview of Impacts
B. Fuel Production & Distribution Impacts of the Proposed
Program
C. Vehicle and Equipment Emission Impacts of Fuel Program
D. Air Quality Impacts
1. Particulate Matter
a. Current Levels
b. Projected Levels Without RFS2 Volumes
c. Projected Levels With RFS2 Volumes
2. Ozone
a. Current Levels
b. Projected Levels Without RFS2 Volumes
c. Projected Levels With RFS2 Volumes
3. Air Toxics
a. Current Levels
b. Projected Levels
i. Acetaldehyde
ii. Formaldehyde
iii. Ethanol
iv. Benzene
v. 1,3-Butadiene
vi. Acrolein
vii. Population Metrics
4. Nitrogen and Sulfur Deposition
a. Current Levels
b. Projected Levels
E. Health Effects of Criteria and Air Toxics Pollutants
1. Particulate Matter
a. Background
b. Health Effects of PM
2. Ozone
a. Background
b. Health Effects of Ozone
3. NOX and SOX
a. Background
b. Health Effects of NOX
c. Health Effects of SOX
4. Carbon Monoxide
5. Air Toxics
a. Acetaldehyde
b. Acrolein
c. Benzene
d. 1,3-Butadiene
e. Ethanol
f. Formaldehyde
g. Peroxyacetyl Nitrate (PAN)
h. Naphthalene
i. Other Air Toxics
F. Environmental Effects of Criteria and Air Toxic Pollutants
1. Visibility
2. Atmospheric Deposition
3. Plant and Ecosystem Effects of Ozone
4. Environmental Effects of Air Toxics
VII. Impacts on Cost of Renewable Fuels, Gasoline, and Diesel
A. Renewable Fuel Production Costs
1. Ethanol Production Costs
a. Corn Ethanol
b. Cellulosic Ethanol
i. Feedstock Costs
ii. Production Costs for Cellulosic Biofuels
c. Imported Sugarcane Ethanol
2. Biodiesel and Renewable Diesel Production Costs
a. Biodiesel
b. Renewable Diesel
B. Biofuel Distribution Costs
1. Ethanol Distribution Costs
2. Cellulosic Distillate and Renewable Diesel Distribution Costs
3. Biodiesel Distribution Costs
C. Reduced U.S. Refining Demand
D. Total Estimated Cost Impacts
1. Refinery Modeling Methodology
2. Overall Impact on Fuel Cost
VIII. Economic Impacts and Benefits
A. Agricultural and Forestry Impacts
1. Biofuel Volumes Modeled
2. Commodity Price Changes
3. Impacts on U.S. Farm Income
4. Commodity Use Changes
5. U.S. Land Use Changes
6. Impact on U.S. Food Prices
7. International Impacts
B. Energy Security Impacts
1. Implications of Reduced Petroleum Use on U.S. Imports
2. Energy Security Implications
a. Effect of Oil Use on Long-Run Oil Price, U.S. Import Costs,
and Economic Output
b. Short-Run Disruption Premium From Expected Costs of Sudden
Supply Disruptions
c. Costs of Existing U.S. Energy Security Policies
3. Combining Energy Security and Other Benefits
4. Total Energy Security Benefits
C. Benefits of Reducing GHG Emissions
1. Introduction
2. Derivation of Interim Social Cost of Carbon Values
3. Application of Interim SCC Estimates to GHG Emissions
Reductions
D. Criteria Pollutant Health and Environmental Impacts
1. Overview
2. Quantified Human Health Impacts
3. Monetized Impacts
4. What Are the Limitations of the Health Impacts Analysis?
E. Summary of Costs and Benefits
IX. Impacts on Water
A. Background
1. Agriculture and Water Quality
2. Ecological Impacts
3. Impacts to the Gulf of Mexico
B. Upper Mississippi River Basin Analysis
1. SWAT Model
2. AEO 2007 Reference Case
3. Reference Cases and RFS2 Control Case
4. Case Study
5. Sensitivity Analysis
C. Additional Water Issues
1. Chesapeake Bay Watershed
2. Ethanol Production and Distribution
a. Production
b. Distillers Grain With Solubles
c. Ethanol Leaks and Spills From Fueling Stations
3. Biodiesel Plants
4. Water Quantity
5. Drinking Water
X. Public Participation
XI. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory Planning and Review
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act
1. Overview
2. Background
3. Summary of Potentially Affected Small Entities
4. Reporting, Recordkeeping, and Compliance
5. Related Federal Rules
6. Steps Taken To Minimize the Significant Economic Impact on
Small Entities
a. Significant Panel Findings
b. Outreach With Small Entities (and the Panel Process)
c. Panel Recommendations, Proposed Provisions, and Provisions
Being Finalized
i. Delay in Standards
ii. Phase-in
iii. RIN-Related Flexibilities
iv. Program Review
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v. Extensions of the Temporary Exemption Based on a Study of
Small Refinery Impacts
vi. Extensions of the Temporary Exemption Based on
Disproportionate Economic Hardship
7. Conclusions
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation and Coordination With
Indian Tribal Governments
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of Children From
Environmental Health Risks and Safety Risks
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use
I. National Technology Transfer Advancement Act
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions to Address
Environmental Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income
Populations
K. Congressional Review Act
XII. Statutory Provisions and Legal Authority
I. Executive Summary
Through this final rule, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
is revising the National Renewable Fuel Standard program to implement
the requirements of the Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007
(EISA). EISA made significant changes to both the structure and the
magnitude of the renewable fuel program created by the Energy Policy
Act of 2005 (EPAct). The EISA fuel program, hereafter referred to as
RFS2, mandates the use of 36 billion gallons of renewable fuel by
2022--a nearly five-fold increase over the highest volume specified by
EPAct. EISA also established four separate categories of renewable
fuels, each with a separate volume mandate and each with a specific
lifecycle greenhouse gas emission threshold. The categories are
renewable fuel, advanced biofuel, biomass-based diesel, and cellulosic
biofuel. There is a notable increase in the mandate for cellulosic
biofuels in particular. EISA increased the cellulosic biofuel mandate
to 16 billion gallons by 2022, representing the bulk of the increase in
the renewable fuels mandate.
EPA's proposed rule sought comment on a multitude of issues,
ranging from how to interpret the new definitions for renewable biomass
to the Agency's proposed methodology for conducting the greenhouse gas
lifecycle assessments required by EISA. The decisions presented in this
final rule are heavily informed by the many public comments we received
on the proposed rule. In addition, and as with the proposal, we sought
input from a wide variety of stakeholders. The Agency has had multiple
meetings and discussions with renewable fuel producers, technology
companies, petroleum refiners and importers, agricultural associations,
lifecycle experts, environmental groups, vehicle manufacturers, states,
gasoline and petroleum marketers, pipeline owners and fuel terminal
operators. We also have worked closely with other Federal agencies and
in particular with the Departments of Energy and Agriculture.
This section provides an executive summary of the final RFS2
program requirements that EPA is implementing as a result of EISA. The
RFS2 program will replace the RFS1 program promulgated on May 1, 2007
(72 FR 23900).\1\ Details of the final requirements can be found in
Sections II and III, with certain lifecycle aspects detailed in Section
V.
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\1\ To meet the requirements of EPAct, EPA had previously
adopted a limited program that applied only to calendar year 2006.
The RFS1 program refers to the general program adopted in the May
2007 rulemaking.
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This section also provides a summary of EPA's assessment of the
environmental and economic impacts of the use of higher renewable fuel
volumes. Details of these analyses can be found in Sections IV through
IX and in the Regulatory Impact Analysis (RIA).
A. Summary of New Provisions of the RFS Program
Today's notice establishes new regulatory requirements for the RFS
program that will be implemented through a new subpart M to 40 CFR part
80. EPA is maintaining several elements of the RFS1 program such as
regulations governing the generation, transfer, and use of Renewable
Identification Numbers (RINs). At the same time, we are making a number
of updates to reflect the changes brought about by EISA
1. Required Volumes of Renewable Fuel
The RFS program is intended to require a minimum volume of
renewable fuel to be used each year in the transportation sector. In
response to EPAct 2005, under RFS1 the required volume was 4.0 billion
gallons in 2006, ramping up to 7.5 billion gallons by 2012. Starting in
2013, the program also required that the total volume of renewable fuel
contain at least 250 million gallons of fuel derived from cellulosic
biomass.
In response to EISA, today's action makes four primary changes to
the volume requirements of the RFS program. First, it substantially
increases the required volumes and extends the timeframe over which the
volumes ramp up through at least 2022. Second, it divides the total
renewable fuel requirement into four separate categories, each with its
own volume requirement. Third, it requires, with certain exceptions
applicable to existing facilities, that each of these mandated volumes
of renewable fuels achieve certain minimum thresholds of GHG emission
performance. Fourth, it requires that all renewable fuel be made from
feedstocks that meet the new definition of renewable biomass including
certain land use restrictions. The volume requirements in EISA are
shown in Table I.A.1-1.
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P
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[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR26MR10.414
BILLING CODE 6560-50-C
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As shown in the table, the volume requirements are not exclusive,
and generally result in nested requirements. Any renewable fuel that
meets the requirement for cellulosic biofuel or biomass-based diesel is
also valid for meeting the advanced biofuel requirement. Likewise, any
renewable fuel that meets the requirement for advanced biofuel is also
valid for meeting the total renewable fuel requirement. See Section V.C
for further discussion of which specific types of fuel may qualify for
the four categories shown in Table I.A.1-1.
2. Standards for 2010 and Effective Date for New Requirements
While EISA established the renewable fuel volumes shown in Table
I.A.1-1, it also requires that the Administrator set the standards
based on these volumes each November for the following year based in
part on information provided from the Energy Information Agency (EIA).
In the case of the cellulosic biofuel standard, section 211(o)(7)(D) of
EISA specifically requires that the standard be set based on the volume
projected to be available during the following year. If the volume is
lower than the level shown in Table I.A.1-1, then EISA allows the
Administrator to also lower the advanced biofuel and total renewable
fuel standards each year accordingly. Given the implications of these
standards and the necessary judgment that can't be reduced to a formula
akin to the RFS1 regulations, we believe it is appropriate to set the
standards through a notice-and-comment rulemaking process. Thus, for
future standards, we intend to issue an NPRM by summer and a final rule
by November 30 of each year in order to determine the appropriate
standards applicable in the following year. However, in the case of the
2010 standards, we are finalizing them as part of today's action.
a. 2010 Standards
While we proposed that the cellulosic biofuel standard would be set
at the EISA-specified level of 100 million gallons for 2010, based on
analysis of information available at this time, we no longer believe
the full volume can be met. Since the proposal, we have had detailed
discussions with over 30 companies that are in the business of
developing cellulosic biofuels and cellulosic biofuel technology. Based
on these discussions, we have found that many of the projects that
served as the basis for the proposal have been put on hold, delayed, or
scaled back. At the same time, there have been a number of additional
projects that have developed and are moving forward. As discussed in
Section IV.B.3, the timing for many of the projects indicates that
while few will be able to provide commercial volumes for 2010, an
increasing number will come on line in 2011, 2012, and 2013. The
success of these projects is then expected to accelerate growth of the
cellulosic biofuel industry out into the future. EIA provided us with a
projection on October 29, 2009 of 5.04 million gallons (6.5 million
ethanol-equivalent gallons) of cellulosic biofuel production for 2010.
While our company-by-company assessment varies from EIA's, as described
in Section IV.B.3., and actual cellulosic production volume during 2010
will be a function of developments over the course of 2010, we
nevertheless believe that 5 million gallons (6.5 million ethanol
equivalent) represents a reasonable, yet achievable level for the
cellulosic standard for 2010. While this is lower than the level
specified in EISA, no change to the advanced biofuel and total
renewable fuel standards is warranted. With the inclusion of an energy-
based Equivalence Value for biodiesel and renewable diesel, 2010
compliance with the biomass-based diesel standard will be more than
enough to ensure compliance with the advanced biofuel standard for
2010.
Today's rule also includes special provisions to account for the
2009 biomass-based diesel volume requirements in EISA. As described in
the NPRM, in November 2008 we used the new total renewable fuel volume
of 11.1 billion gallons from EISA as the basis for the 2009 total
renewable fuel standard that we issued under the RFS1 regulations.\2\
While this approach ensured that the total mandated renewable fuel
volume required by EISA for 2009 was used, the RFS1 regulatory
structure did not provide a mechanism for implementing the 0.5 billion
gallon requirement for biomass-based diesel nor the 0.6 billion gallon
requirement for advanced biofuel. As we proposed, and as is described
in more detail in Section II.E.2, we are addressing this issue in
today's rule by combining the 2010 biomass-based diesel requirement of
0.65 billion gallons with the 2009 biomass based diesel requirement of
0.5 billion gallons to require that obligated parties meet a combined
2009/2010 requirement of 1.15 billion gallons by the end of the 2010
compliance year. No similar provisions are required in order to fulfill
the 2009 advanced biofuel volume mandate.
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\2\ 73 FR 70643, November 21, 2008
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The resulting 2010 standards are shown in Table I.A.2-1. These
standards represent the fraction of a refiner's or importer's gasoline
and diesel volume which must be renewable fuel. Additional discussion
of the 2010 standards can be found in Section II.E.1.b.
Table I.A.2-1--Standards for 2010
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cellulosic biofuel......................................... 0.004%
Biomass-based diesel....................................... 1.10%
Advanced biofuel........................................... 0.61%
Renewable fuel............................................. 8.25%
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b. Effective Date
Under CAA section 211(o) as modified by EISA, EPA is required to
revise the RFS1 regulations within one year of enactment, or December
19, 2008. Promulgation by this date would have been consistent with the
revised volume requirements shown in Table I.A.1-1 that begin in 2009
for certain categories of renewable fuel. As described in the NPRM, we
were not able to promulgate final RFS2 program requirements by December
19, 2008.
Under today's rule, the transition from using the RFS1 regulatory
provisions regarding registration, RIN generation, reporting, and
recordkeeping to using comparable provisions in this RFS2 rule will
occur on July 1, 2010. This is the start of the 1st quarter following
completion of the statutorily required 60-day Congressional Review
period for such a rulemaking as this. This will provide adequate lead
time for all parties to transition to the new regulatory requirements,
including additional time to prepare for RFS2 implementation for those
entities who may find it helpful, especially those covered by the RFS
program for the first time. In addition, making the transition at the
end of the quarter will help simplify the recordkeeping and reporting
transition to RFS2. To facilitate the volume obligations being based on
the full year's gasoline and diesel production, and to enable the
smooth transition from the RFS1 to RFS2 regulatory provisions,
Renewable Identification Numbers (RINs--which are used in the program
for both credit trading and for compliance demonstration) that were
generated under the RFS1 regulations will continue to be valid for
compliance with the RFS2 obligations. Further discussion of transition
issues can be found in Sections II.A and II.G.4, respectively.
According to EISA, the renewable fuel obligations applicable under
RFS2 apply on a calendar basis. That is, obligated parties must
determine their
[[Page 14676]]
renewable volume obligations (RVOs) at the end of a calendar year based
on the volume of gasoline or diesel fuel they produce during the year,
and they must demonstrate compliance with their RVOs in an annual
report that is due two months after the end of the calendar year.
For 2010, today's rule will follow this same general approach. The
four RFS2 RVOs for each obligated party will be calculated on the basis
of all gasoline and diesel produced or imported on and after January 1,
2010, through December 31, 2010. Obligated parties will be required to
demonstrate by February 28 of 2011 that they obtained sufficient RINs
to satisfy their 2010 RVOs. We believe this is an appropriate approach
as it is more consistent with Congress' provisions in EISA for 2010,
and there is adequate lead time for the obligated parties to achieve
compliance.
The issue for EPA to resolve is how to apply the four volume
mandates under EISA for calendar year 2010. These volume mandates are
translated into applicable percentages that obligated parties then use
to determine their renewable fuel volume obligations based on the
gasoline and diesel they produce or import in 2010. There are three
basic approaches that EPA has considered, based on comments on the
proposal. The first is the approach adopted in this rule--the four RFS2
applicable percentages are determined based on the four volume mandates
covered by this rule, and the renewable volume obligation for a refiner
or importer will be determined by applying these percentages to the
volume of gasoline and diesel fuel they produce during calendar year
2010. Under this approach, there is no separate applicable percentage
under RFS1 for 2010, however RINs generated in 2009 and 2010 under RFS1
can be used to meet the four volume obligations for 2010 under the RFS2
regulations. Another option, which was considered and rejected by EPA,
is much more complicated--(1) determine an RFS1 applicable percentage
based on just the total renewable fuel volume mandate, using the same
total volume for renewable fuel as used in the first approach, and
require obligated parties to apply that percentage to the gasoline
produced from January 1, 2010 until the effective date of the RFS2
regulations, and (2) determine the four RFS2 applicable percentages as
discussed above, but require obligated parties to apply them to only
the gasoline and diesel in 2010 after the effective date of the RFS2
regulations. Of greater concern than its complexity, the second
approach fails to ensure that the total volumes for three of the volume
mandates are met for 2010. In effect EPA would be requiring that
obligated parties use enough cellulosic biofuel, biomass-based diesel,
and advanced biofuel to meet approximately 75% of the total volumes
required for these fuels under EISA. While the total volume mandate
under EISA for renewable fuel would likely be met, the other three
volumes mandates would only be met in part. The final option would
involve delaying the RFS2 requirements until January 1, 2011, which
would avoid the complexity of the second approach, but would be even
less consistent with EISA's requirements.
The approach adopted in this rule is clearly the most consistent
with EISA's requirement of four different volume mandates for all of
calendar year 2010. In addition, EPA is confident that obligated
parties have adequate lead-time to comply with the four volume
requirements under the approach adopted in this rule. The volume
requirements are achieved by obtaining the appropriate number of RINs
from producers of the renewable fuel. The obligated parties do not need
lead time for construction or investment purposes, as they are not
changing the way they produce gasoline or diesel, do not need to design
to install new equipment, or take other actions that require longer
lead time. Obtaining the appropriate amount of RINs involves
contractual or other arrangements with renewable fuel producers or
other holders of RINs. Obligated parties now have experience
implementing RFS1, and the actions needed to comply under the RFS2
regulations are a continuation of these kinds of RFS1 activities. In
addition, an adequate supply of RINs is expected to be available for
compliance by obligated parties. RFS1 RINs have been produced
throughout 2009 and continue to be produced since the beginning of
2010. There has been and will be no gap or lag in the production of
RINS, as the RFS1 regulations continue in effect and require that
renewable fuel producers generate RINs for the renewable fuel they
produce. These 2009 and 2010 RFS1 RINs will be available and can be
used towards the volume requirements of obligated parties for 2010.
These RFS1 RINS combined with the RFS2 RINs that will be generated by
renewable fuel producers are expected to provide an adequate supply of
RINs to ensure compliance for all of the renewable volume mandates. For
further discussion of the expected supply of renewable fuel, see
section IV.
In addition, obligated parties have received adequate notice of
this obligation. The proposed rule called for obligated parties to meet
the full volume mandates for all four volume mandates, and to base
their volume obligation on the volume of gasoline and diesel produced
starting January 1, 2010. While the RFS2 regulations are not effective
until after January 1, 2010, the same full year approach is being taken
for the 2010 volumes of gasoline and diesel. Obligated parties have
been on notice based on EPA's proposal, discussions with many
stakeholders during the rulemaking, the issuance of the final rule
itself, and publication of this rule in the Federal Register. As
discussed above, there is adequate time for obligated parties to meet
their 2010 volume obligations by the spring of 2011.
This approach does not impose any retroactive requirements. The
obligation that is imposed under the RFS2 regulations is forward
looking--by the spring of 2011, when compliance is determined,
obligated parties must satisfy certain volume obligations. These future
requirements are calculated in part based on volumes of gasoline and
diesel produced prior to the effective date of the RFS2 regulations,
but this does not make the RFS2 requirement retroactive in nature. The
RFS2 regulations do not change in any way the legal obligations or
requirements that apply prior to the effective date of the RFS2
regulations. Instead, the RFS2 requirements impose new requirements
that must be met in the future. There is adequate lead time to comply
with these RFS2 requirements, and they achieve a result that is more
consistent with Congress' goals in establishing 4 volume mandates for
calendar year 2010, and for these reasons EPA is adopting this approach
for calendar year 2010.
Parties that intend to generate RINs, own and/or transfer them, or
use them for compliance purposes after July 1, 2010 will need to
register or re-register under the RFS2 provisions and modify their
information technology (IT) systems to accommodate the changes we are
finalizing today. As described more fully in Section II, these changes
include redefining the D code within the RIN that identifies which
standard a fuel qualifies for, adding a process for verifying that
feedstocks meet the renewable biomass definition, and calculating
compliance with four standards instead of one. EPA's registration
system is available now for parties to complete the registration
process. Further details on this process can be found elsewhere in
today's preamble as well as at http://www.epa.gov/otaq/regs/fuels/
[[Page 14677]]
fuelsregistration.htm. Parties that produce motor vehicle, nonroad,
locomotive, and marine (MVNRLM) diesel fuel but not gasoline will be
newly obligated parties and may be establishing IT systems for the RFS
program for the first time.
3. Analysis of Lifecycle Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Thresholds for
Renewable Fuels
a. Background and Conclusions
A significant aspect of the RFS2 program is the requirement that
the lifecycle GHG emissions of a qualifying renewable fuel must be less
than the lifecycle GHG emissions of the 2005 baseline average gasoline
or diesel fuel that it replaces; four different levels of reductions
are required for the four different renewable fuel standards. These
lifecycle performance improvement thresholds are listed in Table I.A.3-
1. Compliance with each threshold requires a comprehensive evaluation
of renewable fuels, as well as the baseline for gasoline and diesel, on
the basis of their lifecycle emissions. As mandated by EISA, the
greenhouse gas emissions assessments must evaluate the aggregate
quantity of greenhouse gas emissions (including direct emissions and
significant indirect emissions such as significant emissions form land
use changes) related to the full lifecycle, including all stages of
fuel and feedstock production, distribution and use by the ultimate
consumer.
Table I.A.3-1--Lifecycle GHG Thresholds Specified in EISA
[Percent Reduction from Baseline]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Renewable fuel \a\......................................... 20
Advanced biofuel........................................... 50
Biomass-based diesel....................................... 50
Cellulosic biofuel......................................... 60
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\a\ The 20% criterion generally applies to renewable fuel from new
facilities that commenced construction after December 19, 2007.
It is important to recognize that fuel from the existing capacity
of current facilities and the capacity of all new facilities that
commenced construction prior to December 19, 2007 (and in some cases
prior to December 31, 2009) are exempt, or grandfathered, from the 20%
lifecycle requirement for the Renewable Fuel category. Therefore, EPA
has in the discussion below emphasized its analysis on those plants and
fuels that are likely to be used for compliance with the rule and would
be subject to the lifecycle thresholds. Based on the analyses and
approach described in Section V of this preamble, EPA is determining
that ethanol produced from corn starch at a new facility (or expanded
capacity from an existing) using natural gas, biomass or biogas for
process energy and using advanced efficient technologies that we expect
will be most typical of new production facilities will meet the 20% GHG
emission reduction threshold compared to the 2005 baseline gasoline. We
are also determining that biobutanol from corn starch meets the 20%
threshold. Similarly, EPA is making the determination that biodiesel
and renewable diesel from soy oil or waste oils, fats and greases will
exceed the 50% GHG threshold for biomass-based diesel compared to the
2005 petroleum diesel baseline. In addition, we have now modeled
biodiesel and renewable diesel produced from algal oils as complying
with the 50% threshold for biomass-based diesel. EPA is also
determining that ethanol from sugarcane complies with the applicable
50% GHG reduction threshold for advanced biofuels. The modeled pathways
(feedstock and production technology) for cellulosic ethanol and
cellulosic diesel would also comply with the 60% GHG reduction
threshold applicable to cellulosic biofuels. As discussed later in
section V, there are also other fuels and fuel pathways that we are
determining will comply with the GHG thresholds.
Under EISA, EPA is allowed to adjust the GHG reduction thresholds
downward by up to 10% if necessary based on lifecycle GHG assessment of
biofuels likely to be available. Based on the results summarized above,
we are not finalizing any adjustments to the lifecycle GHG thresholds
for the four renewable fuel standard categories.
EPA recognizes that as the state of scientific knowledge continues
to evolve in this area, the lifecycle GHG assessments for a variety of
fuel pathways are likely to be updated. Therefore, while EPA is using
its current lifecycle assessments to inform the regulatory
determinations for fuel pathways in this final rule, as required by the
statute, the Agency is also committing to further reassess these
determinations and lifecycle estimates. As part of this ongoing effort,
we will ask for the expert advice of the National Academy of Sciences,
as well as other experts, and incorporate their advice and any updated
information we receive into a new assessment of the lifecycle GHG
emissions performance of the biofuels being evaluated in this final
rule. EPA will request that the National Academy of Sciences evaluate
the approach taken in this rule, the underlying science of lifecycle
assessment, and in particular indirect land use change, and make
recommendations for subsequent lifecycle GHG assessments on this
subject. At this time we are estimating this review by the National
Academy of Sciences may take up to two years. As specified by EISA, if
EPA revises the analytical methodology for determining lifecycle
greenhouse gas emissions, any such revision will apply to renewable
fuel from new facilities that commence construction after the effective
date of the revision.
b. Fuel Pathways Considered and Key Model Updates Since the Proposal
EPA is making the GHG threshold determination based on a
methodology that includes an analysis of the full lifecycle, including
significant emissions related to international land-use change. As
described in more detail below and in Section V of this preamble, EPA
has used the best available models for this purpose, and has
incorporated many modifications to its proposed approach based on
comments from the public and peer reviewers and developing science. EPA
has also quantified the uncertainty associated with significant
components of its analyses, including important factors affecting GHG
emissions associated with international land use change. As discussed
below, EPA has updated and refined its modeling approach since proposal
in several important ways, and EPA is confident that its modeling of
GHG emissions associated with international land use is comprehensive
and provides a reasonable and scientifically robust basis for making
the threshold determinations described above. As discussed below, EPA
plans to continue to improve upon its analyses, and will update it in
the future as appropriate.
Through technical outreach, the peer review process, and the public
comment period, EPA received and reviewed a significant amount of data,
studies, and information on our proposed lifecycle analysis approach.
We incorporated a number of new, updated, and peer-reviewed data
sources in our final rulemaking analysis including better satellite
data for tracking land use changes and improved assessments of N2O
impacts from agriculture. The new and updated data sources are
discussed further in this section, and in more detail in Section V.
We also performed dozens of new modeling runs, uncertainty
analyses, and sensitivity analyses which are leading to greater
confidence in our results. We have updated our analyses in conjunction
with, and based on, advice from experts from government,
[[Page 14678]]
academia, industry, and not for profit institutions.
The new studies, data, and analysis performed for the final
rulemaking impacted the lifecycle GHG results for biofuels in a number
of different ways. In some cases, updates caused the modeled analysis
of lifecycle GHG emissions from biofuels to increase, while other
updates caused the modeled emissions to be reduced. Overall, the
revisions since our proposed rule have led to a reduction in modeled
lifecycle GHG emissions as compared to the values in the proposal. The
following highlights the most significant revisions. Section V details
all of the changes made and their relative impacts on the results.
Corn Ethanol: The final rule analysis found less overall indirect
land use change (less land needed), thereby improving the lifecycle GHG
performance of corn ethanol. The main reasons for this decrease are:
Based on new studies that show the rate of improvement in
crop yields as a function of price, crop yields are now modeled to
increase in response to higher crop prices. When higher crop yields are
used in the models, less land is needed domestically and globally for
crops as biofuels expand.
New research available since the proposal indicates that
the corn ethanol production co-product, distillers grains and solubles
(DGS), is more efficient as an animal feed (meaning less corn is needed
for animal feed) than we had assumed in the proposal. Therefore, in our
analyses for the final rule, domestic corn exports are not impacted as
much by increased biofuel production as they were in the proposal
analysis.
Improved satellite data allowed us to more finely assess
the types of land converted when international land use changes occur,
and this more precise assessment led to a lowering of modeled GHG
impacts. Based on previous satellite data, the proposal assumed
cropland expansion onto grassland would require an amount of pasture to
be replaced through deforestation. For the final rulemaking analysis we
incorporated improved economic modeling of demand for pasture area and
satellite data which indicates that pasture is also likely to expand
onto existing grasslands. This reduced the GHG emissions associated
with an amount of land use change.
However, we note that not all modeling updates necessarily reduced
predicted GHG emissions from land use change. As one example, since the
proposal a new version of the GREET model (Version 1.8C) has been
released. EPA reviewed the new version and concluded that this was an
improvement over the previous GREET release that was used in the
proposal analysis (Version 1.8B). Therefore, EPA updated the GHG
emission factors for fertilizer production used in our analysis to the
values from the new GREET version. This had the result of slightly
increasing the GHG emissions associated with fertilizer production and
thus slightly increasing the GHG emission impacts of domestic
agriculture.
For the final rule, EPA has analyzed a variety of corn ethanol
pathways including ethanol made from corn starch using natural gas,
coal, and biomass as process energy sources in production facilities
utilizing both dry mill and wet mill processes. For corn starch
ethanol, we also considered the technology enhancements likely to occur
in the future such as the addition of corn oil fractionation or
extraction technology, membrane separation technology, combined heat
and power and raw starch hydrolysis.
Biobutanol from corn starch: In addition to ethanol from corn
starch, for this final rule, we have also analyzed bio-butanol from
corn starch. Since the feedstock impacts are the same as for ethanol
from corn starch, the assessment for biobutanol reflects the differing
impacts due to the production process and energy content of biobutanol
compared to that of ethanol.
Soybean Biodiesel: The new information described above for corn
ethanol also leads to lower modeled GHG impacts associated with soybean
biodiesel. The revised assessment predicts less overall indirect land
use change (less land needed) and less impact from the land use changed
that does occur (due to updates in types of converted land assumed). In
addition, the latest IPCC guidance indicates reduced domestic soybean
N2O emissions, and updated USDA and industry data show reductions in
biodiesel processing energy use and a higher co-product credit, all of
which further reduced the modeled soybean biodiesel lifecycle GHG
emissions. This has resulted in a significant improvement in our
assessment of the lifecycle performance of soybean biodiesel as
compared to the estimate in the proposal.
Biodiesel and Renewable Diesel from Algal Oil and Waste Fats and
Greases: In addition to biodiesel from soy oil, biodiesel and renewable
diesel from algal oil (should it reach commercial production) and
biodiesel from waste oils, fats and greases have been modeled. These
feedstock sources have little or no land use impact so the GHG impacts
associate with their use in biofuel production are largely the result
of energy required to produce the feedstock (in the case of algal oil)
and the energy required to turn that feedstock into a biofuel.
Sugarcane Ethanol: Sugarcane ethanol was analyzed considering a
range of technologies and assuming alternative pathways for dehydrating
the ethanol prior to its use as a biofuel in the U.S. For the final
rule, our analysis also shows less overall indirect land use change
(less land needed) associated with sugarcane ethanol production. For
the proposal, we assumed sugarcane expansion in Brazil would result in
cropland expansion into grassland and lost pasture being replaced
through deforestation. Based on newly available regional specific data
from Brazil, historic trends, and higher resolution satellite data, in
the final rule, sugarcane expansion onto grassland is coupled with
greater pasture intensification, such that there is less projected
impact on forests. Furthermore, new data provided by commenters showed
reduced sugarcane ethanol process energy, which also reduced the
estimated lifecycle GHG impact of sugarcane ethanol production.
Cellulosic Ethanol: We analyzed cellulosic ethanol production using
both biochemical (enzymatic) and thermo-chemical processes with corn
stover, switchgrass, and forestry thinnings and waste as feedstocks.
For cellulosic diesel, we analyzed production using the Fischer-Tropsch
process. For the final rule, we updated the cellulosic ethanol
conversion rates based on new data provided by the National Renewable
Energy Laboratory (NREL.) As a result of this update, the gallons per
ton yields for switchgrass and several other feedstock sources
increased in our analysis for the final rule, while the predicted
yields from corn residue and several other feedstock sources decreased
slightly from the NPRM values. In addition, we also updated our
feedstock production yields based on new work conducted by the Pacific
Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL). This analysis increased the tons
per acre yields for several dedicated energy crops. These updates
increased the amount of cellulosic ethanol projected to come from
energy crops. While the increase in crop yields and conversion
efficiency reduced the GHG emissions associated with cellulosic
ethanol, there remains an increased demand for land to grow dedicated
energy crops; this land use impact resulted in increased GHG emissions
with the net result varying by the type of cellulosic feedstock source.
[[Page 14679]]
We note that several of the renewable fuel pathways modeled are
still in early stages of development or commercialization and are
likely to continue to develop as the industry moves toward commercial
production. Therefore, it will be necessary to reanalyze several
pathways using updated data and information as the technologies
develop. For example, biofuel derived from algae is undergoing wide
ranging development. Therefore for now, our algae analyses presume
particular processes and energy requirements which will need to be
reviewed and updated as this fuel source moves toward commercial
production.
For this final rule we have incorporated a statistical analysis of
uncertainty about critical variables in our pathway analysis. This
uncertainty analysis is explained in detail in Section V and is
consistent with the specific recommendations received through our peer
review and public comments on the proposal. The uncertainty analysis
focused on two aspects of indirect land use change--the types of land
converted and the GHG emission associated with different types of land
converted. In particular, our uncertainty analysis focused on such
specific sources of information as the satellite imaging used to inform
our assessment of land use trends and the specific changes in carbon
storage expected from a change in land use in each geographic area of
the world modeled. We have also performed additional sensitivity
analyses including analysis of two yield scenarios for corn and soy
beans to assess the impact of changes in yield assumptions.
This uncertainty analysis provides information on both the range of
possible outcomes for the parameters analyzed, an estimate of the
degree of confidence that the actual result will be within a particular
range (in our case, we estimated a 95% confidence interval) and an
estimate of the central tendency or midpoint of the GHG performance
estimate.
In the proposal, we considered several options for the timeframe
over which to measure lifecycle GHG impacts and the possibility of
discounting those impacts. Based on peer review recommendations and
other comments received, EPA is finalizing its assessments based on an
analysis assuming 30 years of continued emission impacts after the
program is fully phased in by 2022 and without discounting those
impacts.
EPA also notes that it received significant comment on our proposed
baseline lifecycle greenhouse gas assessment of gasoline and diesel
(``petroleum baseline''). While EPA has made several updates to the
petroleum analysis in response to comments (see Section V for further
discussion), we are finalizing the approach based on our interpretation
of the definition in the Act as requiring that the petroleum baseline
represent an average of the gasoline and diesel fuel (whichever is
being replaced by the renewable fuel) sold as transportation fuel in
2005.
As discussed in more detail later, the modeling results developed
for purposes of the final rule provide a rich and comprehensive base of
information for making the threshold determinations. There are numerous
modeling runs, reflecting updated inputs to the model, sensitivity
analyses, and uncertainty analyses. The results for different scenarios
include a range and a best estimate or mid-point. Given the potentially
conservative nature of the base crop yield assumption, EPA believes the
actual crop yield in 2022 may be above the base yield; however we are
not in a position to characterize how much above it might be. To the
extent actual yields are higher, the base yield modeling results would
underestimate to some degree the actual GHG emissions reductions
compared to the baseline.
In making the threshold determinations for this rule, EPA weighed
all of the evidence available to it, while placing the greatest weight
on the best estimate value for the base yield scenario. In those cases
where the best estimate for the base yield scenario exceeds the
reduction threshold, EPA judges that there is a good basis to be
confident that the threshold will be achieved and is determining that
the bio-fuel pathway complies with the applicable threshold. To the
extent the midpoint of the scenarios analyzed lies further above a
threshold for a particular biofuel pathway, we have increasingly
greater confidence that the biofuel exceeds the threshold.
EPA recognizes that certain commenters suggest that there is a very
high degree of uncertainty associated in particular with determining
international indirect land use changes and their emissions impacts,
and because of this EPA should exclude any calculation of international
indirect land use changes in its lifecycle analysis. Commenters say EPA
should make the threshold determinations based solely on modeling of
other sources of lifecycle emissions. In effect, commenters argue that
the uncertainty of the modeling associated with international indirect
land use change means we should use our modeling results but exclude
that part of the results associated with international land use change.
For the reasons discussed above and in more detail in Section V,
EPA rejects the view that the modeling relied upon in the final rule,
which includes emissions associated with international indirect land
use change, is too uncertain to provide a credible and reasonable
scientific basis for determining whether the aggregate lifecycle
emissions exceed the thresholds. In addition, as discussed elsewhere,
the definition of lifecycle emissions includes significant indirect
emissions associated with land use change. In deciding whether a bio-
fuel pathway meets the threshold, EPA has to consider what it knows
about all aspects of the lifecycle emissions, and decide whether there
is a valid basis to find that the aggregate lifecycle emissions of the
fuel, taking into account significant indirect emissions from land use
change meets the threshold. Based on the analyses conducted for this
rule, EPA has determined international indirect land use impacts are
significant and therefore must be included in threshold compliance
assessment.
If the international land use impacts were so uncertain that their
impact on lifecycle GHG emissions could not be adequately determined,
as claimed by commenters, this does not mean EPA could assume the
international land use change emissions are zero, as commenters
suggest. High uncertainty would not mean that emissions are small and
can be ignored; rather it could mean that we could not tell whether
they are large or small. If high uncertainty meant that EPA were not
able to determine that indirect emissions from international land use
change are small enough that the total lifecycle emissions meet the
threshold, then that fuel could not be determined to meet the GHG
thresholds of EISA and the fuel would necessarily have to be excluded
from the program.
In any case, that is not the situation here as EPA rejects
commenters' suggestion and does not agree that the uncertainty over the
indirect emissions from land use change is too high to make a reasoned
threshold determination. Therefore biofuels with a significant
international land use impact are included within this program.
c. Consideration of Fuel Pathways Not Yet Modeled
Not all biofuel pathways have been directly modeled for this rule.
For example, while we have modeled cellulosic biofuel produced from
corn
[[Page 14680]]
stover, we have not modeled the specific GHG impact of cellulosic
biofuel produced from other crop residues such as wheat straw or rice
straw. Today, in addition to finalizing a threshold compliance
determination for those pathways we specifically modeled, in some
cases, our technical judgment indicates other pathways are likely to be
similar enough to modeled pathways that we are also assured these
similar pathways qualify. These pathways include fuels produced from
the same feedstock and using the same production process but produced
in countries other than those modeled. The agricultural sector modeling
used for our lifecycle analysis does not predict any soybean biodiesel
or corn ethanol will be imported into the U.S., or any imported
sugarcane ethanol from production in countries other than Brazil.
However, these rules do not prohibit the use in the U.S. of these fuels
produced in countries not modeled if they are also expected to comply
with the eligibility requirements including meeting the thresholds for
GHG performance. Although the GHG emissions of producing these fuels
from feedstock grown or biofuel produced in other countries has not
been specifically modeled, we do not anticipate their use would impact
our conclusions regarding these feedstock pathways. The emissions of
producing these fuels in other countries could be slightly higher or
lower than what was modeled depending on a number of factors. Our
analyses indicate that crop yields for the crops in other countries
where these fuels are also most likely to be produced are similar or
lower than U.S. values indicating the same or slightly higher GHG
impacts. Agricultural sector inputs for the crops in these other
countries are roughly the same or lower than the U.S. pointing toward
the same or slightly lower GHG impacts. If crop production were to
expand due to biofuels in the countries where the models predict these
biofuels might additionally be produced would tend to lower our
assessment of international indirect impacts but could increase our
assessment of the domestic (i.e., the country of origin) land use
impacts. EPA believes, because of these offsetting factors along with
the small amounts of fuel potentially coming from other countries, that
incorporating fuels produced in other countries will not impact our
threshold analysis. Therefore, fuels of the same fuel type, produced
from the same feedstock using the same fuel production technology as
modeled fuel pathways will be assessed the same GHG performance
decisions regardless of country of origin. These pathways also include
fuels that might be produced from similar feedstock sources to those
already modeled and which are expected to have less or no indirect land
use change. In such cases, we believe that in order to compete
economically in the renewable fuel marketplace such pathways are likely
to be at least as energy efficient as those modeled and thus have
comparable lifecycle GHG performance. Based on these considerations, we
are extending the lifecycle results for the fuel pathways already
modeled to 5 broader categories of feedstocks. This extension of
lifecycle modeling results is discussed further in Section V.C.
We have established five categories of biofuel feedstock sources
under which modeled feedstock sources and feedstock sources similar to
those modeled are grouped and qualify on the basis of our existing
modeling. These are:
1. Crop residues such as corn stover, wheat straw, rice straw,
citrus residue.
2. Forest material including eligible forest thinnings and solid
residue remaining from forest product production.
3. Annual cover crops planted on existing crop land such as winter
cover crops.
4. Separated food and yard waste including biogenic waste from food
processing.
5. Perennial grasses including switchgrass and miscanthus.
The full set of pathways for which we have been able to make a
compliance decision are described in Section V.
Threshold determinations for certain other pathways were not
possible at this time because sufficient modeling or data is not yet
available. In some of these cases, we recognize that a renewable fuel
is already being produced from an alternative feedstock. Although we
have the data needed for analysis, we did not have sufficient time to
complete the necessary lifecycle GHG impact assessment for this final
rule. We will model and evaluate additional pathways after this final
rule on the basis of current or likely commercial production in the
near-term and the status of current analysis at EPA. EPA anticipates
modeling grain sorghum ethanol, woody pulp ethanol, and palm oil
biodiesel after this final rule and including the determinations in a
rulemaking within 6 months. Our analyses project that they will be used
in meeting the RFS2 volume standard in the near-term. During the course
of the NPRM comment period, EPA received detailed information on these
pathways and is currently in the process of analyzing these pathways.
We have received comments on several additional feedstock/fuel
pathways, including rapeseed/canola, camelina, sweet sorghum, wheat,
and mustard seed, and we welcome parties to utilize the petition
process described in Section V.C to request EPA to examine additional
pathways.
We anticipate there could be additional cases where we currently do
not have information on which to base a lifecycle GHG assessment
perhaps because we are not yet aware of potential unique plant
configurations or operations that could result in greater efficiencies
than assumed in our analysis. In many cases, such alternative pathways
could have been explicitly modeled as a reasonably straightforward
extension of pathways we have modeled if the necessary information had
been available. For example, while we have modeled specific
enhancements to corn starch ethanol production such as membrane
separation or corn oil extraction, there are likely other additional
energy saving or co-product pathways available or under development by
the industry. It is reasonable to also consider these alternative
energy saving or co-product pathways based upon their technical merits.
Other current or emerging pathways may require new analysis and
modeling for EPA to fully evaluate compliance. For example, fuel
pathways with feedstocks or fuel types not yet modeled by EPA may
require additional modeling and, it follows, public comment before a
determination of compliance can be made.
Therefore, for those fuel pathways that are different than those
pathways EPA has listed in today's regulations, EPA is establishing a
petition process whereby a party can petition the Agency to consider
new pathways for GHG reduction threshold compliance. As described in
Section V.C, the petition process is meant for parties with serious
intention to move forward with production via the petitioned fuel
pathway and who have moved sufficiently forward in the business process
to show feasibility of the fuel pathway's implementation. In addition,
if the petition addresses a fuel pathway that already has been
determined to qualify as one or more types of renewable fuel under RFS
(e.g., renewable fuel, or advanced biofuel), the pathway must have the
potential to result in qualifying for a renewable fuel type for which
it was not previously qualified. Thus, for example, the Agency will not
undertake any additional review for a party wishing to get a modified
LCA value for a
[[Page 14681]]
previously approved fuel pathway if the desired new value would not
change the overall pathway classification.
The petition must contain all the necessary information on the fuel
pathway to allow EPA to effectively assess the lifecycle performance of
the new fuel pathway. See Section V.C for a full description. EPA will
use the data supplied via the petition and other pertinent data
available to the Agency to evaluate whether the information for that
fuel pathway, combined with information developed in this rulemaking
for other fuel pathways that have been determined to exceed the
threshold, is sufficient to allow EPA to evaluate the pathway for a
determination of compliance. We expect such a determination would be
pathway specific. For some fuel pathways with unique modifications or
enhancements to production technologies in pathways otherwise modeled
for the regulations listed today, EPA may be able to evaluate the
pathway as a reasonably straight-forward extension of our current
assessments. In such cases, we would expect to make a decision for that
specific pathway without conducting a full rulemaking process. We would
expect to evaluate whether the pathway is consistent with the
definitions of renewable fuel types in the regulations, generally
without going through rulemaking, and issue an approval or disapproval
that applies to the petitioner. We anticipate that we will subsequently
propose to add the pathway to the regulations. Other current or
emerging fuel pathways may require significant new analysis and/or
modeling for EPA to conduct an adequate evaluation for a compliance
determination (e.g., feedstocks or fuel types not yet included in EPA's
assessments for this regulation). For these pathways, EPA would give
notice and seek public comment on a compliance determination under the
annual rulemaking process established in today's regulations. If we
make a technical determination of compliance, then we anticipate the
fuel producer will be able to generate RINs for fuel produced under the
additional pathway following the next available quarterly update of the
EPA Moderated Transaction System (EMTS). EPA will process those
petitions as expeditiously as possible for those pathways which are
closer to the commercial production stage than others. In all events,
parties are expected to begin this process with ample lead time as
compared to their commercial start dates. Further discussion of this
petition process can be found in Section V.C.
We note again that the continued work of EPA and others is expected
to result in improved models and data sources, and that re-analysis
based on such updated information could revise these determinations.
Any such reassessment that would impact compliance would necessarily go
through rulemaking and would only be applicable to production from
future facilities after the revised rule was finalized, as required by
EISA.
4. Compliance With Renewable Biomass Provision
EISA changed the definition of ``renewable fuel'' to require that
it be made from feedstocks that qualify as ``renewable biomass.''
EISA's definition of the term ``renewable biomass'' limits the types of
biomass as well as the types of land from which the biomass may be
harvested. The definition includes:
Planted crops and crop residue from agricultural land
cleared prior to December 19, 2007 and actively managed or fallow on
that date.
Planted trees and tree residue from tree plantations
cleared prior to December 19, 2007 and actively managed on that date.
Animal waste material and byproducts.
Slash and pre-commercial thinnings from non-federal
forestlands that are neither old-growth nor listed as critically
imperiled or rare by a State Natural Heritage program.
Biomass cleared from the vicinity of buildings and other
areas at risk of wildfire.
Algae.
Separated yard waste and food waste.
In today's rule, EPA is finalizing definitions for the many terms
included within the definition of renewable biomass. Where possible,
EPA has adhered to existing statutory, regulatory or industry
definitions for these terms, although in some cases we have altered
definitions to conform to EISA's statutory language, to further the
goals of EISA, or for ease of program implementation. For example, EPA
is defining ``agricultural land'' from which crops and crop residue can
be harvested for RIN-generating renewable fuel production as including
cropland, pastureland, and land enrolled in the Conservation Reserve
Program. An in-depth discussion of the renewable biomass definitions
can be found in Section II.B.4.
In keeping with EISA, under today's final rule, renewable fuel
producers may only generate RINs for fuels made from feedstocks meeting
the definition of renewable biomass. In order to implement this
requirement, we are finalizing three potential mechanisms for domestic
and foreign renewable fuel producers to verify that their feedstocks
comply with this requirement. The first involves renewable biomass
recordkeeping and reporting requirements by renewable fuel producers
for their individual facilities. As an alternative to these individual
recordkeeping and reporting requirements, the second allows renewable
fuel producers to form a consortium to fund an independent third-party
to conduct an annual renewable biomass quality-assurance survey, based
on a plan approved by EPA. The third is an aggregate compliance
approach applicable only to crops and crop residue from the U.S. It
utilizes USDA's publicly available agricultural land data as the basis
for an EPA determination of compliance with the renewable biomass
requirements for these particular feedstocks. This determination will
be reviewed annually, and if EPA finds it is no longer warranted, then
renewable fuel producers using domestically grown crops and crop
residue will be required to conduct individual or consortium-based
verification processes to ensure that their feedstocks qualify as
renewable biomass. These final provisions are described below, with a
more in-depth discussion in Section II.B.4.
For renewable fuel producers using feedstocks other than planted
crops or crop residue from agricultural land that do not choose to
participate in the third-party survey funded by an industry consortium,
the final renewable biomass recordkeeping and reporting provisions
require that individual producers obtain documentation about their
feedstocks from their feedstock supplier(s) and take the measures
necessary to ensure that they know the source of their feedstocks and
can demonstrate to EPA that they have complied with the EISA definition
of renewable biomass. Specifically, EPA's renewable biomass reporting
requirements for producers who generate RINs include a certification on
renewable fuel production reports that the feedstock used for each
renewable fuel batch meets the definition of renewable biomass.
Additionally, producers will be required to include with their
quarterly reports a summary of the types and volumes of feedstocks used
throughout the quarter, as well as maps of the land from which the
feedstocks used in the quarter were harvested. EPA's final renewable
biomass recordkeeping provisions require renewable fuel producers to
[[Page 14682]]
maintain sufficient records to support their claims that their
feedstocks meet the definition of renewable biomass, including maps or
electronic data identifying the boundaries of the land where the
feedstocks were produced, documents tracing the feedstocks from the
land to the renewable fuel production facility, other written records
from their feedstock suppliers that serve as evidence that the
feedstock qualifies as renewable biomass, and for producers using
planted trees or tree residue from tree plantations, written records
that serve as evidence that the land from which the feedstocks were
obtained was cleared prior to December 19, 2007 and actively managed on
that date.
Based on USDA's publicly available agricultural land data, EPA is
able to establish a baseline of the aggregate amount of U.S.
agricultural land (meaning cropland, pastureland and CRP land in the
United States) that is available for the production of crops and crop
residues for use in renewable fuel production consistent with the
definition of renewable biomass. EPA has determined that, in the
aggregate this amount of agricultural land (land cleared or cultivated
prior to EISA's enactment (December 19, 2007) and actively managed or
fallow, and nonforested on that date) is expected to, at least in the
near term, be sufficient to support EISA renewable fuel obligations and
other foreseeable demands for crop products, without clearing and
cultivating additional land. EPA also believes that economic factors
will lead farmers to use the ``agricultural land'' available for crop
production under EISA rather than bring new land into crop production.
As a result, EPA is deeming renewable fuel producers using
domestically-grown crops and crop residue as feedstock to be in
compliance with the renewable biomass requirements, and those producers
need not comply with the recordkeeping and quarterly reporting
requirements as established for the non[dash]crop-based biomass sector.
However, EPA will annually review USDA data on lands in agricultural
production to determine if these conclusions remain valid. If EPA
determines that the 2007 baseline amount of eligible agricultural land
has been exceeded, EPA will publish a notice of that finding in the
Federal Register. At that point, renewable fuel producers using planted
crops or crop residue from agricultural lands would be subject to the
same recordkeeping and reporting requirements as other renewable fuel
producers.
5. EPA-Moderated Transaction System
We introduced the EPA Moderated Transaction System (EMTS) in the
NPRM as a new method for managing the generation of RINs and
transactions involving RINs. EMTS is designed to resolve the RIN
management issues of RFS1 that lead to widespread RIN errors, many
times resulting in invalid RINs and often tedious remedial procedures
to resolve those errors. It is also designed to address the added RIN
categories, more complex RIN generation requirements, and additional
volume of RINs associated with RFS2. Commenters broadly support EMTS
and most stated that its use should coincide with the start of RFS2;
however, many commenters expressed concerns over having sufficient time
to implement the new system. In today's action, we are requiring the
use of EMTS for all RFS2 RIN generations and transactions beginning
July 1, 2010. EPA has utilized an open process for the development of
EMTS since it was first introduced in the NPRM, conducting workshops
and webinars, and soliciting stakeholder participation in its
evaluation and testing. EPA pledges to work with the regulated
community, as a group and individually, to ensure EMTS is successfully
implemented. EPA anticipates that with this level of assistance,
regulated parties will not experience significant difficulties in
transitioning to the new system, and EPA believes that the many
benefits of the new system warrant its immediate use.
6. Other Changes to the RFS Program
Today's final rule also makes a number of other changes to the RFS
program that are described in more detail in Sections II and III below,
including:
Grandfathering provisions: Renewable fuel from existing
facilities is exempt from the lifecycle GHG emission reduction
threshold of 20% up to a baseline volume for that facility that will be
established at the time of registration. As discussed in Section
II.B.3, the exemption from the 20% GHG threshold applies only to
renewable fuel that is produced from facilities which commenced
construction on or before December 19, 2007, or in the case of ethanol
plants that use natural gas or biodiesel for process heat, on or before
December 31, 2009.
Renewable fuels produced from municipal solid waste (MSW):
The new renewable biomass definition in EISA modified the ability for
MSW-derived fuels to qualify under the RFS program by restricting it to
``separated yard waste or food waste.'' We are finalizing provisions
that would allow certain portions of MSW to be included as renewable
biomass, provided that reasonable separation has first occurred.
Equivalence Values: We are generally maintaining the
provisions from RFS1 that the Equivalence Value for each renewable fuel
will be based on its energy content in comparison to ethanol, adjusted
for renewable content. The cellulosic biofuel, advanced biofuel, and
renewable fuel standards can be met with ethanol-equivalent volumes of
renewable fuel. However, since the biomass-based diesel standard is a
``diesel'' standard, its volume must be met on a biodiesel-equivalent
energy basis.
Cellulosic biofuel waiver credits: If EPA reduces the
required volume of cellulosic biofuel according to the waiver
provisions in EISA, EPA will offer a number of credits to obligated
parties no greater than the reduced cellulosic biofuel standard. These
waiver credits are not allowed to be traded or banked for future use,
and are only allowed to be used to meet the cellulosic biofuel standard
for the year that they are offered. In response to concerns expressed
in comments on the proposal, we are implementing certain restrictions
on the use of these waiver credits. For example, unlike Cellulosic
Biofuel RINs, waiver credits may not be used to meet either the
advanced biofuel standard or the total renewable fuel standard. For the
2010 compliance period, since the cellulosic standard is lower than the
level otherwise required by EISA, we are making cellulosic waiver
credits available to obligated parties for end-of-year compliance
should they need them at a price of $1.56 per gallon-RIN.
Obligated fuels: EISA expanded the program to cover
``transportation fuel'', not just gasoline. Therefore, under RFS2,
obligated fuel volumes will include all gasoline and all MVNRLM diesel
fuel. Other fuels such as jet fuel and fuel intended for use in ocean-
going vessels are not obligated fuels under RFS2. However, renewable
fuels used in jet fuel or heating oil are valid for meeting the
renewable fuel volume mandates. Similarly, while we are not including
natural gas, propane, or electricity used in transportation as
obligated fuels at this time, we will allow renewable forms of these
fuels to qualify under the program for generating RINs.
B. Impacts of Increasing Volume Requirements in the RFS2 Program
The displacement of gasoline and diesel with renewable fuels has a
wide
[[Page 14683]]
range of environmental and economic impacts. As we describe in Sections
IV-IX, we have assessed many of these impacts for the final rule. It is
difficult to ascertain how much of these impacts might be due to the
natural growth in renewable fuel use due to market forces as crude oil
prices rise versus what might be forced by the RFS2 standards.
Regardless, these assessments provide important information on the
wider public policy considerations related to renewable fuel production
and use, climate change, and national energy security. Where possible,
we have tried to provide two perspectives on the impacts of the
renewable fuel volumes mandated in EISA--both relative to the RFS1
mandated volumes, and relative to a projection from EIA (AEO 2007) of
renewable fuel volumes that would have been expected without EISA.
Based on the results of our analyses, when fully phased in by 2022,
the increased volume of renewable fuel required by this final rule in
comparison to the AEO 2007 forecast would result in 138 million metric
tons fewer CO2-equivalent GHG emissions (annual average over
30 years), the equivalent of removing 27 million vehicles from the road
today.
At the same time, increases in emissions of hydrocarbons, nitrogen
oxides, particulate matter, and other pollutants are projected to lead
to increases in population-weighted annual average ambient PM and ozone
concentrations, which in turn are anticipated to lead to up to 245
cases of adult premature mortality. The air quality impacts, however,
are highly variable from region to region. Ambient PM2.5 is
likely to increase in areas associated with biofuel production and
transport and decrease in other areas; for ozone, many areas of the
country will experience increases and a few areas will see decreases.
Ethanol concentrations will increase substantially; for the other
modeled air toxics there are some localized impacts, but relatively
little impact on national average concentrations. We note that the air
quality modeling results presented in this final rule do not constitute
the ``anti-backsliding'' analysis required by Clean Air Act section
211(v). EPA will be analyzing air quality impacts of increased
renewable fuel use through that study and will promulgate appropriate
mitigation measures under section 211(v), separate from this final
action.
In addition to air quality, there are also expected to be adverse
impacts on both water quality and quantity as the production of
biofuels and their feedstocks increase.
In addition to environmental impacts, the increased volumes of
renewable fuels required by this final rule are also projected to have
a number of other energy and economic impacts. The increased renewable
fuel use is estimated to reduce dependence on foreign sources of crude
oil, increase domestic sources of energy, and diversify our energy
portfolio to help in moving beyond a petroleum-based economy. The
increased use of renewable fuels is also expected to have the added
benefit of providing an expanded market for agricultural products such
as corn and soybeans and open new markets for the development of
cellulosic feedstock industries and conversion technologies. Overall,
however, we estimate that the renewable fuel standards will result in
significant net benefits, ranging between $16 and $29 billion in 2022.
Table I.B-1 summarizes the results of our impacts analyses of the
volumes of renewable fuels required by the RFS2 standards in 2022
relative to the AEO2007 reference case and identifies the section where
you can find further explanation of it. As we work to implement the
requirements of EISA, we will continue to assess these impacts. These
are the annual impacts projected in 2022 when the program is fully
phased in. Impacts in earlier years would differ but in most cases were
not able to be modeled or assessed for this final rule.
Table I.B-1--Impact Summary of the RFS2 Standards in 2022 Relative to the AEO2007 Reference Case (2007 Dollars)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Category Impact in 2022 Section discussed
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Emissions and Air Quality
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
GHG Emissions............................ -138 million metric tons................... V.D.
Non-GHG Emissions (criteria and toxic -1% to +10% depending on the pollutant..... VI.A.
pollutants).
Nationwide Ozone......................... +0.12 ppb population-weighted seasonal max VIII.D.
8 hr average.
Nationwide PM2.5......................... +0.002 [mu]g/m\3\ population-weighted VIII.D.
annual average PM2.5.
Nationwide Ethanol....................... +0.409 [mu]g/m\3\ population-weighted VI.D.
annual average.
Other Nationwide Air Toxics.............. -0.0001 to -0.023 [mu]g/m\3\ population- VI.D.
weighted annual average depending on the
pollutant.
PM2.5-related Premature Mortality........ 33 to 85 additional cases of adult VIII.D.
mortality (estimates vary by study).
Ozone-related Premature Mortality........ 36 to 160 additional cases of adult VIII.D.
mortality (estimates vary by study).
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Other Environmental Impacts
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Loadings to the Mississippi River from Nitrogen: +1,430 million lbs. (1.2%)....... IX.
the Upper Mississippi River Basin. Phosphorus: +132 million lbs. (0.7%).......
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fuel Costs
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Gasoline Costs........................... -2.4[cent]/gal............................. VII.D.
Diesel Costs............................. -12.1 [cent]/gal........................... VII.D.
Overall Fuel Cost........................ -$11.8 Billion............................. VII.D.
Gasoline and Diesel Consumption.......... -13.6 Bgal................................. VII.C.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Food Costs
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Corn..................................... +8.2%...................................... VIII.A.
Soybeans................................. +10.3%..................................... VIII.A.
[[Page 14684]]
Food..................................... +$10 per capita............................ VIII.A.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Economic Impacts
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Energy Security.......................... +$2.6 Billion.............................. VIII.B.
Monetized Health Impacts................. -$0.63 to -$2.2 Billion.................... VIII.D.
GHG Impacts (SCC) \a\.................... +$0.6 to $12.2 Billion (estimates vary by VIII.C.
SCC assumption).
Oil Imports.............................. -$41.5 Billion............................. VIII.B
Farm Gate Food........................... +$3.6 Billion.............................. VIII.A.
Farm Income.............................. +$13 Billion (+36%)........................ VIII.A.
Corn Exports............................. -$57 Million (-8%)......................... VIII.A.
Soybean Exports.......................... -$453 Million (-14%)....................... VIII.A.
Total Net Benefits \b\................... +$13 to $26 Billion (estimates vary by SCC VIII.F.
assumption).
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\a\ The models used to estimate SCC values have not been exercised in a systematic manner that would allow
researchers to assess the probability of different values. Therefore, the interim SCC values should not be
considered to form a range or distribution of possible or likely values. See Section VIII.D for a complete
summary of the interim SCC values.
\b\ Sum of Overall Fuel Costs, Energy Security, Monetized Health Impacts, and GHG Impacts (SCC).
II. Description of the Regulatory Provisions
While EISA made a number of changes to CAA section 211(o) that must
be reflected in the RFS program regulations, it left many of the basic
program elements intact, including the mechanism for translating
national renewable fuel volume requirements into applicable standards
for individual obligated parties, requirements for a credit trading
program, geographic applicability, treatment of small refineries, and
general waiver provisions. As a result, many of the regulatory
requirements of the RFS1 program will remain largely or, in some cases,
entirely unchanged. These provisions include the distribution of RINs,
separation of RINs, use of RINs to demonstrate compliance, provisions
for exporters, recordkeeping and reporting, deficit carryovers, and the
valid life of RINs.
The primary elements of the RFS program that we are changing to
implement the requirements in EISA fall primarily into the following
seven areas:
(1) Expansion of the applicable volumes of renewable fuel.
(2) Separation of the volume requirements into four separate
categories of renewable fuel, with corresponding changes to the RIN and
to the applicable standards.
(3) New definitions of renewable fuel, advanced biofuel, biomass-
based diesel, and cellulosic biofuel.
(4) New requirement that renewable fuels meet certain lifecycle
emission reduction thresholds.
(5) New definition of renewable biomass from which renewable fuels
can be made, including certain land use restrictions.
(6) Expansion of the types of fuels that are subject to the
standards to include diesel.
(7) Inclusion of specific types of waivers for different categories
of renewable fuels and, in certain circumstances, EPA-generated credits
for cellulosic biofuel.
EISA does not change the basic requirement under CAA 211(o) that
the RFS program include a credit trading program. In the May 1, 2007
final rulemaking implementing the RFS1 program, we described how we
reviewed a variety of approaches to program design in collaboration
with various stakeholders. We finally settled on a RIN-based system for
compliance and credit purposes as the one which met our goals of being
straightforward, maximizing flexibility, ensuring that volumes are
verifiable, and maintaining the existing system of fuel distribution
and blending. RINs represent the basic framework for ensuring that the
statutorily required volumes of renewable fuel are used as
transportation fuel in the U.S. Since the RIN-based system generally
has been successful in meeting the statutory goals, we are maintaining
much of its structure under RFS2.
This section describes the regulatory changes we are finalizing to
implement the new EISA provisions. Section III describes other changes
to the RFS program that we considered or are finalizing, including an
EPA-moderated RIN trading system that provides a context within which
all RIN transfers will occur.
A. Renewable Identification Numbers (RINs)
Under RFS2, each RIN will continue to represent one gallon of
renewable fuel in the context of demonstrating compliance with
Renewable Volume Obligations (RVO), consistent with our approach under
RFS1, and the RIN will continue to have unique information similar to
the 38 digits in RFS1. However in the EPA Moderated Transaction System
(EMTS), RIN detail information will be available but generally hidden
during transactions. In general the codes within the RIN will have the
same meaning under RFS2 as they do under RFS1, with the exception of
the D code which will be expanded to cover the four categories of
renewable fuel defined in EISA.
As described in Section I.A.2, the RFS2 regulatory program will go
into effect on July 1, 2010, but the 2010 percentage standards issued
as part of today's rule will apply to all gasoline and diesel produced
or imported on or after January 1, 2010. As a result, some 2010 RINs
will be generated under the RFS1 requirements and others will be
generated under the RFS2 requirements, but all RINs generated in 2010
will be valid for meeting the 2010 annual standards. Since RFS1 RINs
and RFS2 RINs will differ in the meaning of the D codes, we are
implementing a mechanism for distinguishing between these two
categories of RINs in order to appropriately apply them to the
standards. In short, we are requiring the use of D codes under RFS2
that do not overlap the values for the D codes under RFS1. Table II.A-1
describes the D code definitions we are finalizing in today's action.
[[Page 14685]]
Table II.A-1--Final D Code Definitions
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
D value Meaning under RFS1 Meaning under RFS2
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1...................................... Cellulosic biomass ethanol..... Not applicable.
2...................................... Any renewable fuel that is not Not applicable.
cellulosic biomass ethanol.
3...................................... Not applicable................. Cellulosic biofuel.
4...................................... Not applicable................. Biomass-based diesel.
5...................................... Not applicable................. Advanced biofuel.
6...................................... Not applicable................. Renewable fuel.
7...................................... Not applicable................. Cellulosic diesel.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under this approach, D code values of 1 and 2 are only relevant for
RINs generated under RFS1, and D code values of 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7 are
only relevant for RINs generated under RFS2. As described in Section
I.A.2, the RFS1 regulations will apply in January through June of 2010,
while the RFS2 regulations will become effective on July 1, 2010. RINs
generated under RFS1 regulations in the first three months of 2010 can
be used for meeting the four 2010 standards applicable under RFS2. To
accomplish this, these RFS1 RINs will be subject to the RFS1/RFS2
transition provisions wherein they will be deemed equivalent to one of
the four RFS2 RIN categories using their RR and/or D codes. See Section
II.G.4 for further description of how RFS1 RINs will be used to meet
standards under RFS2. The determination of which D code will be
assigned to a given batch of renewable fuel is described in more detail
in Section II.D.2 below.
Table II.A-1 includes one D code corresponding to each of the four
renewable fuel categories defined in EISA, and an additional D code of
7 corresponding to the unique, additional type of renewable fuel called
cellulosic diesel. As described in the NPRM, a diesel fuel product
produced from cellulosic feedstocks that meets the 60% GHG threshold
could qualify as either cellulosic biofuel or biomass-based diesel. The
NPRM described two possible approaches to this unique category of
renewable fuel:
1. Have the producer of the cellulosic diesel designate their fuel
up front as either cellulosic biofuel with a D code of 3, or biomass-
based diesel with a D code of 4, limiting the subsequent potential in
the marketplace for the RIN to be used for just one standard or the
other.
2. Have the producer of the cellulosic diesel designate their fuel
with a new cellulosic D code of 7, allowing the subsequent use of the
RIN in the marketplace interchangeably for either the cellulosic
biofuel standard or the biomass-based diesel standard.
We are finalizing the second option. By creating an additional D
code of 7 to represent cellulosic diesel RINs, we believe its value in
the marketplace will be maximized as it will be priced according to the
relative demand for cellulosic biofuel and biomass-based diesel RINs.
For instance, if demand for cellulosic biofuel RINs is higher than
demand for biomass-based diesel RINs, then cellulosic diesel RINs will
be priced as if they are cellulosic biofuel RINs. Not only does this
approach benefit producers, but it allows obligated parties the
flexibility to apply a RIN with a D code of 7 to either their
cellulosic biofuel RVO or their biomass-based diesel RVO, depending on
the number of RINs they have acquired to meet these two obligations. It
also helps the functionality of the RIN program by helping protect
against the potential for artificial RIN shortages in the marketplace
for one standard or the other even though sufficient qualifying fuel
was produced.
Under RFS2, each batch-RIN generated will continue to uniquely
identify not only a specific batch of renewable fuel, but also every
gallon-RIN assigned to that batch. Thus the RIN will continue to be
defined as follows:
RIN: KYYYYCCCCFFFFFBBBBBRRDSSSSSSSSEEEEEEEE
Where:
K = Code distinguishing assigned RINs from separated RINs
YYYY = Calendar year of production or import
CCCC = Company ID
FFFFF = Facility ID
BBBBB = Batch number
RR = Code identifying the Equivalence Value
D = Code identifying the renewable fuel category
SSSSSSSS = Start of RIN block
EEEEEEEE = End of RIN block
B. New Eligibility Requirements for Renewable Fuels
Aside from the higher volume requirements, most of the substantive
changes that EISA makes to the RFS program affect the eligibility of
renewable fuels in meeting one of the four volume requirements.
Eligibility is determined based on the types of feedstocks that are
used, the land that is used to grow feedstocks for renewable fuel
production, the processes that are used to convert those feedstocks
into fuel, and the lifecycle greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions that are
emitted in comparison to the gasoline or diesel that the renewable fuel
displaces. This section describes these eligibility criteria and how we
are implementing them for the RFS2 program.
1. Changes in Renewable Fuel Definitions
Under the previous Renewable Fuel Standards (RFS1), renewable fuel
was defined generally as ``any motor vehicle fuel that is used to
replace or reduce the quantity of fossil fuel present in a fuel mixture
used to fuel a motor vehicle''. The RFS1 definition included motor
vehicle fuels produced from biomass material such as grain, starch,
fats, greases, oils, and biogas. The definition specifically included
cellulosic biomass ethanol, waste derived ethanol, and biodiesel, all
of which were defined separately. (See 72 FR 23915).
The definitions of renewable fuels under today's rule (RFS2) are
based on the new statutory definition in EISA. Like the previous rules,
the definitions in RFS2 include a general definition of renewable fuel,
but unlike RFS1, we are including a separate definition of ``Renewable
Biomass'' which identifies the feedstocks from which renewable fuels
may be made.
Another difference in the definitions of renewable fuel is that
RFS2 contains three subcategories of renewable fuels: (1) Advanced
Biofuel, (2) Cellulosic Biofuel and (3) Biomass-Based Diesel. Each must
meet threshold levels of reduction of greenhouse gas emissions as
discussed in Section II.B.2. The specific definitions and how they
differ from RFS1 follow below.
a. Renewable Fuel
``Renewable Fuel'' is defined as fuel produced from renewable
biomass and that is used to replace or reduce the quantity of fossil
fuel present in a transportation fuel. The definition of ``Renewable
Fuel'' now refers to ``transportation fuel'' rather than referring to
motor vehicle fuel.
[[Page 14686]]
``Transportation fuel'' is also defined, and means fuel used in motor
vehicles, motor vehicle engines, nonroad vehicles or nonroad engines
(except for ocean going vessels). Also renewable fuel now includes
heating fuel and jet fuel.
Given that the primary use of electricity, natural gas, and propane
is not for fueling vehicles and engines, and the producer generally
does not know how it will be used, we cannot require that producers or
importers of these fuels generate RINs for all the volumes they produce
as we do with other renewable fuels. However, we are allowing fuel
producers, importers and end users to include electricity, natural gas,
and propane made from renewable biomass as a RIN-generating renewable
fuel in RFS only if they can identify the specific quantities of their
product which are actually used as a transportation fuel,. This may be
possible for some portion of renewable electricity and biogas since
many of the affected vehicles and equipment are in centrally-fueled
fleets supplied under contract by a particular producer or importer of
natural gas or propane. A producer or importer of renewable electricity
or biogas who documents the use of his product in a vehicle or engine
through a contractual pathway would be allowed to generate RINs to
represent that product, if it met the definition of renewable fuel.
(This is also discussed in Section II.D.2.a)
b. Advanced Biofuel
``Advanced Biofuel'' is a renewable fuel other than ethanol derived
from corn starch and for which lifecycle GHG emissions are at least 50%
less than the gasoline or diesel fuel it displaces. Advanced biofuel
would be assigned a D code of 5 as shown in Table II.A-1.
While ``Advanced Biofuel'' specifically excludes ethanol derived
from corn starch, it includes other types of ethanol derived from
renewable biomass, including ethanol made from cellulose,
hemicellulose, lignin, sugar or any starch other than corn starch, as
long as it meets the 50% GHG emission reduction threshold. Thus, even
if corn starch-derived ethanol were made so that it met the 50% GHG
reduction threshold, it will still be excluded from being defined as an
advanced biofuel. Such ethanol while not an advanced biofuel will still
qualify as a renewable fuel for purposes of meeting the standards.
c. Cellulosic Biofuel
Cellulosic biofuel is renewable fuel derived from any cellulose,
hemicellulose, or lignin each of which must originate from renewable
biomass. It must also achieve a lifecycle GHG emission reduction of at
least 60%, compared to the gasoline or diesel fuel it displaces.
Cellulosic biofuel is assigned a D code of 3 as shown in Table II.A-1.
Cellulosic biofuel in general also qualifies as both ``advanced
biofuel'' and ``renewable fuel''.
The definition of cellulosic biofuel for RFS2 is broader in some
respects than the RFS1 definition of ``cellulosic biomass ethanol''.
That definition included only ethanol, whereas the RFS2 definition of
cellulosic biofuels includes any biomass-to-liquid fuel such as
cellulosic gasoline or diesel in addition to ethanol. The definition of
``cellulosic biofuel'' in RFS2 differs from RFS1 in another significant
way. The RFS1 definition provided that ethanol made at any facility--
regardless of whether cellulosic feedstock is used or not--may be
defined as cellulosic if at such facility ``animal wastes or other
waste materials are digested or otherwise used to displace 90% or more
of the fossil fuel normally used in the production of ethanol.'' This
provision was not included in EISA, and therefore does not appear in
the definitions pertaining to cellulosic biofuel in the final rule.
d. Biomass-Based Diesel
``Biomass-based diesel'' includes both biodiesel (mono-alkyl
esters) and non-ester renewable diesel (including cellulosic diesel).
The definition of biodiesel is the same very broad definition of
``biodiesel'' that was in EPAct and in RFS1, and thus, it includes any
diesel fuel made from biomass feedstocks. However, EISA added three
restrictions. First, EISA requires that such fuel be made from
renewable biomass. Second, its lifecycle GHG emissions must be at least
50% less than the diesel fuel it displaces. Third, the statutory
definition of ``Biomass-based diesel'' excludes renewable fuel derived
from co-processing biomass with a petroleum feedstock. In our proposed
rule, we sought comment on two options for how co-processing could be
treated. The first option considered co-processing to occur only if
both petroleum and biomass feedstock are processed in the same unit
simultaneously. The second option considered co-processing to occur if
renewable biomass and petroleum feedstock are processed in the same
unit at any time; i.e., either simultaneously or sequentially. Under
the second option, if petroleum feedstock was processed in the unit,
then no fuel produced from such unit, even from a biomass feedstock,
would be deemed to be biomass-based diesel.
We selected the first option to be used in the final rule. Under
this approach, a batch of fuel qualifying for the D code of 4 that is
produced in a processing unit in which only renewable biomass is the
feedstock for such batch, will meet the definition of ``Biomass-Based
Diesel. Thus, serial batch processing in which 100% vegetable oil is
processed one day/week/month and 100% petroleum the next day/week/month
could occur without the activity being considered ``co-processing.''
The resulting products could be blended together, but only the volume
produced from vegetable oil will count as biomass-based diesel. We
believe this is the most straightforward approach and an appropriate
one, given that it would allow RINs to be generated for volumes of fuel
meeting the 50% GHG reduction threshold that is derived from renewable
biomass, while not providing any credit for fuel derived from petroleum
sources. In addition, this approach avoids the need for potentially
complex provisions addressing how fuel should be treated when existing
or even mothballed petroleum hydrotreating equipment is retrofitted and
placed into new service for renewable fuel production or vice versa.
Under today's rule, any fuel that does not satisfy the definition
of biomass-based diesel only because it is co-processed with petroleum
will still meet the definition of ``Advanced Biofuel'' provided it
meets the 50% GHG threshold and other criteria for the D code of 5.
Similarly it will meet the definition of renewable fuel if it meets a
GHG emission reduction threshold of 20%. In neither case, however, will
it meet the definition of biomass-based diesel.
This restriction is only really an issue for renewable diesel and
biodiesel produced via the fatty acid methyl ester (FAME) process. For
other forms of biodiesel, it is never made through any sort of co-
processing with petroleum.\3\ Producers of renewable diesel must
therefore specify whether or not they use ``co-processing'' to produce
the fuel in order to determine the correct D code for the RIN.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ The production of biodiesel (mono alkyl esters) does require
the addition of methanol which is usually derived from natural gas,
but which contributes a very small amount to the resulting product.
We do not believe that this was intended by the statute's reference
to ``co-processing'' which we believe was intended to address only
renewable fats or oils co-processed with petroleum in a hydrotreater
to produce renewable diesel.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
e. Additional Renewable Fuel
The statutory definition of ``additional renewable fuel'' specifies
fuel produced
[[Page 14687]]
from renewable biomass that is used to replace or reduce fossil fuels
used in heating oil or jet fuel. EISA indicates that EPA may allow for
the generation of credits for such additional renewable fuel that will
be valid for compliance purposes. Under the RFS program, RINs operate
in the role of credits, and RINs are generated when renewable fuel is
produced rather than when it is blended. In most cases, however,
renewable fuel producers do not know at the time of fuel production
(and RIN generation) how their fuel will ultimately be used.
Under RFS1, only RINs assigned to renewable fuel that was blended
into motor vehicle fuel (i.e., highway fuel) are valid for compliance
purposes. We therefore created special provisions requiring that RINs
be retired if they were assigned to renewable fuel that was ultimately
blended into nonroad fuel. The new EISA provisions regarding additional
renewable fuel make the RFS1 requirement for retiring RINs unnecessary
if renewable fuel is blended into heating oil or jet fuel. As a result,
we have modified the regulatory requirements to allow RINs assigned to
renewable fuel blended into heating oil or jet fuel in addition to
highway and nonroad transportation fuels to continue to be valid for
compliance purposes. From a regulatory standpoint, there is no
difference between renewable fuels used for transportation purposes,
versus heating oil and jet fuels.
EISA uses the term ``home heating oil'' in the definition of
``additional renewable fuel.'' The statute does not clarify whether the
term should be interpreted to refer only to heating oil actually used
in homes, or to all fuel of a type that can be used in homes. We note
that the term ``home heating oil'' is typically used in industry in the
latter manner, to refer to a type of fuel, rather than a particular use
of it, and the term is typically used interchangeably in industry with
heating oil, heating fuel, home heating fuel, and other terms depending
on the region and market. We believe this broad interpretation based on
typical industry usage best serves the goals and purposes of the
statute. If EPA interpreted the term to apply only to heating oil
actually used in homes, we would necessarily require tracking of
individual gallons from production through ultimate use in use in homes
in order to determine eligibility of the fuel for RINs. Given the
fungible nature of the oil delivery market, this would likely be
sufficiently difficult and potentially expensive so as to discourage
the generation of RINs for renewable fuels used as home heating oil.
This problem would be similar to that which arose under RFS1 for
certain renewable fuels (in particular biodiesel) that were produced
for the highway diesel market but were also suitable for other markets
such as heating oil and non-road applications where it was unclear at
the time of fuel production (when RINs are typically generated under
the RFS program) whether the fuel would ultimately be eligible to
generate RINs. Congress eliminated the complexity with regards to non-
road applications in RFS2 by making all fuels used in both motor
vehicle and nonroad applications subject to the renewable fuel standard
program. We believe it best to interpret the Act so as to also avoid
this type of complexity in the heating oil context. Thus, under today's
regulations, RINs may be generated for renewable fuel used as ``heating
oil,'' as defined in existing EPA regulations at 80.2(ccc). In addition
to simplifying implementation and administration of the Act, this
interpretation will best realize the intent of EISA to reduce or
replace the use of fossil fuels,
f. Cellulosic Diesel
In the proposed rule, we sought comment on how diesel made from
cellulosic feedstocks should be considered. Specifically, a diesel fuel
product produced from cellulosic feedstocks that meets the 60% GHG
threshold could qualify as either cellulosic biofuel or biomass-based
diesel. Based on comments received, and as discussed previously in
Section II.A, today's rule requires the cellulosic diesel producer to
categorize their product as cellulosic diesel with a D code of 7. It
can then be traded in the marketplace and used for compliance with
either the biomass-based diesel standard or the cellulosic biofuel
standard.
2. Lifecycle GHG Thresholds
As part of the new definitions that EISA creates for cellulosic
biofuel, biomass-based diesel, advanced biofuel, and renewable fuel,
EISA also sets minimum performance measures or ``thresholds'' for
lifecycle GHG emissions. These thresholds represent the percent
reduction in lifecycle GHGs that is estimated to occur when a renewable
fuel displaces gasoline or diesel fuel. Table II.B.2-1 lists the
thresholds established by EISA.
Table II.B.2-1--Lifecycle GHG Thresholds in EISA
[Percent reduction from a 2005 gasoline or diesel baseline]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Renewable fuel................................................. 20%
Advanced biofuel............................................... 50%
Biomass-based diesel........................................... 50%
Cellulosic biofuel............................................. 60%
------------------------------------------------------------------------
There are also special provisions for each of these thresholds:
Renewable fuel: The 20% threshold only applies to renewable fuel
from new facilities that commenced construction after December 19,
2007, with an additional exemption from the 20% threshold for ethanol
plants that commenced construction in 2008 or 2009 and are fired with
natural gas, biomass, or any combination thereof. Facilities not
subject to the 20% threshold are ``grandfathered.'' See Section II.B.3
below for a complete discussion of grandfathering. Also, EPA can adjust
the 20% threshold to as low as 10%, but the adjustment must be the
minimum possible, and the resulting threshold must be established at
the maximum achievable level based on natural gas fired corn-based
ethanol plants.
Advanced biofuel and biomass-based diesel: The 50% threshold can be
adjusted to as low as 40%, but the adjustment must be the minimum
possible and result in the maximum achievable threshold taking cost
into consideration. Also, such adjustments can be made only if it is
determined that the 50% threshold is not commercially feasible for
fuels made using a variety of feedstocks, technologies, and processes.
Cellulosic biofuel: Similarly to advanced biofuel and biomass-based
diesel, the 60% threshold applicable to cellulosic biofuel can be
adjusted to as low as 50%, but the adjustment must be the minimum
possible and result in the maximum achievable threshold taking cost
into consideration. Also, such adjustments can be made only if it is
determined that the 60% threshold is not commercially feasible for
fuels made using a variety of feedstocks, technologies, and processes.
Our analyses of lifecycle GHG emissions, discussed in detail in
Section V, identified a range of fuel pathways that are capable of
complying with the GHG performance thresholds for each of these
separate fuel standards. Thus, we have determined that the GHG
thresholds in Table II.B.2-1 should not be adjusted. Further discussion
of this determination can be found in Section V.C.
[[Page 14688]]
3. Renewable Fuel Exempt From 20 Percent GHG Threshold
After considering comments received, the Agency has decided to
implement the proposed option for interpreting the grandfathering
provisions that provide an indefinite exemption from the 20 percent GHG
threshold for renewable fuel facilities which have commenced
construction prior to December 19, 2007. For these facilities, only the
baseline volume of renewable fuel is exempted. For ethanol facilities
which commenced construction after that date and which use natural gas,
biofuels or a combination thereof, we proposed that such facilities
would be ``deemed compliant'' with the 20 percent GHG threshold. The
exemption for such facilities is conditioned on construction being
commenced on or before December 31, 2009, and is specific only to
facilities which produce ethanol only, per language in EISA. The
exemption would continue indefinitely, provided the facility continues
to use natural gas and/or biofuel. This section provides the background
and summary of the original proposal, and the reasons for the selection
of this option.
a. General Background of the Exemption Requirement
EISA amends section 211(o) of the Clean Air Act to provide that
renewable fuel produced from new facilities which commenced
construction after December 19, 2007 must achieve at least a 20%
reduction in lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions compared to baseline
lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions.\7\ Facilities that commenced
construction before December 19, 2007 are ``grandfathered'' and thereby
exempt from the 20% GHG reduction requirement.
For facilities that produce ethanol and for which construction
commenced after December 19, 2007, section 210 of EISA states that
``for calendar years 2008 and 2009, any ethanol plant that is fired
with natural gas, biomass, or any combination thereof is deemed to be
in compliance with the 20% threshold.'' Since all renewable fuel
production facilities that commenced construction prior to the date of
EISA enactment are covered by the more general grandfathering
provision, this exemption can only apply to those facilities that
commenced construction after enactment of EISA, and before the end of
2009. We proposed that the statute be interpreted to mean that fuel
from such qualifying facilities, regardless of date of startup of
operations, would be exempt from the 20% GHG threshold requirement for
the same time period as facilities that commence construction prior to
December 19, 2007, provided that such plants commence construction on
or before December 31, 2009, complete such construction in a reasonable
amount of time, and continue to burn only natural gas, biomass, or a
combination thereof. Most commenters generally agreed with our
proposal, while other commenters argued that the exemption was only
meant to last for a two-year period. As we noted in the NPRM, we
believe that it would be a harsh result for investors in these new
facilities, and would be generally inconsistent with the energy
independence goals of EISA, to interpret the Act such that these
facilities would only be guaranteed two years of participation in the
RFS2 program. In light of these considerations, we continue to believe
that it is an appropriate interpretation of the Act to allow the deemed
compliant exemption to continue indefinitely with the limitations we
proposed. Therefore we are making final this interpretation in today's
rule.
b. Definition of Commenced Construction
In defining ``commence'' and ``construction'', we proposed to use
the definitions of ``commence'' and ``begin actual construction'' from
the Prevention of Significant Deterioration (PSD) regulations, which
draws upon definitions in the Clean Air Act. (40 CFR 52.21(b)(9) and
(11)). Specifically, under the PSD regulations, ``commence'' means that
the owner or operator has all necessary preconstruction approvals or
permits and either has begun a continuous program of actual on-site
construction to be completed in a reasonable time, or entered into
binding agreements which cannot be cancelled or modified without
substantial loss.'' Such activities include, but are not limited to,
``installation of building supports and foundations, laying underground
pipe work and construction of permanent storage structures.'' We
proposed adding language to the definition that is currently not in the
PSD definition with respect to multi-phased projects. We proposed that
for multi-phased projects, commencement of construction of one phase
does not constitute commencement of construction of any later phase,
unless each phase is ``mutually dependent'' on the other on a physical
and chemical basis, rather than economic.
The PSD regulations provide additional conditions beyond addressing
what constitutes commencement. Specifically, the regulations require
that the owner or operator ``did not discontinue construction for a
period of 18 months or more and completed construction within a
reasonable time.'' (40 CFR 52.21(i)(4)(ii)(c)). While ``reasonable
time'' may vary depending on the type of project, we proposed that for
RFS2 a reasonable time to complete construction of renewable fuel
facilities be no greater than 3 years from initial commencement of
construction. We sought comment on this time frame.
Commenters generally agreed with our proposed definition of
commenced construction. Some commenters felt that the 3 year time frame
was not a ``reasonable time'' to complete construction in light of the
economic difficulties that businesses have been and will likely
continue to be facing. We recognize that there have been extreme
economic problems in the past year. Based on historical data which show
construction of ethanol plants typically take about one year, we
believe that the 3-year time frame allows such conditions to be taken
into account and that it is an appropriate and fair amount of time to
allow for completion. Therefore, we are not extending the amount of
time that constitutes ``reasonable'' to five years as was suggested.
c. Definition of Facility Boundary
We proposed that the grandfathering and deemed compliant exemptions
apply to ``facilities.'' Our proposed definition of this term is
similar in some respects to the definition of ``building, structure,
facility, or installation'' contained in the PSD regulations in 40 CFR
52.21. We proposed to modify the definition, however, to focus on the
typical renewable fuel plant. We proposed to describe the exempt
``facilities'' as including all of the activities and equipment
associated with the manufacture of renewable fuel which are located on
one property and under the control of the same person or persons.
Commenters agreed with our proposed definition of ``facility'' and we
are making that definition final today.
d. Proposed Approaches and Consideration of Comments
We proposed one basic approach to the exemption provisions and
sought comment on five additional options. The basic approach would
provide an indefinite extension of grandfathering and deemed compliant
status but with a limitation of the exemption from the 20% GHG
threshold to a baseline volume of renewable fuel. The five additional
options for which we sought
[[Page 14689]]
comment were: (1) Expiration of exemption for grandfathered and
``deemed compliant'' status when facilities undergo sufficient changes
to be considered ``reconstructed''; (2) Expiration of exemption 15
years after EISA enactment, industry-wide; (3) Expiration of exemption
15 years after EISA enactment with limitation of exemption to baseline
volume; (4) ``Significant'' production components are treated as
facilities and grandfathered or deemed compliant status ends when they
are replaced; and (5) Indefinite exemption and no limitations placed on
baseline volumes.
i. Comments on the Proposed Basic Approach
Generally, commenters supported the basic approach in which the
volume of renewable fuel from grandfathered facilities exempt from the
20% GHG reduction threshold would be limited to baseline volume. One
commenter objected to the basic approach and argued that the statute's
use of the word ``new'' and the phrase ``after December 19, 2007''
provided evidence that facilities which commenced construction prior to
that date would not ever be subject to the threshold regardless of the
volume produced from such facilities. In response, we note first that
the statute does not provide a definition of the term ``new
facilities'' for which the 20% GHG threshold applies. We believe that
it would be reasonable to include within our interpretation of this
term a volume limitation, such that a production plant is considered a
new facility to the extent that it produces renewable fuel above
baseline capacity. This approach also provides certainty in the
marketplace in terms of the volumes of exempt fuel, and a relatively
straightforward implementation and enforcement mechanism as compared to
some of the other alternatives considered. Furthermore, EPA believes
that the Act should not be interpreted as allowing unlimited expansion
of exempt facilities for an indefinite time period, with all volumes
exempt, as suggested by the commenter. Such an approach would likely
lead to a substantial increase in production of fuel that is not
subject to any GHG limitations, which EPA does not believe would be
consistent with the objectives of the Act.
We solicited comment on whether changes at a facility that resulted
in an increase in GHG emissions, such as a change in fuel or feedstock,
should terminate the facility's exemption from the 20 percent GHG
threshold. Generally, commenters did not support such a provision,
pointing out that there are many variations within a plant that cannot
be adequately captured in a table of fuel and feedstock pathways as we
proposed (see 74 FR 24927). Implementing such a provision would create
questions of accounting and tracking that would need to be evaluated on
a time-consuming case-by-case basis. For example, if a switch to a
different feedstock or production process resulted in less efficiency,
facilities may argue that they are increasing energy efficiency
elsewhere (e.g. purchasing waste heat instead of burning fuel onsite to
generate steam). We would then need to assess such changes to track the
net energy change a plant undergoes. Given the added complexity and
difficulty in carrying out such an option, we have decided generally
not to implement it. There is an exception, however, for ``deemed
compliant'' facilities. These facilities achieve their status in part
by being fired only by natural gas or biomass, or a combination
thereof. Today's rule provides, as proposed, that these facilities will
lose their exemption if they switch to a fuel other than natural gas,
biomass, or a combination thereof, since these were conditions that
Congress deemed critical to granting them the exemption from the 20%
GHG reduction requirement.
We also solicited comment on whether we should allow a 10%
tolerance on the baseline volume for which RINs can be generated
without complying with the 20% GHG reduction threshold to allow for
increases in volume due to debottlenecking. Some favored this concept,
while others argued that the tolerance should be set at 20 percent.
After considering the comments received, we have decided that a 10%
(and 20%) level is not appropriate for this regulation for the
following reasons: (1) We have decided to interpret the exemption of
the baseline volume of renewable fuel from the 20 percent requirement
as extending indefinitely. Any tolerance provided could, therefore, be
present in the marketplace for a considerable time period; (2)
increases in volume of 10% or greater could be the result of
modifications other than debottlenecking. Consistent with the basic
approach we are taking today towards interpreting the grandfathering
and deemed compliant provisions, we believe that the fuel produced as a
result of such modifications comes from ``new facilities'' within the
meaning of the statute, and should be subject to the 20% GHG reduction
requirement; (3) we are allowing baseline volume to be based on the
maximum capacity that is allowed under state and federal air permits.
With respect to the last reason, facilities that have been operating
below the capacity allowed in their state permits would be able to
claim a baseline volume based on the maximum capacity. As such, these
facilities may indeed be able to increase their volume by 10 to 20
percent by virtue of how their baseline volume is defined. We believe
this is appropriate, however, since their permits should reflect their
design, and the fuel resulting from their original pre-EISA (or pre-
2010, for deemed compliant facilities) design should be exempt from the
20% GHG reduction requirement. Nevertheless, we recognize and agree
with commenters that some allowances should be made for minor changes
brought about by normal maintenance which are consistent with the
proper operation of a facility. EPA is not aware of a particular study
or analysis that could be used as a basis for picking a tolerance level
reflecting this concept, We believe, however, that the value should be
relatively small, so as not to encourage plant expansions that are
unrelated to debottlenecking. We believe that a 5% tolerance level is
consistent with these considerations, and have incorporated that value
in today's rule.
ii. Comments on the Expiration of Grandfathered Status
Commenters who supported an expiration of the exemption did so
because of concerns that the proposed approach of providing an
indefinite exemption would not provide any incentives to bring these
plants into compliance with current standards. They also objected to
plants being allowed an indefinite period beyond the time period when
it could be expected that they would have paid off their investors. The
commenters argued that the cost of operation for such plants would be
less than competing plants that do have to comply with current
standards; as such, commenters opposed to the basic approach felt an
indefinite exemption would be a subsidy to plants that will never
comply with the 20 percent threshold level. The renewable fuels
industry, on the other hand, viewed the options that would set an
expiration date (either via cumulative reconstruction, or a 15-year
period from date of enactment) as harsh, particularly if the lifecycle
analysis results make it costly for existing facilities to meet the 20%
threshold. Some also argued that no such temporal limitation appears in
the statute.
We considered such comments, but in light of recent lifecycle
analyses we conducted in support of this rule we have concluded that
many of the current
[[Page 14690]]
technology corn ethanol plants may find it difficult if not impossible
to retrofit existing plants to comply with the 20 percent GHG reduction
threshold. In addition, the renewable fuels industry viewed the
alternative proposals that would set an expiration date (either via
cumulative reconstruction, or a 15-year period from date of enactment)
as harsh, particularly if the lifecycle analysis results make it costly
for existing facilities to meet the 20% threshold. Given the difficulty
of meeting such threshold, owners of such facilities could decide to
shut down the plant. Given such implications of meeting the 20 percent
threshold level for existing facilities we have chosen not to finalize
any expiration date.
e. Final Grandfathering Provisions
For the reasons discussed above, the Agency has decided to proceed
with the proposed baseline volume approach, rather than the expiration
options. We hold open the possibility, therefore, of revisiting and
reproposing the exemption provision in a future rulemaking to take such
advances into account. Ending the grandfathering exemption after its
usefulness is over would help to streamline the ongoing implementation
of the program.
The final approach adopted today is summarized as follows:
i. Increases in volume of renewable fuel produced at grandfathered
facilities due to expansion
For facilities that commenced construction prior to December 19,
2007, we are defining the baseline volume of renewable fuel exempt from
the 20% GHG threshold requirement to be the maximum volumetric capacity
of the facility that is allowed in any applicable state air permit or
Federal Title V operating permit.\4\ We had proposed in the NPRM that
nameplate capacity be defined as permitted capacity, but that if the
capacity was not stipulated in any federal, state or local air permit,
then the actual peak output should be used. We have decided that since
permitted capacity is the limiting condition, by virtue of it being an
enforceable limit contained in air permits, that the term ``nameplate
capacity'' is not needed. In addition, we are allowing a 5% tolerance
as discussed earlier. Therefore, today's rule defines permitted
capacity as 105% of the maximum permissible volume output of renewable
fuel allowed under operating conditions specified in all applicable
preconstruction, construction and operating permits issued by
regulatory authorities (including local, regional, state or a foreign
equivalent of a state, and federal permits). If the capacity of a
facility is not stipulated in such air permits, then the grandfathered
volume is 105% of the maximum annual volume produced for any of the
last five calendar years prior to 2008. Volumes greater than this
amount which may typically be due to expansions of the facility which
occur after December 19, 2007, will be subject to the 20% GHG reduction
requirement if the facility wishes to generate RINs for the incremental
expanded volume. The increased volume will be considered as if produced
from a ``new facility'' which commenced construction after December 19,
2007. Changes that might occur to the mix of renewable fuels produced
within the facility are irrelevant--they remain grandfathered as long
as the overall volume falls within the baseline volume. Thus, for
example, if an ethanol facility changed its operation to produce
butanol, but the baseline volume remained the same, the fuel so
produced would be exempt from the 20% GHG reduction requirement.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ Volumes also include expansions to existing facilities,
provided that the construction for such expansion commences prior to
December 19, 2007. In such instances, the total volume from the
original facility plus the additional volume due to expansion is
grandfathered.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The baseline volume will be defined as above for deemed compliant
facilities (those ethanol facilities fired by natural gas or biomass or
a combination thereof that commenced construction after December 19,
2007 but before January 1, 2010) with the exception that if the maximum
capacity is not stipulated in air permits, then the exempt volume is
the maximum annual peak production during the plant's first three years
of operation. In addition, any production volume increase that is
attributable to construction which commenced prior to December 31, 2009
would be exempt from the 20% GHG threshold, provided that the facility
continued to use natural gas, biomass or a combination thereof for
process energy. Because deemed compliant facilities owe their status to
the fact that they use natural gas, biomass or a combination thereof
for process heat, their status will be lost, and they will be subject
to the 20% GHG threshold requirement, at any time that they change to a
process energy source other than natural gas and/or biomass. Finally,
because EISA limits deemed compliant facilities to ethanol facilities,
if there are any changes in the mix of renewable fuels produced by the
facility, only the ethanol volume remains grandfathered. We had
solicited comment on whether fuels other than ethanol could also be
deemed compliant. Based on comments received and additional
consideration to this matter, we decided that because the Act does not
authorize EPA to allow fuels other than ethanol, the deemed compliant
provisions will apply only to facilities producing that fuel.
Volume limitations contained in air permits may be defined in terms
of peak hourly production rates or a maximum annual capacity. If they
are defined only as maximum hourly production rates, they will need to
be converted to an annual rate. Because assumption of a 24-hour per day
production over 365 days per year (8,760 production hours) may
overstate the maximum annual capacity we are requiring a conversion
rate of 95% of the total hours in a year (8,322 production hours) based
on typical operating ``uptime'' of ethanol facilities.
The facility registration process (see Section II.C) will be used
to define the baseline volume for individual facilities. Owners and
operators must submit information substantiating the permitted capacity
of the plant, or the maximum annual peak capacity if the maximum
capacity is not stipulated in a federal, state or local air permit, or
EPA Title V operating permit. Copies of applicable air permits which
stipulate the maximum annual capacity of the plant, must be provided as
part of the registration process. Subsequent expansions at a
grandfathered facility that results in an increase in volume above the
baseline volume will subject the increase in volume to the 20% GHG
emission reduction threshold (but not the original baseline volume).
Thus, any new expansions will need to be designed to achieve the 20%
GHG reduction threshold if the facility wants to generate RINs for that
volume. Such determinations will be made on the basis of EPA-defined
fuel pathway categories that are deemed to represent such 20%
reduction.
EPA enforcement personnel commented that claims for an exemption
from the 20% GHG reduction requirement should be made promptly, so that
they can be verified with recent supporting information. They were
concerned, in particular, that claims for exempt status could be made
many years into the future for facilities that may or may not have
concluded construction within the required time period, but delayed
actual production of renewable fuel due to market conditions or other
reasons. EPA believes that this comment has merit, and has included a
requirement in Section 80.1450(f) of the final rule for registration of
facilities claiming an exemption from the 20% GHG reduction requirement
by May 1,
[[Page 14691]]
2013. This provision does not require actual fuel production, but
simply the filing of registration materials that assert a claim for
exempt status. It will benefit both fuel producers, who will likely be
able to more readily collect the required information if it is done
promptly, and EPA enforcement personnel seeking to verify the
information. However, given the potentially significant implications of
this requirement for facilities that may qualify for the exemption but
miss the registration deadline, the rule also provides that EPA may
waive the requirement if it determines that the submission is
verifiable to the same extent as a timely-submitted registration.
ii. Replacements of Equipment
If production equipment such as boilers, conveyors, hoppers,
storage tanks and other equipment are replaced, it would not be
considered construction of a ``new facility'' under this option of
today's final rule--the baseline volume of fuel would continue to be
exempt from the 20% GHG threshold. We sought comment on an approach
that would require that if coal-fired units are replaced, that the
replacement units must be fired with natural gas or biofuel for the
product to be eligible for RINs that do not satisfy the 20% GHG
threshold. Some commenters supported such an approach. We agreed,
however, with other commenters who point out that the language in EISA
provides for an indefinite exemption for grandfathered facilities.
While we interpret the statute to limit the exemption to the baseline
volume of a grandfathered facility, we do not interpret the language to
allow EPA to require that replacements of coal fired units be natural
gas or biofuel. Thus replacements of coal fired equipment will not
affect the facility's grandfathered status.
iii. Registration, Recordkeeping and Reporting
Facility owner/operators will be required to provide evidence and
certification of commencement of construction. Such certification will
require copies of all applicable air permits that apply to the
construction and operation of the facility. Owner/operators must
provide annual records of process fuels used on a BTU basis, feedstocks
used and product volumes. For facilities that are located outside the
United States (including outside the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the
U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa, and the Commonwealth of the
Northern Mariana Islands) owners will be required to provide
certification as well. Since the definition of commencement of
construction includes having all necessary air permits, we will require
that facilities outside the United States certify that such facilities
have obtained all necessary permits for construction and operation
required by the appropriate national and local environmental agencies.
4. New Renewable Biomass Definition and Land Restrictions
As explained in Section I, EISA lists seven types of feedstock that
qualify as ``renewable biomass.'' EISA limits not only the types of
feedstocks that can be used to make renewable fuel, but also the land
that these renewable fuel feedstocks may come from. Specifically,
EISA's definition of renewable biomass incorporates land restrictions
for planted crops and crop residue, planted trees and tree residue,
slash and pre-commercial thinnings, and biomass from wildfire areas.
EISA prohibits the generation of RINs for renewable fuel made from
feedstock that does not meet the definition of renewable biomass, which
includes not meeting the associated land restrictions. The following
sections describe EPA's interpretation of several key terms related to
the definition of renewable biomass, and the approach in today's rule
to implementing the renewable biomass requirements.
a. Definitions of Terms
EISA's renewable biomass definition includes a number of terms that
require definition. The following sections discuss EPA's definitions
for these terms, which were developed with ease of implementation and
enforcement in mind. We have made every attempt to define these terms
as consistently with other federal statutory and regulatory definitions
as well as industry standards as possible, while keeping them workable
for purposes of program implementation.
i. Planted Crops and Crop Residue
The first type of renewable biomass described in EISA is planted
crops and crop residue harvested from agricultural land cleared or
cultivated at any time prior to December 19, 2007, that is either
actively managed or fallow, and nonforested. We proposed to interpret
the term ``planted crops'' to include all annual or perennial
agricultural crops that may be used as feedstock for renewable fuel,
such as grains, oilseeds, and sugarcane, as well as energy crops, such
as switchgrass, prairie grass, and other species, providing that they
were intentionally applied to the ground by humans either by direct
application as seed or nursery stock, or through intentional natural
seeding by mature plants left undisturbed for that purpose. We received
numerous comments on our proposed definition of ``planted crops,''
largely in support of our proposed definition. However, some commenters
noted that ``microcrops,'' such as duckweed, a flowering plant
typically grown in ponds or tanks, are also being investigated for used
as renewable fuel feedstocks. These microcrops are typically grown in a
similar manner to algae, but cannot be categorized as algae since they
are relatively more complex organisms. EPA's proposed definition would
have unintentionally excluded microcrops such as duckweed through the
requirement that planted crops be ``applied to the ground.'' After
considering comments received, EPA does not believe that there is any
basis under EISA for excluding from the definition of renewable biomass
crops such as duckweed that are applied to a tank or pond for growth
rather than to the soil. As with other planted crops, these ponds or
tanks must be located on existing ``agricultural land,'' as described
below, to qualify as renewable biomass under EISA. Therefore, including
such microcrops within the definition of renewable biomass will not
result in the direct loss of forestland or other ecologically sensitive
land that Congress sought to protect through the land restrictions in
the definition of renewable biomass. Doing so will further the
objectives of the statute of promoting the development of emerging
technologies to produce clean alternatives to petroleum-based fuels,
and to further U.S. energy independence.
For these reasons, we are finalizing our proposed definition of
``planted crops,'' with the inclusion of provisions allowing for the
growth of ``microcrops'' in ponds or tanks that are located on
agricultural land. Our final definition also includes a reference to
``vegetative propagation,'' in which a new plant is produced from an
existing vegetative structure, as one means by which planted crops may
reproduce, since this is an important method of reproduction for
microcrops such as duckweed. The final definition of ``planted crops''
includes all annual or perennial agricultural crops from existing
agricultural land that may be used as feedstock for renewable fuel,
such as grains, oilseeds, and sugarcane, as well as energy crops, such
as switchgrass, prairie grass, duckweed and other species (but not
including algae species or planted trees), providing that they
[[Page 14692]]
were intentionally applied by humans to the ground, a growth medium, or
a pond or tank, either by direct application as seed or plant, or
through intentional natural seeding or vegetative propagation by mature
plants introduced or left undisturbed for that purpose. We note that
because EISA contains specific provisions for planted trees and tree
residue from tree plantations, our final definition of planted crops in
EISA excludes planted trees, even if they may be considered planted
crops under some circumstances.
We proposed that ``crop residue'' be limited to the residue, such
as corn stover and sugarcane bagasse, left over from the harvesting of
planted crops. We sought comment on including biomass from agricultural
land removed for purposes of invasive species control or fire
management. We received many comments supporting the inclusion of
biomass removed from agricultural land for purposes of invasive species
control and/or fire management. We believe that such biomass is
typically removed from agricultural land for the purpose of preserving
or enhancing its value in agricultural crop production. It may be
removed at the time crops are harvested, post harvest, periodically
(e.g., for pastureland) or during extended fallow periods. We agree
with the commenters that this material is a form of biomass residue
related to crop production, whether or not derived from a crop itself,
and, therefore, are modifying the proposed definition of ``crop
residue'' to include it. We also received comments encouraging us to
expand the definition of crop residue to include materials left over
after the processing of the crop into a useable resource, such as
husks, seeds, bagasse and roots. EPA agrees with these comments and has
altered the final definition to cover such materials. Based on comments
received, our final definition of ``crop residue'' is the biomass left
over from the harvesting or processing of planted crops from existing
agricultural land and any biomass removed from existing agricultural
land that facilitates crop management (including biomass removed from
such lands in relation to invasive species control or fire management),
whether or not the biomass includes any portion of a crop or crop
plant.
Our proposed regulations restricted planted crops and crop residue
to that harvested from existing agricultural land, which, under our
proposed definition, includes three land categories--cropland,
pastureland, and Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) land. We proposed
to define cropland as land used for the production of crops for
harvest, including cultivated cropland for row crops or close-grown
crops and non-cultivated cropland for horticultural crops. We proposed
to define pastureland as land managed primarily for the production of
indigenous or introduced forage plants for livestock grazing or hay
production, and to prevent succession to other plant types. We also
proposed that CRP land, which is administered by USDA's Farm Service
Agency, qualify as ``agricultural land'' under RFS2.
EPA received numerous comments on our proposed definition of
existing agricultural land. Generally, commenters were in support of
our definition of ``cropland'' and its inclusion in the definition of
existing agricultural land. Additionally, commenters generally did not
object to CRP lands or pastureland being included in the definition of
agricultural land. Based on our consideration of comments received on
the proposed rule, EPA is including cropland, pastureland and CRP land
in the definition of existing agricultural land, as proposed.
We sought comment in the proposal on whether rangeland should be
included as agricultural land under RFS2. Rangeland is land on which
the indigenous or introduced vegetation is predominantly grasses,
grass-like plants, forbs or shrubs and which--unlike cropland or
pastureland--is predominantly managed as a natural ecosystem. EPA
received a number of comments concerning whether rangeland should be
included in the definition of existing agricultural land under RFS2.
Some commenters urged EPA to expand the definition of existing
agricultural land to include rangeland, arguing that rangelands could
serve as important sources of renewable fuel feedstocks. Many of these
commenters argued that, although it is generally less intensively
managed than cropland, rangeland is nonetheless actively managed
through control of brush or weed species, among other practices. In
contrast, other commenters argued against the inclusion of rangeland,
contending that the potential conversion of rangeland into cropland for
growing renewable biomass would lead to losses of carbon, soil, water
quality, and biodiversity.
Under EISA, renewable biomass includes crops and crop residue from
agricultural land cleared or cultivated at any time prior to the
enactment of EISA that is either ``actively managed of fallow'' and
nonforested. In determining whether rangeland should be considered
existing agricultural land under this provision, EPA must decide if
rangeland qualifies as ``actively managed or fallow.'' EPA believes
that the term ``actively managed'' is best interpreted by reference to
the type of material and practices that this provision addresses--
namely crops and residue associated with growing crops. We think it is
appropriate to inquire whether the type of management involved in a
land type is consistent with that which would occur on land where crops
are harvested. Thus, while we acknowledge that some types of rangeland
are managed to a certain degree, the level of ``active management''
that is typically associated with land dedicated to growing
agricultural crops is far more intensive than the types of management
associated with rangeland. For example, rangeland is rarely tilled,
fertilized or irrigated as croplands and, to a lesser degree,
pasturelands, are. Furthermore, since rangeland encompasses a wide
variety of ecosystems, including native grasslands or shrublands,
savannas, wetlands, deserts and tundra, including it in the definition
of agricultural land would increase the risk that these sensitive
ecosystems would become available under EISA for conversion into
intensively managed mono-culture cropland. Finally, the conversion of
relatively undisturbed rangeland to the production of annual crops
could in some cases lead to large releases of GHGs stored in the soil,
as well as a loss of biodiversity, both of which would be contrary to
EISA's stated goals. For these reasons, EPA is not including rangeland
in the definition of ``existing agricultural land'' in today's final
rule.
We proposed to include in our definition of existing agricultural
land the requirement that the land was cleared or cultivated prior to
December 19, 2007, and that, since December 19, 2007, it has been
continuously actively managed (as agricultural land) or fallow, and
nonforested. We proposed to interpret the phrase ``that is actively
managed or fallow, and nonforested'' as meaning that land must have
been actively managed or fallow, and nonforested, on December 19, 2007,
and continuously thereafter in order to qualify for renewable biomass
production. We received extensive comments on this interpretation. Many
commenters suggested an interpretation of the requirement that
agricultural land be ``actively managed'' to mean that the land had to
be ``actively managed'' at the time EISA was passed on December 17,
2007, such that the amount of land available for biofuel feedstock
production was established at that point
[[Page 14693]]
and would not diminish over time. Other commenters supported our
proposed interpretation, which would mean that the amount of land
available for biofuel feedstock production could diminish over time if
parcels of land cease to be actively managed at any point, thus taking
them out of contention for biofuel feedstock cultivation. Some
commenters argued that this interpretation is contrary to Congress'
intent and the basic premise of the RFS program since, over time, it
could lead to a reduction in the amount of renewable biomass available
for use as renewable fuel feedstocks, while the statutorily required
volumes of renewable fuel increase over time. These commenters further
argue that the active management provision should be interpreted as a
``snapshot'' of agricultural land existing and actively managed on
December 19, 2007. Under this interpretation, the land that was cleared
or cultivated prior to December 19, 2007 and was actively managed on
that date, would be eligible for renewable biomass production
indefinitely.
We agree that the goal of the EISA and RFS program, to increase the
presence of renewable fuels in transportation fuel, will be better
served by interpreting the ``actively managed or fallow'' requirement
in the renewable biomass definition as applying to land actively
managed or fallow on December 19, 2007, rather than interpreting this
requirement as applying beginning on December 19, 2007 and continuously
thereafter. In addition, by simplifying the requirement in this
fashion, there will be significantly less burden on regulated parties
in ensuring that their feedstocks come from qualifying lands. For these
reasons, we are modifying the definition of existing agricultural land
so that the ``active management'' requirement is satisfied for those
that were cleared or cultivated and actively managed or fallow, and
non-forested on December 19, 2007.
Further, we proposed and are finalizing that ``actively managed''
means managed for a predetermined outcome as evidenced by any of the
following: Sales records for planted crops, crop residue, or livestock;
purchasing records for land treatments such as fertilizer, weed
control, or reseeding; a written management plan for agricultural
purposes; documentation of participation in an agricultural program
sponsored by a Federal, state or local government agency; or
documentation of land management in accordance with an agricultural
certification program. While we received comments indicating that
including a definitive checklist of required evidential records would
be helpful to have explicitly identified in the regulations, we are not
doing so in order to maintain flexibility, as feedstock producers may
vary in the types of evidence they can readily obtain to show that
their agricultural land was actively managed. We are adding, however, a
clarification that the records must be traceable to the land in
question. For example, it will not be sufficient to have a receipt for
seed purchase if there is not additional evidence indicating that the
seed was applied to the land which is claimed as existing agricultural
land.
The term ``fallow'' is generally used to describe cultivated land
taken out of production for a finite period of time. We proposed and
sought comment on defining fallow to mean agricultural land that is
intentionally left idle to regenerate for future agricultural purposes,
with no seeding or planting, harvesting, mowing, or treatment during
the fallow period. We also proposed and sought comment on requiring
documentation of such intent. We received many comments that supported
our proposed definition of fallow. We also received comments indicating
that EPA should set a time limit for land to qualify as fallow (as
opposed to abandoned for agricultural purposes). We have decided not to
include a time limit for land to qualify as ``fallow'' because we
understand that agricultural land may be left fallow for many different
purposes and for varying amounts of time. Any particular timeframe that
EPA might choose for this purpose would be somewhat arbitrary. Further,
EISA does not indicate a time limit on the period of time that
qualifying land could be fallow, so EPA does not believe that it would
be appropriate to do so in its regulations. Therefore, EPA is
finalizing its proposed definition of ``fallow.''
Finally, in order to define the term ``nonforested'' as used in the
definition of ``existing agricultural land,'' we proposed first to
define the term ``forestland'' as generally undeveloped land covering a
minimum area of one acre upon which the predominant vegetative cover is
trees, including land that formerly had such tree cover and that will
be regenerated. We also proposed that forestland would not include tree
plantations. ``Nonforested'' land under our proposal would be land that
is not forestland.
We received many comments on our proposed definition of forestland.
Some commenters urged EPA to broaden the definition of ``forestland''
to include tree plantations, arguing that plantations are well-accepted
as a subset of forestland. Others advocated that EPA should make every
effort to distinguish between tree plantations and forestland so as not
to run the risk of allowing native forests to be converted into less
diverse tree plantations from which trees could be harvested for
renewable fuel production. For today's final rule, EPA is including
tree plantations as a subset of forestland since it is commonly
understood as such throughout the forestry industry. Under EISA,
renewable biomass may include ``slash and pre-commercial thinnings''
from non-federal forestlands, and ``planted trees and tree residue''
from actively managed tree plantations on non-federal land. One effect
under EISA of the modification from the proposed rule to include tree
plantations as a subset of forestland is to allow pre-commercial
thinnings and slash, in addition to planted trees and tree residue,
harvested from tree plantations to serve as qualifying feedstocks for
renewable fuel production. EPA believes it is appropriate to include
pre-commercial thinnings and slash from actively managed tree
plantations as renewable biomass, consistent with the EISA provision
allowing harvested trees and tree residue from tree plantations to
qualify as renewable biomass. Another effect of including the tree
plantations as a kind of forestland is that, since crops and crop
residue must come from land that was ``non-forested'' as of the date of
EISA enactment, a tract of land managed as a tree plantation on the
date of EISA enactment could not be converted to cropland for the
production of feedstock for RIN-generating renewable fuel. EPA believes
that this result in keeping with Congressional desire to avoid the
conversion of new lands to crop production for renewable fuel
production.
Additionally, EPA received comments indicating that, in order to be
consistent with existing statutory and/or regulatory definitions of
``forestland,'' EPA should exclude tree covered areas in intensive
agricultural crop production settings, such as fruit orchards, or tree-
covered areas in urban settings such as city parks from the definition
of forestland. EPA agrees that these types of land cannot be
characterized as ``forestland,'' and is thus excluding them from the
definition. EPA's final definition of forestland is ``generally
undeveloped land covering a minimum of 1 acre upon which the primary
vegetative species is trees, including land that formerly had such tree
cover and that will be regenerated and tree plantations.
[[Page 14694]]
Tree covered areas in intensive agricultural crop production settings,
such as fruit orchards, or tree-covered areas in urban settings such as
city parks, are not considered forestland.''
ii. Planted Trees and Tree Residue
The definition of renewable biomass in EISA includes planted trees
and tree residue from actively managed tree plantations on non-federal
land cleared at any time prior to December 19, 2007, including land
belonging to an Indian tribe or an Indian individual, that is held in
trust by the United States or subject to a restriction against
alienation imposed by the United States.
We proposed to define the term ``planted trees'' to include not
only trees that were established by human intervention such as planting
saplings and artificial seeding, but also trees established from
natural seeding by mature trees left undisturbed for such a purpose.
Some commenters disagreed with our inclusion of naturally seeded trees
in our definition of ``planted trees.'' They argue that an area which
is managed for natural regeneration of trees is more akin to a natural
forest than a tree plantation, and that the difference between the two
types of land should be clear in order to distinguish between the two
and to avoid the effective conversion of natural forests to tree
plantations under EISA. EPA agrees that the inclusion of natural
reseeding in the definition of ``planted trees'' would make
distinguishing between tree plantations and forests difficult or
impossible, thus negating the separate restrictions that Congress
placed on the two types of land. On the other hand, EPA believes that
trees that are naturally seeded and grown together with hand- or
machine-planted trees in a tree plantation should not categorically be
excluded from qualifying as renewable biomass. Such natural reseeding
may occur after planting the majority of trees in a tree plantation,
and may be consistent with the management plan for a tree plantation.
EPA has decided, therefore, to modify its proposed definition of
``planted tree'' to be trees harvested from a tree plantation. The term
``tree plantation'' is defined as a stand of no less than 1 acre
composed primarily of trees established by hand- or machine-planting of
a seed or sapling, or by coppice growth from the stump or root of a
tree that was hand- or machine-planted.'' The net effect is that as
long as a tree plantation consists ``primarily'' of trees that were
hand- or machine planted (or derived therefrom, as described below),
then all trees from the tree plantation, including those established
from natural seeding by mature trees left undisturbed for such a
purpose, will qualify as renewable biomass.
We also received a number of comments suggesting that EPA broaden
the definition of planted trees to include other methods of tree
regeneration, such as coppice (the production of new stems from stumps
or roots), that are frequently used in the forestry industry to
regenerate tree plantations. EPA believes that ``planted'' implies
direct human intervention, and that allowing stump-growth from the
stump or roots of a tree that was hand- or machine-planted is
consistent with this concept. Therefore, today's final rule broadens
the concept of ``planted trees'' from a tree plantation to include ``a
tree established by hand- or machine-planting of a seed or sapling, or
by coppice growth from the stump or root of a tree that was hand- or
machine-planted.'' This new language will appear in the definition of
``tree plantation.''
In the NPRM, we proposed to define a ``tree plantation'' as a stand
of no fewer than 100 planted trees of similar age and comprising one or
two tree species, or an area managed for growth of such trees covering
a minimum of one acre. We received numerous comments on our definition
of tree plantation. Several commenters urged EPA to define tree
plantation more broadly by using the definition from the Dictionary of
Forestry--``a stand composed primarily of trees established by planting
or artificial seeding,'' However, this definition does not provide
sufficiently clear guidelines for determining whether a given parcel of
land would be considered a tree plantation rather than a natural
forest. Since trees are considered renewable biomass under RFS2 only if
they are harvested from tree plantations, we believe that our proposed
definition was clearer and more easily applied in the field.
Accordingly, EPA has not adopted the definition of this term from the
Dictionary of Forestry. Other commenters argued that there is no
technical justification for limiting the number of species or number of
trees in a plantation, and that many tree plantations include a variety
of species. EPA believes that there is merit in these comments.
Accordingly, EPA is finalizing a broadened definition of ``tree
plantation,'' by removing the limitations on the number and species of
trees. EPA is defining tree plantation as ``a stand of no less than 1
acre composed primarily of trees established by hand- or machine-
planting of a seed or sapling, or by coppice growth from the stump or
root of a tree that was hand- or machine-planted.''
We proposed to apply similar management restrictions to tree
plantations as would apply to existing agricultural land and also to
interpret the EISA language as requiring that to qualify as renewable
biomass for renewable fuel production under RFS2, a tree plantation
must have been cleared at any time prior to December 19, 2007, and
continuously actively managed since December 19, 2007. Consistent with
our final position regarding actively managed existing agricultural
land, we are defining the term ``actively managed'' in the context of
tree plantations as managed for a predetermined outcome as evidenced by
any of the following that must be traceable to the land in question:
Sales records for planted trees or slash; purchasing records for seeds,
seedlings, or other nursery stock together with other written
documentation connecting the land in question to these purchases; a
written management plan for silvicultural purposes; documentation of
participation in a silvicultural program sponsored by a Federal, state
or local government agency; documentation of land management in
accordance with an agricultural or silvicultural product certification
program; an agreement for land management consultation with a
professional forester that identifies the land in question; or evidence
of the existence and ongoing maintenance of a road system or other
physical infrastructure designed and maintained for logging use,
together with one of the above-mentioned documents. Silvicultural
programs such as those of the Forest Stewardship Council, the
Sustainable Forestry Initiative, the American Tree Farm System, or USDA
are examples of the types of programs that could indicate actively
managed tree plantations. As with the definition of ``actively
managed'' as it applies to crops from existing agricultural lands, we
received extensive comments on this interpretation. As with our final
position for crops from existing agricultural lands, we are
interpreting the ``active management'' requirement for tree plantations
to apply on the date of EISA's enactment, December 19, 2007. Those tree
plantations that were cleared or cultivated and actively managed on
December 19, 2007 are eligible for the production of planted trees,
tree residue, slash and pre-commercial thinnings for renewable fuel
production.
In lieu of the term ``tree residue,'' we proposed to use the term
``slash'' in our regulations as a more descriptive, but otherwise
synonymous, term. According
[[Page 14695]]
to the Dictionary of Forestry (1998, p. 168), a source of commonly
understood industry definitions, slash is ``the residue, e.g., treetops
and branches, left on the ground after logging or accumulating as a
result of a storm, fire, girdling, or delimbing.'' We also proposed to
clarify that slash can include tree bark and can be the result of any
natural disaster, including flooding. We received comments in support
of this additional inclusion and are expanding the definition of
``slash'' to include tree bark and residue resulting from natural
disaster, including flooding. We received general support for our
proposal to substitute our definition of ``slash'' for ``tree
residue,'' however, several commenters argued that our definition of
slash is too narrow to be substituted for ``tree residue,'' which
should include woody residues from saw mills and paper mills that
process planted trees from tree plantations. EPA agrees that the term
``residue'' should include this material. Therefore, EPA is expanding
the definition of ``tree residue'' to include residues from processing
planted trees at lumber and paper mills, but is limiting it to the
biogenically derived portion of the residues that can be traced back to
feedstocks meeting the definition of renewable biomass (i.e. planted
trees and tree residue from actively managed tree plantations on non-
federal land cleared at any time prior to December 19, 2007). RINs may
only be generated for the fraction of fuel produced that represents the
biogenic portion of the tree residue, using the procedures described in
ASTM test method D-6866. Thus, if the tree residues are mixed with
chemicals or other materials during processing at the lumber or paper
mills, producers may only generate RINs for the portion of the mixture
that is actually derived from planted trees. EPA's final definition of
``tree residue'' is ``slash and any woody residue generated during the
processing of planted trees from actively managed tree plantations for
use in lumber, paper, furniture or other applications, providing that
such woody residue is not mixed with similar residue from trees that do
not originate in actively managed tree plantations.
iii. Slash and Pre-Commercial Thinnings
The EISA definition of renewable biomass includes slash and pre-
commercial thinnings from non-federal forestlands, including
forestlands belonging to an Indian tribe or an Indian individual, that
are held in trust by the United States or subject to a restriction
against alienation imposed by the United States. However, EISA excludes
slash and pre-commercial thinnings from forests or forestlands that are
ecological communities with a global or State ranking of critically
imperiled, imperiled, or rare pursuant to a State Natural Heritage
Program, old growth forest, or late successional forest.
As described in Sec. II.B.4.a.i of this preamble, our definition of
``forestland'' is generally undeveloped land covering a minimum of 1
acre upon which the primary vegetative species is trees, including land
that formerly had such tree cover and that will be regenerated and tree
plantations. Tree-covered areas in intensive agricultural crop
production settings, such as fruit orchards or tree-covered areas in
urban setting such as city parks, are not considered forestland. Also
as noted in Sec. III.B.4.a.ii of this preamble, we are adopting the
definition of slash listed in the Dictionary of Forestry, with the
addition of tree bark and residue resulting from natural disaster,
including flooding.
As for ``pre-commercial thinnings,'' the Dictionary of Forestry
defines the act of such thinning as ``the removal of trees not for
immediate financial return but to reduce stocking to concentrate growth
on the more desirable trees.'' Because what may now be considered pre-
commercial may eventually be saleable as renewable fuel feedstock, we
proposed not to include any reference to ``financial return'' in our
definition, but rather to define pre-commercial thinnings as those
trees removed from a stand of trees in order to reduce stocking to
concentrate growth on more desirable trees. Additionally, we proposed
to include diseased trees in the definition of pre-commercial thinnings
due to the fact that they can threaten the integrity of an otherwise
healthy stand of trees, and their removal can be viewed as reducing
stocking to promote the growth of more desirable trees. We sought
comment on whether our definition of pre-commercial thinnings should
include a maximum diameter and, if so, what the appropriate maximum
diameter should be. We received comments on our proposed definition of
pre-commercial thinnings that were generally supportive of our proposed
definition. Many commenters argued that EPA should not use a maximum
tree diameter as a basis for defining pre-commercial thinning as tree
diameter varies greatly by forest type and location, making any
diameter limitation EPA might set arbitrary. EPA agrees with this
assessment. Commenters also argued that pre-commercial thinnings may
include other non-tree vegetative material that is removed to promote
and improve tree growth. EPA is attempting to utilize standard industry
definitions to the extent practicable, and believes that the proposed
definition of pre-commercial thinnings, based largely on the Dictionary
of Forestry definition with the addition of other vegetative material
removed to promote tree growth, is appropriate. Therefore, we are
finalizing the proposed definition of ``pre-commercial thinnings,''
with the addition of the phrase ``or other vegetative material that is
removed to promote tree growth.''
We proposed that the State Natural Heritage Programs referred to in
EISA are those comprising a network associated with NatureServe, a non-
profit conservation and research organization. Individual Natural
Heritage Programs collect, analyze, and distribute scientific
information about the biological diversity found within their
jurisdictions. As part of their activities, these programs survey and
apply NatureServe's rankings, such as critically imperiled (S1),
imperiled (S2), and rare (S3) to species and ecological communities
within their respective borders. NatureServe meanwhile uses data
gathered by these Natural Heritage Programs to apply its global
rankings, such as critically imperiled (G1), imperiled (G2), or
vulnerable (the equivalent of the term ``rare,'' or G3), to species and
ecological communities found in multiple States or territories. We
proposed and sought comment on prohibiting slash and pre-commercial
thinnings from all forest ecological communities with global or State
rankings of critically imperiled, imperiled, or vulnerable (``rare'' in
the case of State rankings) from being used for renewable fuel for
which RINs may be generated under RFS2.
We proposed to use data compiled by NatureServe and published in
special reports to identify ``ecologically sensitive forestland.'' The
reports listed all forest ecological communities in the U.S. with a
global ranking of G1, G2, or G3, or with a State ranking of S1, S2, or
S3, and included descriptions of the key geographic and biologic
attributes of the referenced ecological community. We proposed that the
document be incorporated by reference into the definition of renewable
biomass in the final RFS2 regulations (and updated as appropriate
through notice and comment rulemaking). The document would identify
specific ecological communities from which slash and pre-commercial
thinnings could not be used as feedstock for the production of
renewable fuel that would qualify for RINs under RFS2. Draft versions
of the
[[Page 14696]]
document containing the global and State rankings were placed in the
docket for the proposed rule.
EPA received several comments on our proposed interpretation of
EISA's State Natural Heritage Program requirement and the reports
listing G1-G3 and S1-S3 ecological communities. Several commenters
argued that while EISA authorizes EPA to exclude slash and pre-
commercial thinnings from S1-3 and G1 and G2 communities, it does not
authorize the exclusion of biomass from G3 communities, which are
designated as ``vulnerable,'' not ``critically imperiled, imperiled or
rare,'' as EISA requires. The commenters further argue that there is
little or no environmental benefit to adding G3 communities to the list
of lands unavailable for renewable fuel feedstock production, and that
their inclusion limits the availability of forest-derived biomass. EPA
agrees with these comments, and has drafted today's final rule so as
not to specifically exclude from the definition of renewable biomass
slash and pre-commercial thinnings from G3-ranked ``vulnerable''
ecological communities to qualify as renewable biomass for purposes of
RFS2. We are interpreting EISA's language to exclude from the
definition of renewable biomass any biomass taken from ecological
communities in the U.S. with Natural Heritage Programs global ranking
of G1 or G2, or with a State ranking of S1, S2, or S3. We are including
in today's rulemaking docket (EPA-HQ-OAR-2005-0161) the list of
ecological communities fitting this description.
To complete the definition of ``ecologically sensitive
forestland,'' we proposed to include old growth and late successional
forestland which is characterized by trees at least 200 years old. We
received comments on this proposed definition recommending that EPA not
use a single tree age in the define old growth and late-successional
forests, as this criterion does not apply to all types of forests.
While EPA understands that there are a number of criteria for
determining whether a forest is old growth and that the criteria differ
depending on the type of forest, for purposes of the RFS2 rule, EPA
seeks to use definitive criteria that can be applied by non-
professionals. EPA is finalizing the definition of ``old growth'' as
proposed.
iv. Biomass Obtained From Certain Areas at Risk From Wildfire
The EISA definition of renewable biomass includes biomass obtained
from the immediate vicinity of buildings and other areas regularly
occupied by people, or of public infrastructure, at risk from wildfire.
We proposed to clarify in the regulations that ``biomass'' is organic
matter that is available on a renewable or recurring basis, and that it
must be obtained from within 200 feet of buildings, campgrounds, and
other areas regularly occupied by people, or of public infrastructure,
such as utility corridors, bridges, and roadways, in areas at risk of
wildfire.
Furthermore, we proposed to define ``areas at risk of wildfire'' as
areas located within--or within one mile of--forestland, tree
plantations, or any other generally undeveloped tract of land that is
at least one acre in size with substantial vegetative cover. We sought
comment on two possible implementation alternatives for identifying
areas at risk of wildfire. The first proposed alternative would
incorporate into our definition of ``areas at risk of wildfire'' any
communities identified as ``communities at risk'' and covered by a
community wildfire protection plan (CWPP). Communities at risk are
defined through a process within the document, ``Field Guidance--
Identifying and Prioritizing Communities at Risk'' (National
Association of State Foresters, June 2003). CWPPs are developed in
accordance with ``Preparing a Community Wildfire Protection Plan--A
Handbook for Wildland-Urban Interface Communities'' (Society of
American Foresters, March 2004) and certified by a State Forester or
equivalent. We sought comment on incorporating by reference into the
final RFS2 regulations a list of ``communities at risk'' with an
approved CWPP. We also sought comment on a second implementation
approach, which would incorporate into our definition of ``areas at
risk of wildfire'' any areas identified as wildland urban interface
(WUI) land, or land in which houses meet wildland vegetation or are
mixed with vegetation. We noted that SILVIS Lab, in the Department of
Forest Ecology and Management and the University of Wisconsin, Madison,
has, with funding provided by the U.S. Forest Service, mapped WUI lands
based on the 2000 Census and the U.S. Geological Survey National Land
Cover Data (NLCD), and we sought comment on how best to use this map.
We received comments on the proposal and on the two proposed
alternative options for identifying areas at risk of wildfire. A number
of commenters argued that EPA should define ``areas at risk of
wildfire'' using an existing definition of WUI from the Healthy Forests
Restoration Act (Pub. L. 108-148). Many commenters recommended that EPA
include both lands covered by a CWPP as well as lands meeting the
Healthy Forests Restoration Act definition of WUI in order to maximize
the amount of land available for biomass feedstock and to encourage the
removal of hazardous fuel for wildfires. EPA understands that very few
communities that might be eligible for a CWPP actually have one in
place, due to the numerous administrative steps that must be taken in
order to have a CWPP approved, so the option of defining areas at risk
of wildfire exclusively by reference to a list of communities with an
approved CWPP would be underinclusive of all lands that a professional
forester would consider to be at risk of wildfire. Furthermore, EPA
believes that the statutory definition of WUI from the Healthy Forests
Restoration Act (Pub. L. 108-148) is too vague using directly in
implementing the RFS2 program. If EPA used this WUI definition,
individual plots of land would have to be assessed by a professional
forester on a case-by-case basis in order to determine if they meet the
WUI definition, creating an expensive burden for landowners seeking to
sell biomass from their lands as renewable fuel feedstocks.
In light of the comments received and the need for a simple way for
landowners and renewable fuel producers to track the status of
particular plots of land, for the final rule we are identifying ``areas
at risk of wildfire'' as those areas identified as wildland urban
interface. Those areas are depicted and mapped at http://silvis.forest.wisc.edu/Library/WUILibrary.asp. The electronic WUI map
is a readily accessible reference tool that was prepared by experts in
the field of identifying areas at risk of wildfire, and is thus an
ideal reference for purposes of implementing RFS2. EPA has included in
the rulemaking docket instructions on using the WUI map to find the
status of a plot of land.
v. Algae
EISA specifies that ``algae'' qualify as renewable biomass. EPA did
not propose a definition for this term. A number of commenters have
requested clarification, specifically asking whether cyanobacteria
(also known as blue-green algae), diatoms, and angiosperms are within
the definition. Technically, the term ``algae'' has recently been
defined as ``thallophytes (plants lacking roots, stems and leaves) that
have chlorophyll a as their primary photosynthetic pigment and lack a
sterile covering of
[[Page 14697]]
cells around the reproductive cells.'' \5\ Algae are relatively simple
organisms that are virtually ubiquitous, occurring in freshwater,
brackish water, saltwater, and terrestrial habitats. When present in
water, they may be suspended, or grow attached to various substrates.
They range in size from unicellular to among the longest living
organisms (e.g. sea kelp). There is some disagreement among scientists
as to whether cyanobacteria should be considered bacteria or algae.
Some consider them to be bacteria because of their cellular
organization and biochemistry. However, others find it more significant
that they contain chlorophyll a, which differs from the chlorophyll of
bacteria which are photosynthetic, and also because free oxygen is
liberated in blue-green algal photosynthesis but not in that of the
bacteria.\6\ EPA believes that it furthers the purposes of EISA to
interpret the term ``algae'' in EISA broadly to include cyanobacteria,
since doing so will make available another possible feedstock for
renewable fuel production that will further the energy independence and
greenhouse gas reduction objectives of the Act. Further, EPA expects
that cyanobacteria used in biofuel production would be cultivated, as
opposed to harvested, and therefore that there would be no significant
impact from use of cyanobacteria for biofuel production on naturally
occurring algal populations. Diatoms are generally considered by the
scientific community to be algae,\7\ and, consistent with this general
scientific consensus, EPA interprets the EISA definition of algae to
include them. Microcrop angiosperms, however, do not meet the
definition of algae, even if they live in an aquatic habitat, since
they are relatively more complex organisms than the algae. A discussion
of microcrop angiosperms is included above in the discussion of
``planted crops and crop residue.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ Phycology, Robert Edward Lee, Cambridge University Press,
2008, page 3.
\6\ See, generally, Introduction to the Algae. Structure and
Reproduction, by Harold C. Bold and Michael J. Wynne, Prentice-Hall
Inc. 1978, page 31.
\7\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
b. Implementation of Renewable Biomass Requirements
Our proposed approach to the treatment of renewable biomass under
RFS2 was intended to define the conditions under which RINs can be
generated as well as the conditions under which renewable fuel can be
produced or imported without RINs. Our proposed and final approaches to
both of these areas are described in more detail below.
i. Ensuring That RINs Are Generated Only for Fuels Made From Renewable
Biomass
The effect of adding EISA's definition of renewable biomass to the
RFS program is to ensure that renewable fuels are only eligible for the
program if made from certain feedstocks, and if some of those
feedstocks come from certain types of land. In the context of our
regulatory program, this means that RINs could only be generated if it
can be established that the feedstock from which the fuel was made
meets EISA's definitions of renewable biomass include land
restrictions. Otherwise, no RINs could be generated to represent the
renewable fuel produced or imported. The EISA language does not
distinguish between domestic renewable fuel feedstocks and renewable
fuel feedstocks that come from abroad, so our final rule requires
similar feedstock affirmation and recordkeeping requirements for both
RIN-generating domestic renewable fuel producers and RIN-generating
foreign producers or importers.
We acknowledge that incidental contaminants can be introduced into
feedstocks during cultivation, transport or processing. It is not EPA's
intent that the presence of such contaminants should disqualify the
feedstock as renewable biomass. The final regulations therefore
stipulate that the term ``renewable biomass'' includes incidental
contaminants related to customary feedstock production and transport
that are present in feedstock that otherwise meets the definition if
such incidental contaminants are impractical to remove and occur in de
minimus levels. By ``related to customary feedstock production and
transport,'' we refer to contaminants related to crop production, such
as soil or residues related to fertilizer, pesticide and herbicide
applications to crops, as well as contaminants related to feedstock
transport, such as nylon rope used to bind feedstock materials. It
would also include agricultural contaminants introduced to the
feedstock during sorting or shipping, such as miscellaneous sorghum
grains present in a load of corn kernels. However, contamination is not
related to customary feedstock production and transport, so such
feedstocks would not qualify, and in particular, any hazardous waste or
toxic chemical contaminant in feedstock would disqualify the feedstock
as renewable biomass.
ii. Whether RINs Must Be Generated for All Qualifying Renewable Fuel
Under RFS1, virtually all renewable fuel is required to be assigned
a RIN by the producer or importer. This requirement was developed and
finalized in the RFS1 rulemaking in order to address stakeholder
concerns, particularly from obligated parties, that the number of
available RINs should reflect the total volume of renewable fuel used
in the transportation sector in the U.S. and facilitate program
compliance. EISA has dramatically increased the mandated volumes of
renewable fuel that obligated parties must ensure are produced and used
in the U.S. At the same time, EISA makes it more difficult for
renewable fuel producers to demonstrate that they have fuel that
qualifies for RIN generation by restricting qualifying renewable fuel
to that made from ``renewable biomass.'' The inclusion of such
restrictions under RFS2 may mean that, in some situations, a renewable
fuel producer would prefer to forgo the benefits of RIN generation to
avoid the cost of ensuring that its feedstocks qualify for RIN
generation. If a sufficient number of renewable fuel producers acted in
this way, it could lead to a situation in which not all qualifying fuel
is assigned RINs, thus resulting in a shortage of RINs in the market
that could force obligated parties into non-compliance even though
biofuels are being produced and used. Another possible outcome would be
that the demand for and price of RINs would increase significantly,
making compliance by obligated parties more costly and difficult than
necessary and raising prices for consumers.
With these concerns in mind, EPA proposed to preserve in RFS2 the
RFS1 requirement that RINs be generated for all qualifying renewable
fuel. We also proposed that renewable fuel producers maintain records
showing that they utilized feedstocks made from renewable biomass if
they are generating RINs, or, if they are not generating RINs, that
they did not use feedstocks that qualify as renewable biomass. However,
we considered this matter further, and we realize that the implication
of these proposed requirements is that renewable fuel producers would
be caught in the untenable position of being forced to participate in
the RFS2 program (register, keep records, etc.) even if they are unable
to generate RINS because their feedstocks do not meet the definition of
renewable biomass. We received many comments on the proposed
requirement to generate RINs for all qualifying renewable fuel. Most
[[Page 14698]]
commenters argued that the requirement to keep records for non-
qualifying renewable fuels was excessively onerous and served little
purpose for the program.
After considering the comments received, EPA has determined that
this requirement would be overly burdensome and unreasonable for
producers. The burden stems from the requirement that producers prove
that their feedstocks do not qualify if they are not generating RINs.
If the data did not exist or could not be obtained, producers could not
produce the fuel, even if no RINs would be generated. Thus, for the
final rule, EPA is requiring only that producers that do generate RINs
have the requisite records (as discussed in section II.B.4.c.i. of this
preamble) documenting that their fuel is produced from feedstocks
meeting the definition of renewable biomass. Non-RIN generating
producers need not maintain any paperwork related to their feedstocks
and their origins.
Although EPA is not requiring that RINs be generated for all
qualifying renewable fuel, EPA is seeking to avoid situations where
biofuels are produced, but RINs are not made available to the market
for compliance. EPA received comments requesting that we consider a
provision in which any volume of renewable fuel for which RINs were not
generated would be an obligated volume for that producer, to serve as a
disincentive for those producers who might not generate RINs in order
to avoid the RFS program requirements. While EPA is not finalizing this
provision in today's rule, we may consider a future rulemaking to
promulgate a provision such as this if we find that EISA volumes are
not being met due to producers declining to generate RINs for their
qualifying renewable fuel. We also note that it is ultimately the
availability of qualifying renewable fuel, as determined in part by the
number of RINs in the marketplace, that will determine the extent to
which EPA should issue a waiver of RFS requirements on the basis of
inadequate domestic supply. It is in the interest of renewable fuel
producers to avoid a situation where a waiver of the EISA volume
requirements appears necessary. EPA encourages renewable fuel producers
to generate RINs for all fuel that is made from feedstocks meeting the
definition of renewable biomass and that meets the GHG emissions
reduction thresholds set out in EISA. Please see section II.D.6 for
additional discussion of this issue.
c. Implementation Approaches for Domestic Renewable Fuel
Consistent with RFS1, renewable fuel producers will be responsible
for generating Renewable Identification Numbers (RINs) under RFS2. In
order to determine whether or not their fuel is eligible for generating
RINs, renewable fuel producers will generally need to have at least
basic information about the origin of their feedstocks, to ensure they
meet the definition of renewable biomass. In the proposal, EPA
described and sought comment on several approaches for implementing the
land restrictions on renewable biomass contained in EISA.
The proposed approach for ensuring that producers generate RINs
properly was that EPA would require that renewable fuel producers
obtain documentation about their feedstocks from their feedstock
supplier(s) and take the measures necessary to ensure that they know
the source of their feedstocks and can demonstrate to EPA that they
fall within the EISA definition of renewable biomass. EPA would require
renewable fuel producers who generate RINs to affirm on their renewable
fuel production reports that the feedstock used for each renewable fuel
batch meets the definition of renewable biomass. EPA would also require
renewable fuel producers to maintain sufficient records to support
these claims. Specifically, we proposed that renewable fuel producers
who use planted crops or crop residue from existing agricultural land,
or who use planted trees or slash from actively managed tree
plantations, would be required to have copies of their feedstock
producers' written records that serve as evidence of land being
actively managed (or fallow, in the case of agricultural land) since
December 2007, such as sales records for planted crops or trees,
livestock, crop residue, or slash; a written management plan for
agricultural or silvicultural purposes; or, documentation of
participation in an agricultural or silvicultural program sponsored by
a Federal, state or local government agency. In the case of all other
biomass, we proposed to require renewable fuel producers to have, at a
minimum, written records from their feedstock supplier that serve as
evidence that the feedstock qualifies as renewable biomass.
We sought comment on this approach generally as well as other
methods of verifying renewable fuel producers' claims that feedstocks
qualify as renewable biomass. EPA received extensive comments on the
proposed approach. Many affected parties argued that the proposed
approach would pose an unnecessary recordkeeping burden on both
feedstock and renewable fuel producers when, in practice, new lands
will not be cleared, at least in the near future, for purposes of
growing renewable fuel feedstocks. Commenters argued that individual
recordkeeping was onerous, when compliance with the renewable biomass
requirements could be determined through the use of existing data and
third-party programs. Commenters contend that the recordkeeping and
feedstock tracking requirements are particularly arduous for corn,
soybeans and other agricultural crops that are used as renewable fuel
feedstocks due to both the maturity and the highly fungible nature of
those feedstock systems. In contrast, other commenters argued that
recordkeeping and reporting requirements are necessary to ensure that
feedstocks are properly verified as renewable biomass to prevent
undesirable impacts on natural ecosystems and wildlife habitat
globally.
We also sought comment on the possible use under EISA of non-
governmental, third-party verification programs used for certifying and
tracking agricultural and forest products from point of origin to point
of use both within the U.S. and outside the U.S. We examined third-
party organizations that certify specific types of biomass from
croplands and organizations that certify forest lands, including the
Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil, the Basel Criteria for Responsible
Soy Production, the Roundtable on Sustainable Biofuels (RSB) and the
Better Sugarcane Initiative (BSI). Additionally, we examined the work
of the international Soy Working Group, the Brazilian Association of
Vegetable Oil Industries (ABIOVE) and Brazil's National Association of
Grain Exporters (ANEC), Greenpeace, Verified Sustainable Ethanol
initiative, the Sustainable Agriculture Network (SAN), the Forest
Stewardship Council (FSC), American Tree Farm program and Sustainable
Forestry Initiative (SFI). We proposed not to solely rely on any
existing third-party verification program to implement the land
restrictions on renewable biomass under RFS2 for several reasons. These
programs are limited in the scope of products they certify, the acreage
of land certified through third parties in the U.S. covers only a small
portion of the total available land estimated to qualify for renewable
biomass production under the EISA definition, and none of the existing
third-party systems had definitions or criteria that perfectly match
the land use definitions
[[Page 14699]]
and restrictions contained in the EISA definition of renewable biomass.
We received several comments indicating that producers would like
to use evidence of their participation in these types of programs to
prove that their feedstocks meet the definition of renewable biomass.
Others argued that while, at this time, the requirements of third-party
programs may not encompass all of the restrictions and requirements of
EISA's renewable biomass definition, the programs may alter their
criteria in the future to parallel EISA's requirements. EPA agrees that
this is a possibility and, in the future, will consider the use of
these programs in order to simplify compliance with the renewable
biomass requirements. We encourage fuel producers to work to identify
changes to such programs that could allow them to be used as a viable
compliance option.
In the proposal, EPA also acknowledged that land restrictions
contained within the definition of renewable biomass may not, in
practice, result in a significant change in agricultural practices,
since biomass from nonqualifying lands may still be used for non-fuel
(e.g., food) purposes. Therefore, we sought comment on a stakeholder
suggestion to establish a baseline level of production of biomass
feedstocks such that reporting and recordkeeping requirements would be
triggered only when the baseline production levels of feedstocks used
for biofuels were exceeded. Additionally, EPA offered as an alternative
the use of existing satellite and aerial imagery and mapping software
and tools to implement the renewable biomass provisions of EISA. We
received numerous comments in support of these options. Commenters
argued that USDA collects and maintains ample data on land use that EPA
could use to demonstrate that, due to increasing crop yields and other
considerations, agricultural land acreage will not expand, at least in
the near term, to accommodate the increased renewable fuel obligations
of RFS2.
EPA also sought comment on an additional alternative in which EPA
would require renewable fuel producers to set up and administer a
company-wide quality assurance program that would create an additional
level of rigor in the implementation scheme for the EISA land
restrictions on renewable biomass. EPA is not finalizing this company-
wide quality assurance program approach, but rather, is encouraging the
option for an industry-wide quality assurance program, as described in
the following section, to be administered.
i. Recordkeeping and Reporting for Feedstocks
After considering the comments we received on the proposed
approach, EPA is finalizing reporting and recordkeeping requirements
comparable to those in the approach we discussed in the proposed rule
for all categories of renewable biomass, with the exception of planted
crops and crop residue from agricultural land in the United States,
which will be covered by the aggregate compliance approach discussed
below in Section II.B.4.c.iii. EPA believes that these requirements on
the fuel producer utilizing feedstocks other than crops and crop
residue are necessary to ensure that the definition of renewable
biomass is being met, and to allow feedstocks to be traced from their
original producer to the renewable fuel production facility.
Furthermore, we believe that, in most cases, feedstock producers will
already have or will be able to easily generate the specified
documentation for renewable fuel producers necessary to provide them
with adequate assurance that the feedstock in question meets the
definition of renewable biomass.
Under today's rule, all renewable fuel producers must maintain
written records from their feedstock suppliers for each feedstock
purchase that identify the type and amount of feedstocks and where the
feedstock was produced and that are sufficient to verify that the
feedstock qualifies as renewable biomass. Specifically, renewable fuel
producers must maintain maps and/or electronic data identifying the
boundaries of the land where the feedstock was produced, product
transfer documents (PTDs) or bills of lading tracing the feedstock from
that land to the renewable fuel production facility, and other written
records that serve as evidence that the feedstock qualifies as
renewable biomass. We believe the maps or electronic data can be easily
generated using existing Web-based information.
Producers using planted trees and tree residue from tree
plantations must maintain additional documentation that serves as
evidence that the tree plantation was cleared prior to December 19,
2007, and actively managed as a tree plantation on December 19, 2007.
This documentation must consist of the following types of records which
must be traceable to the land in question: Sales records for planted
trees or slash; purchasing records for fertilizer, weed control, or
reseeding, including seeds, seedlings, or other nursery stock together
with other written documentation connecting the land in question to
these purchases; a written management plan for silvicultural purposes;
documentation of participation in a silvicultural program sponsored by
a Federal, state or local government agency; or documentation of land
management in accordance with a silvicultural product certification
program; an agreement for land management consultation with a
professional forester that identifies the land in question; or evidence
of the existence and ongoing maintenance of a road system or other
physical infrastructure designed and maintained for logging use. There
are many existing programs, such as those administered by USDA and
independent third-party certifiers, that could be used as documentation
that verifies that feedstock from certain land qualifies as renewable
biomass. For example, many tree plantation owners already participate
in a third-party certification program such as FSC or SFI. Written
proof of participation by a tract of land in a program of this type on
December 19, 2007 would be sufficient to show that a tree plantation
was cleared prior to that date and that it was actively managed on that
date. The tree plantation owner would need to send copies of this
documentation to the renewable fuel producer when supplying them with
biomass that will be used as a renewable fuel feedstock.
We anticipate that the recordkeeping requirements will result in
renewable fuel producers amending their contracts and modifying their
supply chain interactions to satisfy the requirement that producers
have documented assurance and proof about their feedstock's origins.
Enforcement will rely in part on EPA's review of renewable fuel
production reports and attest engagements of renewable fuel producers'
records. EPA will also consult other data sources, including any data
made available by USDA, and may conduct site visits or inspections of
feedstock producers' and suppliers' facilities.
The reporting requirements for renewable biomass in today's final
rule include, as proposed, include an affirmation by the renewable fuel
producer for each batch of renewable fuel for which they generate RINs
that the feedstocks used to produce the batch meet the definition of
renewable biomass. Additionally, the final reporting requirements
include a quarterly report to be sent to EPA by each renewable fuel
producer that includes a summary of the types and volumes of feedstocks
used throughout the quarter, as well as electronic data or maps
identifying the land from which those feedstocks were harvested.
[[Page 14700]]
Producers need not provide duplicate maps if purchasing feedstocks
multiple times from one plot of land; producers may cross-reference the
previously submitted map. Producers will also be required to keep
records tracing the feedstocks from the land to the renewable fuel
production facility, other written records from their feedstock
suppliers that serve as evidence that the feedstock qualifies as
renewable biomass, and for producers using planted trees or tree
residue from tree plantations, written records that serve as evidence
that the land from which the feedstocks were obtained was cleared prior
to December 19, 2007 and actively managed on that date. These
requirements will apply to renewable fuel producers using feedstocks
from foreign sources (unless special approvals are granted in the
future, as described below), or from domestic sources, except for
planted crops or crop residue (discussed below).
This approach will be integrated into the existing registration,
recordkeeping, reporting, and attest engagement procedures for
renewable fuel producers. It places the burden of implementation and
enforcement on renewable fuel producers rather than bringing feedstock
producers and suppliers directly under EPA regulation, minimizing the
number of regulated parties under RFS2.
EPA also sought comment on, and is finalizing as an option, an
alternative approach in which EPA allows renewable fuel producers and
renewable fuel feedstock producers and suppliers to develop a quality
assurance program for the renewable fuel production supply chain,
similar to the model of the successful Reformulated Gasoline Survey
Association. While individual renewable fuel producers may still choose
to comply with the individual renewable biomass recordkeeping and
reporting requirements rather than participate in a quality assurance
program, we believe that this preferred alternative could be less
costly than an individual compliance demonstration, and it would add a
quality assurance element to RFS2. Those participating renewable fuel
producers would be presumed to be in compliance with the renewable
biomass requirements unless and until the quality assurance program
finds evidence to the contrary. Under today's rule, renewable fuel
producers must choose either to comply with the individual renewable
biomass recordkeeping and reporting described above, or they must
participate in the quality assurance program.
The quality assurance program must be carried out by an independent
auditor funded by renewable fuel producers and feedstock suppliers. The
program must consist of a verification program for participating
renewable fuel producers and renewable feedstock producers and handlers
designed to provide independent oversight of the feedstock handling
processes that are required to determine if a feedstock meets the
definition of renewable biomass. Under this option, a participating
renewable fuel producer and its renewable feedstock suppliers and
handlers would have to participate in the funding of an organization
which arranges to have an independent auditor conduct a program of
compliance surveys. The compliance audit must be carried out by an
independent auditor pursuant to a detailed survey plan submitted to EPA
for approval by November 1 of the year preceding the year in which the
alternative compliance program would be implemented. The compliance
survey program plan must include a statistically supportable
methodology for the survey, the locations of the surveys, the frequency
of audits to be included in the survey, and any other elements that EPA
determines are necessary to achieve the same level of quality assurance
as the individual recordkeeping and reporting requirements included in
the RFS2 regulations.
Under this alternative compliance program, the independent auditor
would be required to visit participating renewable feedstock producers
and suppliers to determine if the biomass they supply to renewable fuel
producers meets the definition of renewable biomass. This program would
be designed to ensure representative coverage of participating
renewable feedstock producers and suppliers. The auditor would generate
and report the results of the surveys to EPA each calendar quarter. In
addition, where the survey finds improper designations or handling, the
renewable fuel producers would be responsible for identifying and
addressing the root cause of the problem. The renewable fuel producers
would have to take corrective action to retire the appropriate number
of invalid RINs depending on the violation. EPA received comments from
a number of parties who were supportive of this option as an
alternative and less-burdensome way of ensuring that renewable fuel
feedstocks meet the definition of renewable biomass. EPA believes this
option to be an efficient and effective means of implementing and
enforcing the renewable biomass requirements of EISA, and has therefore
included it as a compliance option in today's final rule.
ii. Approaches for Foreign Producers of Renewable Fuel
The EISA renewable biomass language does not distinguish between
domestic renewable fuel and fuel feedstocks and renewable fuel and fuel
and feedstocks that come from abroad. EPA proposed that foreign
producers of renewable fuel that is exported to the U.S. be required to
meet the same compliance obligations as domestic renewable fuel
producers, as well as some additional measure, discussed in Section
II.C., designed to facilitate EPA enforcement in other countries. These
proposed obligations include facility registration and submittal of
independent engineering reviews (described in Section II.C below), and
reporting, recordkeeping, and attest engagement requirements. The
proposal also would have included for foreign producers the same
obligations that domestic producers have for verifying that their
feedstock meets the definition of renewable biomass, such as certifying
on each renewable fuel production report that their renewable fuel
feedstock meets the definition of renewable biomass and working with
their feedstock suppliers to ensure that they receive and maintain
accurate and sufficient documentation in their records to support their
claims.
(1) RIN-Generating Importers
EPA proposed to allow importers to generate RINs for renewable fuel
they are importing into the U.S. only if the foreign producer of that
renewable fuel had not already done so. Under the proposal, in order to
generate RINs, importers would need to obtain information from the
registered foreign producers concerning the point of origin of their
fuel's feedstock and whether it meets the definition of renewable
biomass. Therefore, we proposed that in the event that a batch of
foreign-produced renewable fuel does not have RINs accompanying it when
it arrives at a U.S. port, an importer must obtain documentation that
proves that the fuel's feedstock meets the definition of renewable
biomass (as described in Section II.B.4.a. of this preamble) from the
fuel's producer, who must have registered with the RFS program and
conducted a third-party engineering review. With such documentation,
the importer could generate RINs prior to introducing the fuel into
commerce in the U.S.
We sought comment on this proposed approach and whether and to what
extent the approaches for ensuring
[[Page 14701]]
compliance with the EISA's land restrictions by foreign renewable fuel
producers should differ from the proposed approach for domestic
renewable fuel producers. We received comments on the proposed
implementation option for importers of foreign renewable fuel. Some
argue that the proposed recordkeeping requirements for imported fuel
were overly burdensome. On the other hand, others argued that
importers, similarly to domestic producers, should be required to
obtain information that can serve as evidence that the feedstocks meet
the definition of renewable biomass, in order to avoid fraud. Some
commenters also argued that importers should be able to generate RINs
for fuel imported from foreign producers that are not registered with
EPA under the RFS2 program.
For the final rule, EPA is requiring that importers may only
generate RINs for renewable fuel if the foreign producer has not
already done so. The foreign producers must be registered with EPA
under the RFS2 program, and must have conducted an independent
engineering review. Furthermore, we are requiring that importers obtain
from the foreign producer and maintain in their records written
documentation that serves as evidence that the renewable fuel for which
they are generating RINs was made from feedstocks meeting the
definition of renewable biomass. The foreign producer that originally
generated the fuel must ensure that these feedstock records are
transferred with each batch of fuel and ultimately reach the RIN-
generating importer. A requirement that importers maintain these
renewable biomass records is consistent with the renewable biomass
recordkeeping requirements imposed on domestic producers of renewable
fuel.
(2) RIN-Generating Foreign Producers
Foreign producers that intend to generate RINs would be required to
designate renewable fuel intended for export to the U.S. as such,
segregate the volume until it reaches the U.S., and post a bond to
ensure that penalties can be assessed in the event of a violation, as
discussed in Section II.D.2.b. Similarly to domestic producers of
renewable fuel, foreign producers must obtain and maintain written
documentation from their feedstock providers that can serve as evidence
that their feedstocks meet the definition of renewable biomass. Foreign
producers may also develop a quality assurance program for their
renewable fuel production supply chain, as described above. However,
while domestic renewable fuel producers using crops or crop residues
may rely on the aggregate compliance approach described below to ensure
that their feedstocks are renewable biomass, this approach is not
available at this time to foreign renewable fuel producers, as
described below.
EPA believes that the renewable biomass recordkeeping provisions
are necessary in order for EPA to ensure that RINs are being generated
for fuel that meets EISA's definition of renewable fuel. Just as for
domestic producers, foreign producers must maintain evidence that the
fuel meets the GHG reduction requirements and is made from renewable
biomass.
iii. Aggregate Compliance Approach for Planted Crops and Crop Residue
From Agricultural Land
In light of the comments received on the proposed renewable biomass
recordkeeping requirements and implementation options, EPA sought
assistance from USDA in determining whether existing data and data
sources might suggest an alternative method for verifying compliance
with renewable biomass requirements associated with the use of crops
and crop residue for renewable fuel production. Taking into
consideration publicly available data on agricultural land available
from USDA and USGS as well as expected economic incentives for
feedstock producers, EPA has determined that an aggregate compliance
approach is appropriate for certain types of renewable biomass, namely
planted crops and crop residue from the United States.
Under the aggregate compliance approach, EPA is determining for
this rule the total amount of ``existing agricultural land'' in the
U.S. (as defined above in Section II.B.4.a.) at the enactment date of
EISA, which is 402 million acres. EPA will monitor total agricultural
land annually to determine if national agricultural land acreage
increases above this 2007 national aggregate baseline. Feedstocks
derived from planted crops and crop residues will be considered to be
consistent with the definition of renewable biomass and renewable fuel
producers using these feedstocks will not be required to maintain
specific renewable biomass records as described below unless and until
EPA determines that the 2007 national aggregate baseline is exceeded.
If EPA finds that the national aggregate baseline is exceeded,
individual recordkeeping and reporting requirements as described below
will be triggered for renewable fuel producers using crops and crop
residue. We believe that the aggregate approach will fully ensure that
the EISA renewable biomass provisions related to crops and crop residue
are satisfied, while also easing the burden for certain renewable fuel
producers and their feedstock suppliers vis-[agrave]-vis verification
that their feedstock qualifies as renewable biomass.
As discussed in more detail below, there are five main factors
supporting the aggregate compliance approach we are taking for planted
crops and crop residue. First, EPA is using data sets that allow us to
obtain an appropriately representative estimate of the agricultural
lands available under EISA for the production of crops and crop residue
as feedstock for renewable fuel production. Second, USDA data indicate
an overall trend of agricultural land contraction. These data, together
with EPA economic modeling, suggest that 2007 aggregate baseline
acreage should be sufficient to support EISA renewable fuel obligations
and other foreseeable demands for crop products, at least in the near
term, without clearing and cultivating additional land. Third, EPA
believes that existing economic factors for feedstock producers favor
more efficient utilization practices of existing agricultural land
rather than converting non-agricultural lands to crop production.
Fourth, if, at any point, EPA finds that the total amount of land in
use for the production of crops including crops for grazing and forage
is equal or greater than 397 million acres (i.e. within 5 million acres
of EPA's established 402 million acre baseline), EPA will conduct
further investigations to evaluate whether the presumption built into
the aggregate compliance approach remains valid. Lastly, EPA has set up
a trigger mechanism that in the event there are more than the baseline
amount of acres of cropland, pastureland and CRP land in production,
renewable fuel producers will be required to meet the same individual
or consortium-based recordkeeping and reporting requirements applicable
to RIN-generating renewable fuel producers using other feedstocks.
Taken together, these factors give EPA high confidence that the
aggregate compliance approach for domestically grown crops and crop
residues meets the statutory obligation to ensure feedstock volumes
used to meet the renewable fuel requirements also comply with the
definition of renewable biomass.
(1) Analysis of Total Agricultural Land in 2007
As described in Section II.B.4.a. above, EPA is defining ``existing
agricultural land'' for purposes of the
[[Page 14702]]
EISA land use restrictions on crops and crop residue to include
cropland, pastureland and CRP land that was cleared and actively
managed or fallow and nonforested on the date of EISA enactment. To
determine the aggregate total acreage of existing agricultural land for
the aggregate compliance approach on the date of EISA enactment, EPA
obtained from USDA data representing total cropland (including fallow
cropland), pastureland, and CRP land in 2007 from three independently
gathered national land use data sources (discussed in further detail
below): The Farm Service Agency (FSA) Crop History Data, the USDA
Census of Agriculture (2007), and the satellite-based USDA Crop Data
Layer (CDL). In addition, CRP acreage is provided by FSA's annually
published ``Conservation Reserve Program: Summary and Enrollment
Statistics.'' By definition, the cropland, pastureland, and CRP land
included in these data sources for 2007 were cleared or cultivated on
the date of EISA enactment (December 19, 2007) and, consistent with the
principles set forth in Section II.4.a.i, would be considered
``actively managed'' or fallow and nonforested on that date. These
categories of lands include those from which traditional crops, such as
corn, soy, wheat and sorghum, would likely be grown. Therefore
quantification of cropland, pastureland, and CRP land from these data
sources represents a reasonable assessment of the acreage in the United
States that is available under the Act for the production of crops and
crop residues that could satisfy the definition of renewable biomass in
EISA.
Conservation Reserve Program Data. FSA reports CRP enrollment
acreage each year in the publication ``Conservation Reserve Program:
Summary and Enrollment Statistics.'' The CRP program includes the
general CRP, the Conservation Reserve Enhancement Program (CREP), and
the Farmable Wetlands Program (FWP). The Wetlands Reserve Program (WRP)
and Grasslands Reserve Program (GRP) are not under CRP and are not
included in the total agricultural land figure in this rulemaking. The
2007 CRP acreage was 36.7 million acres. This is an exact count of
acreage within the CRP program in 2007.
Farm Service Agency Crop History Data. The FSA maintains annual
records of field-level land use data for all farms enrolled in FSA
programs. Almost all national cropland and pastureland is reported
through FSA and recorded in this data set. We used the ``Cropland''
category to determine total agricultural land. Pastureland is reported
by farms under the category ``Cropland'' as cropland used for grazing
and forage under the crop type ``mixed forage.'' Timber land and any
grazed native grass was removed from the ``Cropland'' category, because
these land types represent either forestland or rangeland, which are
not within the definition of existing agricultural land. CRP lands and
other conservation program lands are also reported as cropland. Because
GRP and WRP lands are not within the definition of ``existing
agricultural land'' as defined in today's regulations, they were also
subtracted from the ``Cropland'' category total. FSA Crop History Data
show that there was 402 million acres of agricultural land, as defined
here, in the U.S. in 2007 (See Table II.B.4-1).
Table II.B.4-1--Total U.S. Agricultural Land in 2007 From USDA Data
Sources
------------------------------------------------------------------------
FSA crop Agricultural
Land category history data census data
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cropland and Pastureland................ 365 367
CRP Land................................ 37 37
-------------------------------
Total Land.......................... 402 404
------------------------------------------------------------------------
USDA Census of Agriculture. USDA conducts a full census of the U.S.
agricultural sector once every five years. The data are available for
the U.S., each of the 50 States, and for each county. The most recent
census available is the 2007 Census of Agriculture. For the purpose of
this rulemaking, USDA provided EPA total acreage and 95% confidence
intervals for the Census category ``Total Cropland,'' which includes
the sub-categories ``Harvested cropland,'' ``Cropland used only for
pasture and grazing,'' and ``Other cropland.'' WRP and GRP acreage are
included in ``Other cropland,'' so, for purposes of this rulemaking,
they were subtracted from the sub-category number (see above). The
analysis excluded the ``Permanent rangeland and pasture'' category, as
the pasture data cannot be separated from rangeland in this category.
Total CRP acreage in 2007 was added to ``Total cropland.'' With these
adjustments, the Census of Agriculture showed 404 million acres (95%
confidence range 401-406 million acres) of existing agricultural land
as defined in today's rule, in the U.S. in 2007 (See Table II.B.4-1).
Crop Data Layer. The USDA National Agricultural Statistics Service
(NASS) Crop Data Layer (CDL) is a raster, geo-referenced, crop-specific
land cover data layer suitable for use in geographic information
systems (GIS) analysis. Based on satellite data, the CDL has a ground
resolution of 56 meters and was verified using FSA surveys. The CDL
covers 21 major agricultural states for 2007 and therefore cannot be
used to determine a 2007 national aggregate agricultural land baseline.
There will be full coverage of the 48 contiguous states for 2009, and
the CDL can be used for analysis validation purposes during monitoring.
From 2010 onward, it coverage of the 48 contiguous states will be
dependent on available funding. GIS analyses of the CDL will include
all cropland and pastureland data for each state. To ensure that non-
pasture grasslands are not included in the final sum, all areas of the
``Grassland herbaceous'' category from the U.S. Geological National
Land Cover Data layer (NLCD) that overlap the CDL layers are removed
from the total agricultural land number. Producer and user accuracies
\8\ are available for the CDL crop categories.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ ``Producer Accuracy'' indicates the probability that a
groundtruth pixel will be correctly mapped and measures errors of
omission; ``User Accuracy'' indicates the probability that a pixel
from the classification actually matches the groundtruth data and
measures errors of omission.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Primary Data Source Selection for Aggregate Compliance Approach.
EPA has determined that the FSA Crop History Data will be used as the
data set on which the total existing agricultural land baseline will be
based for the aggregate compliance approach. The FSA Crop History Data
is the only complete data set for 2007 that is collected annually,
enabling EPA to monitor agricultural land expansion or
[[Page 14703]]
contraction from year to year using a consistent data set. The total
existing agricultural land value derived from FSA Crop History Data
rests within the 95% confidence interval of the 2007 Census of
Agriculture and is only 2 million acres less than the Census of
Agriculture point estimate. The Census of Agriculture provides slightly
fuller coverage than the FSA Crop History Data due to the nature of the
data collection; however, given that both data collection systems have
consistent and long-standing methodologies, the disparity between the
two should remain approximately constant. Therefore, the FSA Crop
History Data will provide a consistent data set for analyzing any
expansion or contraction of total national agricultural land in the
U.S.
During its annual monitoring, EPA will use the FSA Crop History
Data and the CDL analyses as a secondary source to validate our annual
assessment. In years when the Census of Agriculture is updated, this
data will also be used to validate our annual assessment. Other data
sources, such as the annual NASS Farms, Land in Farms and Livestock
Operations may also be useful as secondary data checks. Lastly, EPA
intends to consider, as appropriate, other data sources for the annual
monitoring analysis of total agricultural land as new technologies and
data sources come online that would improve the accuracy and robustness
of annual monitoring.
(2) Aggregate Agricultural Land Trends Over Time
The Census of Agriculture (conducted every five years) shows that
U.S. agricultural land has decreased by 44 million acres from 1997 to
2007, indicating an overall decade trend of contraction of agricultural
land utilization despite some year-to-year variations that can be seen
by reference to the annual FSA Crop History records (See Table II.B.4-2
and Table II.B.4-3). EPA's FASOM modeling results, which model full
EISA volumes in 2022, support this contraction trend, indicating that
total cropland, pastureland, and CRP land in the U.S. in 2022, under a
scenario of full renewable fuel volume as required by EISA, would be
less than the 2007 national acreage reported in the FSA Crop History
Data (See preamble Section VII and RIA Chapter 5).
Table II.B.4-2--Total Agricultural Land (as Defined in Section II.B.4.a)
Counted in the Census of Agriculture From 1997-2007
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total agricultural land
Census year (millions of acres)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
2007........................................... 404
2002 *......................................... 431
1997 *......................................... 445
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\*\ 2002 data do not include farms with land in FWP or CREP.
Table II.B.4-3--Total Agricultural Land (as Defined in Section II.B.4.a)
Recorded in FSA Crop History Data From 2005-2007
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total agricultural land
Year (millions of acres)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
2007........................................... 402
2006........................................... 393
2005........................................... 392
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(3) Aggregate Compliance Determination
The foundation of the aggregate compliance approach is
establishment of a baseline amount of eligible agricultural land that
was cleared or cultivated and actively managed or fallow and non-
forested on December 19, 2007. Based on USDA-FSA Crop History Data, EPA
is establishing a baseline of 402 million acres of U.S. agricultural
land, as defined in Section II.B.4.a and based upon the methods
described in Section II.B.4.c.iii.(1), that is eligible for production
of planted crops and crop residue meeting the EISA definition of
renewable biomass. EPA will monitor total U.S. agricultural land
annually, using FSA Crop History Data as a primary determinant, but
using other data sources for support (See Section II.4.c.iii.(1)). If,
at any point, EPA finds that the total land in use for the production
of crops, including crops for grazing and forage, is greater than 397
million acres (i.e. within 5 million acres of EPA's established 402
million acre baseline), EPA will conduct further investigations to
evaluate whether the presumption built into the aggregate compliance
approach remains valid. Additionally, if EPA determines that the data
indicates that this 2007 baseline level of eligible agricultural land
has been exceeded, EPA will publish in the Federal Register a finding
to that effect, and additional requirements will be triggered for
renewable fuel producers to verify that they are using planted crops
and crop residue from ``existing agricultural land'' as defined in
today's rule as their renewable fuel feedstock. EPA's findings will be
published by November 30, at the latest. If in November the 402 million
acres baseline is found to be exceeded, then on July 1 of the following
year, renewable fuel producers using feedstocks qualifying for this
aggregate compliance approach, namely planted crops and crop residue
from the United States, will be required to comply with the
recordkeeping and reporting requirements applicable to producers using
other types of renewable biomass, as described in the previous
sections. This includes the option that fuel producers could utilize a
third-party consortium to demonstrate compliance.
EPA acknowledges that it is possible that under this approach some
of the land available under EISA for crop production on the date of
EISA enactment could be retired and other land brought into production,
without altering the assessment of the aggregate amount of cropland,
pastureland and CRP land. Under EISA, crops or crop residues from the
new lands would not qualify as renewable biomass. However, EPA expects
such shifts in acreage to be de minimus, as long as the total aggregate
amount of agricultural land does not exceed the 2007 national aggregate
baseline. EPA expects that new lands are unlikely to be cleared for
agricultural purposes for two reasons. First, it can be assumed that
most undeveloped land that was not used as agricultural land in 2007 is
generally not suitable for agricultural purposes and would serve only
marginally well for production of renewable fuel feedstocks. Due to the
high costs and significant inputs that would be required to make the
non-agricultural land suitable for agricultural purposes, it is highly
unlikely that farmers will undertake the effort to ``shift'' land that
is currently non-agricultural into agricultural use. Second, crop
yields are projected to increase, reducing the need for farmers to
clear new land for agricultural purposes. We believe that this effect
is reflected in the overall trend, discussed earlier, of an overall
contraction in agricultural land acreage over time.
If EPA determines that the baseline is exceeded, and that
individual compliance with the renewable biomass reporting and
recordkeeping requirements is triggered, renewable fuel producers using
crops and crop residue as a feedstock for renewable fuel would become
responsible, beginning July 1 of the following year, for meeting
individual recordkeeping and reporting requirements related to
renewable biomass verification. These requirements are identical to
those that
[[Page 14704]]
apply to producers using other types of renewable biomass feedstocks,
such as planted trees from tree plantations, as described in the
previous sections. Renewable fuel producers generating RINs under the
RFS2 program would continue to be required to affirm (through EMTS--EPA
Moderated Transaction System) for each batch of renewable fuel that
their feedstocks meet the definition of renewable biomass.
Additionally, producers would send a quarterly report to EPA that
includes a summary of the types and volumes of feedstocks used
throughout the quarter, as well as electronic data or maps identifying
the land from which those feedstocks were harvested.
Furthermore, those RIN-generating renewable fuel producers will be
required to obtain and maintain in their files written records from
their feedstock suppliers for each feedstock purchase that identify
where the feedstocks were produced and that are sufficient to verify
that the feedstocks qualify as renewable biomass. This includes maps
and/or electronic data identifying the boundaries of the land where the
feedstock was produced, PTDs or bills of lading tracing the feedstock
from that land to the renewable fuel production facility, and other
written records that serve as evidence that the feedstock qualifies as
renewable biomass. Finally, producers using planted crops and crop
residue must maintain additional documentation that serves as evidence
that the agricultural land used to produce the crop or crop residue was
cleared or cultivated and actively managed or fallow, and nonforested
on December 19, 2007. This documentation must consist of the following
types of records which must be traced to the land in question: sales
records for planted crops, crop residue, or livestock, purchasing
records for land treatments such as fertilizer, weed control, or
reseeding or a written agricultural management plan or documentation of
participation in an agricultural program sponsored by a Federal, State
or local government agency.
Alternatively, if the baseline is exceeded and the requirements are
triggered for individual producer verification that their feedstocks
are renewable biomass renewable fuel producers may choose to work with
other renewable fuel producers as well as feedstock producers and
suppliers to develop a quality assurance program for the renewable fuel
production supply chain. This quality assurance program would take the
place of individual accounting and would consist of an independent
third party quality-assurance survey of all participating renewable
fuel producers and their feedstock suppliers, completed in accordance
with an industry-developed, EPA-approved plan, to ensure that they are
utilizing feedstocks that meet the definition of renewable biomass. An
in-depth discussion of this industry survey option is included in the
previous section.
While the aggregate compliance approach is appropriate for planted
crops and crop residues from agricultural land in the United States,
due in part to certain additional or different constraints imposed by
EISA, the aggregate approach cannot be applied, at this time, to the
other types of renewable biomass. Renewable fuel producers utilizing
these types of renewable biomass, including planted trees and tree
residues from tree plantations, slash and pre-commercial thinnings from
non-federal forestland, animal waste, separated yard and food waste,
etc., will be subject to the individual reporting and recordkeeping
requirements discussed in the previous section.
Additionally, EPA is not finalizing the aggregate compliance
approach for foreign producers of renewable fuel. EPA does not, at this
time, have sufficient data to make a finding that non-domestically
grown crops and crop residues used in renewable fuel production satisfy
the definition of renewable biomass. Nevertheless, if, in the future,
adequate land use data becomes available to make a finding that, in the
aggregate, crops and crop residues used in renewable fuel production in
a particular country satisfy the definition of renewable biomass, EPA
is willing to consider an aggregate compliance approach for renewable
biomass on a country by country basis, in lieu of the individual
recordkeeping and reporting requirements.
d. Treatment of Municipal Solid Waste (MSW)
The statutory definition of ``renewable biomass'' does not include
a reference to municipal solid waste (MSW) as did the definition of
``cellulosic biomass ethanol'' in the Energy Policy Act of 2005
(EPAct), but instead includes ``separated yard waste and food waste.''
We solicited comment on whether EPA can and should interpret EISA
as including MSW that contains yard and/or food waste within the
definition of renewable biomass. On the one hand, the reference in the
statutory definition to ``separated yard waste and food waste,'' and
the lack of reference to other components of MSW (such as waste paper
and wood waste) suggests that only yard and food wastes physically
separated from other waste materials satisfy the definition of
renewable biomass. On the other hand, we noted that EISA does not
define the term ``separated,'' and so does not specify the degree of
separation required. We also noted that there was some evidence in the
Act that Congress did not intend to exclude MSW entirely from the
definition of renewable biomass. The definition of ``advanced biofuel''
includes a list of fuels that are ``eligible for consideration'' as
advanced biofuel, including ``ethanol derived from waste material'' and
biogas ``including landfill gas.''
As an initial matter, we note that some materials clearly fall
within the definition of ``separated yard or food waste.'' The statute
itself identifies ``recycled cooking and trap grease'' as one example
of separated food waste. An example of separated yard waste is the leaf
waste that many municipalities pick up at curbside and keep separate
from other components of MSW for mulching or other uses. However, a
large quantity of food and yard waste is disposed of together with
other household waste as part of MSW. EPA estimates that about 120
million tons of MSW are disposed of annually much of it inextricably
mixed with yard and especially food waste. This material offers a
potentially reliable, abundant and inexpensive source of feedstock for
renewable fuel production which, if used, could reduce the volume of
discarded materials sent to landfills and could help achieve both the
GHG emissions reductions and energy independence goals of EISA. Thus,
EPA believes we should consider under what conditions yard and food
waste that is present in MSW can be deemed sufficiently separated from
other materials to qualify as renewable biomass.
One commenter stated that it is clear that MSW does not qualify as
renewable biomass under EISA, since the 2005 Energy Policy Act
explicitly allowed for qualifying renewable fuel to be made from MSW,
and EISA has no mention of it. Commenters from the renewable fuel
industry generally favored maximum flexibility for the use of MSW in
producing qualifying fuels under EISA, offering a variety of arguments
based on the statutory text and reasons why it would benefit the
environment and the nation's energy policy to do so. They favored
either (1) a determination that unsorted MSW can be used as a feedstock
for advanced biofuel even if it does not meet the definition of
[[Page 14705]]
renewable biomass, (2) that the Act be interpreted to include MSW as
renewable biomass, or (3) that MSW from which varying amounts of
recyclable materials have been removed could qualify as renewable
biomass. A consortium of ten environmental groups said that for EISA
volume mandates to be met, it is important to take advantage of biomass
resources from urban wastes that would otherwise be landfilled. They
urged that post-recycling residues (i.e., those wastes that are left
over at material recovery facilities after separation and recycling)
would fit within the letter and spirit of the definition of renewable
biomass.
EPA does not believe that the statute can be reasonably interpreted
to allow advanced biofuel to be made from material that does not meet
the definition of renewable biomass as suggested in the first approach.
The definition of advanced biofuel specifies that it is a form of
``renewable fuel,'' and renewable fuel is defined in the statute as
fuel that is made from renewable biomass. While the definition of
advanced biofuel includes a list of materials that ``may'' be
``eligible for consideration'' as advanced biofuel, and that list
includes ``ethanol derived from waste materials'' and biogas
``including landfill gas,'' the fact that the specified items are
``eligible for consideration'' indicates that they do not necessarily
qualify but must meet the definitional requirements--being ``renewable
fuel'' made from renewable biomass and having life cycle greenhouse gas
emissions that are at least 50% less than baseline fuel. There is
nothing in the statute to suggest that Congress used the term
``renewable fuel'' in the definition of ``advanced biofuel'' to have a
different meaning than the definition provided in the statute. The
result of the commenter's first approach would be that general
renewable fuel and cellulosic biofuel would be required to be made from
renewable biomass because the definitions of those terms specifically
refer to renewable biomass, whereas advanced biofuel and biomass-based
diesel would not, because their definitions refer to ``renewable fuel''
rather than ``renewable biomass.'' EPA can discern no basis for such a
distinction. EPA believes that the Act as a whole is best interpreted
as requiring all types of qualifying renewable fuels under EISA to be
made from renewable biomass. In this manner the land and feedstock
restrictions that Congress deemed important in the context of biofuel
production apply to all types of renewable fuels.
EPA also does not agree with the commenter who suggested that the
listing in the definition of renewable biomass of ``biomass obtained
from the immediate vicinity of buildings and other areas regularly
occupied by people, or of public infrastructure, at risk from
wildfire'' should be interpreted to include MSW. It is clear that the
term ``at risk of wildfire'' modifies the entire sentence, and the
purpose of the listing is to make the biomass that is removed in
wildfire minimization efforts, such as brush and dead woody material,
available for renewable fuel production. Such material does not
typically include MSW. Had Congress intended to include MSW in the
definition of renewable biomass, EPA believes it would have clearly
done so, in a manner similar to the approach taken in EPAct.
EPA also does not believe that it would be reasonable to interpret
the reference to ``separated yard or food waste'' to include unsorted
MSW. Although MSW contains yard and food waste, such an approach would
not give meaning to the word ``separated.''
We do believe, however, that yard and food wastes that are part of
MSW, and are separated from it, should qualify as renewable biomass.
MSW is the logical source from which yard waste and food waste can be
separated. As to the degree of separation required, some commenters
suggested a simple ``post recycling'' test be appropriate. They would
leave to municipalities and waste handlers a determination of how much
waste should be recycled before the residue was used as a feedstock for
renewable fuel production. EPA believes that such an approach would not
guarantee sufficient ``separation'' from MSW of materials that are not
yard waste or food waste to give meaning to the statutory text.
Instead, EPA believes it would be reasonable in the MSW context to
interpret the word ``separated'' in the term ``separated yard or food
waste'' to refer to the degree of separation to the extent that is
reasonably practicable. A large amount of material can be, and is,
removed from MSW and sold to companies that will recycle the material.
EPA believes that the residues remaining after reasonably practicable
efforts to remove recyclable materials other than food and yard waste
(including paper, cardboard, plastic, textiles, metal and glass) from
MSW should qualify as separated yard and food waste. This MSW-derived
residue would likely include some amount of residual non-recyclable
plastic and rubber of fossil fuel origin, much of it being wrapping and
packaging material for food. Since this material cannot be practicably
separated from the remaining food and yard waste, EPA believes it is
incidental material that is impractical to remove and therefore
appropriate to include in the category of separated food and yard
waste. In sum, EPA believes that the biogenic portion of the residue
remaining after paper, cardboard, plastic, textiles metal and glass
have been removed for recycling should qualify as renewable biomass.
This interpretation is consistent with the text of the statute, and
will promote the productive use of materials that would otherwise be
landfilled. It will also further the goals of EISA in promoting energy
independence and the reduction of GHG emissions from transportation
fuels.
EPA notes there are a variety of recycling methods that can be
used, including curbside recycling programs, as well as separation and
sorting at a material recovery facility (MRF). For the latter, the
sorting could be done by hand or by automated equipment, or by a
combination of the two. Sorting by hand is very labor intensive and
much slower than using an automated system. In most cases the ``by-
hand'' system produces a slightly cleaner stream, but the high cost of
labor usually makes the automated system more cost-effective.
Separation via MRFs is generally very efficient and can provide
comparable if not better removal of recyclables to that achieved by
curbside recycling.
Based on this analysis, today's rule provides that those MSW-
derived residues that remain after reasonably practicable separation of
recyclable materials other than food and yard waste is renewable
biomass. What remains to be addressed is what regulatory mechanisms
should be used to ensure the appropriate generation of RINs when
separated yard and food waste is used as a feedstock. We are finalizing
two methods.
The first method would apply primarily to a small subset of
producers who are able to obtain yard and/or food wastes that have been
kept separate since waste generation from the MSW waste stream.
Examples of such wastes are lawn and leaf waste that have never entered
the general MSW waste stream. Typically, such wastes contain incidental
amounts of materials such as the plastic twine used to bind twigs
together, food wrappers, and other extraneous materials. As with our
general approach to the presence of incidental, de minimus contaminants
in feedstocks that are unintentionally present and impractical to
remove, the presence of such material in separated yard or food waste
will not disqualify such wastes as renewable biomass, and the
contaminants may be disregarded by producers and importers generating
[[Page 14706]]
RINs. (See definition of renewable biomass and 80.1426(f)(1).) Waste
streams kept separate since generation from MSW that consist of yard
waste are expected to be composed almost entirely of woody material or
leaves, and therefore will be deemed to be composed of cellulosic
materials. Waste streams consisting of food wastes, however, may
contain both cellulosic and non-cellulosic materials. For example, a
food processing plant may generate both wastes that are primarily
starches and sugars (such as carrot and potato peelings, as well as
fruits and vegetables that are discarded) as well as corn cobs and
other materials that are cellulosic. We will deem waste streams
consisting of food waste to be composed entirely of non-cellulosic
materials, and qualifying as advanced biofuels, unless the producer
demonstrates that some portion of the food waste is cellulosic. The
cellulosic portion would then qualify as cellulosic biofuel. The method
for quantifying the cellulosic and non-cellulosic portions of the food
waste stream is to be described in a written plan which must be
submitted to EPA under the registration procedures in 80.1450(b)(vii)
for approval and which indicates the location of the facility from
which wastes are obtained, how identification and quantification of
waste material is to be accomplished, and evidence that the wastes
qualify as fully separated yard or food wastes. The producer must also
maintain records regarding the source of the feedstock and the amounts
obtained.
The second method would involve use as feedstock by a renewable
fuel producer of the portion of MSW remaining after reasonably
practical separation activities to remove recyclable materials,
resulting in a separated MSW-derived residue that qualifies as
separated yard and food waste. Today's rule requires that parties that
intend to use MSW-derived residue as a feedstock for RIN-generating
renewable fuel production ensure that reasonably practical efforts are
made to separate recyclable paper, cardboard, textiles, plastics, metal
and glass from the MSW, according to a plan that is submitted by the
renewable fuel producer and approved by EPA under the registration
procedures in 80.1450(b)(viii). In determining whether the plan
submittals provide for reasonably practicable separation of recyclables
EPA will consider: (1) The extent and nature of recycling that may have
occurred prior to receipt of the MSW material by the renewable fuel
producer, (2) available recycling technology and practices, and (3) the
technology or practices selected by the fuel producer, including an
explanation for such selection and reasons why other technologies or
practices were not selected. EPA asks that any CBI accompanying a plan
or a party's justification for a plan be segregated from the non-CBI
portions of the submissions, so as to facilitate disclosure of the non-
CBI portion of plan submittals, and approved plans, to interested
members of the public.
Producers using this second option, will need to determine what
RINs to assign to a fuel that is derived from a variety of materials,
including yard waste (largely cellulosic) and food waste (largely
starches and sugar), as well as incidental materials remaining after
reasonably practical separation efforts such as plastic and rubber of
fossil origin. EPA has not yet evaluated the lifecycle greenhouse gas
performance of fuel made from such mixed sources of waste, so is unable
at this time to assign a D code for such fuel. However, if a producer
uses ASTM test method D-6866 on the fuel made from MSW-derived
feedstock, it can determine what portion of the rule is of fossil and
non-fossil origin. The non-fossil portion of the fuel will likely be
largely derived from cellulosic materials (yard waste, textiles, paper,
and construction materials), and to a much smaller extent starch-based
materials (food wastes). Unfortunately, EPA is not aware of a test
method that is able to distinguish between cellulosic- and starch-
derived renewable fuel. Under these circumstances, EPA believes that it
is appropriate for producers to base RIN assignment on the predominant
component and, therefore, to assume that the biogenic portion of their
fuel is entirely of cellulosic origin. The non-biogenic portion of the
fuel, however, would not qualify for RINs at this time. Thus, in sum,
we are providing via the ASTM testing method an opportunity for
producers using an MSW-derived feedstock to generate RINs only for the
biogenic portion of their renewable fuel. There is no D code for the
remaining fossil-derived fraction of the fuel in today's rule nor for
the entire volume of renewable fuel produced when using MSW-derived
residue as a feedstock. The petition process for assigning such codes
in today's rule can be used for such purpose.
Procedures for the use of ASTM Method D-6866 are detailed in 40 CFR
80.1426(f)(9) of today's rule. We solicited comment on this method, and
while the context of the discussion of method D-6866 was with respect
to using it for gasoline (see 74 FR 24951), the comments we received
provided us information on the method itself. Also, commenters were
supportive of its use. Fuel producers must either run the ASTM D-6866
method for each batch of fuel produced, or run it on composite samples
of the food and yard waste-derived fuel derived from post-recycling MSW
residues. Producers will be required at a minimum to take samples of
every batch of fuel produced over the course of one month and combine
them into a single composite sample. The D-6866 test would then be
applied to the composite sample, and the resulting non-fossil derived
fraction will be deemed cellulosic biofuel, and applied to all batches
of fuel produced in the next month to determine the appropriate number
of RINs that must be generated. The producer would be required to
recalculate this fraction at least monthly. For the first month, the
producer can estimate the non-fossil fraction, and then make a
correction as needed in the second month. (The procedure using the ASTM
D-6866 method applies not only to the waste-derived fuel discussed here
but also to all partially renewable transportation fuels, and is
discussed in further detail in Section II.D.4. See also the regulations
at Sec. 80.1426(f)(4)).
The procedures for assigning D codes to the fuel produced from such
wastes are discussed in further detail in Section II.D.5.
One commenter suggested that biogas from landfills should be
treated in the same manner as renewable fuel produced from MSW. EPA
agrees with the commenter to a certain extent. The definition of
``advanced biofuels'' in EISA identifies ``Biogas (including landfill
gas and sewage waste treatment gas) produced through the conversion of
organic matter from renewable biomass'' as ``eligible for
consideration'' as an advanced biofuel. However, as with MSW, the
statute requires that advanced biofuel be a ``renewable fuel'' and that
such fuel be made from ``renewable biomass.'' The closest reference
within the definition of renewable biomass to landfill material is
``separated yard or food waste.'' However, in applying the
interpretation of ``separated'' yard and food waste described above for
MSW to landfill material, we come to a different result. Landfill
material has by design been put out of practical human reach. It has
been disposed of in locations, and in a manner, that is designed to be
permanent. For example, modern landfills are placed over impermeable
liners and sealed with a permanent cap. In addition, the food and yard
waste present in a landfill has over time become intermingled with
other
[[Page 14707]]
materials to an extraordinary extent. This occurs in the process of
waste collection, shipment, and disposal, and subsequently through
waste decay, leaching and movement within the landfill. Additionally,
we note that the process of biogas formation in a landfill provides
some element of separation, in that it is formed only from the biogenic
components of landfill material, including but not strictly limited to
food and yard waste. Thus, plastics, metal and glass are effectively
``separated'' out through the process of biogas formation. As a result
of the intermixing of wastes, the fact that biogas is formed only from
the biogenic portion of landfill material, and the fact that landfill
material is as a practical matter inaccessible for further separation,
EPA believes that no further practical separation is possible for
landfill material and biogas should be considered as produced from
separated yard and food waste for purposes of EISA. Therefore, all
biogas from landfills is eligible for RIN generation.
We have considered whether to require biogas producers to use ASTM
Method D-6866 to identify the biogenic versus non-biogenic fractions of
the fuel. However, as noted above, biogas is not formed from non-
biogenic compounds in landfills. (Kaplan, et al., 2009) \9\ Thus, no
purpose would be solved in using the ASTM method in the biogas context.
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\9\ Kaplan, et al. (2009). ``Is it Better to Burn or Bury Waste
for Clean Electricity Generation?'' Environmental Science &
Technology 2009 43(6), 1711-1717 (Found in Table S1 of supplemental
material to the article, at http://pubs.acs.org/doi/suppl/10.1021/es802395e/suppl_file/es802395e_si_001.pdf).
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C. Expanded Registration Process for Producers and Importers
In order to implement and enforce the new restrictions on
qualifying renewable fuel under RFS2, we are revising the registration
process for renewable fuel producers and importers. Under the RFS1
program, all producers and importers of renewable fuel who produce or
import more than 10,000 gallons of fuel annually must register with
EPA's fuels program prior to generating RINs. Renewable fuel producer
and importer registration under the RFS1 program consists of filling
out two forms: 3520-20A (Fuels Programs Company/Entity Registration),
which requires basic contact information for the company and basic
business activity information and 3520-20B (Gasoline Programs Facility
Registration) or 3520-20B1 (Diesel Programs Facility Registration),
which require basic contact information for each facility owned by the
producer or importer. More detailed information on the renewable fuel
production facility, such as production capacity and process,
feedstocks, and products was not required for most producers or
importers to generate RINs under RFS1 (producers of cellulosic biomass
ethanol and waste-derived ethanol are the exception to this).
Additionally, EPA recommends companies register their renewable
fuels or fuel additives under title 40 CFR part 79 as a motor vehicle
fuel. In fact, renewable fuels intended for use in motor vehicles will
be required to be registered under title 40 CFR part 79 prior to any
introduction into commerce. Manufacturers and subsequent parties of
fuels and fuel additives not registered under part 79 will be liable
for separate penalties under 40 CFR parts 79 and 80 in the event their
unregistered product is introduced into commerce for use in a motor
vehicle. Further if a registered fuel or fuel additive is used in
manner that is not consistent with their product's registration under
part 79 the manufacturer and subsequent parties will be liable for
penalties under parts 79 and 80. If EPA determines based on the
company's registration that they are not producing renewable fuel, the
company will not be able to generate RINs and the RINs generated for
fuel produced from nonrenewable sources will be invalidated.
Due to the revised definitions of renewable fuel under EISA, we
proposed to expand the registration process for renewable fuel
producers and importers in order to implement the new program
effectively. We received a number of comments that opposed the expanded
registration as commenters deemed it overly burdensome, costly and
unnecessary. However, EPA is finalizing the proposed expanded
registration requirements for the following reasons. The information to
be collected through the expanded registration process is essential to
generating and assigning a certain category of RIN to a volume of fuel.
Additionally, the information collected is essential to determining
whether the feedstock used to produce the fuel meets the definition of
renewable biomass, whether the lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions of
the fuel meets a certain GHG reduction threshold and, in some cases,
whether the renewable fuel production facility is considered to be
grandfathered into the program. Therefore, we are requiring producers,
including foreign producers, and importers that generate RINs to
provide us with information on their feedstocks, facilities, and
products, in order to implement and enforce the program and have
confidence that producers and importers are properly categorizing their
fuel and generating RINs. The registration procedures will be
integrated with the new EPA Moderated Transaction System, discussed in
detail in Section III.A of this preamble.
1. Domestic Renewable Fuel Producers
Information on products, feedstocks, and facilities contained in a
producer's registration will be used to verify the validity of RINs
generated and their proper categorization as either cellulosic biofuel,
biomass-based diesel, advanced biofuel, or other renewable fuel. In
addition, producers of renewable fuel from facilities that qualify for
the exemption from the 20% GHG reduction threshold (as discussed in
Section II.B.3) must provide information that demonstrates when the
facility commenced construction, and that establishes the baseline
volume of the fuel. For those facilities that would qualify as
grandfathered but are not in operation we are allowing until May 1,
2013 to submit and receive approval for a complete facility
registration. This provision does not require actual fuel production,
but simply the filing of registration materials that assert a claim for
exempt status. It will benefit both fuel producers, who will likely be
able to more readily collect the required information if it is done
promptly, and EPA enforcement personnel seeking to verify the
information. However, given the potentially significant implications of
this requirement for facilities that may qualify for the exemption but
miss the registration deadline, the rule also provides that EPA may
waive the requirement if it determines that the submission is
verifiable to the same extent as a timely-submitted registration.
With respect to products, we are requiring that producers provide
information on the types of renewable fuel and co-products that a
facility is capable of producing. With respect to feedstocks, we are
requiring producers to provide to EPA a list of all the different
feedstocks that a renewable fuel producer's facility is likely to use
to convert into renewable fuel. With respect to the producer's
facilities, two types of information must be reported to the Agency.
First, producers must describe each facility's fuel production
processes (e.g., wet mill, dry mill, thermochemical, etc.), and
thermal/process energy source(s). Second, in order to determine what
production volumes would be grandfathered and
[[Page 14708]]
thus deemed to be in compliance with the 20% GHG threshold, we are
requiring evidence and certification of the facility's qualification
under the definition of ``commence construction'' as well as
information necessary to establish its renewable fuel baseline volume
per the requirement outlined in Section II.B.3 of this preamble.
EPA proposed to require that renewable fuel producers have a third-
party engineering review of their facilities prior to generating RINs
under RFS2, and every 3 years thereafter. EPA received comments that
the on-site engineering review was overly burdensome, unnecessary and
costly. A number of commenters noted that the time allotted for
conducting the reviews, between the rule's publication and prior to RIN
generation, is not adequate for producers to hire an engineer and
conduct the review for all of their facilities. Several commenters
requested that on-site licensed engineers be allowed to conduct any
necessary facility reviews.
EPA is finalizing the proposed requirement for an on-site
engineering review of facilities producing renewable fuel due to the
variability of production facilities, the increase in the number of
categories of renewable fuels, and the importance of ensuring that RINs
are generated in the correct category. Without these engineering
reviews, we do not believe it would be possible to implement the RFS2
program in a manner that ensured the requirements of EISA were being
fulfilled. Additionally, the engineering review provides a check
against fraudulent RIN generation. In order to establish the proper
basis for RIN generation, we are requiring that every renewable fuel
producer have the on-site engineering review of their facility
performed in conjunction with his or her initial registration for the
new RFS program. The engineering reviews must be conducted by
independent third parties who can maintain impartiality and objectivity
in evaluating the facilities and their processes. Additionally, the on-
site engineering review must be conducted every three years thereafter
to verify that the fuel pathways established in the initial
registration are still applicable. These requirements apply unless the
renewable fuel producer updates its facility registration information
to qualify for a new RIN category (i.e., D code), in which case the
review needs to be performed within 60 days of the registration update.
Finally, producers are required to submit a copy of their independent
engineering review to EPA, for verification and enforcement purposes.
2. Foreign Renewable Fuel Producers
Under RFS1, foreign renewable fuel producers of cellulosic biomass
ethanol and waste-derived ethanol may apply to EPA to generate RINs for
their own fuel. For RFS2, we proposed that foreign producers of
renewable fuel meet the same requirements as domestic producers,
including registering information about their feedstocks, facilities,
and products, as well as submitting an on-site independent engineering
review of their facilities at the time of registration for the program
and every three years thereafter. These requirements apply to all
foreign renewable fuel producers who plan to export their products to
the U.S. as part of the RFS2 program, whether the foreign producer
generates RINs for their fuel or an importer does.
Foreign producers, like domestic producers, must also undergo an
independent engineering review of their facilities, conducted by an
independent third party who is a licensed professional engineer (P.E.),
or foreign equivalent who works in the chemical engineering field. The
independent third party must provide to EPA documentation of his or her
qualifications as part of the engineering review, including proof of
appropriate P.E. license or foreign equivalent. The third-party
engineering review must be conducted by both foreign producers who plan
to generate RINs and those that don't generate RINs but anticipate
their fuel will be exported to the United States by an importer who
will generate the RINs.
3. Renewable Fuel Importers
We are requiring importers who generate RINs for imported fuel that
they receive without RINs may only do so under certain circumstances.
If an importer receives fuel without RINs, the importer may only
generate RINs for that fuel if they can verify the fuel pathway and
that feedstocks use meet the definition of renewable biomass. An
importer must rely on his supplier, a foreign renewable fuel producer,
to provide documentation to support any claims for their decision to
generate RINs. An importer may have an agreement with a foreign
renewable fuel producer for the importer to generate RINs if the
foreign producer has not done so already. However, the foreign
renewable fuel producer must be registered with EPA and must have had a
third-party engineering review conducted, as noted above, in order for
EPA to be able to verify that the renewable biomass and GHG reduction
requirements of EISA are being fulfilled. Section II.D.2.b describes
the RIN generating restrictions and requirements for importers under
RFS2.
4. Process and Timing
We are making forms for expanded registration for renewable fuel
producers and importers, as well as forms for registration of other
regulated parties, available electronically with the publication of
this final rule. Paper registration forms will only be accepted in
exceptional cases. Registration forms must be submitted and accepted by
the EPA by July 1, 2010, or 60 days prior to a producer producing or
importer importing any renewable fuel, whichever dates come later. If a
producer changes its fuel pathway (feedstock, production process, or
fuel type) to not listed in his registration information on file with
EPA but the change will not incur a change of RIN category for the fuel
(i.e., a change in the appropriate D code), the producer must update
his registration information within seven (7) days of the change.
However, if the fuel producer changes its fuel pathway in a manner that
would result in a change in its RIN category (and thus a new D code),
such an update would need to be submitted at least 60 days prior to the
change, followed by submittal of a complete on-site independent
engineering review of the producer's facility also within 60 days of
the change. If EPA finds that these deadlines and requirements have not
been met, or that a facility's registered profile, dictated by the
various parameters for product, process and feedstock, does not reflect
actual products produced, processes employed, or feedstocks used, then
EPA reserves the right to void, ab initio, any affected RINs generated
and may impose significant penalties. For example a newly registered
(i.e. not grandfathered) ethanol production facility claims in their
registration that they qualify to generate RINs based upon the use of
two advanced engineering practices (1) corn oil fractionation and (2)
production of wet DGS co-product that is, at a minimum, 35% of its
total DGS produced annually. However, during an audit of the producer's
records, it is found that of all their DGS produced, less than 15% was
wet. In this example, the producer has committed a violation that
results in the disqualification of their eligibility to generate RINs;
that is, they no longer have an eligible pathway that demonstrates
qualification with the 20% GHG threshold requirement for corn ethanol
producers. As such any and all RINs produced may be deemed invalid and
the producer may be subject to Clean Air Act penalties.
[[Page 14709]]
The required independent engineering review as discussed above for
domestic and foreign renewable fuel producers is an integral part of
the registration process. The agency recognizes, through comments
received, that there are significant concerns involving timing
necessary and ability to produce a completed engineering review to
satisfy registration requirements. Since the publication of the RFS2
NPRM, we have delivered consistently a message stating that advanced
planning and preparation was necessary from all parties, EPA and the
regulated community inclusive, for successful implementation of this
program. In an effort to reduce demand on engineering resources, we are
allowing grandfathered facilities an additional six months to submit
their engineering review. This will direct the focus of engineering
review resources on producers of advanced, cellulosic and biomass based
diesel. EPA fully expects these producers of advanced renewable fuels
to meet the engineering review requirement; however, if they are having
difficulties producing engineer's reports prior to April 1, we ask that
they contact us.
D. Generation of RINs
Under RFS2, each RIN will continue to be generated by the producer
or importer of the renewable fuel, as in the RFS1 program. In order to
determine the number of RINs that must be generated and assigned to a
batch of renewable fuel, the actual volume of the batch of renewable
fuel must be multiplied by the appropriate Equivalence Value. The
producer or importer must also determine the appropriate D code to
assign to the RIN to identify which of the four standards the RIN can
be used to meet. This section describes these two aspects of the
generation of RINs. Other aspects of the generation of RINs, such as
the definition of a batch, as well as the assignment of RINs to
batches, will remain unchanged from the RFS1 requirements. We received
several comments regarding the method for calculating temperature
standardization of biodiesel and address this issue in Section III.G.
1. Equivalence Values
For RFS1, we interpreted CAA section 211(o) as allowing us to
develop Equivalence Values representing the number of gallons that can
be claimed for compliance purposes for every physical gallon of
renewable fuel. We described how the use of Equivalence Values adjusted
for renewable content and based on energy content in comparison to the
energy content of ethanol was consistent with the sections of EPAct
that provided extra credit for cellulosic and waste-derived renewable
fuels, and the direction that EPA establish ``appropriate'' credit for
biodiesel and renewable fuel volumes in excess of the mandated volumes.
We also noted that the use of Equivalence Values based on energy
content was an appropriate measure of the extent to which a renewable
fuel would replace or reduce the quantity of petroleum or other fossil
fuel present in a fuel mixture. EPA stated that these provisions
indicated that Congress did not intend to restrict EPA discretion in
implementing the program to utilizing a straight volume measurement of
gallons. See 72 FR 23918-23920, and 71 FR 55570-55571. The result was
an Equivalence Value for ethanol of 1.0, for butanol of 1.3, for
biodiesel (mono alkyl ester) of 1.5, and for non-ester renewable diesel
of 1.7.
In the NPRM we noted that EISA made a number of changes to CAA
section 211(o) that impacted our consideration of Equivalence Values in
the context of the RFS2 program. For instance, EISA eliminated the 2.5-
to-1 credit for cellulosic biomass ethanol and waste-derived ethanol
and replaced this provision with large mandated volumes of cellulosic
biofuel and advanced biofuels. EISA also expanded the program to
include four separate categories of renewable fuel (cellulosic biofuel,
biomass-based diesel, advanced biofuel, and total renewable fuel) and
included GHG thresholds in the definitions of each category. Each of
these categories of renewable fuel has its own volume requirement, and
thus there will exist a guaranteed market for each. As a result of
these new requirements, we indicated that there may no longer be a need
for additional incentives for certain fuels in the form of Equivalence
Values greater than 1.0.
In the NPRM we co-proposed and took comment on two options for
Equivalence Values:
1. Equivalence Values would be based on the energy content and
renewable content of each renewable fuel in comparison to denatured
ethanol, consistent with the approach under RFS1, with the addition
that biomass-based diesel standard would be based on energy content in
comparison to biodiesel.
2. All liquid renewable fuels would be counted strictly on the
basis of their measured volumes, and the Equivalence Values for all
renewable fuels would be 1.0 (essentially, Equivalence Values would no
longer apply).
In response to the NPRM, some stakeholders pointed to the
aforementioned changes brought about by EISA as support for a straight
volume approach to Equivalence Values, and argued that it had always
been the intent of Congress that the statutory volume mandates be
treated as straight volumes. Stakeholders taking this position were
generally producers of corn ethanol. However, a broad group of other
stakeholders including refiners, biodiesel producers, a broad group of
advanced biofuel producers, fuel distributor and States indicated that
the first option for an energy-based approach to Equivalence Values was
both supported by the statute and necessary to provide for equitable
treatment of advanced biofuels. They noted that EISA did not change
certain of the statutory provisions EPA looked to for support under
RFS1 in establishing Equivalence Values based on relative volumetric
energy content in comparison to ethanol. For instance, CAA 211(o)
continues to direct EPA to determine an ``appropriate'' credit for
biodiesel, and also directs EPA to determine the ``appropriate'' amount
of credit for renewable fuel use in excess of the required volumes. Had
Congress intended to change these provisions they could have easily
done so. Moreover, some stakeholders argued that the existence of four
standards is not a sufficient reason to eliminate the use of energy-
based Equivalence Values for RFS2. The four categories are defined in
such a way that a variety of different types of renewable fuel could
qualify for each category, such that no single specific type of
renewable fuel will have a guaranteed market. For example, the
cellulosic biofuel requirement could be met with both cellulosic
ethanol or cellulosic diesel. As a result, the existence of four
standards under RFS2 does not obviate the value of standardizing for
energy content, which provides a level playing field under RFS1 for
various types of renewable fuels based on energy content.
Some stakeholders who supported an energy-based approach to
Equivalence Values also argued that a straight volume approach would be
likely to create a disincentive for the development of new renewable
fuels that have a higher energy content than ethanol. For a given mass
of feedstock, the volume of renewable fuel that can be produced is
roughly inversely proportional to its energy content. For instance, one
ton of biomass could be gasified and converted to syngas, which could
then be catalytically reformed into either 80 gallons of ethanol (and
another 14 gal of other alcohols) or 50
[[Page 14710]]
gallons of diesel fuel (and naphtha).\10\ If RINs were assigned on a
straight volume basis, the producer could maximize the number of RINs
he is able to generate and sell by producing ethanol instead of diesel.
Thus, even if the market would otherwise lean towards demanding greater
volumes of diesel, the greater RIN value for producing ethanol may
favor their production instead. However, if the energy-based
Equivalence Values were maintained, the producer could assign 1.7 RINs
to each gallon of diesel made from biomass in comparison to 1.0 RIN to
each gallon of ethanol from biomass, and the total number of RINs
generated would be essentially the same for the diesel as it would be
for the ethanol. The use of energy-based Equivalence Values could thus
provide a level playing field in terms of the RFS program's incentives
to produce different types of renewable fuel from the available
feedstocks. The market would then be free to choose the most
appropriate renewable fuels without any bias imposed by the RFS
regulations, and the costs imposed on different types of renewable fuel
through the assignment of RINs would be more evenly aligned with the
ability of those fuels to power vehicles and engines, and displace
fossil fuel-based gasoline or diesel. Since the technologies for
producing more energy-dense fuels such as cellulosic diesel are still
in the early stages of development, they may benefit from not having to
overcome the disincentive in the form of the same Equivalence Value
based on straight volume.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ Another example would be a fermentation process in which
one ton of cellulose could be used to produce either 70 gallons of
ethanol or 55 gallons of butanol.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Based on our interpretation of EISA as allowing the use of energy-
based Equivalence Values, and because we believe it provides a level
playing field for the development of different fuels that can displace
the use of fossil fuels, and that this approach therefore furthers the
energy independence goals of EISA, we are finalizing the energy-based
approach to Equivalence Values in today's action. We also note that a
large number of companies have already made investments based on the
decisions made for RFS1, and using energy-based Equivalence Values will
maintain consistency with RFS1 and ease the transition into RFS2.
Insofar as renewable fuels with volumetric energy contents higher than
ethanol are used, the actual volumes of renewable fuel that are
necessary to meet the EISA volume mandates will be smaller than those
shown in Table I.A.1-1. The impact on the physical volume will depend
on actual volumes of various advanced biofuels produced in the future.
The main scenario modeled for this final rule includes a forecast for
considerable volumes of relatively high energy diesel fuel made from
renewable biomass, and still results in a physical volume mandate of
30.5 billion gallons. The energy-based approach results in the advanced
biofuel standard being automatically met during the first few years of
the program. For instance, the biomass-based diesel mandated volume for
2010 is 0.65 billion gallons, which will be treated as 0.975 billion
gallons (1.5 x 0.65) in the context of meeting the advanced biofuel
standard. Since the mandated volume for advanced biofuel in 2010 is
0.95 billion gallons, this requirement is automatically met by
compliance with the biomass-based diesel standard.
Although we are finalizing an energy-based approach to Equivalence
Values, we believe that Congress intended the biomass-based diesel
volume mandate to be treated as diesel volumes rather than as ethanol-
equivalent volumes. Since all RINs are generated based on energy
equivalency to ethanol, to accomplish this, we have modified the
formula for calculating the standard for biomass-based diesel to
compensate such that one physical gallon of biomass-based diesel will
count as one gallon for purposes of meeting the biomass-based diesel
standard, but will be counted based on their Equivalence Value for
purposes of meeting the advanced biofuel and total renewable fuel
standards. Since it is likely that the statutory volume mandates were
based on projections for biodiesel, we have chosen to use the
Equivalence Value for biodiesel, 1.5, in this calculation. See Section
II.E.1.a for further discussion. Other diesel fuel made from renewable
biomass can also qualify as biomass-based diesel (e.g., renewable
diesel, cellulosic diesel). But since the variation in energy content
between them is relatively small, variation in the total physical
volume of biomass-based diesel will likewise be small.
In the NPRM we also proposed that the energy content of denatured
ethanol be changed from the 77,550 Btu/gal value used in the RFS1
program to 77,930 Btu/gal (lower heating value). The revised value was
intended to provide a more accurate estimate of the energy content of
pure ethanol, 76,400 Btu/gal, rather than the rounded value of 76,000
Btu/gal that was used under RFS1. Except for the Renewable Fuels
Association who supported this change, most stakeholders did not
comment on this proposal. However, based on new provisions in the Food,
Conservation, and Energy Act of 2008, we have since determined that the
denaturant content of ethanol should be assumed to be 2% rather than
the 5% used in the RFS1 program. This additional change results in a
denatured ethanol energy content of 77,000 Btu/gal and a renewable
content of denatured ethanol of 97.2%.\11\ The value of 77,000 Btu/gal
will be used to convert biogas and renewable electricity into volumes
of renewable fuel under RFS2. This change also affects the formula for
calculating Equivalence Values assigned to renewable fuels. The new
formula is shown below:
\11\ Value is lower than 98% because it is based on energy
content of denaturant versus ethanol, not relative volume.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
EV = (R/0.972) * (EC/77,000)
Where:
EV = Equivalence Value for the renewable fuel, rounded to the
nearest tenth.
R = Renewable content of the renewable fuel. This is a measure of
the portion of a renewable fuel that came from a renewable source,
expressed as a percent, on an energy basis.
EC = Energy content of the renewable fuel, in Btu per gallon (lower
heating value).
Under this new formula, Equivalence Values assigned to specific types
of renewable fuel under RFS1 will continue unchanged under RFS2.
However, non-ester renewable diesel will be required to have a lower
energy content of at least 123,500 Btu/gal in order to qualify for an
Equivalence Value of 1.7. A non-ester renewable diesel with a lower
energy content would be required to apply for a different Equivalent
Value according to the provisions in Sec. 80.1415.
2. Fuel Pathways and Assignment of D Codes
As described in Section II.A, RINs under RFS2 would in general
continue to have the same number of digits and code definitions as
under RFS1. The one change will be that, while the D code will continue
to identify the standard to which the RIN can be applied, it will be
modified to have four values corresponding to the four different
renewable fuel categories defined in EISA. These four D code values and
the corresponding categories are shown in Table II.A-1.
In order to generate RINs for renewable fuel that meets the various
eligibility requirements (see Section II.B), a producer or importer
must know which D code to assign to those RINs. Following the approach
we described in the NPRM, a producer or importer will determine the
appropriate D code using a lookup table in the regulations. The
[[Page 14711]]
lookup table lists various combinations of fuel type, production
process, and feedstock, and the producer or importer chooses the
appropriate combination representing the fuel he is producing and for
which he is generating RINs. Parties generating RINs are required to
use the D code specified in the lookup table and are not permitted to
use a D code representing a broader renewable fuel category. For
example, a party whose fuel qualified as biomass-based diesel could not
choose to categorize that fuel as advanced biofuel or general renewable
fuel for purposes of RIN generation.\12\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ However, a biomass-based diesel RIN can be used to satisfy
Renewable Volume Obligations (RVO) for biomass-based diesel,
advanced biofuel, and total renewable fuel. See Section II.G.3 for
further discussion of the use of RINs for compliance purposes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This section describes our approach to the assignment of D codes to
RINs for domestic producers, foreign producers, and importers of
renewable fuel. Subsequent sections address the generation of RINs in
special circumstances, such as when a production facility has multiple
applicable combinations of feedstock, fuel type, and production process
within a calendar year, production facilities that co-process renewable
biomass and fossil fuels, and production facilities for which the
lookup table does not provide an applicable D code.
a. Producers
For both domestic and foreign producers of renewable fuel, the
lookup table identifies individual fuel ``pathways'' comprised of
unique combinations of the type of renewable fuel being produced, the
feedstock used to produce the renewable fuel, and a description of the
production process. Each pathway is assigned to one of the D codes on
the basis of the revised renewable fuel definitions provided in EISA
and our assessment of the GHG lifecycle performance for that pathway. A
description of the lifecycle assessment of each fuel pathway and the
process we used for determining the associated D code can be found in
Section V.
Note that the generation of RINs also requires as a prerequisite
that the feedstocks used to make the renewable fuel meet the definition
of ``renewable biomass'' as described in Section II.B.4, including
applicable land use restrictions. If a producer is not able to
demonstrate that his feedstocks meet the definition of renewable
biomass, RINs cannot be generated. However, as noted in Section
II.B.4.b.1, feedstocks typically include incidental contaminants. These
contaminants may have been intentionally added to promote cultivation
(e.g., pesticides, herbicides, fertilizer) or transport (e.g., nylon
baling rope). In addition, there may be some incidental contamination
of a particular load of feedstocks with co-product during feedstock
production, or with other agricultural materials during shipping. For
example, there may be incidental corn kernels remaining on some corn
cobs used to produce cellulosic biofuel, or some sorghum kernels left
in a shipping container that are introduced into a load of corn kernels
being shipped to a biofuel production facility. The final regulations
clarify that in assigning D codes for renewable fuel, producers and
importers should disregard the presence of incidental contaminants in
their feedstocks if the incidental contaminants are related to
customary feedstock production and transport, and are impractical to
remove and occur in de minimus levels.
Through our assessment of the lifecycle GHG impacts of different
pathways and the application of the EISA definitions for each of the
four categories of renewable fuel, including the GHG thresholds, we
have determined that all four categories will have pathways that could
be used to meet the Act's volume requirements. For example, ethanol
made from corn stover or switchgrass in an enzymatic hydrolysis process
will count as cellulosic biofuel. Biodiesel made from waste grease or
soybean oil can count as biomass-based diesel. Ethanol made from
sugarcane sugar will count as advanced biofuel. Finally, a variety of
pathways will count as renewable fuel under the RFS2 program. The
complete list of pathways that are valid under our final RFS2 program
is discussed in Section V.C and are provided in the regulations at
Sec. 80.1426(f).
Producers must choose the appropriate D code from the lookup table
in the regulations based on the fuel pathway that describes their
facility. The fuel pathway must be specified by the producer in the
registration process as described in Section II.C. If there are changes
to a producer's facility or feedstock such that their fuel would
require a D code that was different from any D code(s) which their
existing registration information already allowed, the producer is
required to revise its registration information with EPA 30 days prior
to changing the applicable D code it uses to generate RINs. Situations
in which multiple fuel pathways could apply to a single facility are
addressed in Section II.D.3 below.
For producers for whom none of the defined fuel pathways in the
lookup table apply, a producer can still generate RINs if he meets the
criteria for grandfathered or deemed compliant status as described in
Section II.B.3 and his fuel meets the definition of renewable fuel as
described in Section II.B.1. In this case he would use a D code of 6
for those RINs generated under the grandfathering or deemed compliant
provisions.
A diesel fuel product produced from cellulosic feedstocks that
meets the 60% GHG threshold can qualify as either cellulosic biofuel or
biomass-based diesel. In the NPRM, we proposed that the producer of
such ``cellulosic diesel'' be required to choose whether to categorize
his product as either cellulosic biofuel or biomass-based diesel.
However, we requested comment on an alternative approach in which an
additional D code would be defined to represent cellulosic diesel
allowing the cellulosic diesel RIN to be sold into either market. As
described more fully in Section II.A above, we are finalizing this
alternative approach in today's final rule. Producers or importers of a
fuel that qualifies as both biomass-based diesel and cellulosic biofuel
must use a D code of 7 in the RINs they generate, and will thus have
the flexibility of marketing such RINs to parties seeking either
cellulosic biofuel or biomass-based diesel RINs, depending on market
demand. Obligated parties can apply RINs with a D code of 7 to either
their cellulosic biofuel or biomass-based diesel RVOs, but not both.
In addition to the above comments, we received comments requesting
that the use of biogas as process heat in the production of ethanol,
should not be limited to use at the site of renewable fuel production.
Specifically, commenters point out that the introduction of gas
produced from landfills or animal wastes to fungible pipelines is the
only practical manner for most renewable fuel facilities to acquire and
use landfill gas, since very few are located adjacent to landfills, or
have dedicated pipelines from landfill gas operations to their
facilities.\13\ The commenters suggested that ethanol plants causing
landfill gas to be introduced into a fungible gas pipeline be allowed
to claim those volumes. The alternative would be to allow landfill
[[Page 14712]]
gas that is only used onsite to be counted in establishing the pathway.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ This suggestion was also made by several companies with
respect to the RFS1 definition of cellulosic biomass ethanol, which
allowed corn-based ethanol to be deemed cellulosic if 90% of the
fossil fuel used at the ethanol facility to make ethanol was
displaced by fuel derived from animal or other waste materials,
including landfill gas.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We believe that the suggested approach has merit. We agree that it
does not make any difference in terms of the beneficial environmental
attributes associated with the use of landfill gas whether the
displacement of fossil fuel occurs in a fungible natural gas pipeline,
or in a specific facility that draws gas volume from that pipeline. In
fact, a similar approach is widely used with respect to electricity
generated by renewable biomass that is placed into a commercial
electricity grid. A party buying the renewable power is credited with
doing so in state renewable portfolio programs even though the power
from these sources is placed in the fungible grid and the electrons
produced by a renewable source may never actually be used by the party
purchasing it. In essence these programs assume that the renewable
power purchased and introduced into the grid is in fact used by the
purchaser, even though all parties acknowledge that use of the actual
renewable-derived electrons can never be verified once placed in the
fungible grid. We believe that this approach will ultimately further
the GHG reduction and energy security goals of RFS2.
Producers may therefore take into account such displacement
provided that they demonstrate that a verifiable contractual pathway
exists and that such pathway ensures that (1) a specific volume of
landfill gas was placed into a commercial pipeline that ultimately
serves the transportation fueling facility and (2) that the drawn into
this facility from that pipeline matches the volume of landfill gas
placed into the pipeline system. Thus facilities using such a fuel
pathway may then use an appropriate D code for generation of RINs.
This approach also applies to biogas and electricity made from
renewable fuels and which are used for transportation. Producers of
such fuel will be able to generate RINs, provided that a contractual
pathway exists that provides evidence that specific quantities of the
renewable fuel (either biogas or electricity) was purchased and
contracted to be delivered to a specific transportation fueling
facility.\14\ We specify that the pipeline (or transmission line)
system must ultimately serve the subject facility. For electricity that
is produced by the co-firing of fossil fuels with renewable biomass
derived fuels, we are requiring that the resulting electricity is pro-
rated to represent only that amount of electricity generated by the
qualifying biogas, for the purpose of computing RINs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ Note that biogas used for transportation fuel includes
propane made from renewable biomass.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We are also providing for those situations in which biogas or
renewable electricity is provided directly to the transportation
facility, rather than using a commercial distribution system such as
pipelines or transmission lines. For both cases--dedicated use and
commercial distribution--producers must provide contractual evidence of
the production and sale of such fuel, and there are also reporting and
recordkeeping requirements to be followed as well.
Presently, there is no D code for electricity that is produced from
renewable biomass. The petition process for assigning such codes in
today's rule can be used for such purpose.
b. Importers
For imported renewable fuel under RFS2, we are anticipating the
importer to be the primary party responsible for generating RINs.
However, the foreign producer of renewable fuel can instead elect to
generate RINs themselves under certain conditions as described more
fully in Section II.D.2.c below. This approach is consistent with the
approach under RFS1.
Under RFS1, importers who import more than 10,000 gallons in a
calendar year were required to generate RINs for all imported renewable
fuel based on its type, except for cases in which the foreign producer
generated RINs for cellulosic biomass ethanol or waste-derived ethanol.
Due to the new definitions of renewable fuel and renewable biomass in
EISA, importers can no longer generate RINs under RFS2 on the basis of
fuel type alone. Instead, they must be able to demonstrate that the
renewable biomass definition has been met for the renewable fuel they
intend to import and for which they will generate RINs. They must also
have sufficient information about the feedstock and process used to
make the renewable fuel to allow them to identify the appropriate D
code from the lookup table for the RINs they generate. Therefore, in
order to generate RINs, the importer will be required to obtain this
information from a foreign producer. RINs can only be generated if a
demonstration is made that the feedstocks used to produce the renewable
fuel meet the definition of renewable biomass.
In summary, under today's final rule, importers can import any
renewable fuel, but can only generate RINs to represent the imported
renewable fuel under the two conditions described below. If these
conditions do not apply, the importer can import biofuel but cannot
generate RINs to represent that biofuel.
1. The imported renewable fuel is not accompanied by RINs generated
by the registered foreign producer
2. The importer obtains from the foreign producer:
--Documentation demonstrating that the renewable biomass definition has
been met for the volume of renewable fuel being imported.
--Documentation about the feedstock and production process used to
produce the renewable fuel to allow the importer to determine the
appropriate D-code designation in the RINs generated.
We are also finalizing additional requirements for foreign producers
who either generate RINs or provide documentation to an importer
sufficient to allow the importer to generate RINs. As described more
fully in the next section, these additional requirements include
restrictions on mixing of biofuels in the distribution system as it
travels from the foreign producer to the importer.
Finally, EPA is assessing whether additional requirements on
foreign-generated fuel may be necessary for situations in which
importers are generating RINs for the fuel. Additional requirements may
be necessary to ensure that the importers have sufficient information
to properly generate the RINs and that EPA has sufficient information
to determine whether those RINs have been legitimately generated. EPA
will pursue an amendment to the final RFS2 regulations if we find that
additional requirements are appropriate and necessary.
c. Additional Provisions for Foreign Producers
In general, we are requiring foreign producers of renewable fuel to
meet the same requirements as domestic producers with respect to
registration, recordkeeping and reporting, attest engagements, and the
transfer of RINs they generate with the batches of renewable fuel that
those RINs represent. However, we are also placing additional
requirements on foreign producers to ensure that RINs entering the U.S.
are valid and that the regulations can be enforced at foreign
facilities. These additional requirements are designed to accommodate
the more limited access that EPA enforcement personnel have to foreign
entities that are regulated parties under RFS2, and also the fact that
foreign-produced biofuel intended for export to the U.S. is often mixed
with biofuel that will not be exported to the U.S.
[[Page 14713]]
Under RFS1, foreign producers had the option of generating RINs for
the renewable fuel that they export to the U.S. if they wanted to
designate their fuel as cellulosic biomass ethanol or waste-derived
ethanol, and thereby take advantage of the additional 1.5 credit value
afforded by the 2.5 Equivalence Value for such products. In order to
ensure that EPA had the ability to enforce the regulations relating to
the generation of RINs from such foreign ethanol producers, the RFS1
regulations specified additional requirements for them, including
posting a bond, admitting EPA enforcement personnel, and submitting to
third-party engineering reviews of their production process. For RFS2,
we are maintaining these additional requirements for foreign producers
because EPA enforcement personnel have the same limitations under RFS2
with regard to access to foreign entities that are regulated parties as
they did under RFS1.
EISA also creates other unique challenges in the implementation and
enforcement of the renewable fuel standards for foreign-produced
renewable fuel imported into the U.S. Unlike our other fuels programs,
EPA cannot determine whether a particular shipment of renewable fuel is
eligible to generate RINs under the new program by testing the fuel
itself. Instead, information regarding the feedstock that was used to
produce renewable fuel and the process by which it was produced is
vital to determining the proper renewable fuel category and RIN type
for the imported fuel under the RFS2 program. Thus, whether foreign
producers or importers generate RINs, this information must be
collected and maintained by the RIN generator.
If a foreign producer generates RINs for renewable fuel that it
produces and exports to the U.S., we are requiring that ethanol must be
dewatered and denatured by the foreign producer prior to leaving the
production facility and prior to the generation of RINs. This is
consistent with our definition of renewable fuel in which ethanol that
is valid under RFS2 must be denatured. Moreover, the foreign producer
is required to strictly segregate a batch of renewable fuel and its
associated RINs from all other volumes of renewable fuel as it travels
from the foreign producer to the importer. The strict segregation
ensures that RINs entering the U.S. appropriately represent the
renewable fuel imported into the U.S. both in terms of renewable fuel
type and volume.
Several commenters requested that in general the importer be the
RIN generator for imported renewable fuel. Since most imported ethanol
is currently made in Brazil and is not denatured by the foreign
producer, any RINs generated must be generated by the importer.
However, to accomplish this, the importer must obtain the appropriate
information from a foreign producer regarding compliance with the
renewable biomass definition and a description of the associated
pathway for the renewable fuel. Under these circumstances, the foreign
producer must ensure that the information is transferred along with the
renewable fuel through the distribution system until it reaches the
importer. The foreign producer's volume of renewable fuel need not be
strictly segregated from other volumes in this case, so long as a
volume of chemically indistinguishable renewable fuel is tracked
through the distribution system from the foreign producer to the
importer, and the information needed by the importer to generate RINs
follows this same path through the distribution system. Strict
segregation of the volume is not necessary in this case, and the
importer will determine appropriate number of RINs for the specific
volume and type of renewable fuel that he imports.
Finally, if a foreign producer chooses not to participate in the
RFS2 program and thus neither generates RINs nor provides information
to the importer so that the importer can generate RINs, the foreign
producer can still export biofuel to the U.S. However, under these
circumstances the biofuel would not be renewable fuel under RFS2, no
RINs could be generated by any party, and thus the foreign producer
would not be subject to any of the registration, recordkeeping,
reporting, or attest engagement requirements.
3. Facilities With Multiple Applicable Pathways
If a given facility's operations can be fully represented by a
single pathway, then a single D code taken from the lookup table will
be applicable to all RINs generated for fuel produced at that facility.
However, we recognize that this will not always be the case. Some
facilities use multiple feedstocks at the same time, or switch between
different feedstocks over the course of a year. A facility may be
modified to produce the same fuel but with a different process, or may
be modified to produce a different type of fuel. Any of these
situations could result in multiple pathways being applicable to a
facility, and thus there may be more than one applicable D code for
various RINs generated at the facility.
If more than one pathway applies to a facility within a compliance
period, no special steps will need to be taken if the D code is the
same for all the applicable pathways. In this case, all RINs generated
at the facility will have the same D code regardless. Such a producer
with multiple applicable pathways must still describe its feedstock(s),
fuel type(s), and production process(es) in its initial registration
and annual report to the Agency so that we can verify that the D code
used was appropriate.
However, if more than one pathway applies to a facility within a
compliance period and these pathways have been assigned different D
codes, then the producer must determine which D codes to use when
generating RINs. There are a number of different ways that this could
occur. For instance, a producer could change feedstocks, production
processes, or the type of fuel he produces in the middle of a
compliance period. Or, he could use more than one feedstock or produce
more than one fuel type simultaneously. The approach we are finalizing
for designating D codes for RINs in these cases follows the approach
described in the NPRM and is summarized in Table II.D.3-1.
Table II.D.3-1--Approach To Assigning Multiple D Codes for Multiple
Applicable Pathways
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Case/Description Proposed approach
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. The pathway applicable to a facility The applicable D code used in
changes on a specific date, such that generating RINs must change on
one single pathway applies before the the date that the fuel
date and another single pathway produced changes pathways.
applies on and after the date.
2. One facility produces two or more The volumes of the different
different types of renewable fuel at types of renewable fuel should
the same time. be measured separately, with
different D codes applied to
the separate volumes.
[[Page 14714]]
3. One facility uses two or more For any given batch of
different feedstocks at the same time renewable fuel, the producer
to produce a single type of renewable should assign the applicable D
fuel. codes using a ratio (explained
below) defined by the amount
of each type of feedstock
used.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Commenters were generally supportive of this approach to multiple
applicable pathways, and as a result we are finalizing it with few
modifications from the proposal. Further discussion of the comments we
received can be found in Section 3.5.4 of the S&A document.
Following our proposal, cases listed in Table II.D.3-1 will be
treated as hierarchical, with Case 2 only being used to address a
facility's circumstances if Case 1 is not applicable, and Case 3 only
being used to address a facility's circumstances if Case 2 is not
applicable. This approach covers all likely cases in which multiple
applicable pathways may apply to a renewable fuel producer. Some
examples of how Case 2 or 3 would apply are provided in the NPRM.
A facility where two or more different types of feedstock are used
to produce a single fuel (such as Case 3 in Table II.D.3-1) will be
required to generate two or more separate batch-RINs \15\ for a single
volume of renewable fuel, and these separate batch-RINs will have
different D codes. The D codes will be chosen on the basis of the
different pathways as defined in the lookup table in Sec. 80.1426(f).
The number of gallon-RINs that will be included in each of the batch-
RINs will depend on the relative amount of the different types of
feedstocks used by the facility. In the NPRM, we proposed to use the
relative energy content of the feedstocks to determine how many gallon-
RINs should be assigned to each D code. Commenters generally did not
address this aspect of our proposal, and we are finalizing it in
today's action. Thus, the useable energy content of each feedstock must
be used to divide the total number of gallon-RINs generated for a batch
of renewable fuel into two or more groups, each corresponding to a
different D code. Several separate batch-RINs can then be generated and
assigned to the single volume of renewable fuel. The applicable
calculations are given in the regulations at Sec. 80.1426(f)(3).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ Batch-RINs and gallon-RINs are defined in the regulations
at 40 CFR 80.1401.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We proposed several elements of the calculation of the useable
energy content of the feedstocks, including the following:
1. Only that fraction of a feedstock which is expected to be
converted into renewable fuel by the facility can be counted in the
calculation, taking into account facility conversion efficiency.
2. The producer of the renewable fuel is required to designate this
fraction once each year for the feedstocks processed by his facility
during that year, and to include this information as part of his
reporting requirements.
3. Each producer is required to designate the energy content (in
Btu/lb) once each year of the portion of each of his feedstocks which
is converted into fuel. The producer may determine these values for his
own feedstocks, or may use default values provided in the regulations
at Sec. 80.1426(f)(7).
4. Each producer is required to determine the total mass of each
type of feedstock used by the facility on at least a daily basis.
Based on the paucity of comments we received on this issue, we are
finalizing the provisions regarding the calculation of useable energy
content of the feedstocks as it was proposed in the NPRM. As described
in Section II.J, producers of renewable fuel will be required to submit
information in their reports on the feedstocks they used, their
production processes, and the type of fuel(s) they produced during the
compliance period. This will apply to both domestic producers and
foreign producers who export any renewable fuel to the U.S. We will use
this information to verify that the D codes used in generating RINs
were appropriate.
4. Facilities That Co-Process Renewable Biomass and Fossil Fuels
We expect situations to arise in which a producer uses a renewable
feedstock simultaneously with a fossil fuel feedstock, producing a
single fuel that is only partially renewable. For instance, biomass
might be co-fired with coal in a coal-to-liquids (CTL) process that
uses Fischer-Tropsch chemistry to make diesel fuel, biomass and waste
plastics might be fed simultaneously into a catalytic or gasification
process to make diesel fuel, or vegetable oils could be fed to a
hydrotreater along with petroleum to produce a diesel fuel. In these
cases, the diesel fuel will be only partially renewable. RINs can be
generated in such cases, but must be done in such a way that the number
of gallon-RINs corresponds only to the renewable portion of the fuel.
Under RFS1, we created a provision to address the co-processing of
``renewable crudes'' along with petroleum feedstocks to produce a
gasoline or diesel fuel that is partially renewable. See 40 CFR
80.1126(d)(6). However, this provision would not apply in cases where
either the renewable feedstock or the fossil fuel feedstock is a gas
(e.g., biogas, natural gas) or a solid (e.g., biomass, coal).
Therefore, we are eliminating the RFS1 provision applicable only to
liquid feedstocks and replacing it with a more comprehensive approach
that will apply to liquid, solid, or gaseous feedstocks and any type of
conversion process. In this final approach, producers are required to
use the relative energy content of their renewable and non-renewable
feedstocks to determine the renewable fraction of the fuel that they
produce. This fraction in turn is used to determine the number of
gallon-RINs that should be generated for each batch. Commenters said
little about our proposed methodology to use the relative energy
content of the feedstocks, and we are therefore finalizing it largely
as proposed.
We also requested comment on allowing renewable fuel producers to
use an accepted test method to directly measure the fraction of the
fuel that is derived from biomass rather than a fossil fuel feedstock.
For instance, ASTM D-6866 is a radiocarbon dating test method that can
be used to determine the renewable content of transportation fuel. The
use of such a test method can be used in lieu of the calculation of the
renewable portion of the fuel based on the relative energy content of
the renewable biomass and fossil feedstocks. Commenters generally
supported the option of using a radiocarbon dating approach. As a
result, we believe it would be appropriate and are finalizing a
provision to allow parties that co-process renewable biomass and fossil
fuels to choose between using the relative energy in the feedstocks or
ASTM D-6866 to determine the number of gallon-RINs that should be
generated. Regardless of the approach chosen, the
[[Page 14715]]
producer will still need to separately verify that the renewable
feedstocks meet the definition of renewable biomass.
If a producer chose to use the energy content of the feedstocks,
the calculation would be similar to the treatment of renewable fuels
with multiple D codes as described in Section II.D.3 above. As shown in
the regulations at Sec. 80.1426(f)(3), the producer would determine
the renewable fuel volume that would be assigned RINs based on the
amount of energy in the renewable feedstock relative to the amount of
energy in the fossil feedstock. Only one batch-RIN would be generated
for a single volume of fuel produced from both a renewable feedstock
and a fossil feedstock, and this one batch-RIN must be based on the
contribution that the renewable feedstock makes to the total volume of
fuel. The calculation of the relative energy contents includes factors
that take into account the conversion efficiency of the plant, and as a
result potentially different reaction rates and byproduct formation for
the various feedstocks will be accounted for. The relative energy
content of the feedstocks is used to adjust the basic calculation of
the number of gallon-RINs downward from that calculated on the basis of
batch fuel volume and the applicable Equivalence Value. The D code that
must be assigned to the RINs is drawn from the lookup table in the
regulations as if the feedstock was entirely renewable biomass. Thus,
for instance, a coal-to-liquids plant that co-processes some cellulosic
biomass to make diesel fuel would be treated as a plant that produces
only cellulosic diesel for purposes of identifying the appropriate D
code for the fraction of biofuel that qualifies as renewable fuel under
EISA.
If a producer chose to use D-6866, he would be required to either
apply this test to every batch, or alternatively to take samples of
every batch of fuel he produced over the course of one month and
combine them into a single composite sample. The D-6866 test would then
be applied to the composite sample, and the resulting renewable
fraction would be applied to all batches of fuel produced in the next
month to determine the appropriate number of RINs that must be
generated. For the first month, the producer can estimate the non-
fossil fraction, and then make a correction as needed in the second
month. The producer would be required to recalculate the renewable
fraction every subsequent month. See the regulations at Sec.
80.1426(f)(9).
5. Facilities That Process Municipal Solid Waste
As described in Section II.B.4.d, only the separated yard and food
waste of municipal solid waste (MSW) are considered to be renewable
biomass and may be used to produce renewable fuels under the RFS2
program. While renewable fuel producers may produce fuel from all
organic components of MSW, they may generate RINs for only that portion
of MSW that qualifies as renewable biomass. We are providing two
methods for determining the appropriate number of RINs to generate for
each batch of fuel, depending on whether the feedstock is pure food and
yard waste, or separated municipal solid waste, as described in Section
II.B.4.d. While not all biogenic material in the separated MSW is
cellulosic, the vast majority of it is likely to be in most situations.
Specifically, separated municipal solid waste may contain some non-
biogenic materials such as plastics that were unable to be recycled due
to market conditions. We are requiring producers of renewable fuel made
from separated municipal solid waste to use the radiocarbon dating
method D-6866 to calculate the biogenic fraction, presumed to be
composed of cellulosic materials. Therefore, unless a renewable fuel
producer is using MSW streams that are clearly not cellulosic, we
anticipate that a D code of either 3 or 7 will be appropriate for such
RINs. See the regulations at Sec. 80.1426(f).
6. RINless Biofuel
Under the RFS1 program, all renewable fuel made from renewable
feedstocks and used as motor vehicle fuel in the U.S. was assigned
RINs. Therefore, aside from the very small amounts of biofuel used in
nonroad applications or as heating oil, all renewable fuel produced or
imported counted towards the mandated volume goals of the RFS program.
Although conventional diesel fuel was not subject to the standards
under RFS1, all other motor vehicle fuel fell into two groups: fuel
subject to the standards, and fuel for which RINs were generated and
was used to meet those standards.
Under RFS2, our approach to compliance with the renewable biomass
provision will allow the possibility for some biofuel to be produced
without RINs. As described in Section II.B.4 above, we are modifying
our approach to compliance with the renewable biomass provision so that
renewable fuel producers using feedstocks from domestic planted crops
and crop residue will be presumed to meet the renewable biomass
provision. Under this ``aggregate compliance'' approach, these
producers will be generating RINs for all their renewable fuel.
However, producers who use foreign-grown crops or crop residue or other
feedstocks such as planted trees or forestry residues will not be able
to take advantage of this aggregate compliance approach. Instead, they
will be required to demonstrate that their feedstocks meet the
renewable biomass definition, including the associated land use
restrictions, before they will be permitted to generate RINs. Absent
such a demonstration, these producers can still produce biofuel but
will not generate RINs. In addition, fuel producers whose fuel does not
qualify as renewable fuel under this program because it does not meet
the 20% GHG threshold (and is not grandfathered) can still produce
biofuel but will not be allowed to generate RINs. Transportation fuel
consumed in the U.S. will therefore be comprised of three groups: fuel
subject to the standards (gasoline and diesel), fuel for which RINs are
generated and will be used to meet those standards, and RINless
biofuel. RINless biofuel will not be covered under any aspect of the
RFS2 program, despite the fact that in many cases it will meet the EISA
definition of transportation fuel upon blending with gasoline or
diesel.
In their comments in response to the NPRM, several refiners
suggested that RINless biofuel should be treated as an obligated volume
similar to gasoline and diesel, and thus be subject to the standards.
Doing so would ensure that all transportation fuels are covered under
the RFS2 program, consistent with RFS1. Such an approach would also
provide renewable fuel producers with an incentive to demonstrate that
their feedstocks meet the renewable biomass definition and thus
generate RINs for all the biofuel that they produce. There could be
less potential for market manipulation on the part of biofuel producers
who might be considering producing RINless biofuel as a means for
increasing demand for renewable fuel and RINs.
Nevertheless, we do not believe that it would be appropriate at
this time to finalize a requirement that RINless biofuel be considered
an obligated fuel subject to the standards. We did not propose such an
approach in the NPRM, and as a result many renewable fuel producers who
could be affected did not have an opportunity to consider and comment
on it. Moreover, the volume of RINless biofuel is likely to be small
compared to the volume of renewable fuel with RINs since RINs have
value and producers currently have an
[[Page 14716]]
incentive to generate them. However, if in the future RIN values should
fall--for instance, if crude oil prices rise high enough and the market
drives up demand for biofuels--the incentive to demonstrate compliance
with the renewable biomass definition may decrease and there may be an
increase in the volume of RINless biofuel. Under such circumstances it
may be appropriate to reconsider whether RINless biofuel should be
designated as an obligated volume subject to the standards.
E. Applicable Standards
The renewable fuel standards are expressed as a volume percentage,
and are used by each refiner, blender or importer to determine their
renewable fuel volume obligations. The applicable percentages are set
so that if each regulated party meets the percentages, then the amount
of renewable fuel, cellulosic biofuel, biomass-based diesel, and
advanced biofuel used will meet the volumes specified in Table I.A.1-
1.\16\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ Actual volumes can vary from the amounts required in the
statute. For instance, lower volumes may result if the statutorily
required volumes are adjusted downward according to the waiver
provisions in CAA 211(o)(7)(D). Also, higher or lower volumes may
result depending on the actual consumption of gasoline and diesel in
comparison to the projected volumes used to set the standards.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The formulas finalized today for use in deriving annual renewable
fuel standards are based in part on an estimate of combined gasoline
and diesel volumes, for both highway and nonroad uses, for the year in
which the standards will apply. The standards will apply to refiners,
blenders, and importers of these fuels. As described more fully in
Section II.F.3, other producers of transportation fuel, such as
producers of natural gas, propane, and electricity from fossil fuels,
are not subject to the standards. Since the standards apply to
refiners, blenders and importers of gasoline and diesel, these are also
the transportation fuels that are used to determine the annual volume
obligations of an individual refiner, blender, or importer.
The projected volumes of gasoline and diesel used to calculate the
standards will continue to be provided by EIA's Short-Term Energy
Outlook (STEO). The standards applicable to a given calendar year will
be published by November 30 of the previous year. Gasoline and diesel
volumes will continue to be adjusted to account for the required
renewable fuel volumes. In addition, gasoline and diesel volumes
produced by small refineries and small refiners will be exempt through
2010, and that year's standard is adjusted accordingly, as discussed
below.
As discussed in the proposal, four separate standards are required
under the RFS2 program, corresponding to the four separate volume
requirements shown in Table I.A.1-1. The specific formulas we use to
calculate the renewable fuel standards are described below in Section
II.E.1.
In order for an obligated party to demonstrate compliance, the
percentage standards are converted into the volume of renewable fuel
each obligated party is required to satisfy. This volume of renewable
fuel is the volume for which the obligated party is responsible under
the RFS program, and continues to be referred to as its Renewable
Volume Obligation (RVO). Since there are four separate standards under
the RFS2 program, there are likewise four separate RVOs applicable to
each obligated party. Each standard applies to the sum of all gasoline
and diesel produced or imported. Determination of RVOs is discussed in
Section II.G.2.
1. Calculation of Standards
a. How Are the Standards Calculated?
The four separate renewable fuel standards are based primarily on
(1) the 49-state \17\ gasoline and diesel consumption volumes projected
by EIA, and (2) the total volume of renewable fuels required by EISA
for the coming year. Table I.A.2-1 shows the required overall volumes
of four types of renewable fuel specified in EISA. Each renewable fuel
standard is expressed as a volume percentage of combined gasoline and
diesel sold or introduced into commerce in the U.S., and is used by
each obligated party to determine its renewable volume obligation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ Hawaii opted-in to the original RFS program; that opt-in is
carried forward to this program.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Today we are finalizing an approach to setting standards that is
based in part on the sum of all gasoline and diesel produced or
imported in the 48 contiguous states and Hawaii. An approach we are not
adopting but which we discussed in the proposal would have split the
standards between those that would be specific to gasoline and those
that would be specific to diesel. Though this approach to setting
standards would more readily align the RFS obligations with the
relative amounts of gasoline and diesel produced or imported by each
obligated party, we are not adopting this approach because it relies on
projections of the relative amounts of gasoline-displacing and diesel-
displacing renewable fuels. These projections would need to be updated
every year, and as stated in the proposal, we believe that such an
approach would unnecessarily complicate the program.
While the required amount of total renewable fuel for a given year
is provided by EISA, the Act requires EPA to base the standards on an
EIA estimate of the amount of gasoline and diesel that will be sold or
introduced into commerce for that year. As discussed in the proposal,
EIA's STEO will continue to be the source for projected gasoline, and
now diesel, consumption estimates. In order to achieve the volumes of
renewable fuels specified in EISA, the gasoline and diesel volumes used
to determine the standard must be the non-renewable portion of the
gasoline and diesel pools. Because the STEO volumes include renewable
fuel use, we must subtract the total renewable fuel volume from the
total gasoline and diesel volume to get total non-renewable gasoline
and diesel volumes. The Act also requires EPA to use EIA estimates of
renewable fuel volumes; the best estimation of the coming year's
renewable fuel consumption is found in Table 8 (U.S. Renewable Energy
Supply and Consumption) of the STEO. Additional information on
projected renewable fuel use will be included as it becomes available.
As discussed in Section II.D.1, we are finalizing the energy
content approach to Equivalence Values for the cellulosic biofuel,
advanced biofuel, and total renewable fuel standards. However, the
biomass-based diesel standard is based on the volume of biodiesel. In
order to align both of these approaches simultaneously, biodiesel will
continue to generate 1.5 RINs per gallon as in RFS1, and the biomass-
based diesel volume mandate from EISA is then adjusted upward by the
same 1.5 factor. The net result is a biomass-based diesel gallon being
worth 1.0 gallons toward the biomass-based diesel standard, but 1.5
gallons toward the other standards.
CAA section 211(o) exempts small refineries \18\ from the RFS
requirements until the 2011 compliance period. In RFS1, we extended
this exemption to the few remaining small refiners not already
exempted.\19\ Small refineries and small refiners will continue to be
exempt from the program until 2011 under the new RFS2 regulations. Thus
we have excluded their gasoline and diesel volumes from the overall
non-renewable gasoline and diesel volumes used to determine the
applicable percentages until 2011. As discussed in
[[Page 14717]]
the proposal, total small refinery and small refiner gasoline
production volume is expected to be fairly constant compared to total
U.S. transportation fuel production. Thus we estimated small refinery
and small refiner gasoline and diesel volumes using a constant
percentage of national consumption, as we did in RFS1. Using
information from gasoline batch reports submitted to EPA for 2006, EIA
data, and input from the California Air Resources Board regarding
California small refiners, we estimate that small refinery volumes
constitute 11.9% of the gasoline pool, and 15.2% of the diesel pool.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ Under section 211(o) of the Clean Air Act, small refineries
are those with 75,000 bbl/day or less average aggregate daily crude
oil throughput.
\19\ See Section III.E.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
CAA section 211(o) requires that the small refinery adjustment also
account for renewable fuels used during the prior year by small
refineries that are exempt and do not participate in the RFS2 program.
Accounting for this volume of renewable fuel would reduce the total
volume of renewable fuel use required of others, and thus directionally
would reduce the percentage standards. However, as we discussed in
RFS1, the amount of renewable fuel that would qualify, i.e., that was
used by exempt small refineries and small refiners but not used as part
of the RFS program, is expected to be very small. In fact, these
volumes would not significantly change the resulting percentage
standards. Whatever renewable fuels small refineries and small refiners
blend will be reflected as RINs available in the market; thus there is
no need for a separate accounting of their renewable fuel use in the
equations used to determine the standards. We proposed and are
finalizing this value as zero.
The levels of the percentage standards would be reduced if Alaska
or a U.S. territory chooses to participate in the RFS2 program, as
gasoline and diesel produced in or imported into that state or
territory would then be subject to the standard. Section 211(o) of the
Clean Air Act requires that the renewable fuel be consumed in the
contiguous 48 states, and any other state or territory that opts-in to
the program (Hawaii has subsequently opted in). However, because
renewable fuel produced in Alaska or a U.S. territory is unlikely to be
transported to the contiguous 48 states or to Hawaii, including their
renewable fuel volumes in the calculation of the standard would not
serve the purpose intended by section 211(o) of the Clean Air Act of
ensuring that the statutorily required renewable fuel volumes are
consumed in the 48 contiguous states and any state or territory that
opts-in. Therefore, renewable fuels used in Alaska or U.S. territories
are not included in the renewable fuel volumes that are subtracted from
the total gasoline and diesel volume estimates.
In summary, the total projected non-renewable gasoline and diesel
volumes from which the annual standards are calculated are based on EIA
projections of gasoline and diesel consumption in the contiguous 48
states and Hawaii, adjusted by constant percentages of 11.9% and 15.2%
in 2010 to account for small refinery/refiner gasoline and diesel
volumes, respectively, and with built-in correction factors to be used
when and if Alaska or a territory opt-in to the program.
The following formulas are used to calculate the percentage
standards:
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR26MR10.415
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR26MR10.416
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR26MR10.417
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR26MR10.418
Where
StdCB,i = The cellulosic biofuel standard for year i, in
percent
StdBBD,i = The biomass-based diesel standard (ethanol-
equivalent basis) for year i, in percent
StdAB,i = The advanced biofuel standard for year i, in
percent
StdRF,i = The renewable fuel standard for year i, in
percent
RFVCB,i = Annual volume of cellulosic biofuel required by
section 211(o)(2)(B) of the Clean Air Act for year i, in gallons
RFVBBD,i = Annual volume of biomass-based diesel required
by section 211(o)(2)(B) of the Clean Air Act for year i, in gallons
RFVAB,i = Annual volume of advanced biofuel required by
section 211(o)(2)(B) of the Clean Air Act for year i, in gallons
RFVRF,i = Annual volume of renewable fuel required by
section 211(o)(2)(B) of the Clean Air Act for year i, in gallons
Gi = Amount of gasoline projected to be used in the 48
contiguous states and Hawaii, in year i, in gallons*
Di = Amount of diesel projected to be used in the 48
contiguous states and Hawaii, in year i, in gallons
RGi = Amount of renewable fuel blended into gasoline that
is projected to be consumed in the 48 contiguous states and Hawaii,
in year i, in gallons
RDi = Amount of renewable fuel blended into diesel that
is projected to be consumed in the 48 contiguous states and Hawaii,
in year i, in gallons
GSi = Amount of gasoline projected to be used in Alaska
or a U.S. territory in year i if the state or territory opts-in, in
gallons*
RGSi = Amount of renewable fuel blended into gasoline
that is projected to be consumed in Alaska or a U.S. territory in
year i if the state or territory opts-in, in gallons
DSi = Amount of diesel projected to be used in Alaska or
a U.S. territory in year i if the state or territory opts-in, in
gallons *
RDSi = Amount of renewable fuel blended into diesel that
is projected to be consumed in Alaska or a U.S. territory in
[[Page 14718]]
year i if the state or territory opts-in, in gallons
GEi = The amount of gasoline projected to be produced by
exempt small refineries and small refiners in year i, in gallons, in
any year they are exempt per Sec. Sec. 80.1441 and 80.1442,
respectively. Equivalent to 0.119*(Gi-RGi).
DEi = The amount of diesel projected to be produced by
exempt small refineries and small refiners in year i, in gallons, in
any year they are exempt per Sec. Sec. 80.1441 and 80.1442,
respectively. Equivalent to 0.152*(Di-RDi).
* Note that these terms for projected volumes of gasoline and
diesel use include gasoline and diesel that has been blended with
renewable fuel.
b. Standards for 2010
We are finalizing the standards for 2010 in today's action. As
explained in Section I.A.2, while the rulemaking is not effective until
July 1, 2010, the 2010 standards we are setting are annual standards
with compliance demonstrations are due by February 28, 2011.
Under CAA section 211(o)(7)(D)(i), EPA is required to make a
determination each year regarding whether the required volumes of
cellulosic biofuel for the following year can be produced. For any
calendar year for which the projected volume of cellulosic biofuel
production is less than the minimum required volume, the projected
volume becomes the basis for the cellulosic biofuel standard. In such a
case, the statute also indicates that EPA may also lower the required
volumes for advanced biofuel and total renewable fuel.
As discussed in Section IV.B., we are utilizing the EIA projection
of 5.04 million gallons (6.5 million ethanol equivalent gallons) of
cellulosic biofuel as the basis for setting the percentage standard for
cellulosic biofuel for 2010. This is lower than the 100 million gallon
standard set by EISA that we proposed upholding, but reflects the
current state of the industry, as discussed in section V.B. We expect
continued growth in the industry in 2011 and beyond. Since the advanced
biofuel standard is met by just the biomass-based diesel volume
required in 2010, and additional volumes of other advanced biofuels
(e.g., sugarcane ethanol) are available as well, no change to the
advanced biofuel standard is necessary for 2010. Moreover, given the
nested nature of the volume mandates, since no change in the advanced
biofuel standard is necessary, the total renewable fuel standard need
not be changed either.
Table II.E.1.b-1--Standards for 2010
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Percent
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cellulosic biofuel........................................ 0.004
Biomass-based diesel...................................... 1.10
Advanced biofuel.......................................... 0.61
Renewable fuel............................................ 8.25
------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Treatment of Biomass-Based Diesel in 2009 and 2010
As described in Section I.A.2, the four separate 2010 standards
issued in today's rule will apply to all gasoline and diesel produced
in 2010. However, EISA included volume mandates for biomass-based
diesel, advanced biofuel, and total renewable fuel that applied in
2009. Since the RFS2 program was not effective in 2009 and thus the
volume mandates for biomass-based diesel and advanced biofuel were not
implemented in 2009, our NPRM proposed a mechanism to ensure that the
2009 biomass-based diesel volume mandate would eventually be met. In
today's final rule we are finalizing the proposed approach.
a. Shift in 2009 Biomass-Based Diesel Compliance Demonstration to 2010
Under the RFS1 regulations that applied in 2009, we set the
applicable standard for total renewable fuel in November 2008 \20\
using the required volume of 11.1 billion gallons specified in the
Clean Air Act (as amended by EISA), gasoline volume projections from
EIA, and the formula provided in the regulations at Sec. 80.1105(d).
The existing RFS1 regulations did not provide a mechanism for requiring
the use of 0.5 billion gallons of biomass-based diesel or the 0.6
billion gallons of advanced biofuel mandated by EISA for 2009.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ See 73 FR 70643 (November 21, 2008).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the NPRM we proposed that the compliance demonstration for the
2009 biomass-based diesel requirement of 0.5 bill gal be extended to
2010. This approach would combine the 0.5 bill gal requirement for 2009
and the 0.65 bill gal requirement for 2010 into a single requirement of
1.15 bill gal for which compliance demonstrations would be made by
February 28, 2011. As described in the NPRM, we believe that the
deficit carryover provision provides a conceptual mechanism for this
approach, since it would have allowed obligated parties to defer
compliance with any or all of the 2009 standards until 2010. We are
finalizing this approach in today's action. We believe it will ensure
that these two year's worth of biomass-based diesel will be used, while
providing reasonable lead time for obligated parties. It avoids a
transition that fails to have any requirements related to the 2009
biomass-based diesel volume, and instead requires the use of the 2009
volume but achieves this by extending the compliance period by one
year. We believe this is a reasonable exercise of our authority under
section 211(o)(2) to issue regulations that ensure that the volumes for
2009 are ultimately used, even though we were unable to issue final
regulations prior to the 2009 compliance year. We announced our
intentions to implement the 2009 and 2010 biomass-based diesel
requirements in this manner in the November 2008 Federal Register
notice cited previously. We reiterated these intentions in our NPRM.
Thus, obligated parties will have had sufficient lead time to acquire a
sufficient number of biomass-based diesel RINs by the end of 2010 to
comply with the standard based on 1.15 bill gal.
Data available at the time of this writing suggests that
approximately 450 million gallons of biodiesel was produced in 2009,
thus requiring 700 million gallons to be produced in 2010 to satisfy
the combined 2009 and 2010 volume mandates. Information from commenters
and other contacts in the biodiesel industry indicate that feedstocks
and production facilities will be available in 2010 to produce this
volume.
Refiners generally commented that the proposed approach to 2009 and
2010 biomass-based diesel volumes was not appropriate and should not be
implemented. They also recommended that the RFS2 program should be made
effective on January 1, 2011 with no carryover of any previous-year
obligations for biomass-based diesel or any other volume mandate. In
contrast, the National Biodiesel Board and several individual biodiesel
producers supported the proposed approach, but believed it was
insufficient to compel obligated parties to purchase biodiesel in 2009,
something they considered critical to the survival of the biodiesel
industry. Many of these commenters requested that we conduct an interim
rulemaking that would apply to 2009 to implement the EISA mandated
volume of 0.5 billion gallons of biomass-based diesel. If the RFS2
program could not be implemented until 2011, they likewise requested
that interim measures be taken for 2010 to ensure that the full 1.15
bill gal requirement would be implemented. However, putting in place
this new volume requirement without also putting in place EISA's new
definition for biomass-based diesel, renewable fuel, and renewable
biomass
[[Page 14719]]
would have raised significant legal and policy issues that would
necessarily have required a new proposal with its own public notice and
comment process. Because of the significant time required for notice
and comment rulemaking, the need to provide industry with adequate lead
time for new requirements, and the fact that we were already well into
calendar year 2009 at the time the request for an interim rule was
received, it was unlikely that any interim rule could have impacted
biodiesel demand in 2009. Moreover, Agency resources applied to the
interim rulemaking would have been unavailable for development of the
final RFS2 rulemaking. Developing an interim rule could have undermined
EPA's ability to complete the full RFS2 program regulations in time for
2010 implementation. As a result, we did not pursue an interim
rulemaking.
With regard to advanced biofuel, it is not necessary to implement a
separate requirement for the 0.6 billion gallon mandate for 2009. Due
to the nested nature of the volume requirements and the fact that
Equivalence Values will be based on the energy content relative to
ethanol, the 0.5 billion gallon requirement for biomass-based diesel
will count as 0.75 billion gallons of advanced biofuel, exceeding the
requirement of 0.6 billion gallons. Thus compliance with the biomass-
based diesel requirement in 2009 automatically results in compliance
with the advanced biofuel standard.
All 2009 biodiesel and renewable diesel RINs, identifiable through
an RR code of 15 or 17 respectively under the RFS1 regulations, will be
valid for showing compliance with the adjusted 2010 biomass-based
diesel standard of 1.15 billion gallons. This use of previous year RINs
for current year compliance is consistent with our approach to any
other standard for any other year and consistent with the flexibility
available to any obligated party that carries a deficit from one year
to the next. Moreover, it allows an obligated party to acquire
sufficient biodiesel and renewable diesel RINs during 2009 to comply
with the 0.5 billion gallons requirement, even though their compliance
demonstration would not occur until the 2010 compliance period.
We did not reduce the 2009 volume requirement for total renewable
fuel by 0.5 billion gallons to account for the fact that we intended to
move the compliance demonstration for this volume has been moved to the
2010 compliance period. Instead, we are allowing 2009 biodiesel and
renewable diesel RINs to be used for compliance purposes for both the
2009 total renewable fuel standard as well as the 2010 adjusted
biomass-based diesel standard (but not for the 2010 advanced biofuel or
total renewable fuel standards). To accomplish this, we proposed in the
NPRM that an obligated party would add up the 2009 biodiesel and
renewable diesel RINs that he used for 2009 compliance with the RFS1
standard for total renewable fuel, and reduce his 2010 biomass-based
diesel obligation by this amount. Thus, 2009 biodiesel and renewable
diesel RINs are essentially used twice. Any remaining 2010 biomass-
based diesel obligation would need to be covered either with 2009
biodiesel and renewable diesel RINs that were not used for compliance
in 2009 or with 2010 biomass-based diesel RINs. We are finalizing this
approach in today's notice.
b. Treatment of Deficit Carryovers, RIN Rollover, and RIN Valid Life
for Adjusted 2010 Biomass-Based Diesel Requirement
Our transition approach for biomass-based diesel is conceptually
similar, but not identical, to the statutory deficit carryover
provision. In a typical deficit carryover situation, an obligated party
can carry forward any amount of a current-year deficit to the following
year. In the absence of any modifications to the deficit carryover
provisions for our biomass-based diesel transition provisions, then, an
obligated party that did not fully comply with the 2010 biomass-based
diesel requirement of 1.15 billion gallons could carry a deficit of any
amount into 2011. As described in the NPRM, we believe that the deficit
carryover provisions should be modified in the context of the
transition biomass-based diesel approach to more closely represent what
would have occurred if we had been able to implement the 0.5 bill gal
requirement in 2009. Specifically, we are prohibiting obligated parties
from carrying over a biomass-based diesel deficit into 2011 larger than
that based on the 0.65 bill gal volume requirement for 2010. This is
the amount that would have been permitted had we been able to implement
the biomass-based diesel requirements in 2009. In practice, this means
that deficit carryovers from 2010 into 2011 for biomass-based diesel
cannot not exceed 57% (0.65/1.15) of an obligated party's 2010 RVO.
This approach also helps to ensure a minimum volume mandate for
companies producing biomass-based diesel each year.
Similarly, in the absence of any modifications to the provisions
regarding valid life of RINs, 2008 biodiesel and renewable diesel RINs
could not be used for compliance in 2010 with the adjusted biomass-
based diesel standard, despite the fact that the 2010 standard includes
the 2009 requirement for which 2008 RINs should be valid. The National
Biodiesel Board opposed this approach on the basis that the use of 2008
RINs for 2010 compliance demonstrations violated the 2-year valid life
limit for RINs. However, since the 2010 compliance demonstration will
include the obligation that would have applied in 2009, and 2008 RINs
would be valid for 2009 compliance, we are allowing excess 2008
biodiesel and renewable diesel RINs that were not used for compliance
purposes in 2008 to be used for compliance purposes in 2009 or 2010.
As described in Section III.D, we are requiring the 20% RIN
rollover cap to apply in all years, and separately for all four
standards. However, consistent with our approach to deficit carryovers,
we believe that an additional constraint is warranted in the
application of the rollover cap to the biomass-based diesel obligation
in the 2010 compliance year to more closely represent what would have
occurred if we had been able to implement the 0.5 bill gal requirement
in 2009. Specifically, we are limiting the use of excess 2008 RINs to
20% of the statutory 2009 requirement of 0.5 bill gal. This is
equivalent to 0.1 bill gal (20% of 0.5 bill gal), or 8.7% of the
combined 2009/2010 obligation of 1.15 bill gal (0.1/1.15). Thus,
obligated parties will be allowed to use excess 2008 and 2009 biodiesel
and renewable diesel RINs for compliance with the 2010 combined
standard of 1.15 bill gal, so long as the sum of all previous-year RINs
(2008 plus 2009 RINs) does not exceed 20% of their 2010 obligation, and
the 2008 RINs do not exceed 8.7% of their 2010 obligation.
Under RFS1, RINs are generated when renewable fuel is produced, but
if the fuel is ultimately used for purposes other than as motor vehicle
fuel the RINs must generally be retired. Under EISA, however, RINs
generated for renewable fuel that is ultimately used for nonroad
purposes, heating oil, or jet fuel are valid for compliance purposes.
To more closely align our transition approach for biomass-based diesel
to what could have occurred if we had issued the RFS2 standards prior
to 2009, we are allowing 2009 RINs that are retired because they are
ultimately used for nonroad, heating oil or jet fuel purposes to be
valid for compliance with the 2010 standards. Such RINs can
[[Page 14720]]
be reinstated by the retiring party in 2010.
3. Future Standards
The statutorily-prescribed phase-in period ends in 2012 for
biomass-based diesel and in 2022 for cellulosic biofuel, advanced
biofuel, and total renewable fuel. Beyond these years, EISA requires
EPA to determine the applicable volumes based on a review of the
implementation of the program up to that time, and an analysis of a
wide variety of factors such as the impact of the production of
renewable fuels on the environment, energy security, infrastructure,
costs, and other factors. For these future standards, EPA must
promulgate rules establishing the applicable volumes no later than 14
months before the first year for which such applicable volumes would
apply. For biomass-based diesel, this would mean that final rules would
need to be issued by October 31, 2011 for application starting on
January 1, 2013. In today's rulemaking, we are not suggesting any
specific volume requirements for biomass-based diesel for 2013 and
beyond that would be appropriate under the statutory criteria that we
must consider. Likewise, we are not suggesting any specific volume
requirements for the other three renewable fuel categories for 2023 and
beyond. However, the statute requires that the biomass-based diesel
volume in 2013 and beyond must be no less than 1.0 billion gallons, and
that advanced biofuels in 2023 and beyond must represent at a minimum
the same percentage of total renewable fuel as it does in 2022. These
provisions will be implemented as part of an annual standard-setting
process.
F. Fuels That Are Subject to the Standards
Under RFS1, producers and importers of gasoline are obligated
parties subject to the standards--any party that produces or imports
only diesel fuel is not subject to the standards. EISA changes this
provision by expanding the RFS program in general to include all
transportation fuel. As discussed above, however, section 211(o)(3)
continues to require EPA to determine which refiners, blenders, and
importers are treated as subject to the standard. As described further
in Section II.G below, under this rule, the sum of all highway and
nonroad gasoline and diesel fuel produced or imported within a calendar
year will be the basis on which the RVOs are calculated. This section
provides our final definition of gasoline and diesel for the purposes
of the RFS2 program.
1. Gasoline
As with the RFS1 rule, the volume of gasoline used in calculating
the RVO under RFS2 will continue to include all finished gasoline
(reformulated gasoline (RFG) and conventional gasoline (CG)) produced
or imported for use in the contiguous United States or Hawaii, as well
as all unfinished gasoline that becomes finished gasoline upon the
addition of oxygenate blended downstream from the refinery or importer.
This includes both unfinished reformulated gasoline, called
``reformulated gasoline blendstock for oxygenate blending,'' or
``RBOB,'' and unfinished conventional gasoline designed for downstream
oxygenate blending (e.g., sub-octane conventional gasoline), called
``CBOB.'' The volume of any other unfinished gasoline or blendstock,
(such as butane or naphtha produced in a refinery) or exported
gasoline, will not be included in the obligated volume, except where
the blendstock is combined with other blendstock or gasoline to produce
finished gasoline, RBOB, or CBOB. Where a blendstock is blended with
other blendstock to produce finished gasoline, RBOB, or CBOB, the total
volume of the gasoline blend will be included in the volume used to
determine the blender's renewable fuels obligation. Where a blendstock
is added to finished gasoline, only the volume of the blendstock will
be included, since the finished gasoline would have been included in
the compliance determinations of the refiner or importer of the
gasoline. For purposes of this preamble, the various gasoline products
described above that we are including in a party's obligated volume are
collectively called ``gasoline.''
Also consistent with the RFS1 program, we are continuing the
exclusion of any volume of renewable fuel contained in gasoline from
the volume of gasoline used to determine the renewable fuels
obligations. This exclusion applies to any renewable fuels that are
blended into gasoline at a refinery, contained in imported gasoline, or
added at a downstream location. Thus, for example, any ethanol added to
RBOB or CBOB at a refinery's rack or terminal downstream from the
refinery or importer will be excluded from the volume of gasoline used
by the refiner or importer to determine the obligation. This is
consistent with how the standard itself is calculated--EPA determines
the applicable percentage by comparing the overall projected volume of
gasoline used to the overall renewable fuel volume that is specified in
the statute, and EPA excludes ethanol and other renewable fuels that
are blended into the gasoline in determining the overall projected
volume of gasoline. When an obligated party determines their RVO by
applying the applicable percentage to the amount of gasoline they
produce or import, it is consistent to also exclude ethanol and other
renewable fuel blends from the calculation of the volume of gasoline
produced.
As with the RFS1 rule, Gasoline Treated as Blendstock (GTAB) will
continue to be treated as a blendstock under the RFS2 program, and thus
will not count towards a party's renewable fuel obligation. Where the
GTAB is blended with other blendstock (other than renewable fuel) to
produce gasoline, the total volume of the gasoline blend, including the
GTAB, will be included in the volume of gasoline used to determine the
renewable fuel obligation. Where GTAB is blended with renewable fuel to
produce gasoline, only the GTAB volume will be included in the volume
of gasoline used to determine the renewable fuel obligation. Where the
GTAB is blended with finished gasoline, only the GTAB volume will be
included in the volume of gasoline used to determine the renewable fuel
obligation.
2. Diesel
EISA expanded the RFS program to include transportation fuels other
than gasoline, thus both highway and nonroad diesel must be used in
calculating a party's RVO. Any party that produces or imports
petroleum-based diesel fuel that is designated as motor vehicle,
nonroad, locomotive, and marine diesel fuel (MVNRLM) (or any
subcategory of MVNRLM) will be required to include the volume of that
diesel fuel in the determination of its RVO under the RFS2 rule. Diesel
fuel includes any distillate fuel that meets the definition of MVNRLM
diesel fuel as it has already been defined in the regulations at Sec.
80.2(qqq), including any subcategories such as MV (motor vehicle diesel
fuel produced for use in highway diesel engines and vehicles), NRLM
(diesel fuel produced for use in nonroad, locomotive, and marine diesel
engines and equipment/vessels), NR (diesel fuel produced for use in
nonroad engines and equipment), and LM (diesel fuel produced for use in
locomotives and marine diesel engines and vessels).\21\ Transportation
fuels meeting
[[Page 14721]]
the definition of MVNRLM will be used to calculate the RVOs, and
refiners, blenders, or importers of MVNRLM will be treated as obligated
parties. As such, diesel fuel that is designated as heating oil, jet
fuel, or any designation other than MVNRLM or a subcategory of MVNRLM,
will not be subject to the applicable percentage standard and will not
be used to calculate the RVOs.\22\ We requested comment on the idea
that any diesel fuel not meeting these requirements, such as distillate
or residual fuel intended solely for use in ocean-going vessels, would
not be used to calculate the RVOs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ EPA's diesel fuel regulations use the term ``nonroad'' to
designate one large category of land based off-highway engines and
vehicles, recognizing that locomotive and marine engines and vessels
are also nonroad engines and vehicles under EPAct's definition of
nonroad. Except where noted, the discussion of nonroad in reference
to transportation fuel includes the entire category covered by
EPAct's definition of nonroad.
\22\ See 40 CFR 80.598(a) for the kinds of fuel types used by
refiners or importers in designating their diesel fuel.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
One commenter expressed support for including heating oil and jet
fuel into the RIN program, but not to subject these fuels to the RVO
mandate. The commenter stated that fluctuating weather conditions make
it hard to predict with any reliability the volumes of heating oil that
will be used in a given year. Another commenter stated that it supports
the extension of the RFS program to transportation fuels, including
diesel and nonroad fuels.
With respect to fuels for use in ocean-going vessels, EISA
specifies that ``transportation fuels'' do not include such fuels. We
are interpreting that ``fuels for use in ocean-going vessels'' means
residual or distillate fuels other than MVNRLM intended to be used to
power large ocean-going vessels (e.g., those vessels that are powered
by Category 3 (C3), and some Category 2 (C2), marine engines and that
operate internationally). Thus, fuel for use in ocean-going vessels, or
that an obligated party can verify as having been used in an ocean-
going vessel, will be excluded from the renewable fuel standards. Also,
in the context of the recently finalized fuel standards for C3 marine
vessels, this would mean that fuel meeting the 1,000 ppm fuel sulfur
standard would not be considered obligated volume, while all MVNRLM
diesel fuel would.
3. Other Transportation Fuels
Transportation fuels other than gasoline or MVNRLM diesel fuel
(natural gas, propane, and electricity) will not be used to calculate
the RVOs of any obligated party. We believe this is a reasonable way to
implement the obligations of 211(o)(3) because the volumes are small
and the producers cannot readily differentiate the small portion used
in the transportation sector from the large portion used in other
sectors (in fact, the producer may have no knowledge of its ultimate
use). We will reconsider this approach if and when these volumes grow.
At the same time, it is clear that these fuels can be used as
transportation fuel, and under certain circumstances, producers of such
``other transportation fuels'' may generate RINs as a producer or
importer of a renewable fuel. See Section II.D.2.a for further
discussion of other RIN-generating fuels.
G. Renewable Volume Obligations (RVOs)
Under RFS1, each obligated party was required to determine its RVO
based on the applicable percentage standard and its annual gasoline
volume. The RVO represented the volume of renewable fuel that the
obligated party was required to ensure was used in the U.S. in a given
calendar year. Obligated parties were required to meet their RVO
through the accumulation of RINs which represent the amount of
renewable fuel used as motor vehicle fuel that was sold or introduced
into commerce within the U.S. Each gallon-RIN counted as one gallon of
renewable fuel for compliance purposes.
We are maintaining this approach to compliance under the RFS2
program. However, one primary difference between RFS1 and the new RFS2
program in terms of demonstrating compliance is that each obligated
party now has four RVOs instead of one (through 2012) or two (starting
in 2013) under the RFS1 program. Also, as discussed above, RVOs are now
calculated based on production or importation of both gasoline and
diesel fuels, rather than gasoline alone.
By acquiring RINs and applying them to their RVOs, obligated
parties are deemed to have satisfied their obligation to cause the
renewable fuel represented by the RINs to be consumed as transportation
fuel in highway or nonroad vehicles or engines. Obligated parties are
not required to physically blend the renewable fuel into gasoline or
diesel fuel themselves. The accumulation of RINs will continue to be
the means through which each obligated party shows compliance with its
RVOs and thus with the renewable fuel standards.
If an obligated party acquires more RINs than it needs to meet its
RVOs, then in general it can retain the excess RINs for use in
complying with its RVOs in the following year (subject to the 20%
rollover cap discussed in Section III.D) or transfer the excess RINs to
another party. If, alternatively, an obligated party has not acquired
sufficient RINs to meet its RVOs, then under certain conditions it can
carry a deficit into the next year.
This section describes our approach to the calculation of RVOs
under RFS2 and the RINs that are valid for demonstrating compliance
with those RVOs. This includes a description of the special treatment
that must be applied to RFS1 RINs used for compliance purposes under
RFS2, since RINs generated under RFS1 regulations are not exactly the
same as those generated in under RFS2.
1. Designation of Obligated Parties
In the NPRM, we proposed to continue to designate obligated parties
under the RFS2 program as they were designated under RFS1, with the
addition of diesel fuel producers and importers. Regarding gasoline
producers and importers, we proposed that obligated parties who are
subject to the standard would be those that produce or import finished
gasoline (RFG and conventional) or unfinished gasoline that becomes
finished gasoline upon the addition of an oxygenate blended downstream
from the refinery or importer. Unfinished gasoline would include
reformulated gasoline blendstock for oxygenate blending (RBOB), and
conventional gasoline blendstock designed for downstream oxygenate
blending (CBOB) which is generally sub-octane conventional gasoline.
The volume of any other unfinished gasoline or blendstock, such as
butane, would not be included in the volume used to determine the RVO,
except where the blendstock was combined with other blendstock or
finished gasoline to produce finished gasoline, RBOB, or CBOB. Thus,
parties downstream of a refinery or importer would only be obligated
parties to the degree that they use non-renewable blendstocks to make
finished gasoline, RBOB, CBOB, or diesel fuel.
We also took comment on two alternative approaches to the
designation of obligated parties:
--Elimination of RBOB and CBOB from the list of fuels that are subject
to the standard, such that a party's RVO would be based only on the
non-renewable volume of finished gasoline or diesel that he produces or
imports, thereby moving a portion of the obligation to downstream
blenders of renewable fuels into RBOB and CBOB.
--Moving the obligations for all gasoline and diesel downstream of
refineries and importers to parties who supply finished transportation
fuels to retail outlets or to wholesale purchaser-consumer facilities.
[[Page 14722]]
These alternative approaches have the potential to more evenly align a
party's access to RINs with that party's obligations under the RFS2
program. As described more fully in the NPRM, we considered these
alternatives because of market conditions that had changed since the
RFS1 program began. For instance, obligated parties who have excess
RINs have been observed to retain rather than sell them to ensure they
have a sufficient number for the next year's compliance. This was most
likely to occur with major integrated refiners who operate gasoline
marketing operations and thus have direct access to RINs for ethanol
blended into their gasoline. Refiners whose operations are focused
primarily on producing refined products with less marketing do not have
such direct access to RINs and could potentially find it difficult to
acquire a sufficient number for compliance despite the fact that the
total nationwide volume of renewable fuel meets or exceeds the
standard. The result might be a higher price for RINs (and fuel) in the
marketplace than would be expected under a more liquid RIN market. For
similar reasons, we also took comment on possible changes to the
requirement that RINs be transferred with volume through the
distribution system as discussed more fully in Section II.H.4.
In response to the NPRM, stakeholders differed significantly on
whether EPA should implement one of these alternative approaches. For
instance, while some refiners expressed support for moving the
obligations to downstream parties such as blenders, terminals, and/or
wholesale purchaser-consumers, other refiners preferred to maintain the
current approach. Blenders and other downstream parties generally
expressed opposition to a change in the designation of obligated
parties, citing the additional burden of demonstrating compliance with
the standard especially for small businesses. They also pointed to the
need to implement new systems for determining and reporting compliance,
the short leadtime for doing so, and the fewer resources that smaller
downstream companies have to manage such work in comparison to the much
larger refiners. Finally, they pointed to the additional complexity
that would be added to the RFS program beyond that which is necessary
to carry out the renewable fuels mandate under CAA section 211(o).
When the RFS1 regulations were drafted, the obligations were placed
on the relatively small number of refiners and importers rather than on
the relatively large number of downstream blenders and terminals in
order to minimize the number of regulated parties and keep the program
simple. However, with the expanded RFS2 mandates, essentially all
downstream blenders and terminals are now regulated parties under RFS2
since essentially all gasoline will be blended with ethanol. Thus the
rationale in RFS1 for placing the obligation on just the upstream
refiners and importers is no longer valid. Nevertheless, based on the
comments we received, we do not believe that the concerns expressed
warrant a change in the designation of obligated parties for the RFS2
program at this time. We continue to believe that the market will
provide opportunities for parties who are in need of RINs to acquire
them from parties who have excess. Refiners who market considerably
less gasoline or diesel than they produce can establish contracts with
splash blenders to purchase RINs. Such refiners can also purchase
ethanol from producers directly, separate the RINs, and then sell the
ethanol without RINs to blenders. Since the RFS program is based upon
ownership of RINs rather than custody of volume, refiners need never
take custody of the ethanol in order to separate RINs from volumes that
they own. Moreover, a change in the designation of obligated parties
would result in a significant change in the number of obligated parties
and the movement of RINs, changes that could disrupt the operation of
the RFS program during the transition from RFS1 to RFS2.
We will continue to evaluate the functionality of the RIN market.
Should we determine that the RIN market is not operating as intended,
driving up prices for obligated parties and fuel prices for consumers,
we will consider revisiting this provision in future regulatory
efforts.
In the NPRM we also took comment on several other possible ways to
help ensure that obligated parties can demonstrate compliance. For
instance, one alternative approach would have left our proposed
definitions for obligated parties in place, but would have added a
regulatory requirement that any party who blends ethanol into RBOB or
CBOB must transfer the RINs associated with the ethanol to the original
producer of the RBOB or CBOB. Stakeholders generally opposed this
change, agreeing with our assessment that it would be extremely
difficult to implement given that RBOB and CBOB are often transferred
between multiple parties prior to ethanol blending. As a result, a
regulatory requirement for RIN transfers back to the original producer
would have necessitated an additional tracking requirement for RBOB and
CBOB so that the blender would know the identity of the original
producer. It would also be difficult to ensure that RINs representing
the specific category of renewable fuel blended were transferred to the
producer of the RBOB or CBOB, given the fungible nature of RINs
assigned to batches of renewable fuel. For these reasons, we have not
finalized this alternative approach.
Another alternative approach on which we took comment would have
allowed use of RINs that expire without being used for compliance by an
obligated party to be used to reduce the nationwide volume of renewable
fuel required in the following year. This alternative approach could
have helped to prevent the hoarding of RINs from driving up demand for
renewable fuel. However, it would also effectively alter the valid life
limit for RINs. Comments from stakeholders did not change our position
that such an approach is not warranted at this time, and thus we have
not finalized it.
2. Determination of RVOs Corresponding to the Four Standards
In order for an obligated party to demonstrate compliance, the
percentage standards described in Section II.E.1 which are applicable
to all obligated parties must be converted into the volumes of
renewable fuel each obligated party is required to satisfy. These
volumes of renewable fuel are the volumes for which the obligated party
is responsible under the RFS program, and are referred to here as its
RVO. Under RFS2, each obligated party will need to acquire sufficient
RINs each year to meet each of the four RVOs corresponding to the four
renewable fuel standards.
The calculation of the RVOs under RFS2 follows the same format as
the formulas in the RFS1 regulations at Sec. 80.1107(a), with one
modification. The standards for a particular compliance year must be
multiplied by the sum of the gasoline and diesel volume produced or
imported by an obligated party in that year rather than only the
gasoline volume as under the RFS1 program.\23\ To the degree that an
obligated party did not demonstrate full compliance with its RVOs for
the previous year, the shortfall will be included as a deficit
carryover in the calculation. CAA section 211(o)(5) only permits a
deficit carryover from one year to the next if the obligated party
achieves full compliance with each of its RVOs including the deficit
carryover
[[Page 14723]]
in the second year. Thus deficit carryovers cannot occur two years in
succession for any of the four individual standards. They can, however,
occur as frequently as every other year for a given obligated party for
each standard.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ As discussed above, the diesel fuel that is used to
calculate the RVO is any diesel designated as MVNRLM or a
subcategory of MVNRLM.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note that a party that produces only diesel fuel will have an
obligation for all four standards even though he will not have the
opportunity to blend ethanol into his own gasoline. Likewise, a party
that produces only gasoline will have an obligation for all four
standards even though he will not have an opportunity to blend biomass-
based diesel into his own diesel fuel.
3. RINs Eligible To Meet Each RVO
Under RFS1, all RINs had the same compliance value and thus it did
not matter what the RR or D code was for a given RIN when using that
RIN to meet the total renewable fuel standard. In contrast, under RFS2
only RINs with specified D codes can be used to meet each of the four
standards.
As described in Section I.A.1, the volume requirements in EISA are
generally nested within one another, so that any fuel that satisfies
the advanced biofuel requirement also satisfies the total renewable
fuel requirement, and fuel that meets either the cellulosic biofuel or
the biomass-based diesel requirements also satisfies the advanced
biofuel requirement. As a result, the RINs that can be used to meet the
four standards are likewise nested. Using the D codes defined in Table
II.A-1, the RFS2 RINs that can be used to meet each of the four
standards are shown in Table II.G.3-1. RFS1 RINs generated in 2010 and
identified by a D code of 1 or 2 can also be applied to these standards
using the protocol described in Section II.G.4 below.
Table II.G.3-1--RINs That Can Be Used To Meet Each Standard
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Standard Obligation Allowable D codes
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cellulosic biofuel............ RVOCB............ 3 and 7.
Biomass-based diesel.......... RVOBBD........... 4 and 7.
Advanced biofuel.............. RVOAB............ 3, 4, 5, and 7.
Renewable fuel................ RVORF............ 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The nested nature of the four standards also means that in some
cases we must allow the same RIN to be used to meet more than one
standard in the same year. Thus, for instance, a RIN with a D code of 3
can be used to meet three of the four standards, while a RIN with a D
code of 5 can be used to meet both the advanced biofuel and total
renewable fuel standards. However, a D code of 6 can only be used to
meet the renewable fuel standard. Consistent with our proposal, we are
continuing to prohibit the use of a single RIN for compliance purposes
in more than one year or by more than one party.\24\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\24\ Note that we are finalizing an exception to this general
prohibition for the specific and limited case of 2008 and 2009
biodiesel and renewable diesel RINs used to demonstrate compliance
with both the 2009 total renewable fuel standard and the 2010
biomass-based diesel standard. See Section II.E.2.a.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
4. Treatment of RFS1 RINs Under RFS2
As described in the introduction to this section, we are
implementing a number of changes to the RFS program as a result of the
requirements in EISA. These changes will go into effect on July 1, 2010
and, among other things, will affect the conditions under which RINs
are generated and their applicability to each of the four standards. As
a result, RINs generated in 2010 under these RFS2 regulations will not
be exactly the same as RINs generated under RFS1 regulations. Given the
valid RIN life that allows a RIN to be used in the year generated or
the year after, we must address circumstances in which excess 2009 RINs
are used for compliance purposes in 2010. Also, since RINs generated in
January through June of 2010 will be generated under RFS1 regulations,
we must provide a means for them to be used to meet the annual 2010
RFS2 standards. Finally, we must address deficit carryovers from 2009
to 2010, since the total renewable fuel standards in these two years
will be defined differently.
a. Use of RFS1 RINs To Meet Standards Under RFS2
In 2009 and the first three months of 2010, the RFS1 regulations
will continue to apply and thus producers will not be required to
demonstrate that their renewable fuel is made from renewable biomass as
defined by EISA, nor that their combination of fuel type, feedstock,
and process meets the GHG thresholds specified in EISA. Moreover, there
is no practical way to determine after the fact if RINs generated under
RFS1 regulations meet any of these criteria. However, we believe that
the vast majority of RFS1 RINs generated in 2009 and the first two
months of 2010 will in fact meet the RFS2 requirements. First, while
ethanol made from corn must meet a 20% GHG threshold under RFS2 if
produced by a facility that commenced construction after December 19,
2007, facilities that were already built or had commenced construction
as of December 19, 2007 are exempt from this requirement. Essentially
all ethanol produced in 2009 and the first three months of 2010 will
meet the prerequisites for this exemption. Second, it is unlikely that
renewable fuels produced in 2009 or the first three months of 2010 will
have been made from feedstocks that do not meet the new renewable
biomass definition. It is very unlikely that new land would have been
cleared or cultivated since December 19, 2007 for use in growing crops
for renewable fuel production, and thus the land use restrictions
associated with the renewable biomass definition will very likely be
met. Finally, the text of section 211(o)(5) states that a ``credit
generated under this paragraph shall be valid to show compliance for
the 12 months as of the date of generation,'' and EISA did not change
this provision and did not specify any particular transition protocol
to follow. A straightforward interpretation of this provision is to
allow RFS1 RINs generated in 2009 and early 2010 to be valid to show
compliance for the annual 2010 obligations.
The separate definitions for cellulosic biofuel and biomass-based
diesel require GHG thresholds of 60% and 50%, respectively. While we do
not have a mechanism in place to determine if these thresholds have
been met for RFS1 RINs generated in 2009 or early 2010, any shortfall
in GHG performance for this one transition period is unlikely to have a
significant impact on long-term GHG benefits of the program. Few
stakeholders commented on our proposed treatment of RFS1 RINs under
RFS2. Of those that did, most supported our proposed approach to the
use of RFS1 RINs to meet RFS2 obligations. Based on our belief that it
is critical to
[[Page 14724]]
the smooth operation of the program that excess 2009 RINs be allowed to
be used for compliance purposes in 2010, we are allowing RFS1 RINs that
were generated in 2009 or 2010 representing cellulosic biomass ethanol
to be valid for use in satisfying the 2010 cellulosic biofuel standard.
Likewise, we are allowing RFS1 RINs that were generated in 2009 or 2010
representing biodiesel and renewable diesel to be valid for use in
satisfying the 2010 biomass-based diesel standard.
Consistent with our proposal, we have used information contained in
the RR and D codes of RFS1 RINs to determine how those RINs should be
treated under RFS2. The RR code is used to identify the Equivalence
Value of each renewable fuel, and under RFS1 these Equivalence Values
are unique to specific types of renewable fuel. For instance, biodiesel
(mono alkyl ester) has an Equivalence Value of 1.5, and non-ester
renewable diesel has an Equivalence Value of 1.7, and both of these
fuels may be valid for meeting the biomass-based diesel standard under
RFS2. Likewise, RINs generated for cellulosic biomass ethanol under
RFS1 regulations must be identified with a D code of 1, and these fuels
will be valid for meeting the cellulosic biofuel standard under RFS2.
Our final treatment of RFS1 RINs for compliance under RFS2 is shown in
Table II.G.4.a-1.
Table II.G.4.a-1--Treatment of RFS1 RINs for RFS2 Compliance Purposes
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
RINs generated under RFS1 \a\ Treatment under RFS2 \b\
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Any RIN with D code of 2 and RR code of Equivalent to RFS2 RINs with D code of 4.
15 or 17.
All other RINs with D code of 2.......... Equivalent to RFS2 RINs with D code of 6.
Any RIN with D code of 1................. Equivalent to RFS2 RINs with D code of 3.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\a\ See RFS1 RIN code definitions at Sec. 80.1125.
\b\ See RFS2 RIN code definitions at Sec. 80.1425.
b. Deficit Carryovers From the RFS1 Program to RFS2
The calculation of RVOs in 2010 under the RFS2 regulations will be
somewhat different than the calculation of RVOs in 2009 under RFS1. In
particular, 2009 RVOs were based on gasoline production only, while
2010 RVOs will be based on volumes of gasoline and diesel. As a result,
2010 compliance demonstrations that include a deficit carried over from
2009 will combine obligations calculated on two different bases.
We do not believe that deficits carried over from 2009 to 2010 will
undermine the goals of the program in requiring specific volumes of
renewable fuel to be used each year. Although RVOs in 2009 and 2010
will be calculated differently, obligated parties must acquire
sufficient RINs in 2010 to cover any deficit carried over from 2009 in
addition to that portion of their 2010 obligation which is based on
their 2010 gasoline and diesel production. As a result, the 2009
nationwide volume requirement of 11.1 billion gallons of renewable fuel
will be consumed over the two year period concluding at the end of
2010. Thus, we are not implementing any special treatment for deficits
carried over from 2009 to 2010.
A deficit carried over from 2009 to 2010 will only affect a party's
total renewable fuel obligation in 2010, as the 2009 obligation is for
total renewable fuel use, not a subcategory. The RVOs for biomass-based
diesel or advanced biofuel will not be affected, as they do not have
parallel obligations in 2009 under RFS1.\25\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ There is no cellulosic biofuel standard for 2010.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
H. Separation of RINs
As we proposed in the NPRM, we are requiring the RFS1 provisions
regarding the separation of RINs from volumes of renewable fuel to be
retained for RFS2. However, the modifications in EISA required changes
to the treatment of RINs associated with nonroad renewable fuel and
renewable fuels used in heating oil and jet fuel. Our approach to the
separation of RINs by exporters must also be modified to account for
the fact that there would be four categories of renewable fuel under
RFS2.
1. Nonroad
Under RFS1, RINs associated with renewable fuels used in nonroad
vehicles and engines downstream of the renewable fuel producer were
required to be retired by the party who owned the renewable fuel at the
time of blending. This provision derived from the EPAct definition of
renewable fuel which was limited to fuel used to replace fossil fuel
used in a motor vehicle. However, EISA expands the definition of
renewable fuel, and ties it to the definition of transportation fuel
which is defined as any ``fuel for use in motor vehicles, motor vehicle
engines, nonroad vehicles, or nonroad engines (except for ocean-going
vessels).'' To implement these changes, the RFS2 program eliminates the
RFS1 RIN retirement requirement for renewable fuels used in nonroad
applications, with the exception of RINs associated with renewable
fuels used in ocean-going vessels.
Since RINs have a valid life of two years, the NPRM proposed that a
2009 RFS1 RIN that is retired because the renewable fuel associated
with it was used in nonroad vehicles or engines could be reinstated in
2010 for use in compliance with the 2010 standards. Stakeholders
supported this approach, and we are finalizing it in today's action.
2. Heating Oil and Jet Fuel
EISA defines ``additional renewable fuel'' as ``fuel that is
produced from renewable biomass and that is used to replace or reduce
the quantity of fossil fuel present in home heating oil or jet fuel.''
\26\ While we are not requiring fossil-based heating oil and jet fuel
to be included in the fuel used by a refiner or importer to calculate
their RVOs, we are allowing renewable fuels used as or in heating oil
and jet fuel to generate RINs. Similarly, RINs associated with a
renewable fuel, such as biodiesel, that is blended into heating oil
will continue to be valid for compliance purposes. See also discussion
in Section II.B.1.e.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\26\ EISA, Title II, Subtitle A--Renewable Fuel Standard,
Section 201.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
3. Exporters
Under RFS1, exporters were assigned an RVO representing the volume
of renewable fuel that was exported, and they were required to separate
all RINs that were assigned to fuel that was exported. Since there was
only one standard, there was only one possible RVO applicable to
exporters.
Under RFS2, there are four possible RVOs corresponding to the four
categories of renewable fuel (cellulosic biofuel, biomass-based diesel,
advanced biofuel, and total renewable fuel). However, given the
fungible nature of the RIN system and the fact that an
[[Page 14725]]
assigned RIN transferred with a volume of renewable fuel may not be the
same RIN that was originally generated to represent that volume, RINs
from different fuel types can accompany volumes. Thus, there may be no
way for an exporter to determine from an assigned RIN which of the four
categories applies to an exported volume. In order to determine its
RVOs, the only information available to the exporter may be the type of
renewable fuel that he is exporting.
However, if an exporter knows, or has reason to know, that the
renewable fuel that it is exporting is either cellulosic biofuel or
advanced biofuel, we are requiring the exporter to determine an RVO for
the exported fuel based upon these fuel types. For instance, if an
exporter purchases cellulosic biofuel or advanced biofuel directly from
a producer or if the fuel has been segregated from other fuels, we
would expect the exporter to know or have reason to know the type of
fuel that it is exporting. Another example of when we would expect an
exporter to know or have reason to know that the fuel that it is
exporting is cellulosic or advanced biofuel would be if the commercial
documents that accompany the purchase or sale of the renewable fuel
identify the product as cellulosic or advanced biofuel.
EPA recognizes that in many situations, exporters will not know or
have reason to know which of the four categories of renewable fuel
apply to the exported fuel. If this is the case, we are requiring
exporters to follow the approach proposed in the NPRM. Exported volumes
of biodiesel (mono alkyl esters) and renewable diesel must be used to
determine the exporter's RVO for biomass-based diesel. For all other
types of renewable fuel, the most likely category is general renewable
fuel. Thus, we are requiring that all renewable fuels be used to
determine the exporter's RVO for total renewable fuel. Our final
approach is provided at Sec. 80.1430.
In the NPRM we took comment on an alternative approach in which the
total nationwide volumes required in each year (see Table I.A.1-1)
would be used to apportion specific types of renewable fuel into each
of the four categories. For example, exported ethanol may have
originally been produced from cellulose to meet the cellulosic biofuel
requirement, from corn to meet the total renewable fuel requirement, or
may have been imported as advanced biofuel. If ethanol were exported,
we could divide the exported volume into three RVOs for cellulosic
biofuel, advanced biofuel, and total renewable fuel using the same
proportions represented by the national volume requirements for that
year. However, as described in the NPRM, we believe that this
alternative approach would have added considerable complexity to the
compliance determinations for exporters without necessarily adding more
precision. Given the expected small volumes of exported renewable fuel,
we continue to believe that this added complexity is not warranted at
this time.
As described above, exporters must separate any RINs assigned to
renewable fuel that they export. However, since RINs are fungible and
the owner of a batch of renewable fuel has the flexibility to assign
between zero and 2.5 gallon-RINs to each gallon, we have made this
flexibility explicit for exporters. Thus, an exporter can separate up
to 2.5 gallon-RINs for each gallon of renewable fuel that he exports.
While the exporter is not required to retain these separated RINs for
use in complying with his RVOs calculated on the basis of the exported
volumes, this would be the most straightforward approach and would
ensure that the exporter has sufficient RINs to comply. However, we are
aware of some exporters who sell RINs that they separate as a source of
revenue, with the intention to purchase replacement RINs on the open
RIN market later in the year to comply with their RVOs. At this time we
are not aware of such activities resulting in noncompliance, and thus
the RFS2 regulations promulgated today will continue to allow this.
However, we may revisit this issue in the future if there is evidence
that exporters are failing to comply because they are selling RINs that
they separate from exported volumes.
4. Requirement To Transfer RINs With Volume
In the NPRM, we proposed that the approach to RIN transfers
established under RFS1--that RINs generated by renewable fuel producers
and importers must be assigned to batches of renewable fuel and
transferred along with those batches--be continued under RFS2. However,
given the higher volumes required under RFS2 and the resulting
expansion in the number of regulated parties, we also took comment on
two alternative approaches to RIN transfers. Along with the alternative
approaches for designation of obligated parties as described in Section
II.G.1 above, a change to the requirement to transfer RINs with batches
had the potential to more evenly align a party's access to RINs with
that party's obligations under the RFS2 program. Nevertheless, for the
reasons described below, we have determined that it would not be
appropriate to implement these alternative approaches at this time.
In the first alternative approach, we would have removed the
restriction established under the RFS1 rule requiring that RINs be
assigned to batches of renewable fuel and transferred with those
batches. Instead, renewable fuel producers could have sold RINs (with a
K code of 2 rather than 1) separately from volumes of renewable fuel to
any party.
In the second alternative approach, producers and importers of
renewable fuels would be required to separate and transfer the RIN, but
only to an obligated party. This ``direct transfer'' approach would
require renewable fuel producers to transfer RINs with renewable fuel
for all transactions with obligated parties, and sell all other RINs
directly to obligated parties on a quarterly basis for any renewable
fuel volumes that were not sold directly to obligated parties. Any RINs
not sold in this way would be required to be offered for sale to any
obligated party through a public auction. Only renewable fuel
producers, importers, and obligated parties would be allowed to own
RINs.
Many renewable fuel producers supported the concept of allowing
them to separate the RINs from renewable fuel that they produce. They
generally argued in favor of a free market approach to RINs in which
there would be no restrictions on whom they could sell RINs to, or in
what timeframe. The direct transfer approach was unnecessary, they
argued, since the market would compel them to sell all RINs they
generated, and all RINs would eventually end up in the hands of the
obligated parties that need them. However, other renewable fuel
producers opposed any change to the requirement that RINs be assigned
to volumes of renewable and transferred with those volumes through the
distribution system. They argued that the system established under RFS1
has proven to work and it would create an unwarranted burden to require
producers to modify their IT systems for RFS2.
Marketers and distributors were generally opposed to our proposed
alternative approaches to RIN transfers. Moreover, SIGMA and NACS, as
in the RFS1 rulemaking process, recommended that RINs not be generated
by producers at all, but rather by the party that blends renewable fuel
into gasoline or diesel, or uses renewable fuel in its neat form as a
transportation fuel.
[[Page 14726]]
Obligated parties generally opposed any change to the RFS1
requirement that RINs be assigned to volumes of renewable fuel by the
producer or importer, and transferred with volumes through the
distribution system. They reiterated their concern, first raised in the
RFS1 rulemaking, that a free market approach would place them at
greater risk of market manipulation by renewable fuel producers.
Moreover, while generally expressing support for the concept of a
direct transfer approach, they also expressed doubt that the auctions
could be regulated in such a way as to ensure that RIN generators could
not withhold RINs from the market by such means as failing to
adequately advertise the time and location of an auction, by setting
the selling price too high, by specifying a minimum number of bids
before selling, by conducting auctions infrequently, by having unduly
short bidding windows, etc. These concerns were exacerbated by the
nested standards required by EISA, under which many obligated parties
have expressed concern about being able to acquire sufficient RINs for
compliance.
Given the significant challenges associated with a change to the
requirement that RINs be transferred with volume and the opposing views
among stakeholders, we are not making any change in today's final rule.
5. Neat Renewable Fuel and Renewable Fuel Blends Designated as
Transportation Fuel, Heating Oil, or Jet Fuel
Under RFS1, RINs must, with limited exceptions, be separated by an
obligated party taking ownership of the renewable fuel, or by a party
that blends renewable fuel with gasoline or diesel. In addition, a
party that designates neat renewable fuel as motor vehicle fuel may
separate RINs associated with that fuel if the fuel is in fact used in
that manner without further blending. One exception to these provisions
is that biodiesel blends in which diesel constitutes less than 20
volume percent are ineligible for RIN separation by a blender. While
EPA understands that in the vast majority of cases, biodiesel is
blended with diesel in concentrations of 80 volume percent or less,
there may be instances in which biodiesel is blended with diesel in
concentrations of more than 80 percent biodiesel, but the blender is
prohibited from separating RINs under the RFS1 regulations.
Thus, in order to account for situations in which biodiesel blends
of 81 percent or greater may be used as transportation fuel, heating
oil, or jet fuel without ever having been owned by an obligated party,
EPA proposed, and is finalizing a change to the applicability of the
RIN separation provisions for RFS2. Section 80.1429(b)(4) will allow
for separation of RINs for neat renewable fuel or blends of renewable
fuel and diesel fuel that the party designates as transportation fuel,
heating oil, or jet fuel, provided the neat renewable fuel or blend is
used in the designated form, without further blending, as
transportation fuel, heating oil, or jet fuel. Those parties that blend
renewable fuel with gasoline or diesel fuel (in a blend containing 80
percent or less biodiesel) must separate RINs pursuant to Sec.
80.1429(b)(2).
Thus, for example, if a party intends to separate RINs from a
volume of B85, the party must designate the blend for use as
transportation fuel, heating oil, or jet fuel and the blend must be
used in its designated form without further blending. The party is also
required to maintain records of this designation pursuant to Sec.
80.1454(b)(5). Finally, the party is required to comply with the
proposed PTD requirements in Sec. 80.1453(a)(11)(iv), which serve to
notify downstream parties that the volume of fuel has been designated
for use as transportation fuel, heating oil, or jet fuel, and must be
used in that designated form without further blending. Parties may
separate RINs at the time they comply with the designation and PTD
requirements, and do not need to physically track ultimate fuel use.
I. Treatment of Cellulosic Biofuel
1. Cellulosic Biofuel Standard
EISA requires that the Administrator set the cellulosic biofuel
standard each November for the next year based on the lesser of the
volume specified in the Act or the projected volume of cellulosic
biofuel production based on EIA estimates for that year. In the event
that the projected volume is less than the amount required in the Act,
EPA may also reduce the applicable volume of the total renewable fuel
and advanced biofuels requirement by the same or a lesser volume. We
will examine EIA's projected volumes and other available data including
the required production outlook reports discussed in Section II.K to
decide the appropriate standard for the following year. The outlook
reports from all renewable fuel producers will assist EPA in
determining what the cellulosic biofuel standard should be and if the
total renewable fuel and/or advanced biofuel standards should be
adjusted. For years where EPA determines that the projected volume of
cellulosic biofuels is not sufficient to meet the levels in EISA we
will consider the availability of other advanced biofuels in deciding
whether to lower the advanced biofuel standard as well.
In determining whether the advanced biofuel and/or total renewable
fuel volume requirements should also be adjusted downward in the event
that projected volumes of cellulosic biofuel fall short of the
statutorily required volumes, we believe it may be appropriate to allow
excess advanced biofuels to make up some or all of the shortfall in
cellulosic biofuel. For instance, if we determined that sufficient
biomass-based diesel was available, we could decide that the required
volume of advanced biofuel need not be lowered, or that it should be
lowered to a smaller degree than the required cellulosic biofuel
volume. Thus, the Act requires EPA to examine the total and advanced
renewable fuel standards and volumes in the event of a cellulosic
volume waiver. EPA will look at projections for each year on an
individual yearly basis to determine if the standards should be
adjusted. EPA believes that since the standards are nested and the
total and advanced renewable fuel volume mandates are met in part by
the cellulosic volume mandate, Congress gave EPA the flexibility to
lower the required total and advanced volumes, but Congress also wanted
to encourage the development of advanced renewable fuels as well and
allow in appropriate circumstances for the use of those fuels in the
event they can meet that year's required volumes that would have been
met by the cellulosic mandate.
2. EPA Cellulosic Biofuel Waiver Credits for Cellulosic Biofuel
Whenever EPA sets the cellulosic biofuel standard at a level lower
than that required in EISA, but greater than zero, EPA is required to
provide a number of cellulosic credits for sale that is no more than
the volume used to set the standard. Congress also specified the price
for such credits: Adjusted for inflation, they must be offered at the
price of the higher of 25 cents per gallon or the amount by which $3.00
per gallon exceeds the average wholesale price of a gallon of gasoline
in the United States. The inflation adjustment will be for years after
2008. The inflation adjustment will be based on the standard US
inflation measure Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (CPI-U)
for All Items
[[Page 14727]]
expenditure category as provided by the Bureau of Labor Statistics.\27\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\27\ See U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics
(BLS), Consumer Price Index Web site at: http://www.bls.gov/cpi/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Congress afforded the Agency considerable flexibility in
implementing the system of cellulosic biofuel credits. EISA states EPA;
``shall include such provisions, including limiting the credits' uses
and useful life, as the Administrator deems appropriate to assist
market liquidity and transparency, to provide appropriate certainty for
regulated entities and renewable fuel producers, and to limit any
potential misuse of cellulosic biofuel credits to reduce the use of
other renewable fuels, and for such other purposes as the Administrator
determines will help achieve the goals of this subsection.''
We have fashioned a number of limitations on the use of cellulosic
that reflect these considerations. Specifically, the credits will be
called ``Cellulosic Biofuel Waiver Credits'' (or ``waiver credits'') so
that there is no confusion with RINs or allowances used in the acid
rain program. Such waiver credits will only be available for the
current compliance year for which we have waived some portion of the
cellulosic biofuel standard, they will only be available to obligated
parties, and they will be nontransferable and nonrefundable. Further,
obligated parties may only purchase waiver credits up to the level of
their cellulosic biofuel RVO less the number of cellulosic biofuel RINs
that they own. A company owning cellulosic biofuel RINs and cellulosic
waiver credits may use both types of credits if desired to meet their
RVOs, but unlike RINs obligated parties will not be able to carry
waiver credits over to the next calendar year. Obligated parties may
not use waiver credits to meet a prior year deficit obligation. These
restrictions help ensure that waiver credits are not overutilized at
the expense of actual renewable volume.
In the NPRM, EPA proposed that the credits could be usable for the
advanced and total renewable standards similarly to cellulosic biofuel
RINs. Several commenters stated this provision could displace advanced
and total renewable fuel that was actually produced which would be
against the intent of the Act, and that unlike RINs a company should
only be permitted to use waiver credits to meet its cellulosic biofuel
obligation. We agree, and are limiting the use of waiver credits for
compliance with only a company's cellulosic biofuel RVO.
In the event the total volume of conventional gasoline and diesel
fuel produced or imported in the country exceeds the projections used
to set the standard, companies will still be able to purchase waiver
credits up to their cellulosic volume obligation. When setting a
reduced cellulosic biofuel standard EPA makes a determination that the
cellulosic volume specified in EISA will not be met and that
determination is not based on how much nonrenewable motor fuel will be
produced. EPA sets the standard based on the volumes in the Act and a
projection of gasoline production to ensure the obligation is broken up
most equitably. EPA believes that Congress wanted all obligated parties
to have equal access to the waiver credits in the event of the waiver
and did not want obligated parties to incur a deficit due to the timing
of when they purchased waiver credits.
Cellulosic Biofuel Waiver Credits, in the event of a waiver, will
be offered in a generic format rather than a serialized format, like
RINs. Waiver credits can be purchased using procedures defined by the
EPA, and at the time that an obligated party submits its annual
compliance demonstration to the EPA and establishes that it owns
insufficient cellulosic biofuel RINs to meet its cellulosic biofuel
RVO. EPA will define these procedures with the U.S. Treasury before the
end of the first annual compliance period. EPA will publish these
procedures with the obligated party annual compliance report template.
EPA will provide the forms necessary to purchase the credits. EPA
intends to provide options for obligated parties to use Pay.Gov or if
desired to mail payment to the U.S. Treasury.
The wholesale price of gasoline used by EPA in setting the price of
the waiver credits will be based on the average monthly bulk (refinery
gate) price of gasoline using data from the most recent twelve months
of data from EIA available to EPA at the time it develops the
cellulosic biofuel standard.\28\ EPA will use refinery gate price, U.S.
Total Gasoline Bulk Sales (Price) by Refiners from EIA in calculating
the average, since it is the price most reflective of what most
obligated parties are selling their fuel. EPA will use the most recent
twelve months of data provided by EIA to develop an average price on
actual volumes produced in the year prior to the compliance year. In
order to provide regulatory certainty, we will set the waiver credits
price for the following year each November when and if we set a
cellulosic biofuel standard for the following year that is based on
achieving a lower volume of cellulosic biofuel use than is specified in
EISA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ More information on wholesale gasoline prices can be found
on the Department of Energy's (DOE), Energy Information
Administration's (EIA) Web site at: http://tonto.eia.doe.gov/dnav/pet/hist/LeafHandler.ashx?n=PET&s=A103B00002&f=M.
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For the 2010 compliance period, since the cellulosic standard is
lower than the level otherwise required by EISA, we are also making
cellulosic waiver credits available to obligated parties for end-of-
year compliance should they need them at a price of $1.56 per gallon-
RIN.'' The price for the 2011 compliance period, if necessary will be
set when we announce the 2011 cellulosic biofuel standard.
3. Application of Cellulosic Biofuel Waiver Credits
While the credit provisions of section 202(e) of EISA ensure that
there is a predictable upper limit to the price that cellulosic biofuel
producers can charge for a gallon of cellulosic biofuel and its
assigned RIN, there may be circumstances in which this provision has
other unintended consequences. This could occur in situations where the
cost of total renewable fuel RINs exceeds the cost of the cellulosic
waiver credits. To prevent this, we sought comment on and are
finalizing an additional restriction: An obligated party may only
purchase waiver credits from the EPA to the degree that it establishes
it owns insufficient cellulosic biofuel RINs to meet its cellulosic
biofuel RVO. This approach forces obligated parties to apply all their
cellulosic biofuel RINs to their cellulosic biofuel RVO before applying
any waiver credits to their cellulosic biofuel RVO.
Even with this restriction the approach in the NPRM might not have
operated as intended. For instance, if the combination of cellulosic
biofuel volume price and RIN price were to become low compared to that
for general renewable fuel, a small number of obligated parties could
have purchased more cellulosic biofuel than they need to meet their
cellulosic biofuel RVOs and could have used the additional cellulosic
biofuel RINs to meet their advanced biofuel and total renewable fuel
RVOs. Other obligated parties would then have had no access to
cellulosic biofuel volume nor cellulosic biofuel RINs, and would have
been forced to purchase waiver credits from the EPA. This situation
would have had the net effect of waiver credits replacing advanced
biofuels and/or general renewable fuel rather than cellulosic biofuel.
Based on comments received on the NPRM, EPA is placing the additional
restriction of only allowing the waiver credits to count
[[Page 14728]]
towards the cellulosic biofuel standard and not the advanced or
renewable fuel standards.
Moreover, under certain conditions it may be possible for the
market price of general renewable fuel RINs to be significantly higher
than the market price of cellulosic biofuel RINs, as the latter is
limited in the market by the price of EPA-generated waiver credits
according to the statutory formula described in Section II.I.2 above.
Under some conditions, this could result in a competitive disadvantage
for cellulosic biofuel in comparison to corn ethanol, for example. For
instance, if gasoline prices at the pump are significantly higher than
ethanol production costs, while at the same time corn-ethanol
production costs are lower than cellulosic ethanol production costs,
profit margins for corn-ethanol producers will be larger than for
cellulosic ethanol producers. Under these conditions, while obligated
parties may still purchase cellulosic ethanol volume and its associated
RINs rather than waiver credits, cellulosic ethanol producers will
realize lower profits than corn-ethanol producers due to the upper
limit placed on the price of cellulosic biofuel RINs through the
pricing formula for waiver credits. For a newly forming and growing
cellulosic biofuel industry, this competitive disadvantage could make
it more difficult for investors to secure funding for new projects,
threatening the ability of the industry to reach the statutorily
mandated volumes.
Finally, in the NPRM we sought comment on a ``dual RIN'' approach
to cellulosic biofuel. In this approach, both cellulosic biofuel RINs
(with a D code of 3) and waiver credits would have only been applied to
an obligated party's cellulosic biofuel RVO, but producers of
cellulosic biofuel would also generate an additional RIN representing
advanced biofuel (with a D code of 5). The producer would have only
been required to transfer the advanced biofuel RIN with a batch of
cellulosic biofuel, and could retain the cellulosic biofuel RIN for
separate sale to any party.\29\ The cellulosic biofuel and its attached
advanced biofuel RIN would then have competed directly with other
advanced biofuel and its attached advanced biofuel RIN, while the
separate cellulosic biofuel RIN would have an independent market value
that would have been effectively limited by the pricing formula for
waiver credits as described in Section II.I.2. However, this approach
would have been a more significant deviation from the RIN generation
and transfer program structure that was developed cooperatively with
stakeholders during RFS1. It would have provided cellulosic biofuel
producers with significantly more control over the sale and price of
cellulosic biofuel RINs, which was one of the primary concerns of
obligated parties during the development of RFS1. Therefore, EPA is
treating the transfer of cellulosic RINs in the same manner as the
other required volumes.
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\29\ The cellulosic biofuel RIN would be a separated RIN with a
K code of 2 immediately upon generation.
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J. Changes to Recordkeeping and Reporting Requirements
1. Recordkeeping
Recordkeeping, including product transfer documents (PTDs), will
support the enforcement of the use of RINs for compliance purposes.
Parties are afforded significant freedom with regard to the form that
PTDs take. Product codes may be used as long as they are understood by
all parties, but they may not be used for transfers to truck carriers
or to retailers or wholesale purchaser-consumers. Parties must keep
copies of all PTDs they generate and receive, as well as copies of all
reports submitted to EPA and all records related to the sale, purchase,
brokering or transfer or RINs, for five (5) years. Parties must keep
copies of records that relate to program flexibilities, such as small
business-oriented provisions. Upon request, parties are responsible for
providing their records to the Administrator or the Administrator's
authorized representative. We reserve the right to request to receive
documents in a format that we can read and use.
In Section III.A. of this preamble, we describe an EPA-Moderated
Transaction System (EMTS) for RINs. The new system allows for ``real-
time'' recording of transactions involving RINs.
2. Reporting
Producers and importers who generate or take ownership of RINs
shall submit RIN Transaction Reports \30\ and/or RIN Generation Reports
quarterly. Renewable fuel exporters and obligated parties shall submit
their RIN Transaction Reports quarterly, and RIN owners shall submit
their RIN Transaction Reports quarterly. EMTS will be used by all
parties to record ``real time'' generation of RINs and transactions
involving RINs starting July 1, 2010. ``Real time'' means recordation
within five (5) business days of generation or any transaction
involving a RIN.
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\30\ For ease of reference, the current RFS (i.e. RFS1) form may
be viewed at the EPA Fuels Reporting Web site at the following URL:
http://www.epa.gov/otaq/regs/fuels/rfsforms.htm (accessed November
16, 2009). These forms will be updated for RFS2.
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Quarterly reports are to be submitted on the following schedule.
Quarterly reports include RIN Activity Reports and, with EMTS,
simplified reporting and certification of the RIN Generation and RIN
Transaction Reports.
Table II.J-1--Quarterly Reporting Schedule
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Quarter covered by report Due date for report
------------------------------------------------------------------------
January-March............................ May 31.
April-June............................... August 31.
July-September........................... November 30.
October-December......................... February 28.
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Annual reports (covering January through December) would continue
to be due on February 28. The only annual report is the Obligated Party
Annual Compliance Report.\31\
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\31\ For RFS1, this form is numbered RFS0300.
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Simplified, secure reporting is currently available through our
Central Data Exchange (CDX). CDX permits us to accept reports that are
electronically signed and certified by the submitter in a secure and
robustly encrypted fashion. Using CDX eliminates the need for wet ink
signatures and reduces the reporting burden on regulated parties. EMTS
will also make use of the CDX environment.
Due to the criteria that renewable fuel producers and importers
must meet in order to generate RINs under RFS2, and due to the fact
that renewable fuel producers and importers must have documentation
about whether their feedstock(s) meets the definition of ``renewable
biomass,'' we proposed several changes to the RIN Generation
Report.\32\ We proposed to make the report a more general report on
renewable fuel production in order to capture information on all
batches of renewable fuel, whether or not RINs are generated for them.
This final rule adopts the proposed approach. All renewable fuel
producers and importers above 10,000 gallons per year must report to
EPA on each batch of their fuel and indicate whether or not RINs are
generated for the batch. If RINs are generated, the producer or
importer is required to certify that his feedstock meets the definition
of ``renewable biomass.'' If RINs are not generated, the producer or
importer must state the reason for not generating RINs, such as they
have documentation that states that
[[Page 14729]]
their feedstock did not meet the definition of ``renewable biomass,''
or the fuel pathway used to produce the fuel was such that the fuel did
not qualify to generate RINs as a renewable fuel. For each batch of
renewable fuel produced, we require information about the types and
volumes of feedstock used and the types and volumes of co-products
produced, as well as information about the process or processes used.
This information is necessary to confirm that the producer or importer
assigned the appropriate D code to their fuel and that the D code was
consistent with their registration information. In this final rule, we
adopt the approach set forth in the notice of proposed rulemaking.
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\32\ For RFS1, this form is numbered RFS0400.
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In addition, we proposed two changes for the RIN Transaction
Report.\33\ First, for reports of RINs assigned to a volume of
renewable fuel, the volume of renewable fuel must be reported. Second,
RIN price information must be submitted for transactions involving both
separated RINs and RINs assigned to a renewable volume. This
information was not collected under RFS1, but because we believe this
information has great programmatic value to EPA, we proposed to collect
it for RFS2. As we explained in the proposed rule, price information
may help us to anticipate and appropriately react to market disruptions
and other compliance challenges, will be beneficial when setting future
renewable standards, and will provide additional insight into the
market when assessing potential waivers. Our incomplete knowledge
regarding RIN pricing for RFS1 adversely affected our ability to assess
the general health and direction of the market and overall liquidity of
RINs. Because we believe the inclusion of price information in reports
will be beneficial to both EPA and to regulated parties, this final
rule includes that information element in reports, as well as
incorporating it as part of the ``real time'' transactional information
collected via EMTS.
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\33\ For RFS1, this form is numbered RFS0200.
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3. Additional Requirements for Producers of Renewable Natural Gas,
Electricity, and Propane
In addition to the general reporting requirement listed above, we
are requiring an additional item of reporting for producers of
renewable natural gas, electricity, and propane who choose to generate
and assign RINs. While producers of renewable natural gas, electricity,
and propane who generate and assign RINs are responsible for filing the
same reports as other producers of RIN-generating renewable fuels, we
are requiring that additional reporting for these producers support the
actual use of their products in the transportation sector. We believe
that one simple way to achieve this may be to add a requirement that
producers of renewable natural gas, electricity, and propane add the
name of the purchaser (e.g., the name of the wholesale purchaser-
consumer (WPC) or fleet) to their RIN generation reports and then
maintain appropriate records that further identify the purchaser and
the details of the transaction. We are not requiring that a purchaser
who is either a WPC or an end user would have to register under this
scenario, unless that party engages in other activities requiring
registration under this program.
4. Attest Engagements
The purpose of an attest engagement is to receive third party
verification of information reported to EPA. An attest engagement,
which is similar to a financial audit, is conducted by a Certified
Public Accountant (CPA) or Certified Independent Auditor (CIA)
following agreed-upon procedures. We have found the information in
attest engagements submitted under RFS1 to be extremely valuable as a
compliance monitoring tool. The approach adopted in this final rule is
identical to the approach adopted under the RFS1 program,\34\ although
the universe of obligated parties and renewable fuels producers is
broader under this final rule for RFS2.
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\34\ See ``Regulation of Fuel and Fuel Additives: Renewable Fuel
Standard Program,'' 72 FR 23900, 23949-23950 (May 1, 2007) for a
detailed discussion of attest engagement requirements under RFS1.
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As with the RFS1 program, an attest engagement must be conducted by
an individual who is a Certified Public Accountant (CPA) or Certified
Internal Auditor (CIA), who is independent of the party whose records
are being reviewed, and who will follow agreed-upon procedures to
determine whether underlying records, reported items, and transactions
agree. The CPA or CIA will generate a report as to their findings.
We have received numerous questions and comments related to how
attest engagements apply to foreign companies and whether or not a
foreign accountant may perform the required agreed-upon procedures. EPA
will accept an attest engagement performed by a foreign accountant who
holds an equivalent credential to an American CPA or CIA. A written
explanation as to the foreign accountant's qualifications and the
equivalency of the credential must accompany the attest engagement.
Producers of renewable fuels, obligated parties, exporters, and any
party who owns RINs must arrange for an annual attest engagement. The
attest engagement report for any given year must be submitted to EPA by
no later than May 31 of the following year. Section 80.1464 of the
regulations specifies the attest engagement procedures to be followed.
K. Production Outlook Reports
Under this program we are requiring the submission, starting in
2010, of annual production outlook reports from all domestic renewable
fuel producers, foreign renewable fuel producers who register to
generate RINs, and importers of renewable fuels. These production
outlook reports will be similar in nature to the pre-compliance reports
required under the Highway and Nonroad Diesel programs. These reports
will contain information about existing and planned production
capacity, long-range plans, and feedstocks and production processes to
be used at each production facility. For expanded production capacity
that is planned or underway at each existing facility, or new
production facilities that are planned or underway, the progress
reports will require information on: (1) Strategic planning; (2)
Planning and front-end engineering; (3) Detailed engineering and
permitting; (4) Procurement and construction; (5) Commissioning and
startup; (6) Projected volumes; (7) Contracts currently in place
(feedstocks, sales, delivery, etc.); and (8) Whether or not feedstocks
have been purchased. The first five project phases are described in
EPA's June 2002 Highway Diesel Progress Review report (EPA document
number EPA420-R-02-016, located at: www.epa.gov/otaq/regs/hd2007/420r02016.pdf). In the proposed rule, we asked for comment on the first
five project phases, and whether or not they were appropriate for
renewable fuels production. We also proposed additional phases in order
to provide better specificity for ascertaining industry status. EPA
plans to use this information in order to provide annual summary
reports regarding such planned capacity.
The full list of requirements for the production outlook reports is
provided in the regulations at Sec. 80.1449. The information submitted
in the reports will be used to evaluate the progress that the industry
is making towards the renewable fuels volume goals mandated by EISA.
They will help EPA set the annual cellulosic biofuel standard and
consider whether waivers would be
[[Page 14730]]
appropriate with respect to the advanced biofuel, biomass-based diesel,
and total renewable fuel standards (see Section II.I of this preamble
for more discussion on this). Production outlook reports will be due
annually by March 31 (except that for the year 2010, the report will be
due September 1) and each annual report must provide projected
information, including any updated information from the previous year's
report.
As mentioned in the preamble to the proposed rule, EPA currently
receives data on projected flexible-fuel vehicle (FFV) sales and
conversions from vehicle manufacturers. These are helpful in providing
EPA with information regarding the potential market for renewable
fuels. We requested comment on whether we should require the annual
submission of data to facilitate our evaluation of the ability of the
distribution system to deliver the projected volumes of biofuels to
petroleum terminals that are needed to meet the RFS2 standards, the
extent to which such information is already publicly available or can
be purchased from a proprietary source, and the extent to which such
publicly available or purchasable data would be sufficient for EPA to
make its determination. We further requested comment on the parties
that should be required to report to EPA, and data requirements. We
believe that publicly available information on E15, E85, and other
refueling facilities is sufficient for us to make a determination about
the adequacy of such facilities to support the projected volumes that
would be used to satisfy the RFS2 standards. Therefore, we are not
finalizing such a requirement.
While we understand that the types of projections we request in the
Outlook Reports could be somewhat speculative in nature, we believe
that the projections will provide us with the most reliable information
possible to inform the annual RFS standards and waiver considerations.
Further, we believe this information will be more useful to us than
other public information that is released in other contexts (e.g.,
announcements for marketing purposes). As mentioned above in Section
II.I, we believe that we can use this information to supplement other
available information (such as volume projections from EIA) to help set
the standard for the following year. Specifically, it will provide more
accurate information for setting the cellulosic biofuel and biomass-
based diesel standards, and any adjustments to the advanced biofuel and
total renewable fuel standards.
We received comments that both support and oppose the Production
Outlook Reports, or some element of them. One commenter stated that EPA
provided no reasonable explanation to require the information being
requested for the reports; the commenter further stated that such
information is not needed to assist parties to come into compliance.
Another commenter stated that the renewable fuels industry cannot
confidently project what will happen in 2010, or even 2020, because
there are too many unknowns, no previous history of renewable fuels
mandates, and no sense of continued tax rebate. The commenter suggested
that until the industry operates for a few years under the RFS2 carve-
outs and the issues on the tax rebates for renewables are resolved, the
industry cannot develop a meaningful outlook forecast. The commenter
further suggested that EPA instead hire a consultant who can look at
the big picture and provide a more meaningful evaluation than could the
individual members of the biofuels industry. However, as discussed
above, while these reports will have their limitations, we believe they
will provide the best and most up to date information available for us
to use in setting the standards and considering any waiver requests. We
will of course also look to other publicly available information, and
may consider using contractors to help out in this regard, but it
cannot replace the need for the production outlook report data.
A commenter noted that this provision is similar to reports
required under the diesel program. The commenter further stated that if
the required information can be captured by EMTS, the commenter fully
supports this requirement. However, the commenter stated that it is
opposed to some of the required elements of the reports for planned
expanded or new production (strategic planning, planning and front-end
engineering, detailed engineering and permitting, procurement and
construction, and commissioning and start-up); these are an aspect of
financial planning that the commenter believes EPA has no jurisdiction
over and cannot derive basis from EISA in any form regardless of
interpretation. As explained above, this information will be used by
EPA to inform us for setting the standards on an annual basis and in
responding to any waiver petitions. It will not be used to assess
compliance with the program. The other provisions for registration,
recordkeeping and reporting serve that purpose.
Another commenter stated that the reports should be required, but
that EPA should not rely too heavily upon the data (particularly for
new biofuel technologies). Some commenters noted that they believe that
requiring Production Outlook Reports is duplicative in nature and/or a
burden to the industry. These commenters also believe that EPA already
receives such information through the reporting that currently exists,
and that EPA could also obtain this information from DOE's Energy
Information Administration (EIA) and the National Biodiesel Board
(NBB). Other commenters expressed concern over reporting such
confidential and strategic information (even as confidential business
information (CBI)), and that information out to 2022 seems excessive
and useless; and that the reports should be limited to just domestic
and foreign producers of renewable fuels but not importers (as they
tend to import renewable fuels based on variable economic conditions
and will not likely have the ability to reliably predict their future
import volumes). The information that currently exists from other
sources is current and historical information. For the purposes of
setting future standards, we need to have information on future plans
and projections. We understand that reality will always be different
from the projections, but they will still give us the best possible
source of information. Furthermore, by having projections five years
out into the future, and then obtaining new reports every year, we will
be able to assess the trends in the data and reports to better utilize
them over time.
Some commenters have expressed concern that the information
required for Production Outlook Reports is not needed, won't provide
useful information because it is speculative, or asks for information
that could be sensitive/confidential. However, we continue to believe
that such information is essential to our annual cellulosic biofuel
standard setting, and consideration of whether waivers should be
provided for other standards. All information submitted to EPA will be
treated as confidential business information (CBI), and if used by EPA
in a regulatory context will only be reported out in very general
terms. As with our Diesel Pre-compliance Reports, we fully expect that
the information will be somewhat speculative in the early reports, and
we will weight it accordingly. As the program progresses, however,
information submitted for the reports will continue to improve. We
believe that any information, whether speculative or concrete, will be
helpful for the purposes described above. Thus
[[Page 14731]]
we are finalizing Production Outlook Reports, and the required elements
at Sec. 80.1449.
L. What Acts Are Prohibited and Who Is Liable for Violations?
The prohibition and liability provisions under this rule are
similar to those of the RFS1 program and other fuels programs in 40 CFR
part 80. The rule identifies certain prohibited acts, such as a failure
to acquire sufficient RINs to meet a party's RVOs, producing or
importing a renewable fuel that is not assigned a proper RIN category
(or D Code), improperly assigning RINs to renewable fuel that was not
produced with renewable biomass, failing to assign RINs to qualifying
fuel, or creating or transferring invalid RINs. Any person subject to a
prohibition is liable for violating that prohibition. Thus, for
example, an obligated party is liable if the party failed to acquire
sufficient RINs to meet its RVO. A party who produces or imports
renewable fuels is liable for a failure to assign proper RINs to
qualifying batches of renewable fuel produced or imported. Any party,
including an obligated party, is liable for transferring a RIN that was
not properly identified.
In addition, any person who is subject to an affirmative
requirement under this program is liable for a failure to comply with
the requirement. For example, an obligated party is liable for a
failure to comply with the annual compliance reporting requirements. A
renewable fuel producer or importer is liable for a failure to comply
with the applicable batch reporting requirements. Any party subject to
recordkeeping or product transfer document (PTD) requirements is liable
for a failure to comply with these requirements. Like other EPA fuels
programs, this rule provides that a party who causes another party to
violate a prohibition or fail to comply with a requirement may also be
found liable for the violation.
EPAct amended the penalty and injunction provisions in section
211(d) of the Clean Air Act to apply to violations of the renewable
fuels requirements in section 211(o). Accordingly, any person who
violates any prohibition or requirement of this rule is subject to
civil penalties of up to $37,500 per day and per each individual
violation, plus the amount of any economic benefit or savings resulting
from each violation. Under this rule, a failure to acquire sufficient
RINs to meet a party's renewable fuels obligation constitutes a
separate day of violation for each day the violation occurred during
the annual averaging period.
As discussed above, the regulations prohibit any party from
creating or transferring invalid RINs. These invalid RIN provisions
apply regardless of the good faith belief of a party that the RINs are
valid. These enforcement provisions are necessary to ensure the RFS2
program goals are not compromised by illegal conduct in the creation
and transfer of RINs.
As in other motor vehicle fuel credit programs, the regulations
address the consequences if an obligated party is found to have used
invalid RINs to demonstrate compliance with its RVO. In this situation,
the obligated party that used the invalid RINs will be required to
deduct any invalid RINs from its compliance calculations. An obligated
party is liable for violating the standard if the remaining number of
valid RINs was insufficient to meet its RVO, and the obligated party
might be subject to monetary penalties if it used invalid RINs in its
compliance demonstration. In determining what penalty is appropriate,
if any, we would consider a number of factors, including whether the
obligated party did in fact procure sufficient valid RINs to cover the
deficit created by the invalid RINs, and whether the purchaser was
indeed a good faith purchaser based on an investigation of the RIN
transfer. A penalty might include both the economic benefit of using
invalid RINs and/or a gravity component.
Although an obligated party is liable under our proposed program
for a violation if it used invalid RINs for compliance purposes, we
would normally look first to the generator or seller of the invalid
RINs both for payment of penalty and to procure sufficient valid RINs
to offset the invalid RINs. However, if, for example, that party was
out of business, then attention would turn to the obligated party who
would have to obtain sufficient valid RINs to offset the invalid RINs.
III. Other Program Changes
In addition to the regulatory changes we are finalizing today in
response to comments received on the proposed rule and EISA (which are
designed to implement the provisions of RFS2), there are a number of
other changes to the RFS program that we are making. We believe that
these changes will increase flexibility, simplify compliance, or
address RIN transfer issues that have arisen since the start of the
RFS1 program. Throughout the rulemaking process, we also investigated
impacts on small businesses and we are finalizing provisions to address
the impacts of the program on them.
A. The EPA Moderated Transaction System (EMTS)
The EPA Moderated Transaction System (EMTS) emerged as a result of
our experiences with and lessons learned from implementing RFS1.
Recognizing that the addition of significant volumes of renewable fuels
and expansion of renewable fuel categories were adding complexity to an
already stressed system, EMTS was introduced as a new approach for
managing RINs in our NPRM. We received broad acceptance of the EMTS
concept in the public comments as well as support for its expeditious
implementation. This section describes the need for EMTS,
implementation of EMTS, and an explanation of how EMTS will work. By
implementing EMTS, we believe that we will be able to greatly reduce
RIN-related errors while efficiently and accurately managing the
universe of RINs. EMTS will save considerable time and resources for
both industry and EPA. This is most evident considering that the system
virtually eliminates multiple sources of administrative errors,
resulting in a reduction of costs and effort expended to correct and
regenerate product transfer documents, documentation and recordkeeping,
and resubmitting reports to EPA. Use of EMTS will result in fewer
report resubmissions and easier reporting for industry, while leaving
fewer reports to be processed by EPA. Industry will spend less time and
effort validating the RINs they procure with greater assurance and
confidence in the RIN market. EPA will spend less time tracking down
invalid RINs and working with regulated parties on complex remedial
actions. This is possible because EMTS removes management of the 38-
digit RIN from the hands of the reporting community. At the same time,
EPA and the reporting community will be working with a standardized
system, reducing stresses and development costs on IT systems.
We received comments suggesting that EPA remove the attest
engagement requirements and certain recordkeeping requirements due to
the use of EMTS. While we believe that EMTS will simplify and reduce
burdens on the regulated community, it is important to point out that
EMTS is strictly a RIN tracking and managing tool designed to
facilitate reporting under the Renewable Fuel Standard program. Product
transfer documents are the commercial documents used to memorialize
transactions of RINs between a buyer and a seller in the market. The
EMTS will rely on references to these
[[Page 14732]]
documents, which can take many forms, but it is not capable of
replacing those documents. Attest engagements are used to verify that
the records required to be kept by regulated parties, including
information retained by a regulated party as well as information
reported to EPA such as laboratory test results, contracts between
renewable fuel/RIN buyers and sellers, feedstock documentation, etc. is
correctly maintained or reported. The information reported via EMTS is
but a subset of the information required to be maintained in a
regulated party's records, and both PTDs and attest engagements are
necessary to ensure that the information collected and tracked in EMTS
concurs with actual events.
1. Need for the EPA Moderated Transaction System
In implementing RFS1, we found that the 38-digit standardized RINs
proved to be confusing to many parties in the distribution chain.
Parties made various errors in generating and using RINs. For example,
parties transposed digits within the RIN and incorrectly referenced
volume numbering. Also, parties created alphanumeric RINs, despite the
fact that RINs were supposed to consist of all numbers.
Once an error is made within a RIN, the error propagates throughout
the distribution system. Correcting an error can require significant
time and resources and usually involves many steps. Not only must
reports to EPA be corrected, underlying records and reports reflecting
RIN transactions must also be located and corrected to reflect
discovery of an error. Because reporting related to RIN transactions
under RFS1 was only on a quarterly basis, a RIN error could exist for
several months before being discovered.
Incorrect RINs are invalid RINs. If parties in the distribution
system cannot track down and correct errors in a timely manner, then
all downstream parties that traded the invalid RIN are in violation.
Because RINs are the basic unit of compliance for the RFS program, it
is important that parties have confidence when generating and using
them.
All parties in the RFS1 and the RFS2 regulated community are
required to use RINs. Under RFS2, we foresee that regulated party
community will substantially expand. Newer regulated parties of an
already complex system necessitate EMTS. These parties include
renewable fuel producers and importers, obligated parties, exporters,
and other RIN owners; (typically marketers of renewable fuels and
blenders). Under RFS1, all RINs were used to comply with a single
standard. With RFS2, there are four standards. RINs must be generated
to identify one of the fuel categories: cellulosic biofuel, cellulosic
diesel, biomass-based diesel, advanced biofuel, and renewable fuels
(e.g., corn ethanol). (For a more detailed discussion of RINs, see
Section II.A of this preamble.) The different types of RINs will be
managed in the EMTS.
2. Implementation of the EPA Moderated Transaction System
We proposed that EMTS would be an opt-in for the calendar year 2010
and mandatory for calendar year 2011. We received many comments
strongly supporting EMTS implementation with the start of the RFS2
program to ensure confidence and simplicity in an increasingly complex
program. We also received comments that EMTS implementation with RFS2
is necessary so industry would not have to create a new system to
handle RFS2 RINs for 2010 and then move to EMTS for 2011 while still
handling RFS1 RINs. Potentially, three RIN transaction systems would
exist during transition from RFS1 to RFS2 if EMTS could not be
implemented with the start of the RFS2 program. EPA agrees that this
three system issue would be an undue burden to industry as it would
require industry to create two systems within a 12 month period. EMTS
development started with the introduction of the NPRM, and has been in
beta testing since early November with a select group of different
industry stakeholders. Industry feedback has been overwhelmingly strong
for the implementation of EMTS with the start of RFS2. With this final
rule, EPA decided that EMTS will start on the same date when RFS2 RINs
are required to be generated. In addition, to ensure that parties will
have enough time to incorporate RFS2 and EMTS requirements into private
RIN tracking systems, the generation of RFS2 RINs will begin on July 1,
2010. Therefore, all RFS regulated parties are required to use EMTS
starting July 1, 2010.
RIN transactions are required to be verified and certified on a
quarterly basis. EMTS will provide summaries for parties to verify,
report, and certify transactions to EPA through the fuels reporting
system, DCFuels. Additional information may be required to be added to
the EMTS provided summary. This additional certification step allows
parties to verification that the information sent to EMTS is accurate.
However, parties may choose to review their data by checking their EMTS
account at anytime.
With EMTS, RIN transactions are required to be verified and
certified on a quarterly basis. EMTS will provide summaries for parties
to verify, report, and certify transactions to EPA through the fuels
reporting system, DCFuels. Additional information may be required to be
added to the EMTS provided report. This additional certification step
allows parties to verify that the information sent to EMTS is accurate.
However, parties may choose to review their data by checking their EMTS
account at any time.
3. How EMTS Will Work
EMTS will be a closed, EPA-moderated system that provides a
mechanism for screening RINs and a structured environment for
conducting RIN transactions. ``Screening'' of RINs means that parties
can have greater confidence that the RINs they handle are genuine.
Although screening cannot remove all human error, we believe it can
remove most of it.
We received comments opposing the 3 day time window for reporting
transactions to the EMTS. One commenter requested 7 days from the event
for sellers to report a transaction and 7 days after that for the buyer
to accept the transaction. In order for this to be a ``real time''
system, we must require that the information comes in a timely manner.
One commenter requested 10 days from the event to send information to
EMTS. EPA has concluded that five days, or a business week, is an
appropriate amount of time for both parties to receive or provide
necessary documentation in order to interact with EMTS accurately and
timely. ``Real time'' will be defined as within five (5) business days
of a reportable event (e.g., generation and assignment of RINs,
transfer of RINs).
Parties who use EMTS must first register with EPA in accordance
with the RFS2 registration program described in Section II.C of this
preamble. Parties will also have to create an account (i.e., register)
via EPA's Central Data Exchange (CDX), as users will access EMTS via
CDX. CDX is a secure and central electronic portal through which
parties may submit compliance reports. Parties must establish an
account with EMTS by July 1, 2010 or 60 days prior to engaging in any
transaction involving RINs, whichever is later. Once registration
occurs, individual accounts will be established within EMTS and the
system will enable a party to submit transactions based on their
registration information.
In EMTS, the screening and assignment of RINs will be made at the
logical point, i.e., the point when RINs
[[Page 14733]]
are generated through production or importation of renewable fuel. A
renewable producer will electronically submit, in ``real time,'' a
volume of renewable fuel produced or imported, as well as a number of
the RINs generated and assigned. EMTS will automatically screen each
batch and either reject the information or allow RINs created in the
RIN generator's account as one of the five types of RINs.
We received comments supporting the RFS1 approach that allows
producers and importers to generate RINs at the renewable fuel point of
sale. EPA realizes that this is an industry practice and this
flexibility will still be allowed for RIN generators, but only if
applied consistently.
After RINs have entered the system, parties may then trade them
based on agreements outside of EMTS. One major advantage of EMTS, over
the RFS1 system, is that the system will simplify trading by allowing
RINs to be traded generically. Only some specifying information will be
needed to trade RINs, such as RIN quantity, fuel type, RIN assignment,
RIN year, RIN price or price per gallon. The unique identification of
the RIN will exist within EMTS, but parties engaging in RIN
transactions will no longer have to worry about incorrectly recording
or using 38-digit RIN numbers. The actual items of transactional
information covered under RFS2 are very similar to those reported under
RFS1. The RIN price is one of the new pieces of transactional
information required to be submitted under RFS2.
We received several adverse comments strongly opposing the
collection of price information due to Confidential Business
Information (CBI) concerns, other services being able to provide this
information, marketplace delays and undue stress on the EMTS from
disagreements in RIN price. We received one comment strongly supporting
EPA collecting this information. EPA decided that the price information
has great programmatic value because it will help us anticipate and
appropriately react to market disruptions and other compliance
challenges, assess and develop responses to potential waivers, and
assist in setting future renewable fuel standards. In addition, EPA
decided that highly summarized price information (e.g., the average
price of RINs traded nationwide) may be valuable to regulated parties,
as well, and may help them to anticipate and avoid market disruptions.
Also, EPA will not require the matching of the exact RIN price to
alleviate the burden of resubmission due to price mistakes. However,
the price information must be accurate and rounded to the nearest cent
(U.S. Dollar) at the time of sending the transactional information to
EMTS.
We received one comment requesting publication of security
precautions taken by EPA to protect EMTS from attacks. EPA cannot
provide security information to the public because providing such
information may create security vulnerabilities. However, EMTS will be
compliant with the appropriate security requirements for all federal
agency information technology systems.
Also as with RFS1, there is no ``good faith'' provision to RIN
ownership. An underlying principle of RIN ownership is still one of
``buyer beware'' and RINs may be prohibited from use at any time if
they are found to be invalid. Because of the ``buyer beware'' aspect,
we will offer the option for a buyer to accept or reject RINs from
specific RIN generators or from classes of RIN generators.
4. A Sample EMTS Transaction
This sample illustrates how two parties may trade RINs in EMTS:
(1) Seller logs into EMTS and posts a sale of 10,000 RINs to Buyer
at X price. For this example, assume the RINs were generated in 2010
and were assigned to 10,000 gallons of ``Renewable fuel (D=6)''.
Seller's RIN account for ``Renewable fuel (D=6)'' is put into a
``pending'' status of 10,000 with the posting of the sale to Buyer.
Buyer receives automatic notification of the pending transaction.
(2) Buyer logs into EMTS. Buyer sees the sale transaction pending.
Assuming it is correct, Buyer accepts it. Upon acceptance, Buyer's RIN
account for ``Renewable fuel (D=6)'' RINs is automatically increased by
10,000 2010 assigned RINs sold at X price.
(3) After Seller has posted the sale and Buyer has accepted it,
EMTS automatically notifies both Buyer and Seller that the transaction
has been fully completed.
Under EMTS, the seller will always have to initiate any
transaction. The specific amount of RINs are put into a pending status
when the seller posts the sale. The buyer must confirm the sale in
order to have the RINs transferred to the buyer's account. Transactions
will always be limited to available RINs. Notification will
automatically be sent to both the buyer and the seller upon completion
of the transaction. EPA considers any sale or transfer as complete upon
acknowledgement by the buyer. We will also allow buyers to submit their
acknowledgement prior to a seller initiating the transaction. However,
these buy transactions will not initiate any RINs being put into a
pending status from a seller's account. Instead, the buy transactions
will be queued and checked periodically to see if a ``sell''
transaction was posted by the seller. If a buy is posted without a
matching sell transaction, then the seller will be notified that a buy
transaction is pending. Both buy and sell transactions must be matched
within a set number of days from the submission date or they will
expire. Transactions will expire 7 days after the submission of the
file. Since both parties are required to submit information within 5
days, we allow the full 5 days to expire plus 2 days in the case of
late submissions.
In summary, the advantage to implementing EMTS is that parties may
engage in RIN transactions with a high degree of confidence, errors
will be virtually eliminated, and everyone engaging in RIN transactions
will have a simplified environment in which to work, which should
minimize the level of resources needed for implementation.
B. Upward Delegation of RIN-Separating Responsibilities
Since the start of the RFS program on September 1, 2007, there have
been a number of instances in which a party who receives RINs with a
volume of renewable fuel is required to either separate or retire those
RINs, but views the recordkeeping and reporting requirements under the
RFS program as an unnecessary burden. Such circumstances typically
might involve a renewable fuel blender, a party that uses renewable
fuel in its neat form, or a party that uses renewable fuel in a non-
highway application and is therefore required to retire the RINs (under
RFS1) associated with the volume. In some of these cases, the affected
party may purchase and/or use only small volumes of renewable fuel and,
absent the RFS program, would be subject to few (if any other) EPA
regulations governing fuels.
This situation will become more prevalent with the RFS2 rule, as
EISA added diesel fuel to the RFS program. With the RFS1 rule, small
blenders (generally farmers and other parties that use nonroad diesel
fuel) blending small amounts of biodiesel were not covered under the
rule as EPAct mandated renewable fuel blending for highway gasoline
only. EISA mandates certain amounts of renewable fuels to be blended
into all transportation fuels--which includes highway and nonroad
diesel fuel. Thus, parties that were not regulated under the RFS1 rule
who only blend a small amount of renewable fuel (and, as mentioned
above, are generally not subject to EPA fuels regulations) will now be
regulated by the RFS program.
[[Page 14734]]
Consequently, we believe it is appropriate, and thus we are
finalizing as proposed, to permit blenders who only blend a small
amount of renewable fuel to allow the party directly upstream to
separate RINs on their behalf. Such a provision is consistent with the
fact that the RFS program already allows marketers of renewable fuels
to assign more RINs to some of their sold product and no RINs to the
rest of their sold product. We believe that this provision will
eliminate undue burden on small parties who would otherwise not be
regulated by this program. This provision is solely for the case of
blenders who blend and trade less than 125,000 total gallons of
renewable fuel per year (i.e., a company that blends 100,000 gallons
and trades another 100,000 gallons would not be able to use this
provision) and is available to any blender who must separate RINs from
a volume of renewable fuel under Sec. 80.1429(b)(2).
We requested comment in the NPRM on this concept, the 125,000
gallon threshold, and appropriate documentation to authorize this
upward delegation. In general, those that commented on this provision
support the idea of upward delegation for small blenders, though one
commenter stated that EPA should not allow small entities to delegate
their RIN-related responsibilities upward. Those commenters that
support the upward delegation provision stated that it should be
limited to small blenders only and should only be for delegating to the
party directly upstream. A few commenters stated that they believe the
125,000 gallon threshold is appropriate; while others commented that it
should be higher. We believe that the 125,000 gallon limit strikes the
correct balance between providing relief to small blenders, while still
ensuring that non-obligated parties cannot unduly influence the RIN
market.
We did not receive any comments on appropriate documentation,
however a couple commenters suggested that we retain the proposed
annual authorization between the blender and the party directly
upstream, as well as allowing a small blender to enter into
arrangements with multiple suppliers on a transaction-by-transaction
basis. Please see Chapter 5 of the Summary and Analysis of Comments
Document for more discussion on the comments received and our responses
to those comments.
We are also finalizing, as stated in the preamble to the proposed
rule, that for upstream delegation, both parties must sign a quarterly
written statement (which must be included with the reporting party's
reports) authorizing the upward delegation. Copies of these statements
must be retained as records by both parties. The supplier would then be
allowed to retain ownership of RINs assigned to a volume of renewable
fuel when that volume is transferred, under the condition that the RINs
be separated or retired concurrently with the transfer of the volume.
This statement would apply to all volumes of renewable fuel transferred
between the two parties. Thus, the two parties would enter into a
contract stating that the supplier has RIN-separation responsibilities
for all transferred volumes between the two parties, and no additional
permissions from the small blender would be needed for any volumes
transferred. A blender may enter into such an agreement with as many
parties as they wish.
C. Small Producer Exemption
Under the RFS1 rule, parties who produce or import less than 10,000
gallons of renewable fuel in a year are not required to generate RINs
for that volume, and are not required to register with the EPA if they
do not take ownership of RINs generated by other parties. These
producers and importers are also exempt from registration, reporting,
recordkeeping, and attest engagement requirements. In the preamble to
the proposed rule, we requested comment on whether or not this 10,000
gallon threshold was appropriate. One commenter suggested that we
retain the 10,000 gallon threshold as-is. Another commenter supported
the concept of less burdensome requirements for small producers, but
suggested that these entities should, at a minimum, be required to
generate RINs for all qualifying renewables. We are maintaining this
exemption under the RFS2 rule for parties who produce or import less
than 10,000 gallons of renewable fuel per year.
In addition to the permanent exemption for those producers and
importers who produce or import less than 10,000 gallons of renewable
fuel per year, we are also finalizing a temporary exemption for
renewable fuel producers who produce less than 125,000 gallons of
renewable fuel each year from new production facilities. These
producers are not required to generate and assign RINs to batches of
renewable fuel for a period of up to three years, beginning with the
calendar year in which the production facility produces its first
gallon of renewable fuel. Such producers are also exempt from
registration, reporting, recordkeeping, and attest engagement
requirements as long as they do not own RINs or voluntarily generate
and assign RINs. This provision is intended to allow pilot and
demonstration plants of new renewable fuel technologies to focus on
developing the technology and obtaining financing during these early
stages of their development without having to comply with the RFS2
regulations.
D. 20% Rollover Cap
EISA does not change the language in CAA section 211(o)(5) stating
that renewable fuel credits must be valid for showing compliance for 12
months as of the date of generation. As discussed in the RFS1 final
rulemaking, we interpreted the statute such that credits would
represent renewable fuel volumes in excess of what an obligated party
needs to meet their annual compliance obligation. Given that the
renewable fuel standard is an annual standard, obligated parties
determine compliance shortly after the end of the year, and credits
would be identified at that time. In the context of our RIN-based
program, we have accomplished the statute's objective by allowing RINs
to be used to show compliance for the year in which the renewable fuel
was produced and its associated RIN first generated, or for the
following year. RINs not used for compliance purposes in the year in
which they were generated will by definition be in excess of the RINs
needed by obligated parties in that year, making excess RINs equivalent
to the credits referred to in section 211(o)(5). Excess RINs are valid
for compliance purposes in the year following the one in which they
initially came into existence. RINs not used within their valid life
will thereafter cease to be valid for compliance purposes.
In the RFS1 final rulemaking, we also discussed the potential
``rollover'' of excess RINs over multiple years. This can occur in
situations wherein the total number of RINs generated each year for a
number of years in a row exceeds the number of RINs required under the
RFS program for those years. The excess RINs generated in one year
could be used to show compliance in the next year, leading to the
generation of new excess RINs in the next year, causing the total
number of excess RINs in the market to accumulate over multiple years
despite the limit on RIN life. When renewable fuel volumes are being
produced that exceed the RFS2 standards, the rollover issue could
undermine the ability of a limit on credit life to guarantee an ongoing
market for renewable fuels.
[[Page 14735]]
To implement EISA's restriction on the life of credits and address
the rollover issue, the RFS1 final rulemaking implemented a 20% cap on
the amount of an obligated party's RVO that can be met using previous-
year RINs. Thus each obligated party is required to use current-year
RINs to meet at least 80% of its RVO, with a maximum of 20% being
derived from previous-year RINs. Any previous-year RINs that an
obligated party may have that are in excess of the 20% cap can be
traded to other obligated parties that need them. If the previous-year
RINs in excess of the 20% cap are not used by any obligated party for
compliance, they will thereafter cease to be valid for compliance
purposes.
As described in the NPRM, EISA does not modify the statutory
provisions regarding credit life, and the volume changes by EISA also
do not change at least the possibility of large rollovers of RINs for
individual obligated parties. As a result we proposed to maintain the
regulatory requirement for a 20% rollover cap under the new RFS2
program, and to apply this cap separately to all four RVOs under RFS2.
However, we took comment on changing the level of the cap to some
alternative value lower or higher than 20%.
A lower cap could provide a greater incentive for parties with
excess RINs to sell them rather than hold onto them, increasing the
availability of RINs for parties that need them for compliance
purposes. But a lower cap would also reduce flexibility for obligated
parties attempting to minimize the costs of compliance with increasing
annual volume requirements, particularly if there are concerns that the
RIN market may be tighter in the future than it is currently.
Conversely, the increasing annual volume requirements in EISA make
it less likely that renewable fuel producers will overcomply, and as a
result it is less likely that there will be an excess of RINs in the
market. Under these circumstances, there is little opportunity for RINs
to build up in the market, and the rollover cap would have less of an
impact on the market as a whole. Thus a higher cap might be warranted.
However, while a higher cap would create greater flexibility for some
obligated parties, it could also create disruptions in the RIN market
as parties with excess RINs would have a greater opportunity to hold
onto them rather than sell them. Parties without direct access to RINs
through the purchase and blending of renewable fuels would be placed at
a competitive disadvantage in comparison to parties with excess RINs.
In the extreme, removal of the cap entirely would allow obligated
parties to roll over up to one year's worth of their obligations
indefinitely.
In general, commenters on the NPRM reiterated the positions that
they raised during development of the RFS1 program. While one renewable
fuel producer requested that the rollover cap be left at 20%, most
producers requested that the rollover cap be reduced to 0%, such that
compliance with the standards applicable in a given year could only be
demonstrated using RINs generated in that year. In contrast, refiners
requested that the rollover cap be either eliminated, such that any
number of previous year RINs could be used for current year compliance,
or at least raised to 40 or 50 percent. Small refiners requested that
the cap be raised for small refiners only to accommodate the
competitive disadvantage with respect to the RIN market that they
believe they experience in comparison to larger refiners.
Based on the comments received, we believe that the 20% level
continues to provide the appropriate balance between, on the one hand,
allowing legitimate RIN carryovers and protecting against potential
supply shortfalls that could limit the availability of RINs, and on the
other hand ensuring an annual demand for renewable fuels as envisioned
by EISA. Therefore, we are continuing the 20% rollover cap for
obligated parties for the RFS program.
E. Small Refinery and Small Refiner Flexibilities
This section discusses flexibilities for small refineries and small
refiners for the RFS2 rule. As explained in the discussion of our
compliance with the Regulatory Flexibility Act below in Section XI.C
and in the Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis in Chapter 7 of the
RIA, we considered the impacts of the RFS2 regulations on small
businesses (small refiners). Most of our analysis of small business
impacts was performed as a part of the work of the Small Business
Advocacy Review Panel (SBAR Panel, or ``the Panel'') convened by EPA
for this rule, pursuant to the Regulatory Flexibility Act as amended by
the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996
(SBREFA). The Final Report of the Panel is available in the rulemaking
docket. For the SBREFA process, we conducted outreach, fact-finding,
and analysis of the potential impacts of our regulations on small
business refiners.
1. Background--RFS1
a. Small Refinery Exemption
CAA section 211(o)(9), enacted as part of EPAct, provides a
temporary exemption to small refineries (those refineries with a crude
throughput of no more than 75,000 barrels of crude per day, as defined
in section 211(o)(1)(K)) through December 31, 2010.\35\ Accordingly,
the RFS1 program regulations exempt gasoline produced by small
refineries from the renewable fuels standard (unless the exemption was
waived), see 40 CFR 80.1141. EISA did not alter the small refinery
exemption in any way.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\35\ Small refineries are also allowed to waive this exemption.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
b. Small Refiner Exemption
As mentioned above, EPAct granted a temporary exemption from the
RFS program to small refineries through December 31, 2010. In the RFS1
final rule, we exercised our discretion under section 211(o)(3)(B) and
extended this temporary exemption to the few remaining small refiners
that met the Small Business Administration's (SBA) definition of a
small business (1,500 employees or less company-wide) but did not meet
the EPAct small refinery definition as noted above.
2. Statutory Options for Extending Relief
There are two provisions in section 211(o)(9) that allow for an
extension of the temporary exemption for small refineries beyond
December 31, 2010.
One provision involves a study by the Department of Energy (DOE)
concerning whether compliance with the renewable fuel requirements
would impose disproportionate economic hardship on small refineries,
and would grant an automatic extension of at least two years for small
refineries that DOE determines would be subject to such
disproportionate hardship (per section 211(o)(9)(A)(ii)). If the DOE
study determines that such hardship exists, then section
211(o)(9)(A)(ii) (which was retained in EISA) provides that EPA shall
extend the exemption for a period of at least two years.
The second provision, at section 211(o)(9)(B), authorizes EPA to
grant an extension for a small refinery based upon disproportionate
economic hardship, on a case-by-case basis. A small refinery may, at
any time, petition EPA for an extension of the small refinery exemption
on the basis of disproportionate economic hardship. EPA is to consult
with DOE and consider the findings of the DOE small
[[Page 14736]]
refinery study in evaluating such petitions. These petitions may be
filed at any time, and EPA has discretion to determine the length of
any exemption that may be granted in response.
3. The DOE Study/DOE Study Results
As discussed above, EPAct required that DOE perform a study by
December 31, 2008 on the impact of the renewable fuel requirements on
small refineries (section 211(o)(9)(A)(ii)(I)), and whether or not the
requirements would impose a disproportionate economic hardship on these
refineries. In the small refinery study, ``EPACT 2005 Section 1501
Small Refineries Exemption Study,'' DOE's finding was that there is no
reason to believe that any small refinery would be disproportionately
harmed by inclusion in the proposed RFS2 program. This finding was
based on the fact that there appeared to be no shortage of RINs
available under RFS1, and EISA has provided flexibility through waiver
authority (per section 211(o)(7)). Further, in the case of the
cellulosic biofuel standard, cellulosic biofuel allowances can be
provided from EPA at prices established in EISA (see regulation section
80.1456). DOE thus determined that small refineries would not be
subject to disproportionate economic hardship under the proposed RFS2
program, and that the exemption should not, on the basis of the study,
be extended for small refineries (including those small refiners who
own refineries meeting the small refinery definition) beyond December
31, 2010. DOE noted in the study that, if circumstances were to change
and/or the RIN market were to become non-competitive or illiquid,
individual small refineries have the ability to petition EPA for an
extension of their small refinery exemption (pursuant to Section
211(o)(9)(B)).
4. Ability To Grant Relief Beyond 211(o)(9)
The SBREFA panel made a number of recommendations for regulatory
relief and additional flexibility for small refineries and small
refiners. These are described in the Final Panel Report (located in the
rulemaking docket), and summarized below. During the development of
this final rule, we again evaluated the various options recommended by
the Panel and also comments on the proposed rule. We also consulted the
small refinery study prepared by DOE.
As described in the Final Panel Report, EPA early-on identified
limitations on its authority to issue additional flexibility and
exemptions to small refineries. In section 211(o)(9) Congress
specifically addressed the issue of an extension of time for compliance
for small refineries, temporarily exempting them from renewable fuel
obligations through December 31, 2010. As discussed above, the statute
also includes two specific provisions describing the basis and manner
in which further extensions of this exemption can be provided. In the
RFS1 rulemaking, EPA considered whether it should provide additional
relief to the limited number of small refiners who were not covered by
the small refinery provision, by providing them a temporary exemption
consistent with that provided by Congress for small refineries. EPA
exercised its discretion under section 211(o)(3) and provided such
relief. Thus, in RFS1, EPA did not modify the relief provided by
Congress for small refineries, but did exercise its discretion to
provide the same relief specified by statute to a few additional
parties.
In RFS2 we are faced with a different issue--the extent to which
EPA should provide additional relief to small refineries beyond the
relief specified by statute, and whether it should provide such further
relief to small refiners as well. There is considerable overlap between
entities that are small refineries and those that are small refiners.
Providing additional relief just to small refiners would, therefore,
also extend additional relief to at least a number of small refineries.
Congress spoke directly to the relief that EPA may provide for small
refineries, including those small refineries operated by small
refiners, and limited that relief to a blanket exemption through
December 31, 2010, with additional extensions if the criteria specified
by Congress are met. EPA believes that an additional or different
extension, relying on a more general provision in section 211(o)(3)
would be inconsistent with Congressional intent. Further, we do not
believe that the statute allows us the discretion to give relief to
small refiners only--as this would result in a subset of small
refineries (those that also qualify as small refiners) receiving relief
that is greater than the relief already given to all small refineries
under EISA.
EPA also notes that the criteria specified by statute for providing
a further compliance extension to small refineries is a demonstration
of ``disproportionate economic hardship.'' The statute provides that
such hardship can be identified through the DOE study, or in individual
petitions submitted to the Agency. However, the DOE study has concluded
that no disproportionate economic hardship exists, at least under
current conditions and for the foreseeable future under RFS2.
Therefore, absent further information that may be provided through the
petition process, there does not currently appear to be a basis under
the statute for granting further compliance extensions to small
refineries. If DOE revises its study and comes to a different
conclusion, EPA can revisit this issue.
5. Congress-Requested Revised DOE Study
In their written comments, as well as in discussions we had with
them on the proposed rule, small refiners indicated that they did not
believe that EPA should rely on the results of the DOE small refinery
study to inform any decisions on small refiner provisions. Small
refiners generally commented that they believe that the study was
flawed and that the conclusions of the study were reached without
adequate analysis of, or outreach with, small refineries (as the
majority of the small refiners own refineries that meet the
Congressional small refinery definition). One commenter stated that
such a limited investigation into the impact on small refineries could
not have resulted in any in-depth analysis on the economic impacts of
the program on these entities. Another commenter stated that it
believes that DOE should be directed to reopen and reassess the small
refinery study be June 30, 2010, as suggested by the Senate
Appropriations Committee.
We are aware that there have been expressions of concern from
Congress regarding the DOE Study. Specifically, in Senate Report 111-
45, the Senate Appropriations Committee ``directed [DOE] to reopen and
reassess the Small Refineries Exemption Study by June 30, 2010,''
noting a number of factors that the Committee intended that DOE
consider in the revised study. The Final Conference Report 111-278 to
the Energy & Water Development Appropriations Act (H.R. 3183),
referenced the language in the Senate Report, noting that the conferees
``support the study requested by the Senate on RFS and expect the
Department to undertake the requested economic review.'' At the present
time, however, the DOE study has not been revised. If DOE prepares a
revised study and the revised study finds that there is a
disproportionate economic impact, we will revisit the exemption
extension at that point in accordance with section 211(o)(9)(A)(ii).
[[Page 14737]]
6. What We're Finalizing
a. Small Refinery and Small Refiner Temporary Exemptions
As mentioned above, the RFS1 program regulations exempt gasoline
produced by small refineries from the renewable fuels standard through
December 31, 2010 (at 40 CFR 80.1141), per EPAct. As EISA did not alter
the small refinery exemption in any way, we are retaining this small
refinery temporary exemption in the RFS2 program without change (except
for the fact that all transportation fuel produced by small refineries
will be exempt, as EISA also covers diesel and nonroad fuels).
Likewise, as we extended under RFS1 the small refinery temporary
exemption to the few remaining small refiners that met the Small
Business Administration's (SBA) definition of a small business (1,500
employees or less company-wide), we are also finalizing a continuation
of the small refiner temporary exemption through December 31, 2010.
b. Case-by-Case Hardship for Small Refineries and Small Refiners
As discussed in Section III.E.2, EPAct also authorizes EPA to grant
an extension for a small refinery based upon disproportionate economic
hardship, on a case-by-case basis. We believe that these avenues of
relief can and should be fully explored by small refiners who are
covered by the small refinery provision. In addition, we believe that
it is appropriate to allow petitions to EPA for an extension of the
temporary exemption based on disproportionate economic hardship for
those small refiners who are not covered by the small refinery
provision (again, per our discretion under section 211(o)(3)(B)); this
would ensure that all small refiners have the same relief available to
them as small refineries do. Thus, we are finalizing a hardship
provision for small refineries in the RFS2 program, that any small
refinery may apply for a case-by-case hardship at any time on the basis
of disproportionate economic hardship per CAA section 211(o)(9)(B). We
are also finalizing a case-by-case hardship provision for those small
refiners that do not operate small refineries using our discretion
under CAA section 211(o)(3)(B). This provision will allow those small
refiners that do not operate small refineries to apply for the same
kind of hardship extension as a small refinery. In evaluating
applications for this hardship provision EPA will take into
consideration information gathered from annual reports and RIN system
progress updates, as recommended by the SBAR Panel, as well as
information provided by the petitioner and through consultation with
DOE.
c. Program Review
During the SBREFA process, the small refiner Small Entity
Representatives (SERs) also requested that EPA perform an annual
program review, to begin one year before small refiners are required to
comply with the program, to provide information on RIN system progress.
As mentioned in the preamble to the proposed rule, we were concerned
that such a review could lead to some redundancy with the notice of the
applicable RFS standards that EPA will publish in the Federal Register
annually, and this annual process will inevitably include an evaluation
of the projected availability of renewable fuels. Nevertheless, some
Panel members commented that they believe a program review could be
beneficial to small entities in providing them some insight to the RFS
program's progress and alleviate some uncertainty regarding the RIN
system. As we will be publishing a Federal Register notice annually,
the Panel recommended, and we proposed, that an update of RIN system
progress (e.g., RIN trading, publicly-available information on RIN
availability, etc.) be included in this annual notice.
Based on comments received on the proposed rule, we believe that
such information could be helpful to industry, especially to small
businesses to help aid the proper functioning of the RIN market,
especially in the first years of the program. However, during the
development of the final rule, it became evident that there could be
instances where we would want to report out RIN system information on a
more frequent basis than just once a year. Thus we are finalizing that
we will periodically report out elements of RIN system progress; but
such information will be reported via other means (e.g., the RFS Web
site (http://www.epa.gov/otaq/renewablefuels/index.htm), EMTS homepage,
etc.).
7. Other Flexibilities Considered for Small Refiners
During the SBREFA process, and in their comments on the proposed
rule, small refiners informed us that they would need to rely heavily
on RINs and/or make capital improvements to comply with the RFS2
requirements. These refiners raised concerns about the RIN program
itself, uncertainty (with the required renewable fuel volumes, RIN
availability, and costs), the desire for an annual RIN system review,
and the difficulty in raising capital and competing for engineering
resources to make capital improvements.
The Panel recommended that EPA consider the issues raised by the
small refiner SERs and discussions had by the Panel itself, and that
EPA should consider comments on flexibility alternatives that would
help to mitigate negative impacts on small businesses to the extent
allowable by the Clean Air Act. A summary of further recommendations of
the Panel are discussed in Section XI.C of this preamble, and a full
discussion of the regulatory alternatives discussed and recommended by
the Panel can be found in the SBREFA Final Panel Report. Also, a
complete discussion of comments received on the proposed rule regarding
small refinery and small refiner flexibilities can be found in Chapter
5 of the Summary and Analysis of Comments document.
a. Extensions of the RFS1 Temporary Exemption for Small Refiners
As previously stated, the RFS1 program regulations provide small
refiners who operate small refineries, as well as those small refiners
who do not operate small refineries, with a temporary exemption from
the standards through December 31, 2010. This provided an exemption for
small refineries (and small refiners) for the first five years of the
RFS program. Small refiner SERs suggested that an additional temporary
exemption for the RFS2 program would be beneficial to them in meeting
the RFS standards as increased by Congress in EISA. The Panel
recommended that EPA propose a delay in the effective date of the
standards until 2014 (for a total of eight years) for small entities,
to the extent allowed by the statute.
During the development of both the Final Panel Report and the
proposed rule, we evaluated various options for small refiners,
including an additional temporary exemption for small refiners from the
required RFS2 standards. As discussed above, we concluded that we do
not have the statutory authority to provide such extensions through
means other than those specified in the statute. Thus, further
extensions will be as a result of any revised DOE study, or in response
to a petition, pursuant to the authorities specified in section
211(o)(9).
We proposed to continue the temporary exemption finalized in RFS1--
through December 31, 2010. Commenters that oppose an extension of the
temporary exemption generally stated that an extension is not
warranted, and some commenters expressed concerns about allowing
[[Page 14738]]
provisions for small refiners. One commenter also stated that it
believes that the small refinery exemption should not be extended and
that the small refiner exemption should be eliminated completely. Two
commenters supported the continuation of the exemption through December
31, 2010 only, and one stated that it does not support an extension as
it believes that all parties have been well aware of the passage of
EISA and small refineries and small refiners should have been striving
to achieve compliance by the end of 2010. Two commenters also expressed
views that the exemption should not have been offered to small refiners
in RFS1 as this was not provided by EPAct, and that an extension of the
exemption should not be finalized for small refineries at all. The
commenters further commented that an economic hardship provision was
included in EPAct, and any exemption extension should be limited to
such cases, and only to the specific small refinery (not small refiner)
that has petitioned for such an extension.
Commenters supporting an extension of the exemption commented that
they believe that the statutes (EPAct and EISA) do not prohibit EPA
from providing relief to regulated small entities on which the rule
will have a significant economic impact, and that such a delay could
lessen the burden on these entities. One commenter stated that it
believes EPA denied or ignored much of the relief recommended by the
Panel in the proposal. Another commenter stated that it believes EPA's
concerns regarding the legal authority are unsustainable considering
EPA's past exercises of discretion under the RFS1 program, and with the
discretion afforded to EPA under section 211(o) of the CAA. Some
commenters requested a delay until 2014 for small refiners. One
additional commenter expressed support for an extension of the small
refinery exemption only, and that these small refineries should be
granted a permanent exemption.
During the development of this final rule, we again evaluated the
various options recommended by the Panel, the legality of offering an
extension of the exemption to small refiners only, and also comments on
the proposed rule. Specifically in the case of an extension of the
exemption for small refiners, we also consulted the small refinery
study prepared by DOE, as the statute directs us to use this as a basis
for providing an additional two year exemption. As discussed above in
Sections III.E.4 and 5, we do not believe that we can provide an
extension of the exemption considering the outcome of the DOE small
refinery study, which did not find that there was a disproportionate
economic hardship. Further, we do not believe that the statute allows
us the discretion to give relief to a subset of small refineries (those
that also qualify as small refiners) that is greater than the relief
already given to all small refineries under EPAct. However, it is
important to recognize that the 211(o)(9) small refinery provision does
allow for extensions beyond December 31, 2010, as discussed above in
Section III.E.2. Thus, refiners may apply for individual hardship
relief.
b. Phase-in
The small refiner SERs suggested that a phase-in of the obligations
applicable to small refiners would be beneficial for compliance, such
that small refiners would comply by gradually meeting the standards on
an incremental basis over a period of time, after which point they
would comply fully with the RFS2 standards. However we stated in the
NPRM that we had serious concerns about our legal authority to provide
such a phase-in. CAA section 211(o)(3)(B) states that the renewable
fuel obligation shall ``consist of a single applicable percentage that
applies to all categories of persons specified'' as obligated parties.
A phase-in approach would essentially result in different applicable
percentages being applied to different obligated parties. Further, such
a phase-in approach would provide more relief to small refineries
operated by small refiners than that provided under the statutory small
refinery provisions.
Some commenters stated that they believe that EPA has the ability
to consider a phase-in of the standards for small refiners. One
commenter suggested that a temporary phase-in could help lessen the
burden of regulation on small entities and promote compliance. Another
commenter stated that it believes EPA's legal concerns regarding a
phase-in are unsustainable considering EPA's past exercises of
discretion under the RFS1 program and with the discretion afforded to
EPA under section 211(o) of the CAA.
After considering the comments on this issue, EPA continues to
believe that allowing a phase-in of regulatory requirements for small
refineries and/or small refiners would be inconsistent with the
statute, for the reasons mentioned above. Any individual entities that
are experiencing hardship that could justify a phase-in of the
standards have the ability to petition EPA for individualized relief.
Therefore we are not including a phase-in of standards for small
refiners in today's rule.
c. RIN-Related Flexibilities
The small refiner SERs requested that the RFS2 rule contain
provisions for small refiners related to the RIN system, such as
flexibilities in the RIN rollover cap percentage and allowing small
refiners only to use RINs interchangeably. In the RFS1 rule, up to 20%
of a previous year's RINs may be ``rolled over'' and used for
compliance in the following year. In the preamble to the proposed rule,
we discussed the concept of allowing for flexibilities in the rollover
cap, such as a higher RIN rollover cap for small refiners for some
period of time or for at least some of the four standards. As the
rollover cap is the means through which we are implementing the limited
credit lifetime provisions in section 211(o) of the CAA, and therefore
cannot simply be eliminated, we requested comment on the concept of
increasing the RIN rollover cap percentage for small refiners and an
appropriate level of that percentage. In response to the Panel's
recommendation, we also sought comment on allowing small refiners to
use the four types of RINs interchangeably.
In their comments on the proposed rule, one small refiner commented
that, in regards to small refiners' concerns about RIN pricing and
availability, there is no mechanism in the rule to address the
possibility that the RIN market will not be viable. The commenter
further suggested that more ``durable'' RINs are needed for small
refiners that can be carried over from year to year, to alleviate some
of the potentially market volatility for renewable fuels. Another
commenter suggested that RINs should be interchangeable for small
refiners, or alternatively, some mechanism should be implemented to
ensure that RIN prices are affordable for small refiners. Further, with
regard to interchangeable RINs, one commenter stated that small
refiners do not have the staff or systems to manage and account for
four different categories of RINs and rural small refiners will suffer
economic hardship and disadvantage because of the unavailability of
biofuels. The commenter also requested an increase in the rollover cap
to 50% for small refiners.
We are not finalizing additional RIN-related flexibilities for
small refiners in today's action. As highlighted in the NPRM, we
continue to believe that the concept of interchangeable RINs for small
refiners only fails to require the four different standards mandated by
Congress (e.g., conventional biofuel
[[Page 14739]]
could not be used instead of cellulosic biofuel or biomass-based
diesel), and is not consistent with section 211(o) of the Clean Air
Act. Essentially, it would circumvent the explicit direction of
Congress in EISA to require that the four RFS2 standards be met
separately. Further, given the findings from the DOE study that small
refineries (and thus, most small refiners) do not currently face
disproportionate economic hardship, and are not expected to do so as
RFS2 is implemented, we do not believe that a basis exists to justify
providing small refiners with a larger rollover cap than other
regulated entities. Thus, small refiners will be held to the same RIN
rollover cap as other obligated parties.
F. Retail Dispenser Labeling for Gasoline With Greater Than 10 Percent
Ethanol
We proposed labeling requirements for fuel dispensers that handle
greater than 10 volume percent ethanol blends which included the
following text: For use only in flexible-fuel vehicles, May damage non-
flexible-fuel vehicles, Federal law prohibits use in non-flexible-fuel
vehicles. This proposal was primarily meant to help address concerns
about the potential misfueling of non-flex-fuel vehicles with E85, in
light of the anticipated increase in E85 sales volumes in response to
the RFS2 program. All ethanol blends above 10 volume percent were
included due to the increasing industry focus on ethanol blender pumps
that are designed to dispense a variety of ethanol blends (e.g., E30,
and E40) for use in flex-fuel vehicles.
Commenters stated that EPA should undertake additional analysis of
the potential impacts from misfueling and what preventative measures
might be appropriate before finalizing labeling requirements for >E10
blends. They also stated that EPA should coordinate any such labeling
provisions with those already in place by the Federal Trade Commission.
EPA is also currently evaluating a petition to allow the use of up to
15 volume percent ethanol in non-flex fuel vehicles. One potential
result of this evaluation might be for EPA to grant a partial waiver
that is applicable only for a subset of the current vehicle population.
Under such an approach, a label for E15 fuel dispensers would be needed
that identifies what vehicles are approved to use E15.
Based on the public comments and the fact that EPA has not
completed its evaluation of the E15 waiver petition, we believe that it
is appropriate to defer finalizing labeling requirements for >E10
blends at this time. This will afford us the opportunity to complete
our analysis of what measures might be appropriate to prevent
misfueling with >E10 blends before this may become a concern in the
context of the RFS2 program.
G. Biodiesel Temperature Standardization
The volume of a batch of renewable fuel can change under extreme
changes in temperature. The volume of a batch of renewable fuel can
experience expansion as the temperature increases, or can experience
contraction as temperature decreases. The Agency requires temperature
standardization of renewable fuels at 60[deg] Fahrenheit ([deg]F) so
renewable fuel volumes are accounted for on a uniform and consistent
basis over the entire fuels industry. In the May 1, 2007 Renewable
Fuels Standard (RFS) final rule the Agency required biodiesel
temperature standardization to be completed as follows:
Vs,b = Va,b x (-0.0008008 x T + 1.0480)
Where
Vs,b = Standard Volume of biodiesel at 60 degrees F, in
gallons;
Va,b = Actual volume of biodiesel, in gallons;
T = Actual temperature of batch, in degrees F.
This equation was based on data from a published research paper by
Tate et al.\36\ Members of the petroleum industry have indicated that
the current biodiesel temperature standardization equation in the
regulations provides different results than that commonly used by both
the petroleum and biodiesel industry for commercial trading of
biodiesel. These commercial values are either based on American
Petroleum Institute (API) tables for petroleum products or on empirical
values from industry measurements at common temperatures and pressures
observed in bulk fuel facilities. The difference between RIN calculated
volumes and commercial sales volumes has created confusion within the
record keeping system of both the petroleum and biodiesel industry.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\36\ Equation was derived from R.E. Tate et al. ``The Densities
of Three Biodiesel Fuels at Temperatures up to 300 [deg]C.'',
Department of Biological Engineering, Dalhousie University, April
2005. ``Fuel 85 (2006) 1004-1009, Table 1 for soy methyl ester.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the RFS2 proposed rule, the Agency proposed the temperature
standardization of biodiesel remain unchanged from the RFS1
requirements.\37\ The Agency received comments from Archer Daniels
Midland Company (ADM), World Energy Alternatives, Marathon Petroleum
Company (Marathon) and the National Biodiesel Board (NBB) to revise the
biodiesel temperature standardization equation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\37\ 74 FR 24943, May 26, 2009.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Both ADM and NBB agreed on the necessity for biodiesel temperature
standardization at 60 [deg]F. ADM and NBB commented on several
empirical calculations which have been developed specific to biodiesel
temperature standardization since the 2007 RFS1 final rule. These
include a 2004 data set developed by the Minnesota Department of
Commerce and the Renewable Energy Group and updated in 2008;
information embedded in the European Biodiesel Specification EN 14214;
and information from the Alberta Research Council. The table below
provides values from NBB for 1000 gallons of biodiesel standardized to
a temperature at 60 [deg]F for these empirical calculations, along with
the current EPA equation, and the American Petroleum Institute (API)
Refined Products Table 6.
Table III.G-1--NBB Comparison of Biodiesel Temperature Standardization
Calculations to 60 [deg]F for 1000 gallons of Biodiesel at 90 [deg]F
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Gallons
------------------------------------------------------------------------
2007 EPA Biodiesel Formula.................................. 975.28
2008 Minnesota (Hedman) data................................ 986.270
API Refined Products Table 6 (biodiesel density @ 7.359).... 986.625
Alberta Research Council.................................... 986.238
EN 14214 data............................................... 986.401
2004 Minnesota Renewable Energy Group data.................. 986.830
------------------------------------------------------------------------
As illustrated by the results from the above table, the values for
the various biodiesel temperature standardization empirical
calculations are within 1 gallon of agreement of each other for a 1000
gallon biodiesel batch, except for the current biodiesel temperature
standardization equation in the regulations.
To ensure consistency in RIN generation, ADM commented EPA should
adopt only one biodiesel temperature standardization calculation. ADM
commented that all biodiesel temperature standardization calculations
developed, including the API Refined Products Table 6, are in very
close agreement with each other and the differences between them all
are insignificant. They further commented the API Refined Products
Table 6 has provided a uniform measurement of volume for years for the
entire liquid fuels industry. Thus, ADM believes the API Refined
Products Table 6 should be adopted for biodiesel to be consistent with
the calculation of sales volumes.
[[Page 14740]]
Finally ADM comments adoption of the API Refined Products Table 6 would
allow for easier verification within the marketplace, eliminate the
need for calculating one volume for sales and trades and another for
RINs, and prevents the entire distribution network from facing the
financial burden of reprogramming existing meters that already are
based on the API Refined Products Table 6.
NBB commented that earlier surveys from its members indicate a
fifty-fifty split between members using the API Refined Products Table
6 or some variation of the current EPA biodiesel formula for biodiesel
temperature standardization. Some NBB members indicated that the API
Refined Products Table 6 was more commonly used by the petroleum
industry and embedded into the meters, pumps and accounting systems of
the petroleum industry. Companies already using the API Refined
Products Table 6 would have a reduction in required paperwork with RIN
generation and tracking because already existing commercial documents
could serve that purpose and they thus could eliminate or reduce their
current dual tracking system. Other NBB members have already embedded
the current EPA biodiesel equation within their accounting and sales
systems and would like to continue using that type of biodiesel
temperature standardization approach rather than the API Refined
Products Table 6. The NBB recommended EPA revise its current equation
in the regulations to the 2008 Hedman biodiesel temperature
standardization equation. Thus, NBB commented EPA should provide
flexibility to their members by allowing the use of either the API
Refined Products Table 6 or the use of a biodiesel temperature
standardization equation.
Marathon commented the regulations allow for the standardization of
volume for other renewable fuels to be determined by an appropriate
formula commonly accepted by the industry which may be reviewed by the
EPA for appropriateness. They recommended that EPA extend this courtesy
to biodiesel.
The Agency acknowledges that the current biodiesel temperature
standardization equation is likely not correct for biodiesel
temperature standardization at ambient temperatures observed in the
fuel distribution system. Based on the comments received, the Agency is
amending the regulations to allow for two ways for biodiesel
temperature standardization: (1) The American Petroleum Institute
Refined Products Table 6B, as referenced in ASTM D1250-08, entitled,
``Standard Guide for Use of the Petroleum Measurement Tables'', and (2)
a biodiesel temperature standardization equation that utilizes the 2008
data generated by the Minnesota Department of Commerce and the
Renewable Energy Group. These two methods for biodiesel temperature
standardization are within one gallon of agreement of each other for a
1000 gallon biodiesel batch and thus in very close agreement. Both ADM
and NBB acknowledged that the differences between these two methods are
insignificant and the resulting corrected volumes from these two
methods of calculation are within accuracy tolerances of any metered
measurement. Thus, the Agency believes the allowance of both of these
methods for biodiesel temperature standardization will increase
flexibility while still providing for a consistent generation and
accounting of biodiesel RINs over the entire fuel delivery system.
IV. Renewable Fuel Production and Use
An assessment of the impacts of increased volumes of renewable fuel
must begin with an analysis of the kind of renewable fuels that could
be used, the types and locations of their feedstocks, the fuel volumes
that could be produced by a given feedstock, and any challenges
associated with their use. This section provides an assessment of the
potential feedstocks and renewable fuels that could be used to meet the
Energy Independence and Security Act (EISA) and the rationale behind
our projections of various fuel types to represent the control cases
for analysis purposes. As new technologies, feedstocks, and fuels
continue to develop on a daily basis, markets may appear differently
from our projections. Although actual volumes and feedstocks may
differ, we believe the projections made for our control cases are
within the range of possible predictions for which the standards are
met and allow for an assessment of the potential impacts of the
increases in renewable fuel volumes that meet the requirements of EISA.
A. Overview of Renewable Fuel Volumes
EISA mandates the use of increasing volumes of renewable fuel. To
assess the impacts of this increase in renewable fuel volume from
business-as-usual (what is likely to have occurred without EISA), we
have established reference and control cases from which subsequent
analyses are based. The reference cases are projections of renewable
fuel volumes without the enactment of EISA and are described in Section
IV.A.1. The control cases are projections of the volumes and types of
renewable fuel that might be used in the future to comply with the EISA
volume mandates. For the NPRM we had focused on one primary control
case (see Section IV.A.2) whereas for the final rule we have expanded
the analysis to include two additional sensitivity cases (see Section
IV.A.3). Based on the public comments received as well as new
information, we have updated the primary control case volumes from the
NPRM to reflect what we believe could be a more likely set of volumes
to analyze. We assume in each of the cases the same ethanol-equivalence
basis as was used in the RFS1 rulemaking to meet the standard. Volumes
are listed in tables for this section in both straight-gallons and
ethanol-equivalent gallons (i.e., times 1.5 for biodiesel or 1.7 for
cellulosic diesel and renewable diesel). The volumes included in this
section are for 2022. For intermediate years, refer to Section 1.2 of
the RIA.
1. Reference Cases
Our primary reference case renewable fuel volumes are based on the
Energy Information Administration's (EIA) Annual Energy Outlook (AEO)
2007 reference case projections.\38\ While AEO 2007 is not as up-to-
date as AEO 2008 or AEO 2009, we chose to use AEO 2007 because later
versions of AEO already include the impact of increased renewable fuel
volumes under EISA as well as fuel economy improvements under CAFE as
required in EISA, whereas AEO 2007 did not.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\38\ AEO 2007 was only used to derive renewable fuel volume
projections for the primary reference case. AEO 2009 was used for
future crude oil cost estimates and for estimating total
transportation fuel energy use.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For the final rule we have also assessed a number of the impacts
relative to a reference case assuming the mandated renewable fuel
volumes under RFS1 from the Energy Policy Act of 2005 (EPAct). This
allows for a more complete assessment of the impacts of the EISA volume
mandates, especially when combined with the impacts assessment
conducted for the RFS1 rulemaking (though many factors have changed
since then). Table IV.A.1-1 summarizes the 2022 renewable fuel volumes
for the AEO 2007 and the RFS1 reference cases (listed in both straight
volumes and ethanol-equivalent volumes).
[[Page 14741]]
Table IV.A.1-1--Reference Case Renewable Fuel Volumes in 2022
[Billion gallons]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Advanced biofuel Non-advanced
------------------------------------------------------ biofuel
Cellulosic Biomass-based Other advanced ------------------
Source/volume type biofuel diesel a biofuel Total renewable
------------------------------------------------------ fuel
Cellulosic Corn ethanol
ethanol c FAME biodiesel b Imported ethanol
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
AEO 2007 Straight Volume...................................... 0.25 0.38 0.64 12.29 13.56
AEO 2007 Ethanol-Equivalent................................... 0.25 0.58 0.64 12.29 13.76
RFS 1 Straight Volume......................................... 0.00 0.30 0.00 7.05 7.35
RFS 1 Ethanol-Equivalent...................................... 0.00 0.45 0.00 7.05 7.50
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
a Biomass-Based Diesel could include FAME biodiesel, cellulosic diesel, and non-co-processed renewable diesel.
b Only fatty acid methyl ester (FAME) biodiesel volumes were considered.
c Under the RFS1 reference case, we assumed the 250-million gallon cellulosic standard set by EPAct would be met primarily by corn ethanol plants
utilizing 90% biomass for energy, thus actual production of cellulosic biofuel is zero. AEO 2007 reference case assumes actual production of
cellulosic biofuel and therefore assumed to be 0.25 billion gallons.
2. Primary Control Case
Our assessment of the renewable fuel volumes required to meet EISA
necessitates establishing a primary set of fuel types and volumes on
which to base our assessment of the impacts of the new standards. EISA
contains four broad categories: cellulosic biofuel, biomass-based
diesel, total advanced biofuel, and total renewable fuel. As these
categories could be met with a wide variety of fuel choices, in order
to assess the impacts of increased volumes of renewable fuel, we
projected a set of reasonable renewable fuel volumes based on our
projection of fuels that could come to market.
Although actual volumes and feedstocks will be different, we
believe the projections made for our control cases are within the range
of possible predictions for which the standards are met and allow for
an assessment of the potential impacts of increased volumes of
renewable fuel. Table IV.A.2-1 summarizes the fuel types used for the
primary control case and their corresponding volumes for the year 2022.
Table IV.A.2-1--Primary Control Case Projected Renewable Fuel Volumes in 2022
[Billion gallons]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Advanced biofuel Non-
------------------------------------------------------------------------------ advanced
Cellulosic biofuel Biomass-based diesel \a\ Other advanced biofuel biofuel Total
Volume type ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- renewable
Other fuel
Cellulosic Cellulosic FAME \c\ NCRD \d\ biodiesel Imported Corn
ethanol diesel \b\ biodiesel \e\ ethanol ethanol
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Straight Volume................................. 4.92 6.52 0.85 0.15 0.82 2.24 15.00 30.50
Ethanol-Equivalent.............................. 4.92 11.08 1.28 0.26 1.23 2.24 15.00 36.00
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\a\ Biomass-Based Diesel could include FAME biodiesel, cellulosic diesel, and non-co-processed renewable diesel.
\b\ Cellulosic Diesel includes at least 1.96 billion gallons (3.33 billion ethanol-equivalent gallons) from Fischer-Tropsch Biomass-to-Liquids (BTL)
processes based on EIA's forecast and an additional 4.56 billion gallons (7.75 billion ethanol-equivalent gallons) from this or other types of
cellulosic diesel processes.
\c\ Fatty acid methyl ester (FAME) biodiesel.
\d\ Non-Co-processed Renewable Diesel (NCRD).
\e\ Other Biodiesel is biodiesel that could be produced in addition to the amount needed to meet the biomass-based diesel standard.
The following subsections detail our rationale for projecting the
amount and type of fuels needed to meet EISA as shown in Table IV.A.2-
1. For cellulosic biofuel we have assumed that by 2022 on a straight-
volume basis about half would come from cellulosic ethanol and the
other half from cellulosic diesel. On an ethanol-equivalent volume
basis, cellulosic diesel would make up almost 70% of the 16 billion
gallons cellulosic biofuel standard. Biomass-based diesel is assumed to
be comprised of a majority of fatty-acid methyl ester (FAME) biodiesel
and a smaller portion of non-co-processed renewable diesel. The portion
of the advanced biofuel category not met by cellulosic biofuel and
biomass-based diesel is assumed to come mainly from imported sugarcane
ethanol with a smaller amount from additional biodiesel sources. The
total renewable fuel volume not required to be comprised of advanced
biofuels is assumed to be met with corn ethanol with small amounts of
other grain starches and waste sugars.
The main difference between the volumes used for the NPRM and the
volumes used for the FRM is the inclusion of cellulosic diesel for the
FRM. The NPRM made the simplifying assumption that the cellulosic
biofuel standard would be met entirely with cellulosic ethanol.
However, due to growing interest and recent developments in
hydrocarbon-based or so-called ``drop-in'' renewable fuels as well as
butanol, and marketplace challenges for consuming high volumes of
ethanol, we have included projections of more non-ethanol renewables in
our primary control case for the final rule.\39\ In the future, this
could include various forms of ``green hydrocarbons'' (i.e., cellulosic
gasoline, diesel and jet) and higher alcohols, but
[[Page 14742]]
for analysis purposes, we have modeled it as cellulosic diesel fuel. We
describe these fuels in greater detail in Section IV.B-D. We have also
included some algae-derived biofuels in our FRM analyses given the
large interest and potential for such fuels. We have continued to
assume zero volume for renewable fuels or blendstocks such as biogas,
jatropha, palm, imported cellulosic biofuel, and other alcohols or
ethers in our control cases. Although we have not included these
renewable fuels and blendstocks in our impact analyses, it is important
to note that they can still be counted under our program if they meet
the lifecycle thresholds and definitions for renewable biomass, and
recent information suggests that some of them may be likely.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\39\ Comments received from Advanced Biofuels Association,
Testimony on June 9, 2009 suggesting a number of advanced biofuel
technologies will be able to produce renewable diesel, jet fuels,
gasoline, and gasoline component fuels (e.g. butanol, iso-octane).
Similar comments were received from the New York State Department of
Environmental Conservation (Docket EPA-HQ-OAR-2005-0161-2143), OPEI
and AllSAFE (Docket EPA-HQ-OAR-2005-0161-2241), and the Low Carbon
Synthetic Fuels Association (Docket EPA-HQ-OAR-2005-0161-2310).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
a. Cellulosic Biofuel
As discussed in our NPRM, whether cellulosic biofuel is ethanol
will depend on a number of factors, including production costs, the
form of tax subsidies, credit programs, and factors influencing the
blending of biofuel into the fuel pool. It will also depend on the
relative demand for gasoline and diesel fuel. As a result of our
analyses on ethanol consumption (see Section IV.D) and continual
tracking of the industry's interest in hydrocarbon-based renewables
(see Section IV.B), we have decided to analyze a cellulosic biofuel
standard made up of both cellulosic ethanol and cellulosic diesel
fuels.
For assessing the impacts of the RFS2 standards, we used AEO 2009
(April release) cellulosic ethanol volumes (4.92 billion gallons), as
well as the cellulosic biomass-to-liquids (BTL) diesel volumes (1.96
billion gallons) using Fischer-Tropsch (FT) processes. We consider BTL
diesel from FT processes as a subset of cellulosic diesel. In order to
reach a total of 16 billion ethanol-equivalent gallons, we assumed that
an additional 4.56 billion gallons of cellulosic diesel could be
produced from other cellulosic diesel processes. Refer to Section 1.2
of the RIA for more discussion.
b. Biomass-Based Diesel
Biomass-based diesel can include fatty acid methyl ester (FAME)
biodiesel, renewable diesel (RD) that has not been co-processed with a
petroleum feedstock, as well as cellulosic diesel. Although cellulosic
diesel could potentially contribute to the biomass-based diesel
category, we have assumed for our analyses that the fuel produced
through Fischer-Tropsch (F-T) or other processes and its corresponding
feedstocks (cellulosic biomass) are already accounted for in the
cellulosic biofuel category discussed previously in Section IV.A.2.a.
FAME and RD processes can both utilize vegetable oils, rendered
fats, and greases, and thus will generally compete for the same
feedstock pool. We have based RD volumes on our forecast of industry
plans, and expect these plants to use rendered fats as feedstock. Most
biodiesel plants now have the capability to use vegetable or animal
fats as feedstock, and thus our analysis assumes biodiesel will be made
from a mix of inputs, depending on local availability, economics, and
season. Refer to Section 1.1 of the RIA for more detail on FAME and RD
feedstocks
Renewable diesel production can be further classified as co-
processed or non-co-processed, depending on whether the renewable
material is mixed with petroleum during the hydrotreating operations.
EISA specifically forbids co-processed RD from being counted as
biomass-based diesel, but it can still count toward the total advanced
biofuel requirement. At this time, based on current industry plans, we
expect most, if not all, RD will be non-co-processed (that is, non-
refinery operations).
Perhaps the feedstock with the greatest potential for providing
large volumes of oil for the production of biomass-based diesel is
algae. However, several technical hurdles do still exist. Specifically,
more efficient harvesting, dewatering, and lipid extraction methods are
needed to lower costs to a level competitive with other feedstocks. For
all three control cases, we have chosen to include 100 million gallons
of algae-based biodiesel by 2022. We believe this is reasonable given
several announcements from the algae industry about their production
plans.\40\ Although algae to biofuel companies can focus on producing
algae oil for traditional biodiesel production, several companies are
alternatively using algae for producing ethanol or crude oil for
gasoline or diesel which could also help contribute to the advanced
biofuel mandate. For more detail on algae as a feedstock, refer to
Section 1.1 of the RIA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\40\ Sapphire Energy plans for 135 MMgal by 2018 and 1 Bgal by
2025; Petrosun plans for 30 MMgal/yr facility; Solazyme plans for
100 MMgal by 2012/13; U.S. Biofuels plans for 4 MMgal by 2010 and 50
MMgal by full scale. Only several companies have thus far revealed
production plans, and more are announced each day. It is important
to realize that future projections are highly uncertain, and we have
taken into account the best information we could acquire at the
time.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
During the comment period, we received information from
stakeholders on alternative biodiesel feedstocks such as camelina and
pennycress, to name a few. These feedstocks are currently being
researched due to their potential for lower agricultural inputs and
higher oil yields than traditional vegetable oil feedstocks as well as
their use in additional crop rotations (i.e., winter cover crops) on a
given area of land. We acknowledge that as we learn more about the
challenges and benefits to the use of newer feedstocks, these could be
used in the future towards meeting the biomass-based diesel standard
under the RFS2 program provided they meet the lifecycle thresholds and
definitions for renewable biomass. For the purpose of our impacts
analysis, however, we have chosen not to include these feedstocks in
our analyses at this time.
c. Other Advanced Biofuel
As defined in EISA, advanced biofuel includes the cellulosic
biofuel and biomass-based diesel categories that were mentioned in
Sections IV.A.2.a and IV.A.2.b above. However, EISA requires greater
volumes of advanced biofuel than just the volumes required of these
fuels. It is entirely possible that greater volumes of cellulosic
biofuel and biomass-based diesel than required by EISA could be
produced in the future. Our control case assumes that the cellulosic
biofuel volumes will not exceed those required under EISA. We do
assume, however, that additional biodiesel than that needed to meet the
biomass-based diesel volume will be used to meet the total advanced
biofuel volume. Despite additional volumes assumed from biodiesel, to
fully meet the total advanced biofuel volume required under EISA, other
types of advanced biofuel are necessary through 2022.
We have assumed for our control case that the most likely sources
of advanced fuel other than cellulosic biofuel and biomass-based diesel
would be from imported sugarcane ethanol and perhaps limited amounts of
co-processed renewable diesel. Our assessment of international fuel
ethanol production and demand indicate that anywhere from 3.8-4.2 Bgal
of sugarcane ethanol from Brazil could be available for export by 2020/
2022. If this volume were to be made available to the U.S., then there
would be sufficient volume to meet the advanced biofuel standard. To
calculate the amount of imported ethanol needed to meet the EISA
advanced biofuel standards, we assumed it would make up the difference
not met by cellulosic biofuel, biomass-based diesel and additional
biodiesel categories (see Table IV.A.2-1). The amount of imported
ethanol required by 2022 is approximately 2.2 Bgal.
[[Page 14743]]
As discussed in the NPRM, other potential advanced biofuels could
include for example, U.S. domestically produced sugarcane ethanol,
biobutanol, and biogas. While we have not chosen to reflect these fuels
in our control case, they can still be counted under our program
assuming they meet the lifecycle thresholds and other definitions under
the program.
d. Other Renewable Fuel
The remaining portion of total renewable fuel not met with advanced
biofuel was assumed to come from corn-based ethanol (including small
amounts from other grains and waste sugars). EISA effectively sets a
limit for participation in the RFS program of 15 Bgal of corn ethanol,
and we are assuming for our analysis that sufficient corn ethanol will
be produced to meet the 15-Bgal limit that either meets the 20% GHG
threshold or is grandfathered. It should be noted, however, that there
is no specific ``corn-ethanol'' mandated volume, and that any advanced
biofuel produced above and beyond what is required for the advanced
biofuel requirements could reduce the amount of corn ethanol needed to
meet the total renewable fuel standard. This occurs in our projections
during the earlier years (2010-2015) in which we project that some
fuels could compete favorably with corn ethanol (e.g., biodiesel and
imported ethanol). Refer to Section 1.2 of the RIA for more details on
interim years. Beginning around 2016, fuels qualifying as advanced
biofuels likely will be devoted to meeting the increasingly stringent
volume mandates for advanced biofuel. It is also important to note that
more than 15 Bgal of corn ethanol could be produced and RINs generated
for that volume under the RFS2 regulations. However, obligated parties
would not be required to purchase more than 15 Bgal worth of non-
advanced biofuel RINs, e.g. corn ethanol RINs.
3. Additional Control Cases Considered
Since there is significant uncertainty surrounding what fuels will
be produced to meet the 16 billion gallon cellulosic biofuel standard,
we have decided to investigate two other sensitivity cases for our cost
and emission impact analyses conducted for the rule. The first case, we
refer to as the ``low-ethanol'' control case and assume only 250
million gallons of cellulosic ethanol (from AEO 2007 reference case).
The rest of the 16 billion gallon cellulosic biofuel standard is made
up of cellulosic diesel as shown in Table IV.A.3-1. The second case, we
refer to as the ``high-ethanol'' control case and assume the entire 16
billion gallon cellulosic biofuel standard is met with cellulosic
ethanol, also shown in Table IV.A.3-1.
Table IV.A.3-1--Control Case Projected Renewable Fuel Volumes in 2022
[Billion gallons]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Advanced biofuel Non-
------------------------------------------------------------------------------ advanced
Cellulosic biofuel Biomass-based diesel \a\ Other advanced biofuel biofuel Total
Case/volume type ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- renewable
Other fuel
Cellulosic Cellulosic FAME \c\ NCRD \d\ biodiesel Imported Corn
ethanol diesel \b\ biodiesel \e\ ethanol ethanol
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Low-Ethanol Straight Volume..................... 0.25 9.26 0.85 0.15 0.82 2.24 15.00 28.57
Low-Ethanol Ethanol-Equivalent.................. 0.25 15.75 1.28 0.26 1.23 2.24 15.00 36.00
High-Ethanol Straight Volume.................... 16.00 0.00 0.85 0.15 0.82 2.24 15.00 35.06
High-Ethanol Ethanol-Equivalent................. 16.00 0.00 1.28 0.26 1.23 2.24 15.00 36.00
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\a\ Biomass-Based Diesel could include FAME biodiesel, cellulosic diesel, and non-co-processed renewable diesel.
\b\ Cellulosic Diesel includes 1.96 billion gallons (3.33 ethanol-equivalent billion gallons) from Fischer-Tropsch Biomass-to-Liquids (BTL) processes
and 7.30 billion gallons (12.42 ethanol-equivalent billion gallons) from other types of cellulosic diesel processes for the Low-Ethanol case and zero
cellulosic diesel in the High-Ethanol Case.
\c\ Fatty acid methyl ester (FAME) biodiesel.
\d\ Non-Co-processed Renewable Diesel (NCRD).
\e\ Other Biodiesel is biodiesel that could be produced in addition to the amount needed to meet the biomass-based diesel standard.
In comparison, our primary control case described in Section
IV.A.2, could be considered a ``mid-ethanol'' control case, as the
cellulosic ethanol and diesel volumes analyzed are in between the low-
ethanol and high-ethanol cases described in this section. We believe
the addition of these sensitivity cases is useful in understanding the
potential impacts of the renewable fuels standards. Refer to Section
1.2 of the RIA for more detail on three control cases analyzed as part
of this rule.
B. Renewable Fuel Production
1. Corn/Starch Ethanol
The majority of domestic biofuel production currently comes from
plants processing corn and other similarly processed grains in the
Midwest. However, there are a handful of plants located outside the
Corn Belt and a few plants processing simple sugars from food or
beverage waste. In this section, we summarize the present state of the
corn/starch ethanol industry and discuss how we expect things to change
in the future under the RFS2 program.
a. Historic/Current Production
The United States is currently the largest ethanol producer in the
world. In 2008, the U.S. produced nine billion gallons of fuel ethanol
for domestic consumption, the majority of which came from locally grown
corn.\41\ The nation is currently on track for producing over 10
billion gallons by the end of 2009.\42\ Although the U.S. ethanol
industry has been in existence since the 1970s, it has rapidly expanded
in recent years due to the phase-out of methyl tertiary butyl ether
(MTBE), elevated crude oil prices, state mandates and tax incentives,
the introduction of the Federal Volume Ethanol Excise Tax
[[Page 14744]]
Credit (VEETC),\43\ the implementation of the existing RFS1
program,\44\ and the new volume requirements established under EISA. As
shown in Figure IV.B.1-1, U.S. ethanol production has grown
exponentially over the past decade.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\41\ Based on total transportation ethanol reported in EIA's
September 2009 Monthly Energy Review (Table 10.2) less imports
(http://tonto.eia.doe.gov/dnav/pet/hist/mfeimus1a.htm).
\42\ Based on ethanol projected in EIA's October 2009 Short Term
Energy Outlook less projected imports. Actual year-end data for 2009
was unavailable at the time of this FRM assessment.
\43\ On October 22, 2004, President Bush signed into law H.R.
4520, the American Jobs Creation Act of 2004 (JOBS Bill), which
created the Volumetric Ethanol Excise Tax Credit (VEETC). The $0.51/
gal ethanol blender credit replaced the former fuel excise tax
exemption, blender's credit, and pure ethanol fuel credit. However,
the 2008 Farm Bill modified the alcohol credit so that corn ethanol
gets a reduced credit of $0.45/gal and cellulosic biofuel gets a
credit of $1.01/gal.
\44\ On May 1, 2007, EPA published a final rule (72 FR 23900)
implementing the Renewable Fuel Standard required by EPAct (also
known as RFS1). RFS1 requires that 4.0 billion gallons of renewable
fuel be blended into gasoline/diesel by 2006, growing to 7.5 billion
gallons by 2012.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR26MR10.419
As of November 2009 there were 180 corn/starch ethanol plants
operating in the U.S. with a combined production capacity of
approximately 12 billion gallons per year.\46\ This does not include
idled ethanol plants, discussed later in this subsection. The majority
of today's ethanol production (91.5% by volume) comes from 155 plants
relying exclusively on corn. Another 8.3% comes from 18 plants
processing a blend of corn and/or similarly processed grains (milo,
wheat, or barley). The remainder comes from seven small plants
processing waste beverages or other waste sugars and starches.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\45\ Based on total transportation ethanol reported in EIA's
September 2009 Monthly Energy Review (Table 10.2) less imports
(http://tonto.eia.doe.gov/dnav/pet/hist/mfeimus1a.htm).
\46\ Our November 2009 corn/starch ethanol industry
characterization was based on a variety of sources including plant
lists published online by the Renewable Fuels Association and
Ethanol Producer Magazine (updated October 22, 2009), information
from ethanol producer Web sites including press releases, and
follow-up correspondence with producers. The baseline does not
include ethanol plants whose primary business is industrial or food-
grade ethanol production nor does it include plants that might be
located in the Virgin Islands or U.S. territories. Where applicable,
current/historic production levels have been used in lieu of
nameplate capacities to estimate production capacity.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Of the 173 plants processing corn and/or other similarly processed
grains, 162 utilize dry-milling technologies and the remaining 11
plants rely on wet-milling processes. Dry mill ethanol plants grind the
entire kernel and generally produce only one primary co-product:
distillers' grains with solubles (DGS). The co-product is sold wet
(WDGS) or dried (DDGS) to the agricultural market as animal feed.
However, there are a growing number of plants using front-end
fractionation to produce food-grade corn oil or back-end extraction to
produce fuel-grade corn oil for the biodiesel industry. A company
called GreenShift has corn oil extraction facilities located at five
ethanol plants in Michigan, Indiana, New York and Wisconsin.\47\
Collectively, these facilities are designed to extract in excess of 7.3
million gallons of corn oil per year. Primafuel Solutions is another
company offering corn oil extraction technologies to make existing
ethanol plants more sustainable. For more information on corn oil
extraction and other advanced technologies being pursued by today's
corn ethanol industry, refer to Section 1.4.1 of the RIA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\47\ Two plants in Michigan and one in each of the other three
states. All company information based on GreenShift's Q2 2009 SEC
filing available at http://www.greenshift.com/pdf/GERS_Form10Q_Q209_FINAL.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In contrast to dry mill plants, wet mill facilities separate the
kernel prior to processing into its component parts (germ, fiber,
protein, and starch) and in turn produce other co-products (usually
gluten feed, gluten meal, and food-grade corn oil) in addition to DGS.
Wet mill
[[Page 14745]]
plants are generally more costly to build but are larger in size on
average.\48\ As such, 11.4% of the current grain ethanol production
comes from the 11 previously mentioned wet mill facilities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\48\ According to our November 2009 corn ethanol plant
assessment, the average wet mill plant capacity is 125 million
gallons per year--almost twice that of the average dry mill plant
capacity (65 million gallons per year). For more on average plant
sizes, refer to Section 1.5 of the RIA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The remaining seven ethanol plants process waste beverages or waste
sugars/starches and operate differently than their grain-based
counterparts. These small production facilities do not require milling
and operate simpler enzymatic fermentation processes.
Ethanol production is a relatively resource-intensive process that
requires the use of water, electricity, and steam. Steam needed to heat
the process is generally produced on-site or by other dedicated
boilers.\49\ The ethanol industry relies primarily on natural gas. Of
today's 180 ethanol production facilities, an estimated 151 burn
natural gas \50\ (exclusively), three burn a combination of natural gas
and biomass, one burns natural gas and coal (although natural gas is
the primary fuel), one burns a combination of natural gas, landfill
biogas and wood, and two burn natural gas and syrup from the process.
We are aware of 17 plants that burn coal as their primary fuel and one
that burns a combination of coal and biomass.\51\ Our research suggests
that three corn ethanol plants rely on a combination of waste heat and
natural gas and one plant does not have a boiler and relies solely on
waste heat from a nearby power plant. Overall, our research suggests
that 27 plants currently utilize cogeneration or combined heat and
power (CHP) technology, although others may exist.\52\ CHP is a
mechanism for improving overall plant efficiency. Whether owned by the
ethanol facility, their local utility, or a third party, CHP facilities
produce their own electricity and use the waste heat from power
production for process steam, reducing the energy intensity of ethanol
production.\53\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\49\ Some plants pull steam directly from a nearby utility.
\50\ Facilities were assumed to burn natural gas if the plant
boiler fuel was unspecified or unavailable on the public domain.
\51\ Includes corrections from NPRM based on new information
obtained on Cargill plants and Blue Flint ethanol plant.
\52\ CHP assessment based on information provided by EPA's
Combined Heat and Power Partnership, literature searches and
correspondence with ethanol producers.
\53\ For more on CHP technology, refer to Section 1.4.1.3 of the
RIA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
During the ethanol fermentation process, large amounts of carbon
dioxide (CO2) gas are released. In some plants the
CO2 is vented into the atmosphere, but where local markets
exist, it is captured, purified, and sold to the food processing
industry for use in carbonated beverages and flash-freezing
applications. We are currently aware of 40 fuel ethanol plants that
recover CO2 or have facilities in place to do so. According
to Airgas, a leading gas distributor, the U.S. ethanol industry
currently recovers 2 to 2.5 million tons of CO2 per year
which translates to about 5-7% of all the CO2 produced by
the industry.\54\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\54\ Based on information provided by Bruce Woerner at Airgas on
August 14, 2009.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Since the majority of ethanol is made from corn, it is no surprise
that most of the plants are located in the Midwest near the Corn Belt.
Of today's 180 ethanol production facilities, 163 are located in the 15
states comprising PADD 2. For a map of the government's Petroleum
Administration for Defense Districts or PADDs, refer to Figure IV.B.1-
2.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR26MR10.420
As a region, PADD 2 accounts for over 94% (or 11.3 billion gallons)
of today's estimated ethanol production capacity, followed by PADD 3
(2.4%), PADDs 4 and 1 (each with 1.3%) and PADD 5 (0.8%). For more
information on today's ethanol plant locations, refer to Section 1.5.1
of the RIA.
The U.S. ethanol industry is currently comprised of a mixture of
company-owned plants and locally-owned farmer cooperatives (co-ops).
The majority of today's ethanol production facilities are company-
owned, and on average these plants are larger in size than farmer-owned
co-ops. Accordingly, these facilities account for about 80% of today's
online ethanol production capacity.\55\ Furthermore, nearly 30% of the
total domestic product comes from 40 plants owned by just three
different companies--POET Biorefining, Archer Daniels Midland (ADM),
and Valero Renewables. Valero entered the ethanol industry in March of
2009 when it acquired seven ethanol plants from
[[Page 14746]]
former ethanol giant, Verasun. The oil company currently has agreements
in place to purchase three more ethanol plants that would bring the
company's ethanol production capacity to 1.1 billion gallons per
year.\56\ However, ethanol plants are much smaller than petroleum
refineries. Valero's smallest petroleum refinery in Ardmore, OK has
about twice the throughput of all its ethanol plants combined.\57\
Still, as obligated parties under RFS1 and RFS2, the refining industry
continues to show increased interest in biofuels. Suncor and Murphy Oil
recently joined Valero as the second and third oil companies to
purchase idled U.S. ethanol plants. Many refiners are also supporting
the development of cellulosic biofuels and algae-based biodiesel.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\55\ Company-owned plants were assumed to be all those companies
not denoted as locally-owned based on Renewable Fuels Association
(RFA), Ethanol Biorefinery Locations (updated October 22, 2009). For
more on average plant sizes, refer to Section 1.5.1 of the RIA.
\56\ Valero recently announced that it has purchase agreements
in place to acquire the last two Verasun plants in Linden, IN and
Bloomington, OH and the former Renew Energy plant in Jefferson
Junction, WI.
\57\ Based on refinery information provided at http://www.valero.com/OurBusiness/OurLocations/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
b. Forecasted Production Under RFS2
As highlighted earlier, domestic ethanol production is projected to
grow to over 10 billion gallons in 2009. And with over 12 billion
gallons of capacity online as of November 2009, ethanol production
should continue to grow in 2010, provided plants continue to produce at
or above today's production levels. In addition, despite current market
conditions (i.e., poor ethanol margins), the ethanol industry is
expected to grow in the future under the RFS2 program. Although there
is not a set corn ethanol requirement, EISA allows for 15 billion
gallons of the 36-billion gallon renewable fuel standard to be met by
conventional biofuels. We expect that corn ethanol will fulfill this
requirement, provided it is more cost competitive than imported ethanol
or cellulosic biofuel in the marketplace.
In addition to the 180 aforementioned corn/starch ethanol plants
currently online, 27 plants are presently idled.\58\ Some of these are
smaller ethanol plants that have been idled for quite some time,
whereas others are in a more temporary ``hot idle'' mode, ready to be
restarted. In response to the economic downturn, a number of ethanol
producers have idled production, halted construction projects, sold off
plants and even filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. Some corn
ethanol companies have exited the industry all together (e.g., Verasun)
whereas others are using bankruptcy as a means to protect themselves
from creditors as they restructure their finances with the goal of
becoming sustainable.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\58\ Based on our November 2009 corn/starch ethanol industry
characterization. We are aware of at least one plant that has come
back online since then.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Crude oil prices are expected to increase in the future making corn
ethanol more economically viable. According to EIA's AEO 2009, crude
oil prices are projected to increase from about $80/barrel (today's
price) to $116/barrel by 2022.\59\ As oil and gas prices rebound, we
expect that the biofuels industry will as well. Since our April 2009
industry assessment used for the NPRM, at least nine corn ethanol
plants have come back online.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\59\ EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2009--ARRA Update (Table 12).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For analysis purposes, we assumed that all 27 idled corn/starch
ethanol plants would resume operations by 2022 under the RFS2 program.
We also assumed that a total of 11 new ethanol plants and two expansion
projects currently under construction or in advanced stages of planning
would come online.\60\ This includes two large dry mill expansion
projects currently underway at existing ADM wet mill plants and two
planned combination corn/cellulosic ethanol plants that received
funding from DOE. While several of these projects are delayed or on
hold at the moment, we expect that these facilities (or comparable
replacement projects) would eventually come online to get the nation to
approximately 15 billion gallons of corn ethanol production capacity.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\60\ Sources include Renewable Fuels Association, Ethanol
Biorefinery Locations (updated October 22, 2009) and Ethanol
Producer Magazine, Producing, Not Producing, Under Construction, and
Expansions lists (last modified on October 22, 2009) in addition to
information gathered from producer Web sites and follow-up
correspondence.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Almost 100% of conventional ethanol plant growth is expected to
come from facilities processing corn or other similarly processed
grains. And not surprisingly, the majority of growth (approximately 70%
by volume) is expected to originate from PADD 2. However, growth is
expected to occur in all PADDs. With the exception of one facility,\61\
all new corn/grain ethanol plants are expected to utilize dry milling
technologies and the majority of new production is expected to come
from plants burning natural gas. However, we anticipate that two manure
biogas plants,\62\ one biomass-fired plant, and two coal-fired ethanol
plants will be added to the mix.\63\ Of these new and returning idled
plants, we're aware of five facilities currently planning to use CHP
technology, bringing the U.S. total to 32.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\61\ Tate and Lyle is currently in the process of building a 115
MGY wet mill corn ethanol plant in Fort Dodge, IA.
\62\ One manure biogas plant that is currently idled and another
that was under construction but is now on hold.
\63\ The two coal fired plants are the aforementioned dry mill
expansion projects currently underway at existing ADM sites. These
projects commenced construction on or before December 19, 2007 and
would therefore should likely be grandfathered under the RFS2 rule.
For more on our grandfathering assessment, refer to Section 1.5.1.4
of the RIA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The above predictions are based on the industry's current near-term
production plans. However, we anticipate additional growth in advanced
ethanol production technologies under the RFS2 program. Forecasted fuel
prices are projected to drive corn ethanol producers to transition from
conventional boiler fuels to biomass feedstocks. In addition, fossil
fuel/electricity prices will likely drive a number of ethanol producers
to pursue CHP technology. For more on our projected 2022 utilization of
these technologies under the RFS2 program, refer to Section 1.5.1.3 of
the RIA.
2. Imported Ethanol
As discussed in the proposal, ethanol imports have traditionally
played a relatively small role in the U.S. transportation fuel market
due to historically low crude prices and the tariff on imported
ethanol. Between years 2000 and 2008, the volume of ethanol imported
into the U.S. has ranged from 46-720 million gallons per year. So far
this year, from January through November 2009, imported ethanol has
only reached 197 million gallons.\64\ As the data show, the volume of
imported ethanol can fluctuate greatly.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\64\ Official Statistics of the U.S. Department of Commerce,
U.S. ITC.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the past, the majority of volume has originated from countries
that are part of the Caribbean Basin Initiative. Direct Brazilian
imports have also made up a sizeable portion of total ethanol imported
into the U.S. However, recently there have been relatively small
amounts of direct imports of ethanol from Brazil.\65\ This indicates
that current market conditions have made importing Brazilian ethanol
directly to the U.S. uneconomical. Part of the reason for this decline
in imports is the cessation of the duty drawback that became effective
on October 1, 2008, but also changes in world sugar prices.\66\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\65\ Approximately 19,000 gallons directly from Brazil in the
month of June 2009 and 4 million gallons from Brazil in the month of
November 2009, zero gallons reported from November 2008-May 2009 and
July 2009-October 2009.
\66\ Lundell, Drake, ``Brazilian Ethanol Export Surge to End;
U.S. Customs Loophole Closed Oct. 1,'' Ethanol and Biodiesel News,
Issue 45, November 4, 2008.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 14747]]
It is difficult to project the potential volume of future ethanol
imports to the U.S. based purely on historical data. Rather, it is
necessary to assess future import potential by analyzing the major
players for foreign ethanol production and consumption. In 2008, the
top three fuel ethanol producers were the U.S., Brazil, and the
European Union (EU), producing 9.0, 6.5, and 0.7 billion gallons,
respectively.\67\ Consumption of fuel ethanol is also dominated by the
United States and Brazil with approximately 9.6 and 4.9 billion gallons
consumed in each country, respectively.68 69 The EU consumed
approximately 0.9 billion gallons of fuel ethanol in 2008.\70\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\67\ Renewable Fuels Association (RFA), ``2008 World Fuel
Ethanol Production, '' http://www.ethanolrfa.org/industry/statistics/#E, March 31, 2009.
\68\ Ibid.
\69\ UNICA, ``Sugarcane Industry in Brazil: Ethanol Sugar,
Bioelectricity'' Brochure, 2008.
\70\ EurObserv'ER, ``Biofuels Barometer'' July 2009, http://www.eurobserv-er.org/pdf/baro192.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In our assessment of foreign ethanol production and consumption, we
analyzed the following countries or group of countries: Brazil, the EU,
Japan, India, and China. Our analyses indicate that Brazil would likely
be the only nation able to supply any meaningful amount of ethanol to
the U.S. in the future. Depending on whether the mandates and goals of
the EU, Japan, India, and China are enacted or met in the future, it is
likely that this group of countries would consume any growth in their
own production and be net importers of ethanol, thus competing with the
U.S. for Brazilian ethanol exports.
Due to uncertainties in the future demand for ethanol domestically
and internationally, uncertainties in the actual investments made in
the Brazilian ethanol industry, as well as uncertainties in future
sugar prices, there appears to be a wide range of Brazilian production
and domestic consumption estimates. The most current and complete
estimates indicate that total Brazilian ethanol exports will likely
reach 3.8-4.2 billion gallons by 2022.71 72 73 As this
volume of ethanol export is available to countries around the world,
only a portion of this will be available exclusively to the United
States. If the balance of the EISA advanced biofuel requirement not met
with cellulosic biofuel and biomass-based diesel were to be met with
imported sugarcane ethanol alone, it would require about 2.2 billion
gallons (see Table IV.A.2-1), or approximately 55% of total Brazilian
ethanol export estimates. This is aggressive, yet within the bounds of
reason, therefore, we have made this simplifying assumption for the
purposes of further analysis.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\71\ EPE, ``Plano Nacional de Energia 2030,'' Presentation from
Mauricio Tolmasquim, 2007.
\72\ UNICA, ``Sugarcane Industry in Brazil: Ethanol, Sugar,
Bioelectricity,'' 2008.
\73\ USEPA International Visitors Program Meeting October 30,
2007, correspondence with Mr. Rodrigues Technical Director from
UNICA Sao Paulo Sugarcane Agro-industry Union, stated approximately
3.7 billion gallons probable by 2017/2020; Consistent with brochure
``Sugarcane Industry in Brazil: Ethanol Sugar, Bioelectricity'' from
UNICA (3.25 Bgal export in 2015 and 4.15 Bgal export in 2020).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Generally speaking, Brazilian ethanol exporters will seek routes to
countries with the lowest costs for transportation, taxes, and tariffs.
With respect to the U.S., the most likely route is through the
Caribbean Basin Initiative (CBI).\74\ Brazilian ethanol entering the
U.S. through CBI countries is not currently subject to the 54 cent/gal
imported ethanol tariff and yet receives the 45 cent/gal ethanol
blender credit. In addition to the U.S., other countries also have
similar tariffs on imported ethanol. Refer to Section 1.5.2 of the RIA
for more details. Due to the economic incentive of transporting ethanol
through the CBI, we expect the majority of the tariff rate quota (TRQ)
to be met or exceeded, perhaps 90% or more. The TRQ is set each year as
7% of the total domestic ethanol consumed in the prior year. If we
assume that 90% of the TRQ is met and that total domestic ethanol (corn
and cellulosic ethanol) consumed in 2021 was 19.2 Bgal (under the
primary control case), then approximately 1.21 Bgal of ethanol could
enter the U.S. through CBI countries in 2022. The rest of the Brazilian
ethanol exports not entering the CBI will compete on the open market
with the rest of the world demanding some portion of direct Brazilian
ethanol. To meet our advanced biofuel standard, we assumed 1.03 Bgal of
sugarcane ethanol would be imported directly to the U.S. in 2022.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\74\ Other preferential trade agreements include the North
American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) which permits tariff-free
ethanol imports from Canada and Mexico and the Andean Trade
Promotion and Drug Eradication Act (ATPDEA) which allows the
countries of Columbia, Ecuador, Bolivia, and Peru to import ethanol
duty-free. Currently, these countries export or produce relatively
small amounts of ethanol, and thus we have not assumed that the U.S.
will receive any substantial amounts from these countries in the
future for our analyses.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
3. Cellulosic Biofuel
The majority of the biofuel currently produced in the United States
comes from plants processing first-generation feedstocks like corn,
plant oils, sugarcane, etc. Non-edible cellulosic feedstocks have the
potential to greatly expand biofuel production, both volumetrically and
geographically. Research and development on cellulosic biofuel
technologies has exploded over the last few years, and plants to
commercialize a number of these technologies are already beginning to
materialize. The $1.01/gallon tax credit for cellulosic biofuel that
was introduced in the 2008 Farm Bill and recently became effective, is
also offering much incentive to this developing industry. In addition
to today's RFS2 program which sets aggressive goals for cellulosic
biofuel production, the Department of Energy (DOE), Department of
Agriculture (USDA), Department of Defense (DOD) and state agencies are
helping to spur industry growth.
a. Current State of the Industry
There are a growing number of biofuel producers, biotechnology
companies, universities and research institutes, start-up companies as
well as refiners investigating cellulosic biofuel production. The
industry is currently pursuing a wide range of feedstocks, conversion
technologies and fuels. There is much optimism surrounding the long-
term viability of cellulosic ethanol and other alcohols for gasoline
blending. There is also great promise and growing interest in synthetic
hydrocarbons like gasoline, diesel and jet fuel as ``drop in''
petroleum replacements. Some companies intend to start by processing
corn or sugarcane and then transition to cellulosic feedstocks while
others are focusing entirely on cellulosic materials. Regardless,
cellulosic biofuel production is beginning to materialize.
We are currently aware of over 35 small pilot- and demonstration-
level plants operating in North America. However, the main focus at
these facilities is research and development, not commercial
production. Most of the plants are rated at less than 250,000 gallons
per year and that's if they were operated at capacity. Most only
operate intermittently for the purpose of demonstrating that the
technologies can be used to produce transportation fuels. The industry
as a whole is still working to increase efficiency, improve yields,
reduce costs and prove to the public, as well as investors, that
cellulosic biofuel is both technologically and economically feasible.
As mentioned above, a variety of feedstocks are being investigated
for cellulosic biofuel production. There is a great deal of interest in
urban waste (MSW and C&D debris) because it is
[[Page 14748]]
virtually free and abundant in many parts of the country, including
large metropolitan areas where the bulk of fuel is consumed. There is
also a lot of interest in agricultural residues (corn stover, rice and
other cereal straws) and wood (forest thinnings, wood chips, pulp and
paper mill waste and yard waste). However, researchers are still
working to find viable harvesting and storage solutions. Others are
investigating the possibility of growing dedicated energy crops for
cellulosic biofuel production, e.g., switchgrass, energy cane, sorghum,
poplar, miscanthus and other fast-growing trees. While these crops have
tremendous potential, many are starting with the feedstocks that are
available today with the mentality that once the industry has proven
itself, it will be easier to secure growing contracts and start
producing energy crops. For more information on cellulosic feedstock
availability, refer to preamble Section IV.B.3.d and Section 1.1.2 of
the RIA.
The industry is also pursuing a number of different cellulosic
conversion technologies and biofuels. Most of the technologies fall
into one of two categories: biochemical or thermochemical. Biochemical
conversion involves the use of acids and/or enzymes to hydrolyze
cellulosic materials into fermentable sugars and lignin. Thermochemical
conversion involves the use of heat to convert biomass into synthesis
gas or pyrolysis oil for upgrading. A third technology pathway is
emerging that involves the use of catalysts to depolymerize or reform
the feedstocks into fuel. The technologies currently being considered
are capable of producing cellulosic alcohols or hydrocarbons for the
transportation fuel market. Many companies are also researching the
potential of co-firing biomass to produce plant energy in addition to
biofuels. For a more in-depth discussion on cellulosic technologies,
refer to Section 1.4.3 of the RIA.
b. Setting the 2010 Cellulosic Biofuel Standard
The Energy Independence and Security Act (EISA) set aggressive
cellulosic biofuel targets beginning with 100 million gallons in 2010.
However, EISA also supplied EPA with cellulosic biofuel waiver
authority. For any calendar year in which the projected cellulosic
biofuel production is less than the minimum applicable volume, EPA can
reduce the standard based on the volume expected to be available that
year. EPA is required to set the annual cellulosic standard by November
30th each year and should consider the annual estimate made by EIA by
October 31st of each year. We are setting the 2010 standard as part of
this final rule.
Setting the cellulosic biofuel standard for 2010 represents a
unique challenge. As discussed above, the industry is currently
characterized by a wide range of companies mostly focused on research,
development, demonstration, and financing their developing
technologies. In addition, while we are finalizing a requirement that
producers and importers of renewable fuel provide us with production
outlook reports detailing future supply estimates (refer to Sec.
80.1449), we do not have the benefit of this valuable cellulosic supply
information for setting the 2010 standard. Finally, since today's
cellulosic biofuel production potential is relatively small, and the
number of potential producers few (as described in more detail below),
the overall volume for 2010 can be heavily influenced by new
developments, either positive or negative associated with even a single
company, which can be very difficult to predict. This is evidenced by
the magnitude of changes in cellulosic biofuel projections and the
potential suppliers of these fuels since the proposal.
In the proposal, we did a preliminary assessment of the cellulosic
biofuel industry to arrive at the conclusion that it was possible to
uphold the 100 million gallon standard in 2010 based on anticipated
production. At the time of our April 2009 NPRM assessment, we were
aware of a handful of small pilot and demonstration plants that could
help meet the 2010 standard, but the largest volume contributions were
expected to come from Cello Energy and Range Fuels.
Cello Energy had just started up a 20 million gallon per year (MGY)
cellulosic diesel plant in Bay Minette, AL. EPA staff visited the
facility twice in 2009 to confirm that the first-of-its-kind commercial
plant was mechanically complete and poised to produce cellulosic
biofuel. It was assumed that start-up operations would go as planned
and that the facility would be operating at full capacity by the end of
2009 and that three more 50 MGY cellulosic diesel plants planned for
the Southeast could be brought online by the end of 2010.
At the time of our assessment, we were also anticipating cellulosic
biofuel production from Range Fuels' first commercial-scale plant in
Soperton, GA. The company received a $76 million grant from DOE to help
build a 40 MGY wood-based ethanol plant and they broke ground in
November 2007. In January 2009, Range was awarded an $80 million loan
guarantee from USDA.\75\ With the addition of this latest capital, the
company seemed well on its way to completing construction of its first
10 MGY phase by the end of 2009 and beginning production in 2010.
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\75\ For more information on federal support for biofuels, refer
to Section 1.5.3.3 of the RIA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Since our April 2009 industry assessment there have been a number
of changes and delays in production plans due to technological,
contractual, financial and other reasons. Cello Energy and Range Fuels
have delayed or reduced their production plans for 2010. Some of the
small plants expected to come online in 2010 have pushed back
production to the 2011-2012 timeframe, e.g., Clearfuels Technology,
Fulcrum River Biofuels, and ZeaChem. Alltech/Ecofin and RSE Pulp &
Chemical, two companies that were awarded DOE funding back in 2008 to
build small-scale biorefineries appear to be permanently on hold or off
the table. In addition, Bell Bio-Energy, a company that received DOD
funding has since abandoned plans to produce cellulosic diesel from MSW
at U.S. military bases.\76\
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\76\ Bell Bio-Energy is currently investigating other locations
for turning MSW into diesel fuel according to an October 14, 2009
conversation with JC Bell.
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At the same time, there has also been an explosion of new
companies, new business relationships, and new advances in the
cellulosic biofuel industry. Keeping track of all of them is a
challenge in and of it self as the situation can change on a daily
basis. EIA recently provided EPA with their first cellulosic biofuel
supply estimate required under CAA section 211(o)(7)(D)(i). In a letter
to the Administrator dated October 29, 2009, they arrived at a 5.04
million gallon estimate for 2010 based on publicly available
information and assumptions made with respect production capacity
utilization.\77\ A summary of the plants they considered is shown below
in Table IV.B.3-1.
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\77\ Letter from Richard Newell, EIA Administrator to Lisa
Jackson, EPA Administrator dated October 29, 2009 (Table 2).
[[Page 14749]]
Table IV.B.3-1--EIA's Projected Cellulosic Biofuel Plant Production Capacities for 2010
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Capacity Expected Production
Online Company Location Product (million utilization (million
gallons) (%) gallons) \3\
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2007............................... KL Process Design.... Upton, WY............ Ethanol.............. 1.5 10 0.15
2008............................... Verenium............. Jennings, LA......... Ethanol.............. 1.4 10 0.14
2008............................... Terrabon............. Bryan, TX............ Bio-Crude............ 0.93 10 0.09
2010............................... Zeachem.............. Boardman, OR......... Ethanol.............. 1.5 10 0.15
2010............................... Cello Energy......... Bay Minette, AL...... Diesel............... 20.0 10 \1\ 2.00
2010............................... Range Fuels.......... Soperton, GA......... Ethanol.............. 5.0 \2\ 50 2.5
-----------------------------------------------
Total.......................... ..................... ..................... ..................... 30.35 .............. 5.04
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Notes: 1. Cello Energy is assigned a 10-percent utilization factor as they have not been able to run on a continuous basis long enough to apply for a
Synthetic Minor Operating Permit or produce significant amounts of fuel during 2009. 2. It is estimated that only half the 2010 projected capacity (10
million gallons per year) will be a qualified fuel. 3. The production from these facilities in 2009 is not surveyed by EIA or EPA.
In addition to receiving EIA's information and coordinating with
them and other offices in DOE, we have initiated meetings and
conversations with over 30 up-and-coming advanced biofuel companies to
verify publicly available information, obtain confidential business
information, and better assess the near-term cellulosic biofuel
production potential for use in setting the 2010 standard. What we have
found is that the cellulosic biofuel landscape has continued to evolve.
Based on information obtained, not only do we project significantly
different production volumes on a company-by-company basis, but the
list of potential producers of cellulosic biofuel in 2010 is also
significantly different than that identified by EIA.
Overall, our industry assessment suggests that it is difficult to
rely on commercial production from small pilot or demonstration-level
plants. The primary purpose of these facilities is to prove that a
technology works and demonstrate to investors that the process is
capable of being scaled up to support a larger commercial plant. Small
plants are cheaper to build to demonstrate technology than larger
plants, but the operating costs ($/gal) are higher due to their small
scale. As a result, it's not economical for most of these facilities to
operate continuously. Most of these plants are regularly shut down and
restarted as needed as part of the research and development process.
Due to their intermittent nature, most of these plants operate at a
fraction of their rated capacity, some less than the 10% utilization
rate assumed by EIA. In addition, few companies plan on making their
biofuel available for commercial sale.
However, there are at least two cellulosic biofuel companies
currently operating demonstration plants in the U.S. and Canada that
could produce fuel commercially in 2010. The first is KL Energy
Corporation, a company we considered for the NPRM with a 1.5 MGY
cellulosic ethanol plant in Upton, WY. This plant was considered by EIA
and is included in Table IV.B.3-1. The second is Iogen's cellulosic
ethanol plant in Ottawa, Canada with a 0.5 MGY capacity. Iogen's
commercial demonstration plant was referenced by EIA as a potential
foreign source for cellulosic biofuel but was not included in their
final table. In addition to these online demonstration plants, there
are three additional companies not on EIA's list that are currently
building demonstration-level cellulosic biofuel plants in North America
that are scheduled to come online in 2010. This includes DuPont Danisco
Cellulosic Ethanol and Fiberight, companies building demonstration
plants in the U.S. and Enerkem, a company building a demonstration
plant in Canada. Cello Energy's plant in Bay Minette, AL continues to
offer additional potential for cellulosic biofuel in 2010. And finally,
Dynamotive, a company that currently has two biomass-based pyrolysis
oil production plants in Canada is another potential source of
cellulosic biofuel in 2010. All seven aforementioned companies are
discussed in greater detail below along with Range Fuels.
KL Energy Corporation (KL Energy), through its majority-owned
Western Biomass Energy, LLC (WBE) located in Upton, WY, is designed to
convert wood products and wood waste products into ethanol. Since the
end of construction in September 2007, equipment commissioning and
process revisions continued until the October 2009 startup. The plant
was built as a 1.5 MGY demonstration plant and was designed to both
facilitate research and operate commercially. It is KL Energy's intent
that WBE's future use will involve the production and sale of small but
commercial-quality volumes of ethanol and lignin co-product. The
company's current 2010 goal is for WBE to generate RINs under the RFS2
program.\78\
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\78\ Based on information provided by Lori Litzen, Environmental
Permit Engineer at KL Energy on December 10, 2009.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Iogen is responsible for opening the first commercial demonstration
cellulosic ethanol plant in North America. Iogen's plant located in
Ottawa, Canada has been producing cellulosic ethanol from wheat straw
since 2004. Like KL Energy, Iogen has slowly been ramping up production
at its 0.5 MGY plant. According to the company's Web site, they
produced approximately 24,000 gallons in 2004 and 34,000 gallons in
2005. Production dropped dramatically in 2006 and 2007 but came back
strong with 55,000 gallons in 2008. Iogen recently produced over
150,000 gallons of ethanol from the demonstration plant in 2009. Iogen
also recently became the first cellulosic ethanol producer to sell its
advanced biofuel at a retail service station in Canada. Their
cellulosic ethanol was blended to make E10 available for sale to
consumers at an Ottawa Shell station. Iogen also recently announced
plans to build its first commercial scale plant in Prince Albert,
Saskatchewan in the 2011/2012 timeframe. Based on the company's
location and operating status, Iogen certainly has the potential to
participate in the RFS2 program. However, at this time, we are not
expecting them to import any cellulosic ethanol into the U.S. in
2010.\79\
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\79\ Based on Web site information, comments submitted in
response to our proposal, and a follow-up phone call with Iogen
Executive VP, Jeff Passmore on December 17, 2009.
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DuPont Danisco Cellulosic Ethanol, LLC (DDCE), a joint venture
between DuPont and Danisco, is another potential source for cellulosic
biofuel in 2010. DDCE received funding from the State of Tennessee and
the University of Tennessee to build a small 0.25 MGY demonstration
plant in Vonore, TN to
[[Page 14750]]
pursue switchgrass-to-ethanol production. According to DDCE,
construction commenced in October 2008 and the plant is now
mechanically complete and undergoing start-up operations. The facility
is scheduled to come online by the end of January and the company hopes
to operate at or around 50% of production capacity in 2010. According
to the DDCE, the objective in Vonore is to validate processes and data
for commercial scale-up, not to make profits. However, the company does
plan to sell the cellulosic ethanol it produces.\80\
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\80\ Based on a December 16, 2009 telephone conversation with
DDCE Director of Corporate Communications, Jennifer Hutchins and
follow-up e-mail correspondence.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Enerkem is another company pursuing cellulosic ethanol production.
The Canadian-based company was recently announced as a recipient of a
joint $50 million grant from DOE and USDA to build a 10 MGY woody
biomass-to-ethanol plant in Pontotoc, MS.\81\ The U.S. plant is not
scheduled to come online until 2012, but Enerkem is currently building
a 1.3 MGY demonstration plant in Westbury, Quebec. According to the
company, plant construction in Westbury started in October 2007 and the
facility is currently scheduled to come online around the middle of
2010. While it's unclear at this time whether the cellulosic ethanol
produced will be exported to the United States, Enerkem has expressed
interest in selling its fuel commercially.\82\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\81\ Refer to December 4, 2009 DOE press release entitled,
``Recovery Act Announcement: Secretaries Chu and Vilsack Announce
More Than $600 Million Investment in Advanced Biorefinery
Projects.''
\82\ Based on an October 14, 2009 meeting with Enerkem and
follow-up telephone conversation with VP of Government Affairs,
Marie-Helene Labrie on December 14, 2009.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additional cellulosic biofuel could come from Fiberight, LLC
(Fiberight) in 2010. We recently became aware of this start-up company
and contacted them to learn more about their process and cellulosic
biofuel production plans. According to Fiberight, they have been
operating a pilot-scale facility in Lawrenceville, VA for three years.
They have developed a proprietary process that not only fractionates
MSW but biologically converts the non-recyclable portion into
cellulosic ethanol and biochemicals. Fiberight recently purchased a
shut down corn ethanol plant in Blairstown, IA and plans to convert it
to become MSW-to-ethanol capable. According to the company,
construction is currently underway and the goal is to bring the 2 MGY
demonstration plant online by February or March, 2010. If the plant
starts up according to plan, the company intends on making cellulosic
ethanol commercially available in 2010 and generating RINS under the
RFS2 program. Fiberight's long-term goal is to expand the Blairstown
plant to a 5-8 MGY capacity and build other small commercial plants
around the country that could convert MSW into fuel.\83\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\83\ Based on a December 15, 2009 telephone conversation with
Fiberight CEO, Craig Stuart-Paul and follow-up e-mail
correspondence.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cello Energy, a company considered in the proposal, continues to be
another viable source for cellulosic biofuel in 2010. Despite recent
legal issues which have constrained the company's capital, Cello Energy
is still pursuing cellulosic diesel production. According to the
company, they are currently working to resolve materials handling and
processing issues that surfaced when they attempted to scale up
production to 20 MGY from a previously operated demonstration plant. As
of November 2009, they were waiting for new equipment to be ordered and
installed which they hoped would allow for operations to be restarted
as early as February or March, 2010. Cello's other planned commercial
facilities are currently on hold until the Bay Minette plant is
operational.\84\
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\84\ Based on a November 9, 2009 telephone conversation with
Cello Energy CEO, Jack Boykin.
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Another potential supplier of cellulosic biofuel is Dynamotive
Energy Systems (Dynamotive) headquartered in Vancouver, Canada.
Dynamotive currently has two plants in West Lorne and Guelph, Ontario
that produce biomass-based pyrolysis oil (also known as ``BioOil'') for
industrial applications. The BioOil production capacity between the two
plants is estimated at around 9 MGY, but both plants are currently
operating at a fraction of their rated capacity.\85\ However, according
to a recent press release, Dynamotive has contracts in place to supply
a U.S.-based client with at least nine shipments of BioOil in 2010. If
Dynamotive's BioOil is used as heating oil or upgraded to
transportation fuel, it could potentially count towards meeting the
cellulosic biofuel standard in 2010.
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\85\ According to Dynamotive's Web site, the Guelph plant has a
capacity to convert 200 tonnes of biomass into BioOil per day. If
all modules are fully operational, the plant has the ability to
process 66,000 dry tons of biomass per year with an energy output
equivalent to 130,000 barrels of oil. The West Lorne plant has a
capacity to convert 130 tonnes of biomass into BioOil per day which,
if proportional to the Guelph plant, translates to an energy-
equivalent of 84,500 barrels of oil. According to a November 3, 2009
press release, Dynamotive has contracts in place to supply a U.S.-
based client with at least nine shipments of BioOil in 2010.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As for the Range Fuels plant, construction of phase one in
Soperton, GA is about 85% complete, with start-up planned for mid-2010.
However, there have been some changes to the scope of the project that
will limit the amount of cellulosic biofuel that can be produced in
2010. The initial capacity has been reduced from 10 to 4 million
gallons per year. In addition, since they plan to start up the plant
using a methanol catalyst they are not expected to produce qualifying
renewable fuel in 2010. During phase two of their project, currently
slated for mid-2012, Range plans to expand production at the Soperton
plant and transition from a methanol to a mixed alcohol catalyst. This
will allow for a greater alcohol production potential as well as a
greater cellulosic biofuel production potential.\86\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\86\ Based on a November 5, 2009 telephone conversation with
Range Fuels VP of Government Affairs, Bill Schafer.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Overall, our most recent industry assessment suggests that there
could potentially be over 30 MGY of cellulosic biofuel production
capacity online by the end of 2010.\87\ However, since most of the
plants are still under construction today, the amount of cellulosic
biofuel produced in 2010 will be contingent upon when and if these
plants come online and whether the projects get delayed due to funding
or other reasons. In addition, based on our discussions with the
developing industry, it is clear that we cannot count on demonstration
plants to produce at or near capacity in 2010, or in their first few
years of operation for that matter. The amount of cellulosic biofuel
actually realized will depend on whether the process works, the
efficiency of the process, and how regularly the plant is run. As
mentioned earlier, most small plants, including commercial
demonstration plants, are not operated continuously. As such, we cannot
base the standard on these plants running at capacity--at least until
the industry develops further and proves that such rates are
achievable. We currently estimate that production from first-of-its
kind plants could be somewhere in the 25-50% range in 2010. Together,
the implementation timelines and anticipated production levels of the
plants described above brings the cellulosic biofuel supply estimate to
somewhere in the 6-13 million gallon range for 2010.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\87\ For more information, refer to Section 1.5.3.2 of the RIA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition, it is unclear how much we can rely on Canadian plants
for
[[Page 14751]]
cellulosic biofuel in 2010. Although we currently receive some
conventional biofuel imports from Canada and many of the aforementioned
Canadian companies have U.S. markets in mind, the country also has its
own renewable fuel initiatives that could keep much of the cellulosic
biofuel produced from coming to the United States, e.g., Iogen.
Finally, it's unclear whether all fuel produced by these facilities
will qualify as cellulosic biofuel under the RFS2 program. Several of
the companies are producing fuels or using feedstocks which may not in
fact qualify as cellulosic biofuel once we receive their detailed
registration information. Factoring in these considerations, the
cellulosic biofuel potential from the six more likely companies
described above could result in several different production scenarios
in the neighborhood of the recent EIA estimate. We believe this
estimate of 5 million gallons or 6.5 ethanol-equivalent million gallons
represents a reasonable yet achievable level for the cellulosic biofuel
standard in 2010 considering the degree of uncertainty involved with
setting the standard for the first year. As mentioned earlier, we
believe standard setting will be easier in future years once the
industry matures, we start receiving production outlook reports and
there is less uncertainty regarding feasibility of cellulosic biofuel
production.
c. Current Production Outlook for 2011 and Beyond
Since the proposal, we have also learned about a number of other
cellulosic biofuel projects in addition to those described above. This
includes commercial U.S. production plans by Coskata, Enerkem and
Vercipia. However, production isn't slated to begin until 2011 or later
and the same is true for most of the other larger plants we're aware of
that are currently under development. Nonetheless, while cellulosic
biofuel production in 2010 may be limited, it is remarkable how much
progress the industry has made in such a short time, and there is a
tremendous growth opportunity for cellulosic biofuels over the next
several years.
Most of the cellulosic biofuel companies we've talked to are in
different stages of proving their technologies. Regardless of where
they are at, many have fallen behind their original commercialization
schedules. As with any new technology, there have been delays
associated with scaling up capacity, i.e., bugs to work out going from
pilot to demonstration to commercialization. However, most are saying
it's not the technologies that are delaying commercialization, it is
lack of available funding. Obtaining capital has been very challenging
given the current recession and the banking sector's financial
difficulties. This is especially true for start-up companies that do
not have access to capital through existing investors, plant profits,
etc. From what we understand, banks are looking for cellulosic
companies to be able to show that their plants are easily ``scalable''
or expandable to commercial size. Many are only considering companies
that have built plants to one-tenth of commercial scale and have logged
many hours of continuous operation.
The government is currently trying to help in this area. To date,
the Department of Energy (DOE) and the Department of Agriculture (USDA)
have allocated over $720 million in federal funding to help build pilot
and demonstration-scale biorefineries employing advanced technologies
in the United States. The largest installment from Recovery Act funding
was recently announced on December 4, 2009 and includes funding for a
series of larger commercial demonstration plants including cellulosic
ethanol projects by Enerkem and INEOS New Planet BioEnergy, LLC. DOE
has also issued grants to help fund some of the first commercial
cellulosic biofuel plants. Current recipients include Abengoa
Bioenergy, BlueFire Ethanol \88\ and POET Biorefining in addition to
Range Fuels. DOE and USDA are also issuing loan guarantees to help
support the up-and-coming cellulosic biofuels industry and funding
research and development. Many states are also providing assistance.
For more information on government support for biofuels, refer to
Section 1.5.3.3 of the RIA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\88\ Although BlueFire is still working on obtaining financing
to build its first demonstration plant, it has received two
installments of federal funding towards its first planned
commercial-scale plant. The 19 MGY plant planned for Fulton, MS
(originally planned for Southern California) was awarded $40 million
from DOE on February 28, 2008 and another $81.1 million from DOE and
USDA on December 4, 2009.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The refining industry is also helping to fund cellulosic biofuel
R&D efforts and some of the first commercial plants. Many of the major
oil companies have invested in advanced second-generation biofuels over
the past 12-18 months. A few refiners (e.g., BP and Shell) have even
entered into joint ventures to become cellulosic biofuel producers.
General Motors and other vehicle/engine manufacturers are also
providing financial support to help with research and development.
A summary of some of the cellulosic biofuel companies with near-
term commercialization plans in North America is provided in Table
IV.B.3-2. The capacities presented represent maximum annual average
throughput based on each company's current production plans. However,
as noted, capacity does not necessarily translate to production. Actual
production of cellulosic biofuel will likely be well below capacity,
especially in the early years of production. We will continue to track
these companies and the cellulosic biofuel industry as a whole
throughout the duration of the RFS2 program. In addition, we will
continue to collaborate with EIA in annual standard setting. A more
detailed discussion of the plants corresponding to these company
estimates is provided in Section 1.5.3 of the RIA.
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P
[[Page 14752]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR26MR10.421
BILLING CODE 6560-50-C
d. Feedstock Availability
A wide variety of feedstocks can be used for cellulosic biofuel
production, including: Agricultural residues, forestry biomass, certain
renewable portions of municipal solid waste and construction and
demolition waste (i.e., separated food, yard and incidental, and post-
recycled paper and wood waste as discussed in Section II.B.4) and
energy crops. These feedstocks are currently much more difficult to
convert into biofuel than traditional corn/starch crops or at least
require new and different processes because of the more complex
structure of cellulosic material.
To determine the likely cellulosic feedstocks for production of 16
billion gallons cellulosic biofuel by 2022, we analyzed the data and
results from various sources. Sources include agricultural modeling
from the Forestry Agriculture Sector Optimization Model (FASOM) to
determine the most economical volume of agriculture residues, energy
crops, and forestry resources (see Section VIII for more details on the
FASOM) used to meet the standard. We supplemented these estimates with
feedstock assessment estimates for the biomass portions of municipal
solid waste and construction and demolition waste.\89\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\89\ It is important to note that our original plant siting
analysis for cellulosic ethanol facilities used the most current
version of outputs from FASOM at the time, which was from April
2008. The siting analysis was used to inform the air quality
modeling, which requires long leadtimes. Since then, FASOM has been
updated to reflect better assumptions. Therefore, the version used
for the FRM in Section VIII on economic impacts is different from
the one used for the plant siting analysis in the NPRM. We do not
believe that the differences between the two versions are enough to
have a major impact on the plant siting analysis.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The following subsections describe the availability of various
cellulosic feedstocks and the estimated amounts from each feedstock
needed to meet the EISA requirement of 16 Bgal of
[[Page 14753]]
cellulosic biofuel by 2022. Refer to Section IV.B.2.c.iv for the
summarized results of the types and volumes of cellulosic feedstocks
chosen based on our analyses.
i. Urban Waste
Cellulosic feedstocks available at the lowest cost to the ethanol
producer will likely be chosen first. This suggests that urban waste
which is already being gathered today and incurs a fee for its disposal
may be among the first to be used. Urban wastes are used in a variety
of ways. Most commonly, wastes are ground into mulch, dumped into land-
fills, or incinerated. We describe two components of urban waste,
municipal solid waste (MSW) and construction and demolition (C&D)
debris, below.
MSW consists of paper, glass, metals, plastics, wood, yard
trimmings, food scraps, rubber, leather, textiles, etc. The portion of
MSW that can qualify as renewable biomass under the program is
discussed in Section II.B.4.d. The bulk of the biogenic portion of MSW
that can be converted into biofuel is cellulosic material such as wood,
yard trimmings, paper, and much of food wastes. Paper made up
approximately 31% of the total MSW generated in 2008.\90\ Although
recycling/recovery rates are increasing over time, there appears to
still be a large fraction of biogenic material that ends up unused and
in land-fills. C&D debris is typically not available in wood waste
assessments, although some have estimated this feedstock based on
population. Utilization of such feedstocks could help generate energy
or biofuels for transportation. However, despite various assessments on
urban waste resources, there is still a general lack of reliable data
on delivered prices, issues of quality (potential for contamination),
and lack of understanding of potential competition with other
alternative uses (e.g., recycling, burning for electricity).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\90\ EPA. Municipal Solid Waste Generation, Recycling, and
Disposal in the United States: Facts and figures for 2008.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We estimated that a total of 44.5 million dry tons of MSW (wood,
yard trimmings, paper, and food waste) and C&D wood waste could be
available for producing biofuels after factoring in several
assumptions, e.g., percent contamination, percent recovered or
combusted for other uses, and percent moisture.91 92 Between
the proposal and this final rule, we have updated the assumptions noted
above based on newer reports. It should be noted, however, that our
estimates of urban waste availability have not changed significantly
between the proposal and the final rule. We assumed that approximately
26 million dry tons (of the total 44.5 million dry tons) could be used
to produce biofuels. However, many areas of the U.S. (e.g., much of the
Rocky Mountains) have such sparse resources that an MSW and C&D
cellulosic facility would not likely be justifiable. We did assume that
in areas with other cellulosic feedstocks (forest and agricultural
residue), that the MSW would be used even if the MSW could not justify
the installation of a plant on its own. Therefore, we have estimated
that urban waste could help contribute to the production of
approximately 2.3 ethanol-equivalent billion gallons of fuel.\93\ Note
that some processes are likely to also process other portions of MSW
(e.g., plastics, rubbers) into fuel, but we have only accounted for the
portion expected to qualify as renewable fuel and produce RINs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\91\ Wiltsee, G., ``Urban Wood Waste Resource Assessment,''
NREL/SR-570-25918, National Renewable Energy Laboratory, November
1998.
\92\ Biocycle, ``The State of Garbage in America,'' Vol. 49, No.
12, December 2008, p. 22.
\93\ Assuming 90 gal/dry ton ethanol conversion yield for urban
waste in 2022.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition to MSW and C&D waste generated from normal day-to-day
activities, there is also potential for renewable biomass to be
generated from natural disasters. This includes diseased trees, other
woody debris, and C&D debris. For instance, Hurricane Katrina was
estimated to have damaged approximately 320 million large trees.\94\
Katrina also generated over 100 million tons of residential debris, not
including the commercial sector. Much of this waste would likely be
disposed of and therefore go unused. Collection of this material for
the generation of biofuel could be a better alternative use for this
waste. While we acknowledge this material could provide a large source
in the short-term, natural disasters are highly variable, making it
hard to predict amounts of material available in the future. Thus, for
our analyses we have not included natural disaster renewable biomass in
our estimates.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\94\ Chambers, J., ``Hurricane Katrina's Carbon Footprint on
U.S. Gulf Coast Forests'' Science Vol. 318, 2007.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ii. Agricultural and Forestry Residues
The next category of feedstocks chosen will likely be those that
are readily produced but have not yet been commercially collected. This
includes both agricultural and forestry residues.
Agricultural residues are expected to play an important role early
on in the development of the cellulosic ethanol industry due to the
fact that they are already being grown. Agricultural crop residues are
biomass that remains in the field after the harvest of agricultural
crops. The most common residues are corn stover (the stalks, leaves,
and/or cobs) and straw from wheat, rice, barley, and oats. These U.S.
crops and others produce more than 500 million tons of residues each
year, although only a fraction can be used for fuel and/or energy
production due to sustainability and conservation constraints.\95\ Crop
residues can be found all over the United States, but are primarily
concentrated in the Midwest since corn stover accounts for half of all
available agricultural residues.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\95\ Elbehri, Aziz. USDA, ERS. ``An Evaluation of the Economics
of Biomass Feedstocks: A Synthesis of the Literature. Prepared for
the Biomass Research and Development Board,'' 2007; Since 2007, a
final report has been released. Biomass Research and Development
Board., ``The Economics of Biomass Feedstocks in the United States:
A Review of the Literature,'' October 2008.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Agricultural residues play an important role in maintaining and
improving soil quality, protecting the soil surface from water and wind
erosion, helping to maintain nutrient levels, and protecting water
quality. Thus, collection and removal of agricultural residues raise
concerns about the potential for increased erosion, reduced crop
productivity, depletion of soil carbon and nutrients, and water
pollution. Sustainable removal rates for agricultural residues have
been estimated in various studies, many showing tremendous variability
due to local differences in soil and erosion conditions, soil type,
landscape (slope), tillage practices, crop rotation managements, and
the use of cover crops. One of the most recent studies by top experts
in the field shows that under current rotation and tillage practices,
about 30% of corn stover (about 59 million metric tons) produced in the
U.S. could be collected, taking into consideration erosion, soil
moisture concerns, and nutrient replacement costs.\96\ The same study
shows that if farmers convert to no-till corn management and total
stover production does not change, then approximately 50% of stover
(100 million metric tons) could be collected without causing erosion to
exceed the tolerable soil loss. This study, however, did not consider
possible soil carbon loss which other studies indicate may be a greater
constraint to environmentally sustainable feedstock harvest than that
needed to control water and wind
[[Page 14754]]
erosion.\97\ Experts agree that additional studies are needed to
further evaluate how soil carbon and other factors affect sustainable
removal rates. Despite unclear guidelines for sustainable removal rates
due to the uncertainties explained above, our agricultural modeling
analysis assumes that no stover is removable on conventional tilled
lands, 35% of stover is removable on conservation tilled lands, and 50%
is removable on no-till lands. In general, these removal guidelines are
appropriate only for the Midwest, where the majority of corn is
currently grown.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\96\ Graham, R.L., ``Current and Potential U.S. Corn Stover
Supplies,'' American Society of Agronomy 99:1-11, 2007.
\97\ Wilhelm, W.W. et al., ``Corn Stover to Sustain Soil Organic
Carbon Further Constrains Biomass Supply,'' Agron. J. 99:1665-1667,
2007.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As already noted, removal rates will vary by region due to local
differences. Given the current understanding of sustainable removal
rates, we believe that such assumptions are reasonably justified. Based
on our research, we also note that calculating residue maintenance
requirements for the amount of biomass that must remain on the land to
ensure soil quality is another approach for modeling sustainable
residue collection quantities. This approach would likely be more
accurate for all landscapes as site-specific conditions such as soil
type, topography, etc. could be taken into account. This would prevent
site-specific soil erosion and soil quality concerns that would
inevitably exist when using average values for residue removal rates
across all soils and landscapes. At the time of our analyses, however,
we had limited data on which to accurately apply this approach and
therefore assumed the removal guidelines based on tillage practices.
Our agricultural modeling (FASOM) suggests that corn stover will
make up the majority of agricultural residues used by 2022 to meet the
EISA cellulosic biofuel standard (4.9 ethanol-equivalent Bgal).\98\
Smaller contributions are expected to come from other crop residues
including sugarcane bagasse (0.6 ethanol-equivalent Bgal), wheat
residues (0.1 ethanol-equivalent Bgal), and sweet sorghum pulp (0.1
ethanol-equivalent Bgal).\99\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\98\ Assuming 92.3 gal/dry ton ethanol conversion yield for corn
stover in 2022.
\99\ Bagasse is a byproduct of sugarcane crushing and not
technically an agricultural residue. Sweet sorghum pulp is also a
byproduct of sweet sorghum processing. We have included it under
this heading for simplification due to sugarcane and sorghum being
an agricultural feedstock.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The U.S. also has vast amounts of forest resources that could
potentially provide feedstock for the production of cellulosic biofuel.
One of the major sources of woody biomass could come from logging
residues. The U.S. timber industry harvests over 235 million dry tons
annually and produces large volumes of non-merchantable wood and
residues during the process.\100\ Logging residues are produced in
conventional harvest operations, forest management activities, and
clearing operations. In 2004, these operations generated approximately
67 million dry tons of forest residues that were left uncollected at
harvest sites.\101\ Other feedstocks include those from other removal
residues, thinnings from timberland, and primary mill residues.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\100\ Smith, W. Brad et al., ``Forest Resources of the United
States, 2002 General Technical Report NC-241,'' St. Paul, MN: U.S.
Dept. of Agriculture, Forest Service, North Central Research
Station, 2004.
\101\ USDA-Forest Service. ``Timber Products Output Mapmaker
Version 1.0.'' 2004.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For the NPRM, FASOM was not able to model forestry biomass as a
potential feedstock. As a result, we relied on USDA-Forest Service (FS)
for information on the forestry sector at the time. For the final rule,
we were able to incorporate the forestry sector model in FASOM. EISA
does not allow forestry material from national forests and virgin
forests that could be used to produce biofuels to count towards the
renewable fuels requirement under EISA. Therefore, our modeling of
forestry biomass excluded such material. The FASOM model estimated that
approximately 0.1 ethanol-equivalent billion gallons would be produced
from forestry biomass to meet EISA.
iii. Dedicated Energy Crops
While urban waste, agricultural residues and forest residues will
likely be the first feedstocks used in the production of cellulosic
biofuel, there may be limitations to their use due to land availability
and sustainable removal rates. Energy crops which are not yet grown
commercially but have the potential for high yields and a series of
environmental benefits could help provide additional feedstocks in the
future. Dedicated energy crops are plant species grown specifically for
energy purposes. Various perennial plants have been researched as
potential dedicated feedstocks, including switchgrass, mixed prairie
grasses, hybrid poplar, miscanthus, energy cane, energy sorghum, and
willow trees. Refer to Section 1.1.2.2 of the RIA for more information
on the benefits and challenges with using dedicated energy crops.
In addition to estimating the extent that agricultural residues
might contribute to cellulosic ethanol production, FASOM also estimated
the contribution that energy crops might provide (7.9 ethanol-
equivalent Bgal).\102\ FASOM covers all cropland and pastureland in
production in the 48 contiguous United States. For the NPRM, FASOM did
not contain all categories of grassland and rangeland captured in
USDA's Major Land Use data sets. For the final rule, FASOM accounts for
all major land categories, including forestland and rangeland. All crop
production, including dedicated energy crops, takes place on cropland.
Land categories that can be converted to cropland production include
cropland pasture, forest pasture, and forestland. More detail can be
found in Chapter VIII of this preamble. Furthermore, we constrained
FASOM to be consistent with the 2008 Farm Bill and assumed 32 million
acres would stay in Conservation Reserve Program (CRP).\103\ Other
models, such as USDA's Regional Environment and Agriculture Programming
(REAP) model and University of Tennessee's POLYSYS model, have shown
that the use of energy crops to meet EISA could be significant, similar
to our FASOM modeling results for the final rule.\104\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\102\ Assuming 16 Bgal cellulosic biofuel total, 2.3 Bgal from
Urban Waste; 13.7 Bgal of cellulosic biofuel for ag residues,
forestry biomass, and/or energy crops would be needed.
\103\ Beside the economic incentive of a farmer payment to keep
land in CRP, local environmental interests may also fight to
maintain CRP land for wildlife preservation. Also, we did not know
what portion of the CRP is wetlands which likely could not support
harvesting equipment.
\104\ Biomass Research and Development Initiative (BR&DI),
``Increasing Feedstock Production for Biofuels: Economic Drivers,
Environmental Implications, and the Role of Research,'' http://www.brdisolutions.com, December 2008.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
iv. Summary of Cellulosic Feedstocks for 2022
Table IV.B.3-3 summarizes our internal estimate of the types of
cellulosic feedstocks projected to be used and their corresponding
volume contribution to 16 billion gallons cellulosic biofuel by 2022
for the purposes of our impacts assessment. The majority of feedstock
is projected to come from dedicated energy crops. Other feedstocks
include agricultural residues, forestry biomass, and urban waste.
[[Page 14755]]
Table IV.B.3-3--Cellulosic Feedstocks Assumed To Meet EISA in 2022 \105\
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Volume
(ethanol-
Feedstock equivalent
Bgal)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Agricultural Residues...................................... 5.7
Corn Stover............................................ 4.9
Sugarcane Bagasse...................................... 0.6
Wheat Residue.......................................... 0.1
Sweet Sorghum Pulp..................................... 0.1
Forestry Biomass........................................... 0.1
Urban Waste................................................ 2.3
Dedicated Energy Crops (Switchgrass)....................... 7.9
------------
Total.................................................... 16.0
------------------------------------------------------------------------
4. Biodiesel & Renewable Diesel
Biodiesel and renewable diesel are replacements for petroleum
diesel that are made from plant or animal fats. Biodiesel consists of
fatty acid methyl esters (FAME) and can be used in low-concentration
blends in most types of diesel engines and other combustion equipment
with no modifications. The term renewable diesel covers fuels made by
hydrotreating plant or animal fats in processes similar to those used
in refining petroleum. Renewable diesel is chemically analogous to
blendstocks already used in petroleum diesel, thus its use can be
transparent and its blend level essentially unlimited. The goal of both
biodiesel and renewable diesel conversion processes is to change the
properties of a variety of feedstocks to more closely match those of
petroleum diesel (such as its density, viscosity, and storage
stability) for which the engines have been designed. The definition of
biodiesel given in applicable regulations is sufficiently broad to be
inclusive of both fuels.\106\ However, the EISA stipulates that
renewable diesel that is co-processed with petroleum diesel cannot be
counted as biomass-based diesel for purposes of complying with the RFS2
volume requirements.\107\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\105\ Volumes are represented here as ethanol-equivalent
volumes, a mix of diesel and ethanol volumes as described in Section
IV.A, above.
\106\ See Section 1515 of the Energy Policy Act of 2005. More
discussion of the definitions of biodiesel and renewable diesel are
given in the preamble of the Renewable Fuel Standard rulemaking,
Section II.B.2, as published in the Federal Register Vol. 72, No.
83, p. 23917.
\107\ For more detailed discussion of the definition of
coprocessing and its implications for compliance with EISA, see
Section II.B.1 of this preamble.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In general, plant and animal oils are valuable commodities with
many uses other than transportation fuel. Therefore we expect the
primary limiting factor in the supply of both biodiesel and renewable
diesel to be feedstock availability and price. Expansion of their
market volumes is dependent on being able to compete on price with the
petroleum diesel they are displacing, which will depend largely on
continuation of current subsidies and other incentives.
Other biomass-based diesel fuel processes are at various stages of
development, but due to uncertainty on production timelines, we didn't
include these fuels in the biomass-based diesel impact assessments.
a. Historic and Projected Production
i. Biodiesel
As of November 2009, the aggregate production capacity of biodiesel
plants in the U.S. was estimated at 2.8 billion gallons per year across
approximately 191 facilities.\108\ (However, at the time of this
writing it is anticipated that capacity utilization will be
approximately 17% for calendar year 2009.) Biodiesel plants exist in
nearly all states, with the largest density of plants in the Midwest
and Southeast where agricultural feedstocks are most plentiful.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\108\ Capacity data taken from National Biodiesel Board as of
November 2009.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table IV.B.4-1 gives data on U.S. biodiesel production and use for
recent years, including net domestic use after accounting for imports
and exports. The figures suggest that the industry has grown out of
proportion with actual biodiesel demand. Reasons for this include
various state incentives to build plants, along with state and federal
incentives to blend biodiesel, which have given rise to an optimistic
industry outlook over the past several years. Since the cost of capital
is relatively low for the biodiesel production process (typically four
to six percent of the total per-gallon cost), this industry developed
along a path of more small, privately-owned plants in comparison to the
ethanol industry, with median size less than 10 million gallons/
yr.\109\ These small plants, with relatively low costs other than
feedstock, have generally been able to survive producing well below
their nameplate capacities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\109\ Assessment of plant capital cost based on USDA production
cost models. A publication describing USDA modeling of biodiesel
production costs can be found in Bioresource Technology 97(2006)
671-8.
Table IV.B.4-1--Summary of U.S. Biodiesel Production and Use
[Million gallons] \110\
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net
Domestic Apparent domestic
Year production Domestic total capacity Net domestic use as
capacity production utilization biodiesel use percent of
(percent) production
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2004............................ 245 28................. 11 27................ 96
2005............................ 395 91................. 23 91................ 100
2006............................ 792 250................ 32 261............... 104
2007............................ 1,809 490................ 27 358............... 73
2008............................ 2,610 776................ 30 413............... 53
2009............................ 2,806 475 (est.)......... 17 296 (est.)........ 62
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Some of this industry capacity may not be dedicated specifically to
fuel production, instead being used to make oleochemical feedstocks for
further conversion into products such as surfactants, lubricants, and
soaps. These products do not show up in renewable fuel sales figures.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\110\ Capacity data taken from National Biodiesel Board as of
November 2009. Production, import, and export figures taken from EIA
Monthly Energy Review, Table 10.4 as of December 2009.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
During 2004-2006, demand for biodiesel grew rapidly, but the trend
of increasing sales was quickly surpassed by construction and start-up
of new plants Since then, periods of high commodity prices followed by
reduced demand for transportation fuel during
[[Page 14756]]
the economic downturn have caused additional strain on the industry
beyond the overcapacity situation. Biodiesel producers were able to
find additional markets overseas, and a significant portion of the 2007
and 2008 production was exported to Europe where fuel prices and
additional tax subsidies helped offset high feedstock costs. However,
the EU enacted a tariff to protect domestic producers early in 2009,
after which exports dropped to a small fraction of production.\111\ We
understand there may be some additional export markets developing
within North America, but given the uncertainty at this time, we do not
account for any biodiesel exports in our projections.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\111\ Ibid.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To perform our impacts analyses for this rule, it was necessary to
forecast the state of the biodiesel industry in the timeframe of the
fully-phased-in RFS. In general, this consisted of reducing the
industry capacity to be much closer to 1.67 billion gallons per year by
2022 (based on the volume requirements to meet the standard; see
Section IV.A.2). This was accomplished by considering as screening
factors the current production and sales incentives in each state as
well as each plant's primary feedstock type and whether it was BQ-9000
certified.\112\ Going forward producers will compete for feedstocks and
markets may consolidate. During this period the number of operating
plants is expected to shrink, with surviving plants utilizing feedstock
segregation and pre-treatment capabilities, giving them flexibility to
process any mix of feedstocks available in their area. By the end of
this period we project a mix of large regional plants and some smaller
plants taking advantage of local market niches, with an overall average
capacity utilization around 85%. Table IV.B.4-2 summarizes this
forecast. See Section 1.5.4 of the RIA for more details.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\112\ Information on state incentives was taken from U.S.
Department of Energy Web site, accessed July 30, 2008, at http://www.eere.energy.gov/afdc/fuels/biodiesel_laws.html. Information on
feedstock and BQ-9000 status was taken from Biodiesel Board fact
sheet, accessed July 30, 2008.
Table IV.B.4-2--Summary of Projected Biodiesel Industry Characterization
Used in Our Analyses \113\
------------------------------------------------------------------------
2008 2022
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total production capacity on-line (million gal/yr).... 2,610 1,968
Number of operating plants............................ 176 121
Median plant size (million gal/yr).................... 5 5
Total biodiesel production (million gal).............. 776 1,670
Average plant utilization............................. 0.30 0.85
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ii. Renewable Diesel
Renewable diesel is a fuel (or blendstock) produced from animal
fats, vegetable oils, and waste greases using chemical processes
similar to those employed in petroleum hydrotreating. These processes
remove oxygen and saturate olefins, converting the triglycerides and
fatty acids into paraffins. Renewable diesel typically has higher
cetane, lower nitrogen, and lower aromatics than petroleum diesel fuel,
while also meeting stringent sulfur standards.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\113\ 2008 capacity data taken from National Biodiesel Board;
production figures taken from EIA Monthly Energy Review, Table 10.4
as of October 2009.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As a result of the oxygen and olefins in the feedstock being
removed, renewable diesel has storage, stability, and shipping
properties equivalent to petroleum diesel. This allows renewable diesel
fuel to be shipped in existing petroleum pipelines used for
transporting fuels, thus avoiding a significant issue with distribution
of biodiesel. For more on fuel distribution, refer to Section IV.C.
Considering that this industry is still in development and that
there are no long-term projections of production volume, we base our
volume estimate of 150 MMgal/yr primarily on recent industry project
announcements involving proven technology. Due to the current status of
tax incentives, we project all of this fuel will be produced at stand-
alone facilities.
b. Feedstock Availability
Publically available industry information along with agricultural
commodity modeling we have done for this rule (see Section VIII.A)
suggests that the three largest sources of feedstock for biodiesel will
be rendered animal fats, soy oil, and corn oil extracted from dry mill
ethanol facilities. Renewable diesel plants are expected to use solely
animal fats due to the fact that these feedstocks are cheaper than
vegetable oils and the process can handle them without issue. Comments
we have received from a large rendering company suggest there will be
adequate fats and greases feedstocks to supply biofuels as well as
other historical uses. Table IV.B.4-3 summarizes the feedstock types,
process types, and volumes projected to be used in 2022 for biodiesel
and renewable diesel. More details on feedstock sources and volumes are
presented in Section 1.1.3 of the RIA.
Table IV.B.4-3--Summary of Projected Biodiesel and Renewable Diesel Feedstock Use in 2022
[MMgal]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Acid-
Feedstock type Base catalyzed pretreatment Renewable
biodiesel biodiesel diesel
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Virgin vegetable oil............................................ 660 .............. ..............
Corn oil from ethanol production................................ .............. 680 ..............
Rendered animal fats and greases................................ .............. 230 150
Algae oil or other advanced source.............................. 100 .............. ..............
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 14757]]
C. Biofuel Distribution
The current motor fuel distribution infrastructure has been
optimized to facilitate the movement of petroleum-based fuels.
Consequently, there are very efficient pipeline-terminal networks that
move large volumes of petroleum-based fuels from production/import
centers on the Gulf Coast and the Northeast into the heartland of the
country. In contrast, most biofuel is produced in the heartland of the
country and needs to be shipped to the coasts, flowing roughly in the
opposite direction of petroleum-based fuels. In addition, while some
renewable fuels such as hydrocarbons may be transparent to the
distribution system, the physical/chemical nature of other renewable
fuels may limit the extent to which they can be shipped/stored fungibly
with petroleum-based fuels. The vast majority of biofuels are currently
shipped by rail, barge and tank truck to petroleum terminals. All
biofuels are currently blended with petroleum-based fuels prior to
use.\114\ Most biofuel blends can be used in conventional vehicles.
However, E85 can only be used in flex-fuel vehicles, requires specially
constructed retail dispensing/storage equipment, and may require
special blendstocks at terminals. These factors limit the ability of
biofuels to utilize the existing petroleum fuel distribution
infrastructure. Hence, the distribution of renewable fuels raises
unique concerns and in many instances requires the addition of new
transportation, storage, blending, and retail equipment.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\114\ The prescribed blending ratio for a given biofuel is based
on vehicle compatibility and emissions considerations. Some biofuels
may be found to be suitable for use without the need for blending
with petroleum-based fuel.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Biofuel Shipment to Petroleum Terminals
Ethanol currently is not commonly shipped by pipeline because it
can cause stress corrosion cracking in pipeline walls and its affinity
for water and solvency can result in product contamination concerns. A
short gasoline pipeline in Florida is currently shipping batches of
ethanol, and other more extensive pipeline systems have feasibility
studies underway.\115\ Thus, existing petroleum pipelines in some areas
of the country may play an increasing role in the shipment of ethanol.
Evaluations are also currently underway regarding the feasibility of
constructing a new dedicated ethanol pipeline from the Midwest to the
East coast. We expect that cellulosic distillate fuels will not have
materials compatibility issues with the existing petroleum fuel
distribution infrastructure. Thus, there may be more opportunity for
cellulosic distillate fuel to be shipped by pipeline. However, the
location of both ethanol and cellulosic distillate production
facilities relative to the origination points for existing petroleum
pipelines will be a limiting factor regarding the extent to which
pipelines can be used.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\115\ Shipment of ethanol in pipelines that carry distillate
fuels as well as gasoline presents additional challenges.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Our analysis of the shipment of ethanol and cellulosic distillate
fuels to petroleum terminals is based on the projections of the
location of biofuel production facilities and end use areas contained
in the NPRM. We assume that the majority of ethanol and cellulosic
distillate fuel would be produced in the Midwest, and that both fuels
would be shipped to petroleum terminals in a similar fashion (by rail,
barge, and tank truck). To the extent which new biofuel production
facilities are more dispersed than projected in the NPRM, there may be
more opportunity for both fuels to be used closer to their point of
manufacture. This potential benefit would primarily apply to cellulosic
ethanol and distillate production facilities given that such facilities
have yet to be constructed, whereas most corn-ethanol production
facilities have already been constructed in the Midwest.
Biodiesel is currently not typically shipped by pipeline due to
concerns that it may contaminate jet fuel that is shipped on the same
pipeline and potential incompatibility with pipeline gaskets and seals.
Kinder Morgan's Plantation pipeline is currently shipping B5 blends on
segments of its system that do not handle jet fuel. The shipment of
biodiesel by pipeline may become more widespread and might be expanded
to systems that handle jet fuel. However, the relatively small
production volumes from individual biodiesel plants and the widespread
location of such production facilities will tend to limit the extent to
which biodiesel may be shipped by pipeline.
Due to the uncertainties regarding the extent to which pipelines
might participate in the transportation of biofuels in the future, we
assumed that biofuels will continue to be transported by rail, barge,
and truck to petroleum terminals as the vast majority of biofuel
volumes are today. To the extent that pipelines do play an increasing
role in the distribution of ethanol, this may improve reliability in
supply and reduce distribution costs. Apart from increased shipment by
pipeline, biofuel distribution, and in particular ethanol distribution
can be further optimized primarily through the expanded use of unit
trains.\116\ We anticipate that the vast majority of ethanol and
cellulosic distillate facilities will be sized to facilitate unit train
service.\117\ We do not expect that biodiesel facilities will be of
sufficient size to justify shipment by unit train. In the NPRM, we
projected that unit train receipt facilities would be located at
petroleum terminals and existing rail terminals. Based on industry
input regarding the logistical hurdles in locating unit train receipt
facilities at petroleum/existing rail terminals, we expect that such
facilities will be constructed on dedicated property with rail access
that is as close to petroleum terminals as practicable.\118\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\116\ Unit trains are composed of 70 to 100 rail cars that are
dedicated to shuttle back and forth from production facilities
downstream receipt facilities near petroleum terminals.
\117\ A facility exists in Iowa to consolidate rail cars of
ethanol from some ethanol plants that are not large enough to
support unit train service by themselves.
\118\ Existing unit train receipt facilities have primarily
followed this model.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Shipment of biofuels by manifest rail to existing rail terminals
will continue to be an important means of supplying biofuels to distant
markets where the volume of the production facility and/or the local
demand is not sufficient to justify shipment by unit train.\119\
Shipments by barge will also play an important role in those instances
where production and demand centers have water access and in some cases
as the final link from a unit train receipt facility to a petroleum
terminal. Direct shipment by tank truck from production facilities to
petroleum terminals will also continue for shipment over distances
shorter than 200 miles.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\119\ Manifest rail shipment refers to the shipment of rail cars
of biofuels in trains that also carry other products.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We project that most biofuel volumes shipped by rail will be
delivered to petroleum terminals by tank truck.\120\ We expect that
this will always be the case for manifest rail shipments. In the NPRM,
we projected that trans-loading of biofuels from rail cars to tank
trucks would be an interim measure until biofuel storage tanks were
constructed.\121\ Based on industry input, we now expect trans-loading
will be a long-term means of transferring manifest rail car shipments
of biofuels received at
[[Page 14758]]
existing rail terminals to tank trucks for delivery to petroleum
terminals. We also anticipate that trans-loading will be used at some
unit train receipt facilities, although we expect that most of these
facilities will install biofuel storage tanks from which tank trucks
will be filled for delivery to petroleum terminals. Imported biofuels
will typically be received and be further distributed by tank truck
from petroleum terminals that already have receipt facilities for
waterborne fuel shipments.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\120\ At least one current ethanol unit train receipt facility
has a pipeline link to a nearby terminal. To the extent that
additional unit train receipt facilities could accomplish the final
link to petroleum terminals by pipeline, this would significantly
reduce the need for shipment by tank truck.
\121\ Trans-loading refers to the direct transfer of the
contents of a rail car to a tank truck without the intervening
delivery into a storage tank.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We anticipate that the deployment of the necessary distribution
infrastructure to accommodate the shipment of biofuels to petroleum
terminals is achievable.\122\ We believe that construction of the
requisite rail cars, barges, tank trucks, tank truck and rail/barge/
truck receipt facilities is within the reach of corresponding
construction firms.\123\ Although shipment of biofuels by rail
represents a major fraction of all biofuel ton-miles, it is projected
to account for approximately 0.4% of all rail freight by 2022. Many
improvements to the freight rail system will be required in the next 15
years to keep pace with the large increase in the overall freight
demand. Given the broad importance to the U.S. economy of meeting the
anticipated increase in freight rail demand, and the substantial
resources that seem likely to be focused on this cause, we believe that
overall freight rail capacity would not be a limiting factor to the
successful implementation of the biofuel requirements under EISA.
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\122\ See Section 1.6 of the RIA for additional discussion of
the challenges in distributing biofuels from the production/import
facility to the end user.
\123\ Vessels that transport biodiesel will need to be heated/
insulated in cold climates to prevent gelling.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Petroleum Terminal Accommodations
Terminals will need to install additional storage capacity to
accommodate the volume of biofuels that we anticipate will be used in
response to the RFS2 standards. Petroleum terminals will also need to
install truck receipt facilities for biofuels and equipment to blend
biofuels into petroleum-based fuels. Upgrades to barge receipt
facilities to handle deliveries of biofuels may also be needed at
petroleum terminals with water access. Biodiesel storage and blending
facilities will need to be insulated/heated in cold climates to prevent
biodiesel from gelling.\124\ Questions have been raised about the
ability of some terminals to install the needed storage capacity due to
space constraints and difficulties in securing permits.\125\ Overall
demand for fuel used in motor vehicles is expected to remain relatively
constant through 2022. Thus, much of the increased demand for biofuel
storage could be accommodated by modifying storage tanks previously
used for the gasoline and petroleum-based diesel fuels that would
displaced by biofuels. The areas served by existing terminals also
often overlap. In such cases, one terminal might be space constrained
while another serving the same area may be able to install the
additional capacity to meet the increase in demand. In cases where it
is impossible for existing terminals to expand their storage capacity
due to a lack of adjacent available land or difficulties in securing
the necessary permits, new satellite storage or new separate terminal
facilities may be needed for additional storage of biofuels. However,
we believe that there would be few such situations.
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\124\ Some terminals are avoiding the need for heated/insulated
biodiesel facilities by storing high biodiesel blends (e.g. B50) for
blending with petroleum-based diesel fuel.
\125\ The Independent Fuel Terminal Operators Association
represents terminals in the Northeast.
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In the NPRM, we stated the current EPA policy that the RFG and
anti-dumping regulations currently require certified gasoline to be
blended with denatured ethanol to produce E85. We also stated that if
terminal operators add blendstocks to finished gasoline for use in
manufacturing E85, the terminal operator would need to register as a
refiner with EPA and meet all applicable standards for refiners.
Commenters questioned these statements. As we are not taking any action
in this final rule with respect to policies surrounding E85, we will
consider these comments outside the context of this rule.
3. Potential Need for Special Blendstocks at Petroleum Terminals for
E85
ASTM International is considering a proposal to lower the minimum
ethanol concentration in E85 to facilitate meeting ASTM minimum
volatility specifications in cold climates and when only low vapor
pressure gasoline is available at terminals.\126\ Commenters have
stated that the current proposal to lower the minimum ethanol
concentration to 68 volume percent may not be sufficient for this
purpose. ASTM International may consider an additional proposal to
further decrease the minimum ethanol concentration. Absent such an
adjustment, a high-vapor pressure petroleum-based blendstock such as
butane would need to be supplied to most petroleum terminals to produce
E85 that meets minimum volatility specifications. In such a case,
butane would need to be transported by tank truck from petroleum
refineries to terminals and storage and blending equipment would be
needed at petroleum terminals.\127\
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\126\ Minimum volatility specifications were established by ASTM
to address safety and vehicle driveability considerations.
\127\ See Section 1.6 of the RIA for a discussion of the
potential distribution of butane to petroleum terminals for blending
with E85 and Section 4.2 for the potential costs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Instead of lowering the minimum ethanol concentration of E85, some
stakeholders are discussing establishing a new high-ethanol blend for
use in flex-fuel vehicles. Such a fuel would have a minimum ethanol
concentration that would be sufficient to allow minimum volatility
specifications to be satisfied while using finished gasoline that is
already available at petroleum terminals.\128\ E85 would continue to be
marketed in addition to this new fuel for use in flex-fuel vehicles
when E85 minimum volatility considerations could be satisfied.
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\128\ Such a new fuel might have a lower ethanol concentration
of 60% and a maximum ethanol concentration of 85%.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We believe that industry will resolve the concerns over the ability
to meet the minimum volatility needed for high-ethanol blends used in
flex-fuel vehicles in a manner that will not necessitate the use of
high-vapor pressure blendstocks in their manufacture. Nevertheless,
petroleum terminals may find it advantageous to blend butane into E85
because of the low cost of butane relative to gasoline provided that
the cost benefit outweighs the associated butane distribution
costs.\129\
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\129\ EPA may consider reevaluating its policies regarding the
blendstocks used in the manufacture of E85 to facilitate this
practice.
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4. Need for Additional E85 Retail Facilities
The number of additional E85 retail facilities needed to consume
the volume of ethanol used under EISA varies substantially depending on
the control case. Under our primary mid-ethanol scenario, we estimate
that by 2022 an additional 19,765 E85 retail facilities would be needed
relative to the AEO reference case to enable the consumption of the
ethanol that we project would be used in E85.\130\ Under
[[Page 14759]]
the high-ethanol scenario, we estimate that an additional 23,809 E85
facilities would be needed and that 4,500 E85 facilities that would
otherwise be in place would need to be upgraded to include more E85
dispensers by 2022. Whereas under the low-ethanol volume scenario, we
project that 11,677 additional E85 facilities would be needed by 2022.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\130\ See Section 1.6 of the RIA for a discussion of the
projected number of E85 refueling facilities that would be needed.
There would need to be a total of 24,265 E85 retail facilities under
the primary scenario, 4,500 of which are projected to have been
placed in service absent the RFS2 standards under the AEO reference
case. Our analysis assumes the installation of new dispensers and
underground storage tank (UST) systems for E85. EPA's Office of
Underground Storage Tanks requires that UST systems must be
compatible with the fuel stored. Authorities who Have Jurisdiction
(such as local fire marshals) typically require that fuel dispensers
be listed by an organization such as Underwriters Laboratories.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On average, approximately 1,520 additional E85 facilities will be
needed each year from 2010 through 2022 under our primary scenario.
Under the high and low ethanol scenarios, an additional 1,820 and 900
E85 retail facilities per year respectively would be needed. Under the
high ethanol case and to a lesser extent under the primary case, this
represents an aggressive timeline for the addition of new E85
facilities given that there are approximately 2,000 E85 retail
facilities in service today. Nevertheless, we believe the addition of
these new E85 facilities may be possible for the industries that
manufacture and install E85 retail equipment. Underwriters Laboratories
requires that E85 refueling dispenser systems must be certified as
complete units.\131\ To date, no complete E85 dispenser systems have
been certified by UL. We understand that all the fuel dispenser
components with the exception of the hoses that connect to the
refueling nozzle have successfully passed the necessary testing. There
does not appear to be a technical difficulty in finding hoses that can
pass the required testing. Therefore, we anticipate this situation will
be resolved once the demand for new E85 facilities is demonstrated.
Hence, we believe that the current lack of a UL certification for
complete E85 dispenser systems will not impede the installation of the
additional E85 facilities that we projected will be needed.
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\131\ See http://ulstandardsinfonet.ul.com/outscope/0087A.html.
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Petroleum retailers expressed concerns about their ability to bear
the cost installing the needed E85 refueling equipment given that most
retailers are small businesses and have limited capital resources. They
also expressed concern regarding their ability to discount the price of
E85 relative to E10 sufficiently to persuade flexible fuel vehicle
owners to choose E85 given the lower energy density of ethanol. Today's
rule does not contain a requirement for retailers to carry E85. We
understand that retailers will only install E85 facilities if they can
be assured of sufficient E85 throughput to recover their capital costs.
The current projections regarding the future cost of gasoline relative
to ethanol indicate that it may be possible to price E85 in a
competitive fashion to E10. Thus, demand for E85 may be sufficient to
encourage retailers to install the needed E85 refueling facilities.
D. Ethanol Consumption
1. Historic/Current Ethanol Consumption
Ethanol and ethanol-gasoline blends have a long history as
automotive fuels. In fact, the well-known Model-T was capable of
running on both ethanol and gasoline.\132\ However, inexpensive crude
oil prices kept ethanol from making a significant presence in the
transportation sector until the end of the 20th century. Over the past
decade, ethanol use has grown rapidly due to oxygenated fuel
requirements, MTBE bans, tax incentives, state mandates, the first
federal renewable fuels standard (``RFS1''), and rising crude oil
prices. Although the cost of crude has come down since reaching record
levels in 2008, uncertainty surrounding pricing and the environmental
implications of fossil fuels continue to drive ethanol use.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\132\ The Model T was also capable of running on kerosene.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A record 9.5 billion gallons of ethanol were blended into U.S.
gasoline in 2008 and EIA is forecasting additional growth in the years
to come.\133\ According to their recently released Short-Term Energy
Outlook (STEO), EIA is forecasting 0.7 million barrels of daily ethanol
use in 2009, which equates to 10.7 billion gallons. The October 2009
STEO projects that total ethanol usage (domestic production plus
imports) will reach 12.1 billion gallons by 2010.\134\
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\133\ EIA, Monthly Energy Review, September 2009 (Table 10.2b).
\134\ Letter from Richard Newell, EIA Administrator to Lisa
Jackson, EPA Administrator dated October 29, 2009 (Table 1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The National Petrochemical and Refiners Association (NPRA)
estimates that ethanol is currently blended into about 75 percent of
all gasoline sold in the United States.\135\ The vast majority is
blended as E10 or 10 volume percent ethanol, although a small amount is
blended as E85 for use in flexible fuel vehicles (FFVs).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\135\ Based on comments provided by NPRA (EPA-HQ-OAR-2005-0161-
2124.1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Complete saturation of the gasoline market with E10 is referred to
as the ethanol ``blend wall.'' The height of the blend wall in any
given year is directly related to gasoline demand. In AEO 2009, EIA
projects that gasoline demand will peak around 2013 and then start to
taper off due to vehicle fuel economy improvements. Based on the
primary ethanol growth scenario we're forecasting under today's RFS2
program, the nation is expected to hit the 14-15 billion gallon blend
wall by around 2014 (refer ahead to Figure IV.D.2-1), although it could
be sooner if gasoline demand is lower than expected. It could also be
lower if projected volumes of non-ethanol renewables do not materialize
and ethanol usage is higher than expected.
Over the years there have been several policy attempts to increase
FFV sales including Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) credits and
government fleet alternative-fuel vehicle requirements. As a result,
there are an estimated 8 million FFVs on the road today, up from just
over 7 million in 2008. While this is not insignificant in terms of
growth, FFVs continue to make up less than 4 percent of the total
gasoline vehicle fleet. In addition, E85 is only currently offered at
about 1 percent of gas stations nationwide. Ethanol consumption is
currently limited by the number of FFVs on the road and the number of
E85 outlets or, more specifically, the number of FFVs with access to
E85. Still many FFV owners with access to E85 are not choosing it
because it is currently priced almost 40 cents per gallon higher than
conventional gasoline on an energy equivalent basis.\136\ According to
EIA, only 12 million gallons of E85 were consumed in 2008.\137\
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\136\ Based on average E85 and regular unleaded gasoline prices
reported at http://www.fuelgaugereport.com/on November 23, 2009.
\137\ EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2009--ARRA Update (Table 2).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To meet today's RFS2 requirements we are going to need to see
growth in FFV and E85 infrastructure as well as changes in retail
pricing and consumer behavior. However, the amount of change needed is
proportional to the amount of ethanol observed under the RFS2 program.
As explained in Section IV.A, EPA expects total ethanol demand could be
anywhere from 17.5 to 33.2 billion gallons in 2022, depending on the
amount of non-ethanol cellulosic biofuels that are realized. The low-
ethanol case would require only moderate changes in FFV/E85
infrastructure and refueling whereas the high-ethanol case would
require very dramatic changes and likely a mandate. For the final rule,
we have chosen to focus our impact analyses on the primary mid-ethanol
case of 22.2 billion gallons. A discussion of how this
[[Page 14760]]
volume of ethanol could be consumed in 2022 with expanded FFV/E85
infrastructure is presented below. As expected, the infrastructure
changes required under this FRM scenario are less extreme than those
highlighted in the proposal based on a predominant ethanol world (34.2
billion gallons of ethanol). However, there are additional
technological, logistical and financial barriers that will need to be
overcome with respect to commercialization of BTL and non-ethanol
cellulosic biofuels. For more on cellulosic diesel technologies,
distribution impacts, and production costs, refer to Sections 1.4, 1.6
and 4.1 of the RIA.
2. Increased Ethanol Use Under RFS2
Under the primary ethanol growth scenario considered as part of
today's rule, ethanol consumption will need to be about three times
higher than RFS1 levels, more than twice as much as today's levels, and
9 billion gallons higher than the ethanol predicted to occur in 2022
absent RFS2 (according to AEO 2007). To get to 22.2 billion gallons of
ethanol use according to the potential ramp-up described in Section 1.2
of the RIA, the nation is predicted to hit the blend wall in 2014 as
shown below in Figure IV.D.2-1.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR26MR10.422
As shown above, we are anticipating almost 14 billion gallons of
non-ethanol advanced biofuels under today's RFS2 program. But overall,
ethanol is expected to continue to be the nation's primary biofuel with
over 22 billion gallons in 2022. To get beyond the blend wall and
consume more than 14-15 billion gallons of ethanol, we are going to
need to see increases in the number FFVs on the road, the number of E85
retailers, and the FFV E85 refueling frequency.
It is possible that conventional gasoline (E0) could continue to
co-exist with E10 and E85 for quite some time. However, for analysis
purposes, we have assumed that E10 would replace E0 as expeditiously as
possible and that all subsequent ethanol growth would come from E85.
Furthermore, we assumed that no ethanol consumption would come from the
mid-level ethanol blends (e.g., E15) under our primary control case
since they are not currently approved for use in non-FFVs. However, as
a sensitivity analysis, we have examined the impacts that E15 would
have on ethanol consumption (refer to Section IV.D.3).
a. Projected Gasoline Energy Demand
The maximum amount of ethanol our country is capable of consuming
in any given year is a function of the total gasoline energy demanded
by the transportation sector. Our nation's gasoline energy demand is
dependent on the number of gasoline-powered vehicles on the road, their
average fuel economy, vehicle miles traveled (VMT), and driving
patterns. For analysis purposes, we relied on the gasoline energy
projections provided by EIA in the AEO 2009 final release.\138\ AEO
2009 takes the fuel economy improvements set by EISA into consideration
and also assumes a slight dieselization of the light-duty vehicle
fleet.\139\ It also takes the recession's impacts on driving patterns
into consideration. The result is a 25% reduction in the projected 2022
gasoline
[[Page 14761]]
energy demand from AEO 2007 (a pre-EISA world) to AEO 2009.\140\ EIA
essentially has total gasoline energy demand (petroleum-based gasoline
plus ethanol) flattening out, and even slightly decreasing, as we move
into the future.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\138\ EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2009--ARRA Update (Table 2).
\139\ The gasoline energy demand forecast provided in AEO 2009--
ARRA Update is reasonably consistent with the recently Proposed
Rulemaking To Establish Light-Duty Vehicle Greenhouse Gas Emission
Standards and Corporate Average Fuel Economy Standards (referred to
hereafter as the ``Light-Duty Vehicle GHG Rule.'' For more
information on the Light-Duty Vehicle GHG Rule, refer to 74 FR 49454
(September 28, 2009).
\140\ EIA, Annual Energy Outlooks 2007 & 2009--ARRA Update
(Table 2).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
b. Projected Growth in Flexible Fuel Vehicles
Over one million FFVs were sold in both 2008 and 2009 according to
EPA certification data. Despite the recession and current state of the
auto industry, automakers are incorporating more and more FFVs into
their light-duty production plans. While the FFV system (i.e., fuel
tank, sensor, delivery system, etc.) used to be an option on some
vehicles, most automakers are moving in the direction of converting
entire product lines over to E85-capable systems. Still, the number of
FFVs that will be manufactured and purchased in future years is
uncertain.
To measure the impacts of increased volumes of renewable fuel, we
considered three different FFV production scenarios that might
correspond to the three biofuel control cases analyzed for the final
rule. For all three cases, we assumed that total light-duty vehicle
sales would follow AEO 2009 trends. The latest EIA report suggests
lower than average sales in 2008-2013 (less than 16 million vehicles
per year) before rebounding and growing to over 17 million vehicles by
2019.\141\ These vehicle projections are consistent with EPA's recently
proposed Light-Duty Vehicle GHG Rule.\142\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\141\ EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2009--ARRA Update (Table 47).
\142\ Rulemaking to Establish Light-Duty Vehicle GHG Emission
Standards and Corporate Average Fuel Economy Standards, 74 FR 49454
(September 28, 2009).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Although we assumed total vehicle and car/truck sales would be the
same in all three cases, we assumed varying levels of FFV production.
For our low-ethanol control case, we assumed steady business-as-usual
FFV growth according to AEO 2009 predictions.\143\ For our primary mid-
ethanol control case, we assumed increased FFV sales under the
presumption that GM, Ford and Chrysler (referred to hereafter as the
``Detroit 3'') would follow through with their commitment to produce
50% FFVs by 2012. Despite the current state of the economy and the
hardships facing the auto industry (GM and Chrysler filed for
bankruptcy earlier this year), the Detroit 3 appear to still be moving
forward with their voluntary FFV commitment.\144\ Under our primary
control case, we assumed that non-domestic FFVs sales would track
around 2%, consistent with today's production/plans.\145\ Finally, for
our high-ethanol control case, we assumed a theoretical 80% FFV mandate
based on the Open Fuel Standard Act of 2009 that was reintroduced in
Congress on March 12, 2009.\146\ Given today's reduced vehicle sales
and gasoline demand, we believe a mandate would be the only viable
means for consuming 32.2 billion gallons of ethanol in 2022.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\143\ EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2009--ARRA Update (Table 47).
\144\ Ethanol Producer Magazine, ``Automakers Maintain FFV
Targets in Bailout Plans.'' February 2009. This is consistent with
information provided in GM and Chrysler's restructuring plans
submitted to the U.S. Department of Treasury on February 17, 2009.
\145\ Based on 2008 FFV certification data and 2009 projections
based on the National Ethanol Vehicle Coalition, 2009 FFV Purchasing
Guide.
\146\ A copy of H.R. 1476 can be found at: http://www.opencongress.org/bill/111-h1476/text.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under our primary mid-ethanol control case, total FFV sales are
estimated at just over 4 million vehicles per year in 2017 and beyond.
This is less aggressive than the assumptions made in the NPRM. At that
time, we were expecting more cellulosic ethanol which could justify
higher FFV production assumptions. We assumed that not only would the
Detroit 3 fulfill their 50% by 2012 FFV production commitment, non-
domestic automakers might follow suit and produce 25% FFV in 2017 and
beyond. We also assumed that annual light-duty vehicle sales would
continue around the historical 16 million vehicle mark resulting in 6
million FFVs in 2017 and beyond.
Based on our revised vehicle/FFV production assumptions coupled
with vehicle survival rates, VMT, and fuel economy estimates applied in
the recently proposed Light-Duty Vehicle GHG Rule, the maximum
percentage of fuel (gasoline/ethanol mix) that could feasibly be
consumed by FFVs in 2022 would be about 20% (down from 30% in the
NPRM). For more information on our FFV production assumptions and fuel
fraction calculations, refer to Section 1.7.2 of the RIA.
c. Projected Growth in E85 Access
According to the National Ethanol Vehicle Coalition (NEVC), there
are currently 2,100 gas stations offering E85 in 44 states plus the
District of Columbia.\147\ While this represents significant industry
growth, it still only translates to 1.3% of U.S. retail stations
nationwide carrying the fuel.\148\ As a result, most FFV owners clearly
do not have reasonable access to E85. For our FFV/E85 analysis, we have
defined ``reasonable access'' as one-in-four pumps offering E85 in a
given area.\149\ Accordingly, just over 5% of the nation currently has
reasonable access to E85, up from 4% in 2008 (based on a mid-year NEVC
pump estimate).\150\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\147\ NEVC Web site, accessed on November 23, 2009.
\148\ Based on National Petroleum News gasoline station estimate
of 161,768 in 2008.
\149\ For a more detailed discussion on how we derived our one-
in-four reasonable access assumption, refer to Section 1.6 of the
RIA. For the distribution cost implications as well as the cost
impacts of assuming reasonable access is greater than one-in-four
pumps, refer to Section 4.2 of the RIA.
\150\ Computed as percent of stations with E85 (2,101/161,768 as
of November 2009 or 1,733/161,768 as of August 2008) divided by 25%
(one-in-four stations).
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There are a number of states promoting E85 usage by offering FFV/
E85 awareness programs and/or retail pump incentives. A growing number
of states are also offering infrastructure grants to help expand E85
availability. Currently, 10 Midwest states have adopted a progressive
Energy Security and Climate Stewardship Platform.\151\ The platform
includes a Regional Biofuels Promotion Plan with a goal of making E85
available at one third of all stations by 2025. In addition, the
American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA or Recovery Act)
recently increased the existing federal income tax credit from $30,000
or 30% of the total cost of improvements to $100,000 or 50% of the
total cost of needed alternative fuel equipment and dispensing
improvements.\152\
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\151\ The following states have adopted the plan: Illinois,
Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Ohio, South
Dakota and Wisconsin. For more information, visit: http://www.midwesterngovernors.org/resolutions/Platform.pdf.
\152\ http://frwebgate.access.gpo.gov/cgi-bin/getdoc.cgi?dbname=111_cong_bills&docid=f:h1enr.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Given the growing number of subsidies, it is clear that E85
infrastructure will continue to expand in the future. However, like
FFVs, we expect that E85 station growth will be somewhat proportional
to the amount of ethanol realized under the RFS2 program. As such, we
analyzed three different E85 growth scenarios for the final rule that
could correspond to the three different RFS2 control cases. As an upper
bound for our high-ethanol control case, we maintained the 70% access
assumption we applied for the NPRM. This is roughly equivalent to all
urban areas in the United States offering reasonable (one-in-four-
station) access
[[Page 14762]]
to E85.\153\ For our other control cases we assumed access to E85 would
be lower with the logic that retail stations (the majority of which are
independently owned and operated and net around $30,000 per year) would
not invest in more E85 infrastructure than what was necessary to meet
the RFS2 requirements. For our primary mid-ethanol control case we
assumed reasonable access would grow from 4% in 2008 to 60% in 2022 and
for our low-ethanol control case we assumed that access would only grow
to 40% by 2022. As discussed in Section IV.C, we believe these E85
growth scenarios are possible based on our assessment of distribution
infrastructure capabilities.
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\153\ For this analysis, we've defined ``urban'' as the top 150
metropolitan statistical areas according to the U.S. census and/or
counties with the highest VMT projections according the EPA MOVES
model, all RFG areas, winter oxy-fuel areas, low-RVP areas, and
other relatively populated cities in the Midwest.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
d. Required Increase in E85 Refueling Rates
As mentioned earlier, there were just over 7 million FFVs on the
road in 2008. If all FFVs refueled on E85 100% of the time, this would
translate to about 8.3 billion gallons of E85 use.\154\ However, E85
usage was only around 12 million gallons in 2008.\155\ This means that,
on average, FFV owners were only tapping into about 0.15% of their
vehicles' E85/ethanol usage potential last year. Assuming that only 4%
of the nation had reasonable one-in-four access to E85 in 2008 (as
discussed above), this equates to an estimated 4% E85 refueling
frequency for those FFVs that had reasonable access to the fuel.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\154\ Based on average vehicle miles traveled (VMT) and in-use
fuel economy (MPG) for FFVs in the fleet in 2008. For more
information on FFV E85 fuel consumption calculations, refer to
Section 1.7.4 of the RIA.
\155\ EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2009--ARRA Update (Table 17).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
There are several reasons behind today's low E85 refueling
frequency. For starters, many FFV owners may not know they are driving
a vehicle that is capable of handling E85. As mentioned earlier, more
and more automakers are starting to produce FFVs by engine/product
line, e.g., all 2008 Chevy Impalas are FFVs.\156\ Consequently,
consumers (especially brand loyal consumers) may inadvertently buy a
flexible fuel vehicle without making a conscious decision to do so. And
without effective consumer awareness programs in place, these FFV
owners may never think to refuel on E85. In addition, FFV owners with
reasonable access to E85 and knowledge of their vehicle's E85
capabilities may still not choose to refuel on E85. They may feel
inconvenienced by the increased refueling requirements. Based on its
lower energy density, FFV owners will need to stop to refuel 21% more
often when filling up on E85 over E10 (and likewise, 24% more often
when refueling on E85 over conventional gasoline).\157\ In addition,
some FFV owners may be deterred from refueling on E85 out of fear of
reduced vehicle performance or just plain unfamiliarity with the new
motor vehicle fuel. However, as we move into the future, we believe the
biggest determinant will be price--whether E85 is priced competitively
with gasoline based on its reduced energy density (discussed in more
detail in the subsection that follows).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\156\ NEVC, ``2008 Purchasing Guide for Flexible Fuel
Vehicles.'' Refers to all mass produced 3.5 and 3.9L Impalas.
However, it is our understanding that consumers may still place
special orders for non-FFVs.
\157\ Based on our assumption that denatured ethanol has an
average lower heating value of 77,012 BTU/gal and conventional
gasoline (E0) has average lower heating value of 115,000 BTU/gal.
For analysis purposes, E10 was assumed to contain 10 vol% ethanol
and 90 vol% gasoline. Based on EIA's AEO 2009 assumption, E85 was
assumed to contain 74 vol% ethanol and 26 vol% gasoline on average.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To comply with the RFS2 program and consume 22.2 billion gallons of
ethanol by 2022 (under our primary ethanol control case), not only
would we need more FFVs and more E85 retailers, we would need to see a
significant increase in the current FFV E85 refueling frequency. Based
on the FFV and retail assumptions described above in subsections (b)
and (c), our analysis suggests that FFV owners with reasonable access
to E85 would need to fill up on it as often as 58% of the time, a
significant increase from today's estimated 4% refueling frequency. In
order for this to be possible, there will need to be an improvement in
the current E85/gasoline price relationship.
e. Market Pricing of E85 Versus Gasoline
According to an online fuel price survey, E85 is currently priced
almost 40 cents per gallon or about 15% lower than regular grade
conventional gasoline.\158\ But this is still about 30 cents per gallon
higher than conventional gasoline on an energy-equivalent basis. To
increase our nation's E85 refueling frequency to the levels described
above, E85 needs to be priced competitively with (if not lower than)
conventional gasoline based on its reduced energy content, increased
time spent at the pump, and limited availability. Overall, we estimate
that E85 would need to be priced about 25% lower than E10 at retail in
2022 in order for it to make sense to consumers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\158\ Based on average E85 and regular unleaded gasoline prices
reported at http://www.fuelgaugereport.com/ on November 23, 2009.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
However, ultimately it comes down to what refiners are willing to
pay for ethanol blended as E85. The more ethanol you try to blend as
E85, the more devalued ethanol becomes as a gasoline blendstock.
Changes to state and Federal excise tax structures could help promote
ethanol blending as E85. Similarly, high crude prices make E85 look
more attractive. According to EIA's AEO 2009, crude oil prices are
expected to increase from about $80 per barrel (today's price) to $116/
barrel by 2022.\159\ Based on our retail cost calculations, ethanol
would have to be priced around $2/gallon or less in order to be
attractive to refiners for E85 blending in 2022. According to the DTN
Ethanol Center, the current rack price for ethanol is around $2.20/
gallon.\160\ However, as explained in Section 4.4 of the RIA, we
project that the average ethanol delivered price will come down in the
future under the RFS2 program. Therefore, while gasoline refiners and
markets will always have a greater profit margin selling ethanol in
low-level blends to consumers based on volume, they should be able to
maintain a profit selling it as E85 based on energy content in the
future.
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\159\ EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2009--ARRA Update (Table 12).
\160\ http://www.dtnethanolcenter.com/index.cfm?show=10&mid=32.
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Once the nation gets past the blend wall, more ethanol will need to
be blended as E85 and less as E10. FFV owners who were formerly
refueling on gasoline will need to start filling up on E85. Under our
primary control case, we expect that 12.9 billion gallons of ethanol
would be blended as E10 and 9.3 billion gallons would be blended as E85
to reach the 22.2 billion gallons in 2022. For more on our ethanol
consumption feasibility and retail cost calculations, including
discussion of the other two control cases, refer to Section 1.7 of the
RIA.
3. Consideration of >10% Ethanol Blends
On March 6, 2009, Growth Energy and 54 ethanol manufacturers
submitted an application for a waiver of the prohibition of the
introduction into commerce of certain fuels and fuel additives set
forth in section 211(f) of the Act. This application seeks a waiver for
ethanol-gasoline blends of up to 15 percent ethanol by volume.\161\ On
April
[[Page 14763]]
21, 2009, EPA issued a Federal Register notice announcing receipt of
the Growth Energy waiver application and soliciting comment on all
aspects of it.\162\ On May 20, 2009, EPA issued an additional Federal
Register notice extending the public comment period by an additional 60
days.\163\ The comment period ended on July 20, 2009, and EPA is now
evaluating the waiver application and considering the comments which
were submitted.
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\161\ http://www.growthenergy.org/2009/e15/Waiver%20Cover%20Letter.pdf. Additional supporting documents are
available on the Growth Energy Web site.
\162\ Refer to 74 FR 18228 (April 21, 2009).
\163\ Refer to 74 FR 23704 (May 20, 2009).
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In a letter dated November 30, 2009, EPA notified the applicant
that, because crucial vehicle durability information being developed by
the Department of Energy would not be available until mid-2010, EPA
would be delaying its decision on the application until a sufficient
amount of this information could be included in its analysis so that
the most scientifically supportable decision could be made.\164\ As the
current Growth Energy waiver application is still under review, EPA
believes it is appropriate to address aspects of the mid-level blend
waiver in its decision announcement on the waiver application as
opposed to dealing with the comments and evaluation of the potential
waiver in the preamble of today's final rule.
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\164\ http://www.epa.gov/OMS/regs/fuels/additive/lettertogrowthenergy11-30-09.pdf.
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Although EPA has yet to make a waiver decision, since its approval
could have a significant impact on our analyses that are based on the
use of E85, as a sensitivity analysis, we have evaluated the impacts
that E15 could have on ethanol consumption feasibility. More
specifically, we have assessed the impacts of a partial waiver for
newer technology vehicles consistent with the direction of EPA's
November 30, 2009 letter. We assumed that E10 would need to continue to
co-exist for legacy and non-road equipment based on consumer demand
regardless of any waiver decision. For analysis purposes, we assumed
E10 would be marketed as premium-grade gasoline (the universal fuel),
E15 would be marketed as regular-grade gasoline (to maximize ethanol
throughput) and, like today, midgrade would be blended from the two
fuels to make a 12.5 vol% blend (E12.5). In addition, we assumed that
some E15-capable vehicles would continue to choose E10 or E12.5 based
on our knowledge of today's premium and midgrade sales.\165\
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\165\ According to EIA's 2008 Petroleum Annual Outlook (Table
45), midgrade and premium comprise 13.5% of total gasoline sales.
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In the event of a partial waiver, it is unclear how long it would
take for E15 to be fully deployed or whether it would ever be available
nationwide. For analysis purposes, we assumed that E15 would be fully
phased in and available at all retail stations nationwide by the time
the nation hit the blend wall, or around 2014 for our primary control
case shown in Figure IV.D.3-1.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR26MR10.423
As modeled, a partial waiver for E15 could increase the ethanol
consumption potential from conventional vehicles to about 19 billion
gallons. Under our primary control case (shown in Figure IV.D.3-1), E15
could postpone the blend wall by up to five years, or to 2019. Although
E15 would fall short of meeting the RFS2 requirements under this
scenario, it could provide interim relief while the county ramps up
non-ethanol cellulosic biofuel production and expands E85/FFV
infrastructure. Under our high-ethanol control case, a partial waiver
for E15 could eliminate
[[Page 14764]]
the need for FFV or E85 infrastructure mandates. Under our low-ethanol
control case, E15 could eliminate the need for additional FFV/E85
infrastructure all together. For more information, refer to Section
1.7.6 of the RIA.
V. Lifecycle Analysis of Greenhouse Gas Emissions
A. Introduction
As recognized earlier in this preamble, a significant aspect of the
RFS2 program is the requirement that a fuel meet a specific lifecycle
greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions threshold for compliance for each of
four types of renewable fuels. This section describes the methodology
used by EPA to determine the lifecycle GHG emissions of biofuels, and
the petroleum-based transportation fuels that they replace. EPA
recognizes that this aspect of the RFS2 regulatory program has received
particular attention and comment throughout the public comment period.
Therefore, this section also will describe the enhancements made to our
approach in conducting the lifecycle analysis for the final rule. This
section will highlight areas where we have incorporated new scientific
data that has become available since the proposal as well as the
approach the Agency has taken to recognize and quantify, where
appropriate, the uncertainty inherent in this analysis.
1. Open and Science-Based Approach to EPA's Analysis
Throughout the development of EPA's lifecycle analysis, the Agency
has employed a collaborative, transparent, and science-based approach.
EPA's lifecycle methodology, as developed for the RFS2 proposal,
required breaking new scientific ground and using analytical tools in
new ways. The work was generally recognized as state of the art and an
advance on lifecycle thinking, specifically regarding the indirect
impacts of biofuels.
However, the complexity and uncertainty inherent in this work made
it extremely important that we seek the advice and input of a broad
group of stakeholders. In order to maximize stakeholder outreach
opportunities, the comment period for the proposed rule was extended to
120 days. In addition to this formal comment period, EPA made multiple
efforts to solicit public and expert feedback on our approach.
Beginning early in the NPRM process and continuing throughout the
development of this final rule, EPA held hundreds of meetings with
stakeholders, including government, academia, industry, and non-profit
organizations, to gather expert technical input. Our work was also
informed heavily by consultation with other federal agencies. For
example, we have relied on the expert advice of USDA and DOE, as well
as incorporating the most recent inputs and models provided by these
Agencies. Dialogue with the State of California and the European Union
on their parallel, on-going efforts in GHG lifecycle analysis also
helped inform EPA's methodology. As described below, formal technical
exchanges and an independent, formal peer review of the methodology
were also significant components of the Agency's outreach. A key result
of our outreach effort has been awareness of new studies and data that
have been incorporated into our final rule analysis.
Technology Exchanges: Immediately following publication of the
proposed rule, EPA held a two-day public workshop focused specifically
on lifecycle analysis to assure full understanding of the analyses
conducted, the issues addressed, and the options discussed. The
workshop featured EPA presentations on each component of the
methodology as well as presentations and discussions by stakeholders
from the renewable fuel community, federal agencies, universities, and
environmental groups. The Agency also took advantage of opportunities
to meet in the field with key, affected stakeholders. For example, the
Agency was able to twice participate in meetings and tours in Iowa
hosted by the local renewable fuel and agricultural community. As
described in this section, one of the many outcomes of these meetings
was an improved understanding of agricultural and biofuel production
practices.
As indicated in the proposal, our lifecycle results were
particularly impacted by assumptions about land use patterns and
emissions in Brazil. During the public comment process we were able to
update and refine these assumptions, including the incorporation of
new, improved sources of data based on Brazil-specific data and
programs. In addition, the Agency received more recent trends on
Brazilian crop productivity, areas of crop expansion, and regional
differences in costs of crop production and land availability. Lastly,
we received new information on efforts to curb deforestation allowing
the Agency to better predict this impact through 2022.
Peer Review: To ensure the Agency made its decisions for this final
rule on the best science available, EPA conducted a formal, independent
peer review of key components of the analysis. The reviews were
conducted following the Office of Management and Budget's peer review
guidance that ensures consistent, independent government-wide
implementation of peer review, and according to EPA's longstanding and
rigorous peer review policies. In accordance with these guidelines, EPA
used independent, third-party contractors to select highly qualified
peer reviewers. The reviewers selected are leading experts in their
respective fields, including lifecycle assessment, economic modeling,
remote sensing imagery, biofuel technologies, soil science,
agricultural economics, and climate science. They were asked to
evaluate four key components of EPA's methodology: (1) Land use
modeling, specifically the use of satellite data and EPA's proposed
land conversion GHG emission factors; (2) methods to account for the
variable timing of GHG emissions; (3) GHG emissions from foreign crop
production (both the modeling and data used); and (4) how the models
EPA relied upon are used together to provide overall lifecycle
estimates.
The advice and information received through this peer review are
reflected throughout this section. EPA's use of higher resolution
satellite data is one example of a direct outcome of the peer review,
as is the Agency's decision to retain its reliance upon this data. The
reviewers also provided recommendations that have helped to inform the
larger methodological decisions presented in this final rule. For
example, the reviewers in general supported the importance of assessing
indirect land use change and determined that EPA used the best
available tools and approaches for this work. However, the review also
recognized that no existing model comprehensively simulates the direct
and indirect effects of biofuel production both domestically and
internationally, and therefore model development is still evolving. The
uncertainty associated with estimating indirect impacts and the
difficulty in developing precise results also were reflected in the
comments. In the long term, this peer review will help focus EPA's
ongoing lifecycle analysis work as well as our future interactions with
the National Academy of Science and other experts.
Altogether, the many and extensive public comments we received to
the rule docket, the numerous meetings, workshops and technical
exchanges, and the scientific peer review have all been instrumental to
EPA's ability to advance our analysis between proposal and final and to
develop the
[[Page 14765]]
methodological and regulatory approach described in this section.
2. Addressing Uncertainty
The peer review, the public comments we have received, and the
analysis conducted for the proposal and updated here for the final
rule, indicate that it is important to take into account indirect
emissions when looking at lifecycle emissions from biofuels. It is
clear that, especially when considering commodity feedstocks, including
the market interactions of biofuel demand on feedstock and agricultural
markets is a more accurate representation of the impacts of an increase
in biofuels production on GHG emissions than if these market
interactions are not considered.
However, it is also clear that there are significant uncertainties
associated with these estimates, particularly with regard to indirect
land use change and the use of economic models to project future market
interactions. Reviewers highlighted the uncertainty associated with our
lifecycle GHG analysis and pointed to the inherent uncertainty of the
economic modeling.
In the proposal, we asked for comment on whether and how to conduct
an uncertainty analysis to help quantify the magnitude of this
uncertainty and its relative impact on the resulting lifecycle
emissions estimates. The results of the peer review, and the feedback
we have received from the comment process, supported the value of
conducting such an analysis. Therefore, working closely with other
government agencies as well as incorporating feedback from experts who
commented on the rule, we have quantified the uncertainty associated
specifically with the international indirect land use change emissions
associated with increased biofuel production.
Although there is uncertainty in all portions of the lifecycle
modeling, we focused our uncertainty analysis on the factors that are
the most uncertain and have the biggest impact on the results. For
example, the energy and GHG emissions used by a natural gas-fired
ethanol plant to produce one gallon of ethanol can be calculated
through direct observations, though this will vary somewhat between
individual facilities. The indirect domestic emissions are also fairly
well understood, however these results are sensitive to a number of key
assumptions (e.g., current and future corn yields). The indirect,
international emissions are the component of our analysis with the
highest level of uncertainty. For example, identifying what type of
land is converted internationally and the emissions associated with
this land conversion are critical issues that have a large impact on
the GHG emissions estimates.
Therefore, we focused our efforts on the international indirect
land use change emissions and worked to manage the uncertainty around
those impacts in three ways: (1) Getting the best information possible
and updating our analysis to narrow the uncertainty, (2) performing
sensitivity analysis around key factors to test the impact on the
results, and (3) establishing reasonable ranges of uncertainty and
using probability distributions within these ranges in threshold
assessment. The following sections outline how we have incorporated
these three approaches into our analysis.
EPA recognizes that as the state of scientific knowledge continues
to evolve in this area, the lifecycle GHG assessments for a variety of
fuel pathways will continue to change. Therefore, while EPA is using
its current lifecycle assessments to inform the regulatory
determinations for fuel pathways in this final rule, as required by the
statute, the Agency is also committing to further reassess these
determinations and lifecycle estimates. As part of this ongoing effort,
we will ask for the expert advice of the National Academy of Sciences,
as well as other experts, and incorporate their advice and any updated
information we receive into a new assessment of the lifecycle GHG
emissions performance of the biofuels being evaluated in this final
rule. EPA will request that the National Academy of Sciences over the
next two years evaluate the approach taken in this rule, the underlying
science of lifecycle assessment, and in particular indirect land use
change, and make recommendations for subsequent rulemakings on this
subject. This new assessment could result in new determinations of
threshold compliance compared to those included in this rule that would
apply to future production (from plants that are constructed after each
subsequent rule).
B. Methodology
The regulatory purpose of this analysis is to determine which
biofuels (both domestic and imported) qualify for the four different
GHG reduction thresholds and renewable fuel categories established in
EISA (see Section I.A). This threshold assessment compares the
lifecycle emissions of a particular biofuel against the lifecycle
emissions of the petroleum-based fuel it is replacing (e.g., ethanol
replacing gasoline or biodiesel replacing diesel). This section
discusses the Agency's approach both for assessing the lifecycle GHG
emissions from biofuels as well as for the petroleum-based fuels
replaced by the biofuels.
As described in detail below, EPA has received a number of comments
on the different pieces of this analysis and has thoroughly considered
those comments as well as feedback from our peer review process. In
each section below we will discuss comments received and how they
impacted our analysis.
1. Scope of Analysis
As stated in the proposal, the definition of lifecycle GHG
emissions established by Congress in EISA is critical to establishing
the scope of our analysis. Congress specified that:
The term ``lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions'' means the
aggregate quantity of greenhouse gas emissions (including direct
emissions and significant indirect emissions such as significant
emissions from land use changes), as determined by the
Administrator, related to the full fuel lifecycle, including all
stages of fuel and feedstock production and distribution, from
feedstock generation or extraction through the distribution and
delivery and use of the finished fuel to the ultimate consumer,
where the mass values for all greenhouse gases are adjusted to
account for their relative global warming potential.\166\
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\166\ Clean Air Act Section 211(o)(1).
This definition forms the basis of defining the goal and scope of
our lifecycle GHG analysis and in determining to what extent changes
should be made to the analytical approach outlined in our proposed
rulemaking.
a. Inclusion of Indirect Land Use Change
EPA notes that it received significant comment on including
international indirect emissions in its lifecycle calculations. Most of
the comments suggested that the science of international indirect land
use change was too new, or that the uncertainty involved was too great,
to be included in a regulatory analysis. EPA continues to believe that
compliance with the EISA mandate--determining ``the aggregate GHG
emissions related to the full fuel lifecycle, including both direct
emissions and significant indirect emissions such as land use
changes''--makes it necessary to assess those direct and significant
indirect impacts that occur not just within the United States, but also
those that occur in other countries.
Some commenters strongly supported EPA's proposal to include
significant GHG emissions that occur overseas and
[[Page 14766]]
are related to the lifecycle of renewable fuels or baseline fuels used
in the United States. These commenters agreed that the text of the
statute supports EPA's proposed approach, and that the alternative of
ignoring such emissions would result in grossly inaccurate assessments,
and would be inconsistent with the international nature of GHG
pollution and the fact that overseas emissions have domestic impacts.
Other commenters argued that the presumption against
extraterritorial application of domestic laws carries with it the
presumption that Congress is concerned with domestic effects and
domestic impacts only. They assert further that Congress intended to
benefit domestic agriculture through EISA enactment, and that the
statute's ambiguous terms should not be interpreted in a manner that
could harm domestic agriculture in general or, for one commenter, the
biodiesel industry in particular. Although considering international
emissions in its analyses could result in different implications under
the statute for various fuels and fuel pathways as compared to ignoring
these emissions, EPA believes that this is precisely the outcome that
Congress intended. Implementation of EISA will undoubtedly benefit the
domestic agricultural sector as a whole, with some components
benefiting more than others depending in part on the lifecycle GHG
emissions associated with the products to be made from individual
feedstocks. If Congress had sought to promote all biofuel production
without regard to GHG emissions related to the full lifecycle of those
fuels, it would not have specified GHG reduction thresholds for each
category of renewable fuel for which volume targets are specified in
the Act.
It is also important to note that including international indirect
emissions in EPA's lifecycle analysis does not exercise regulatory
authority over activities that occur solely outside the U.S., nor does
it raise questions of extra-territorial jurisdiction. EPA's regulatory
action involves an assessment of products either produced in the U.S.
or imported into the U.S. EPA is simply assessing whether the use of
these products in the U.S. satisfies requirements under EISA for the
use of designated volumes of renewable fuel, cellulosic biofuel,
biomass-based diesel, and advanced biofuel. Considering international
emissions in determining the lifecycle GHG emissions of the
domestically-produced or imported fuel does not change the fact that
the actual regulation of the product involves its use solely inside the
U.S.
A number of commenters pointed to the text and structure of the
definition of ``lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions'' to argue that EPA
either is not authorized to consider GHG emissions related to
international land use change, or that it is not required to do so. One
commenter suggested that the reference in the definition of ``lifecycle
greenhouse gas emissions'' to ``all stages'' of the lifecycle ``from''
feedstock generation ``through'' use of the fuel by the ultimate
consumer does not include indirect emissions that result from decisions
to place more land in acreage overseas for such non-fuel purposes as
cattle feed. Another commenter stated that EPA's approach does not give
any meaning to the terms ``significant'' and ``fuel lifecycle'' in the
definition, but instead focuses on the words such as ``full'' to arrive
at an expansive meaning. This commenter also noted the lack of any
specific reference to international considerations in Section 211(o),
as opposed to other provisions in the CAA, such as Section 115.
EPA believes that a complete analysis of the aggregate GHG
emissions related to the full lifecycle of renewable fuels includes the
significant indirect emissions from international land use change that
are predicted to result from increased domestic use of agricultural
feedstocks to produce renewable fuel. The statute specifically directs
EPA to include in its analyses significant indirect emissions such as
significant emissions from land use changes. EPA has not ignored either
the terms ``significant'' or ``life cycle.'' It is clear from EPA's
assessments that the modeled indirect emissions from land use changes
are ``significant'' in terms of their relationship to total GHG
emissions for given fuel pathways. Therefore, they are appropriately
considered in the total GHG emissions profile for the fuels in
question. EPA has not ignored the term ``life cycle.'' The entire
approach used by EPA is directed to fully analyzing emissions related
to the complete lifecycle of renewable and baseline fuels.
Although the definition of lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions in
Section 211(o) does not specifically mention international emissions,
it would be inconsistent with the intent of this section of the amended
Act to exclude them. A large variety of activities outside the U.S.
play a major part in the full fuel lifecycle of both baseline (gasoline
and diesel fuel used as transportation fuel in 2005) and renewable
fuels. For example, several stages of the lifecycle process for
gasoline and diesel can occur overseas, including extraction and
delivery of imported crude oil, and for imported gasoline and diesel
products, emissions associated with refining and distribution of the
finished product to the U.S. For imported renewable fuel, all of the
emissions associated with feedstock production and distribution, fuel
processing, and delivery of the finished renewable fuel to the U.S.
occur overseas. The definition of lifecycle GHG emissions makes it
clear that EPA is to determine the aggregate emissions related to the
``full'' fuel lifecycle, including ``all stages of fuel and feedstock
production and distribution.'' Thus, EPA could not, as a legal matter,
ignore those parts of a fuel lifecycle that occur overseas.
Drawing a distinction between GHG emissions that occur inside the
U.S. as compared to emissions that occur outside the U.S. would result
in a lifecycle analysis that bears no apparent relationship to the
purpose of this provision. The purpose of the thresholds in EISA is to
require the use of renewable fuels that achieve reductions in GHG
emissions compared to the baseline. Ignoring international emissions, a
large part of the GHG emission associated with the different fuels,
would result in a GHG analysis that bears no relationship to the real
world emissions impact of transportation fuels. The baseline would be
significantly understated, given the large amount of imported crude and
imported finished gasoline and diesel used in 2005. Likewise, the
emissions estimates for imported renewable fuel would be grossly
reduced in comparison to the aggregate emissions estimates for fuels
made domestically with domestically-grown feedstocks, simply because
the impacts of domestically produced fuels occurred within the U.S. EPA
does not believe that Congress intended such a result.
Excluding international impacts means large percentages of GHG
emissions would be ignored. This would take place in a context where
the global warming impact of emissions is irrespective of where the
emissions occur. If the purpose of thresholds is to achieve some
reduction in GHG emissions in order to help address climate change,
then ignoring emissions outside our borders interferes with the ability
to achieve this objective. Such an approach would essentially undermine
the purpose of the provision, and would be an arbitrary interpretation
of the broadly phrased text used by Congress.
One commenter stated that matters that could appropriately be
considered part of a food lifecycle (new land clearing for overseas
grain production as a result of decreased U.S. grain exports)
[[Page 14767]]
should not be considered part of a renewable fuel lifecycle. However,
the suggested approach would mean that EPA would fail to account for
the significant indirect emissions that relate to renewable fuel
production. EPA believes this would be counter to Congressional intent.
Although a life cycle analysis of foreign food production may also take
into account a given land use change, that does not mean that the same
land use change should not be considered in evaluating its ultimate
cause, which may be renewable fuel production in the United States.
Some comments asserted that significant GHG gas emissions from
international land use change should not be considered if the only
available models for doing so are not generally accepted or valid
considering economics or science, or where the approach is new and
untested, or where the data are faulty and EPA models unrealistic
scenarios. As described in this rulemaking, EPA has used the best
available models and substantially modified key inputs to those models
to reflect comments by peer reviewers, the public, and emerging
science. EPA has also modeled additional scenarios from those described
in the NPRM. EPA recognizes that uncertainty exists with respect to the
results, and has attempted to quantify the range of uncertainty. While
EPA agrees that application of the models it has used in the context of
assessing GHG emissions represents changes from previous biofuel
lifecycle modeling, EPA disagrees that it has used faulty data, modeled
unrealistic scenarios, or that its approach is otherwise scientifically
indefensible. Although the results of modeling GHG emissions associated
with international land use change are uncertain, EPA has attempted to
quantify that uncertainty and is now in a better position to consider
the uncertainty inherent in its approach.
One commenter asserted that by considering international land use
changes, EPA is seeking to penalize domestic renewable fuel producers
for impacts over which they have no control. In response, EPA disagrees
that it is seeking to penalize anyone at all. EPA is simply attempting
to account for all GHG emissions related to the full fuel lifecycle.
Domestic renewable fuel producers may have no direct control over land
use changes that occur overseas as a result of renewable fuel
production and use here, but their choice of feedstock can and does
influence oversees activities, and EPA believes it is appropriate to
consider the GHG emissions from those activities in its analyses.
Some commenters noted that a finding of causation is built into the
definitions of ``indirect effects'' in the Endangered Species Act and
the National Environmental Policy Act, and that EPA should interpret
the reference to ``indirect emissions' in EISA as requiring similar
findings of causation. Specifically, they argue that for EPA to count
GHG emissions from international land use change in its assessments,
EPA must find that renewable fuel production ``caused'' the land use
change. In response, without addressing the commenter's claims
regarding the requirements of NEPA or the ESA, EPA notes that Congress
has specified in Section 211(o) the required causal link between a fuel
and indirect emissions. The indirect emissions must be ``related to''
the full fuel lifecycle. EPA believes that it has demonstrated this
link through its modeling efforts. Specifically, the models predict
that increased demand for feedstocks to produce renewable fuel that
satisfies EISA mandates will likely result in international land use
change. Such change is, then, ``related to'' the full fuel lifecycle of
these fuels. EPA does not believe that the statute requires EPA to wait
until these effects occur to establish the required linkage, but
instead believes that it is authorized to use predictive models to
demonstrate likely results.
The term ``related to'' is generally interpreted broadly as meaning
to have a connection to or refer to a matter. To determine whether an
indirect emission has the appropriate connection to the full fuel
lifecycle, we must look at both the objectives of this provision as
well as the nature of the relationship. EPA has used a suite of global
models to project a variety of agricultural impacts of the RFS program,
including changes in the types of crops and number of acres planted
world-wide. These shifts in the agricultural market are a direct
consequence of the increased demand for biofuels in the U.S. This
increased demand diverts biofuel feedstocks from other competing uses,
and also increases the price of the feedstock, thus spurring additional
international production. Our analysis uses country-specific
information to determine the amount, location, and type of land use
change that would occur to meet these changes in production patterns.
The linkages of these changes to increased U.S. biofuel demand in our
analysis are generally close, and are not extended or overly complex.
Overall, EPA is confident that it is appropriate to consider
indirect emissions, including those from both domestic and
international land use changes, as ``related to'' the full fuel
lifecycle, based on the results of our modeling. These results form a
reasonable technical basis for the linkage between the full fuel
lifecycle of transportation fuels and indirect emissions, as well as
for the determination that these emissions are significant. EPA
believes that while uncertainty in the resulting aggregate GHG
estimates should be taken into consideration, it would be inappropriate
to exclude indirect emissions estimates from this analysis. The use of
reasonable estimates of these kinds of indirect emissions allows EPA to
conduct a reasoned evaluation of total GHG impacts, which is needed to
promote the objectives of this provision, as compared to ignoring or
not accounting for these indirect emissions.
EPA understands that including international indirect land use
change is a key decision and that there is significant uncertainty
associated with it. That is why we have taken an approach that
quantifies that uncertainty and presents the weight of currently
available evidence in making our threshold determinations.
b. Models Used
As described in the proposal, to estimate lifecycle indirect
impacts of biofuel production requires the use of economic modeling to
determine the market impacts of using agricultural commodity feedstocks
for biofuels. The use of economic models and the uncertainty of those
models to accurately predict future agricultural sector scenarios was
one of the main comments we received on our analysis. While the
comments and specifically the peer review supported our need to use
economic models to incorporate and measure indirect impacts of biofuel
production, they also highlighted the uncertainty with that modeling
approach, especially in projecting out to the future.
However, it is important to note that while there are many factors
that impact the uncertainty in predicting total land used for crop
production, making accurate predictions of many of these factors are
not relevant to our analysis. For example different assumptions about
economic growth rates, weather, and exchange rates will all impact
future agricultural projections including amount of land use for crops.
However, we are interested only in the difference between two biofuel
scenarios holding all other changes constant. So the absolute values
and projections for crops and other variables in the model
[[Page 14768]]
projections are not as important as the difference the model is
projecting due to an increase in biofuels production. This limits the
uncertainty of using the economic models for our analysis.
Furthermore, one of the key uncertainties associated with our
agricultural sector economic modeling that has the biggest impact on
land use change results is the assumptions around crop yields. As
discussed in Section V.A.2, we are conducting sensitivity analysis
around different yield assumptions in our analysis.
Therefore, because of the fact that we are only using the economic
models to determine the difference between two projected scenarios and
the fact that we are conducting sensitivity analysis around the yield
assumptions we feel it is appropriate and acceptable to use economic
models in our analysis of determining GHG thresholds in our final rule
analysis.
As was the case in the proposed analysis, to estimate the changes
in the domestic agricultural sector (e.g., changes in crop acres
resulting from increased demand for biofuel feedstock or changes in the
number of livestock due to higher corn prices) and their associated
emissions, EPA uses the Forestry and Agricultural Sector Optimization
Model (FASOM), developed by Texas A&M University and others. To
estimate the impacts of biofuels feedstock production on international
agricultural and livestock production, we used the integrated Food and
Agricultural Policy and Research Institute international models, as
maintained by the Center for Agricultural and Rural Development (FAPRI-
CARD) at Iowa State University.
One of the main comments we received on our choice of models was
the issue of transparency. Several comments were concerned that the
results of EPA's modeling efforts can not be duplicated outside the
experts who developed the models and conducted the analysis used by EPA
in the proposal. Upon the release of the proposal, EPA requested
comment on the use of these various models. EPA conducted a number of
measures to gather comments, including the public comment period upon
release of the NPRM analysis, holding a public workshop on the
lifecycle methodology, and conducting a peer review of the lifecycle
methodology. Specifically, one of the major tasks of the peer review of
EPA's lifecycle GHG methodology was to review and comment on the use of
the various models and their linkages. The response we received through
the peer review is supportive of our use of the FASOM and FAPRI-CARD
models, affirming that they are the strong and appropriate tools for
the task of estimating land use changes stemming from agricultural
economic impacts due to changes in biofuel policy.
In addition, in an effort to garner as useful comments as possible
and to be as transparent as possible about the modeling process, EPA
supplied in the docket technical documents for the FASOM and FAPRI-CARD
models, the output received by EPA from each model, and the models
themselves such that the public and commenters could learn and examine
how each model operates.
Building upon the support for the use of the FASOM and FAPRI-CARD
models, a number of important enhancements were made to both models in
response to comments received through the public comment system and
through the peer review, and in consultation with various experts on
domestic and international agronomics. These enhancements include
updated substitution rates of corn and soybean meal for distillers
grains (DG) based on recent scientific research by Argonne National
Laboratory, the addition of a corn oil from the dry mill ethanol
extraction process as a source of biodiesel, the full incorporation of
FASOM's forestry model that dynamically interacts with the agriculture
sector model in the U.S., as well as the addition of a Brazil regional
model to the FAPRI-CARD modeling system. All of these enhancements are
discussed in more detail below and in the RIA (Chapter 2 and 5). In
addition to the model enhancements we also conducted a sensitivity
analysis on yields as part of our final rule analysis. These updates to
our modeling and the sensitivity analysis was done in response to
public comments specifically asking for this to add transparency to the
modeling and modeling results.
We also received comments on the combined use of FASOM and FAPRI-
CARD. Several comments and peer reviewers questioned the benefit of
using two agricultural sector models. Specifically reviewers pointed to
some of the inconsistencies in the FASOM and FAPRI-CARD domestic
results. For the final rule analysis we worked to reconcile the two
model results. We apply the same set of scenarios and key input
assumptions in both models. For example, both models were updated to
apply consistent treatment of DGs in domestic livestock feed
replacement and consistent assumptions regarding DG export.
Some reviewers questioned the benefits of using FASOM and suggested
we rely entirely on the FAPRI-CARD model for the analysis. However, we
continue to believe there are benefits to the use of FASOM.
Specifically, the fact that FASOM has domestic land use change
interactions between crop, pasture, and forest integrated into the
modeling is an advantage over using the domestic FAPRI-CARD model that
only tracks cropland.
c. Scenarios Modeled
As was done for the proposal, to quantify the lifecycle GHG
emissions associated with the increase in renewable fuel mandated by
EISA, we compared the differences in total GHG emissions between two
future volume scenarios in our economic models. For each individual
biofuel, we analyzed the incremental GHG emission impacts of increasing
the volume of that fuel to the total mix of biofuels needed to meet the
EISA requirements. Rather than focus on the impacts associated with a
specific gallon of fuel and tracking inputs and outputs across
different lifecycle stages, we determined the overall aggregate impacts
across sectors of the economy in response to a given volume change in
the amount of biofuel produced.
Volume Scenarios: The two future scenarios considered included a
``business as usual'' volume of a particular renewable fuel based on
what would likely be in the fuel pool in 2022 without EISA, as
predicted by the Energy Information Agency's Annual Energy Outlook
(AEO) for 2007 (which took into account the economic and policy factors
in existence in 2007 before EISA). The second scenario assumed a higher
volume of renewable fuels as mandated by EISA for 2022.
We project our analysis and economic modeling through the life of
the program. We then consider the impacts of an increase of biofuels on
the agricultural sector in 2022 as the basis for our threshold
analysis. This was an area that we received numerous comments on
highlighting that this approach adds uncertainty to our results because
we are projecting uncertain technology and other changes out into the
future. One of the recommendations was to base the lifecycle GHG
assessments on a near term time frame and update the analysis every few
years to capture actual technology changes.
We continue to focus our final rule analyses on 2022 results for
two main reasons. First, it would require an extremely complex
assessment and administratively difficult implementation program to
track how biofuel production might continuously change from month to
month or year to
[[Page 14769]]
year. Instead, it seems appropriate that each biofuel be assessed a
level of GHG performance that is constant over the implementation of
this rule, allowing fuel providers to anticipate how these GHG
performance assessments should affect their production plans. Second,
it is appropriate to focus on 2022, the final year of ramp up in the
required volumes of renewable fuel as this year. Assessment in this
year allows the complete fuel volumes specified in EISA to be
incorporated. This also allows for the complete implementation of
technology changes and updates that were made to improve or modeling
efforts. For example, the inclusion of price induced yield increases
and the efficiency gains of DGs replacement are phased in over time.
Furthermore, these changes are in part driven by the changes in earlier
years of increased biofuel use.
Crop Yield Scenarios: EPA received numerous comments to the effect
that we should consider a case in our economic models with higher
yields that what were projected for the proposed rule analysis. There
are many factors that go into the economic modeling but the yield
assumptions for different crops has one of the biggest impacts on land
use and land use change. Therefore, for this analysis we ran a base
yield case and a high yield case. This will provide two distinct model
results for key parameters like total amount of land converted by crop
by country.
EPA's base yield projections are derived from extrapolating through
2022 long-term historical U.S. corn yields from 1985 to 2009. This
estimate, 183 bushels/acre for corn and 48 bushels/acre for soybeans,
is consistent with USDA's method of projecting future crop yields.
During the public comment process we learned that numerous technical
advancements-- including better farm practices, seed hybridization and
genetic modification--have led to more rapid gains in yields since
1995. In addition, commenters, including many leading seed companies,
provided data supporting more rapid improvements in future yields. For
example, commenters pointed to recent advancements in seed development
(including genetic modification) and the general accumulation of
knowledge of how to develop and bring to market seed varieties--factors
that would allow for a greater rate of development of seed varieties
requiring fewer inputs such as fertilizer and pest management
applications. This new information would suggest that the base yield
may be a conservative estimate of future yields in the U.S. Therefore,
in coordination with USDA experts, EPA has developed for this final
rule a high yield case scenario of 230 bushels/acre for corn and 60
bushels/acre for soybeans. These figures represent the 99% upper bound
confidence limit of variability in historical U.S. yields. This high
yield case represents a feasible high yield scenario for the purpose of
a sensitivity test of the impact on the results of higher yields.
Feedback we received indicated that corn and soybean yields respond
in tandem and that a high yield corn case would also imply a higher
yield for soybeans as well. The high yield case is therefore based on
higher yield corn and soybeans in the U.S. as well as in the major corn
and soybean producing countries around the world. For international
yields, it is reasonable to assume the same percent increases from the
baseline yield assumptions could occur as we are estimating for the
U.S. Thus in the case of corn, 230 bushels per acre is approximately
25% higher than the U.S. baseline yield of 183 bushels per acre in
2022. This same 25% increase in yield can be expected for the top corn
producers in the rest of the world by 2022, as justified improvements
in seed varieties and, perhaps even more so than in the case of the
U.S., improvements in farming practices which can take more full
advantage of the seed varieties' potential. For example, seeds can be
more readily developed to perform well in the particular regions of
these countries and can be coupled with much improved farming practices
as farmers move away from historical practices such as saving seeds
from their crop for use the next year and better understand the
economic advantages of modern farming practices. So the high yield
scenarios would not have the same absolute yield values in other
countries as the U.S. but would have the same percent increase.
While we modeled a high yield scenario for this analysis we
continue to rely primarily on the base yield estimates in our
assessments of different biofuel lifecycle GHG emissions recognizing
that the base yields could be conservative. The reasons outlined above
could lead to higher rates of yield growth in the future, however,
there are mitigating factors that could limit this yield growth or
potentially cause reductions in yield growth rates. For example, the
water requirements for both increased corn farming and ethanol
production could lead to future water constraints that may in some
regions limit yield growth potential. Furthermore, one of the long term
impacts of potential global climate change could be a reduction in
agricultural output of different impacted regions around the world,
including the U.S. This could also serve to reduce yield growth. As
with many aspects of this lifecycle modeling, as the science and data
evolves on crop yields, the Agency will update its factors accordingly.
2. Biofuel Modeling Framework & Methodology for Lifecycle Analysis
Components
As discussed above, to account for the direct and indirect
emissions of biofuel production required the use of agricultural sector
economic models. The results of these models were combined with other
data sources to generate lifecycle GHG emissions for the different
fuels. The basic modeling framework involved the following steps and
modeling tools.
To estimate the changes in the domestic agricultural sector we used
FASOM, developed by Texas A&M University and others. FASOM is a partial
equilibrium economic model of the U.S. forest and agricultural sectors
that tracks over 2,000 production possibilities for field crops,
livestock, and biofuels for private lands in the contiguous United
States. Because FASOM captures the impacts of all crop production, not
just biofuel feedstock, we are able to use it to determine secondary
agricultural sector impacts, such as crop shifting and reduced demand
due to higher prices.
The output of the FASOM analysis includes changes in total domestic
agricultural sector fertilizer and energy use. These are calculated
based on the inputs required for all the different crops modeled and
changes in the amounts of the different crops produced due to increased
biofuel production. FASOM output also includes changes in the number
and type of livestock produced. These changes are due to the changes in
animal feed prices and make-up due to the increase in biofuel
production. The FASOM output changes in fertilizer, energy use, and
livestock are combined with GHG emission factors from those sources to
generate biofuel lifecycle impacts. The GHG emission factors for fuel
and fertilizer production come from the Greenhouse gases, Regulated
Emissions, and Energy use in Transportation (GREET) spreadsheet
analysis tool developed by Argonne National Laboratories, and livestock
GHG emission factors are from IPCC guidance.
To estimate the domestic impacts of N2O emissions from
fertilizer application, we used the DAYCENT
[[Page 14770]]
model developed by Colorado State University. The DAYCENT model
simulates plant-soil systems and is capable of simulating detailed
daily soil water and temperature dynamics and trace gas fluxes
(CH4, N2O, and NOX). DAYCENT model
results for N2O emissions from different crop and land use
changes were combined with FASOM output to generate overall domestic
N2O emissions.
FASOM output also provides changes in total land use required for
agriculture and land use shifting between crops, and interactions with
pasture, and forestry. This output is combined with emission factors
from land use change to generate domestic land use change GHG emissions
from increased biofuel production.
To estimate the impacts of biofuels feedstock production on
international agricultural and livestock production, we used the
integrated FAPRI-CARD international models, developed by Iowa State
University. These worldwide agricultural sector economic models capture
the biological, technical, and economic relationships among key
variables within a particular commodity and across commodities.
The output of the FAPRI-CARD model included changes in crop acres
and livestock production by type by country globally. Unlike FASOM, the
FAPRI-CARD output did not include changes in fertilizer or energy use
or have land type interactions built in. These were developed outside
the FAPRI-CARD model and combined with the FAPRI-CARD output to
generate GHG emission impacts.
Crop input data by crop and country was developed and combined with
the FAPRI-CARD output crop acreage change data to generate overall
changes in fertilizer and energy use. These fertilizer and energy
changes along with the FAPRI-CARD output livestock changes were then
converted to GHG emissions based on the same basic approach used for
domestic sources, which involves combining with emission factors from
GREET and IPCC.
International land use change emissions were determined based on
combining FAPRI-CARD output of crop acreage change with satellite data
to determine types of land impacted by the projected crop changes and
then applying emission factors of different land use conversions to
generate GHG impacts.
Additional modeling and data sources used to determine the GHG
emissions of other stages in the biofuel lifecycle include studies and
data on the distance and modes of transport needed to ship feedstock
from the field to the biofuel processing facility and the finished
biofuel from the facility to end use. These distances and modes are
used to develop amount and type of energy used for transport which is
combined with GREET factors to generate GHG emissions. We also
calculate energy use needed in the biofuel processing facility from
industry sources, reports, and process modeling. This energy use is
combined with emissions factors from GREET to develop GHG impacts of
the biofuel production process
The following sections outline how the modeling tools and
methodology discussed above were used in conducting the analysis for
the different lifecycle stages of biofuel production, including changes
made since the proposal. Lifecycle stages discussed include feedstock
production, land use change, feedstock and fuel transport, biofuel
production, and vehicle end use. The modeling of the petroleum fuels
baseline is discussed in Section V.B.3.
a. Feedstock Production
Our analysis addresses the lifecycle GHG emissions from feedstock
production by capturing both the direct and indirect impacts of growing
corn, soybeans, and other renewable fuel feedstocks. For both domestic
and international agricultural feedstock production, we analyzed four
main sources of GHG emissions: agricultural inputs (e.g., fertilizer
and energy use), fertilizer N2O, livestock, and rice
methane. (Emissions related to land use change are discussed in the
next section).
i. Domestic Agricultural Sector Impacts
Agricultural Sector Inputs: The proposal analysis calculated GHG
emissions from domestic agriculture fertilizer and energy use and
production change by applying rates of energy and fertilizer use by
crop by region to the FASOM acreage data and then multiplying by
default factors for GHG emissions from GREET. Fuel use emissions from
GREET include both the upstream emissions associated with production of
the fuel and downstream combustion emissions.
In general commenters supported this approach as it captures all
indirect impacts of agricultural sector emissions and not just those
associated with the specific biofuel crop in question. However, we did
receive comments as part of our Model Linkages Peer Review that the
input data for some crops may be overestimating GHG emissions.
Specifically, the commenter highlighted that N2O emissions
from domestic hay production seemed to be over estimated. As part of
the final rule analysis EPA confirmed that input data was being used
correctly, however, the hay N2O emissions in the proposal
may have been overestimated based on the approach used in the proposal
to generate N2O emissions from nitrogen fixing crops. This
has been updated for the final rule analysis as discussed in the next
section which resulted in lower emissions from nitrogen fixing crops.
Other comments indicated that we should be using the most up to
date data for our calculations of GHG emissions. Since the proposal
there has been a new release of the GREET model (Version 1.8C). EPA
reviewed the new version and concluded that this was an improvement
over the previous GREET release that was used in the proposal analysis
(Version 1.8B). Therefore, EPA updated the GHG emission factors for
fertilizer production used in our analysis to the values from the new
GREET version. This had the result of slightly increasing the GHG
emissions associated with fertilizer production and thus slightly
increasing the GHG emission impacts of domestic agriculture.
As was the case in the proposal, we held the rates of domestic
fertilizer application constant over time. This is true for both of our
yield scenarios considered as well as for price induced yield
increases. This constant rate of application is justified based on USDA
data indicating that crops are becoming more efficient in their uptake
of fertilizer such that higher yields can be achieved based on the same
per acre fertilizer application rates.
N2O Emissions: The proposal analysis calculated N2O
emissions from domestic fertilizer application and nitrogen fixing
crops based on the amount of fertilizer used and different regional
factors to represent the percent of nitrogen (N) fertilizer applied
that result in N2O emissions. The proposal analysis
N2O factors were based on existing DAYCENT modeling that was
developed using the 1996 IPCC guidance for calculating N2O
emissions from fertilizer applications and nitrogen fixing crops. We
identified in the proposal that this was an area we would be updating
for the final rule based on new analysis from Colorado State University
using the DAYCENT model. This update was not available at time of
proposal.
We received a number of comments on our proposal results indicating
that the N2O emissions were overestimated from soybean and
other legume production (e.g., nitrogen fixing hay) in our analysis.
The main issue is that because the N2O emission factors used
in the proposal were based on the 1996
[[Page 14771]]
IPCC guidance for N2O accounting they were overestimating
N2O emissions from nitrogen fixing crops. As an update in
2006, IPCC guidance was changed such that biological nitrogen fixation
was removed as a direct source of N2O because of the lack of
evidence of significant emissions arising from the fixation process
itself. IPCC concluded that the N2O emissions induced by the
growth of legume crops/forages may be estimated solely as a function of
the above-ground and below-ground nitrogen inputs from crop/forage
residue. This change effectively reduces the N2O emissions
from nitrogen fixing crops like soybeans and nitrogen fixing hay from
the 1996 to 2006 IPCC guidance.
Therefore, as part of the update to new N2O emission
factors from DAYCENT used for our final rule analysis we have updated
to the 2006 IPCC guidance which reduces the N2O emissions
from soybean production. This has the effect of reducing lifecycle GHG
emissions for soybean biodiesel production. When we model corn
expansion as would result from increased production of corn-based
ethanol, one of the impacts is that the increase in corn acres
displaces some acres otherwise planted to soy beans. Since the GHG
emissions impact of this change in land use considers the
N2O emissions benefit from the displaced soy, the result of
this lower soy bean N2O assessment means that the benefits
for soy displacement are less, directionally increasing the net GHG
emissions for corn expansion.
We also received comments on our approach that we should use IPCC
factors directly as opposed to relying on DAYCENT modeling. The
difference is that IPCC provides default factors by crop by country,
while DAYCENT models N2O emissions by crop but also by
region within the US, accounting for different soil types and weather
factors. For the final rule we still rely on the DAYCENT modeling
results as we believe them to be more accurate. For example, the
National Greenhouse Gas Inventory as reported annually by the US to the
Framework Convention on Climate Change uses the DAYCENT model to
determine N2O emissions from domestic fertilizer use as
opposed to using default IPCC factors as the DAYCENT modeling is
recognized to be a more accurate approach.
Livestock Emissions: GHG emissions from livestock have two main
sources: enteric fermentation and manure management. For the proposal,
enteric fermentation methane emissions were determined by applying IPCC
default factors for different livestock types to herd values as
calculated by FASOM to get GHG emissions. Comments we received on this
approach were that the default IPCC factors do not account for the
beneficial use of distiller grains (DGs) as animal feed. Use of DGs has
been shown to decrease methane produced from enteric fermentation if
replacing corn as animal feed. This is due to the fact that the DGs are
a more efficient feed source. Consistent with our assumptions regarding
the efficiency of DGs as an animal feed in our agricultural sector
modeling, we have also included the enteric fermentation methane
reductions of DGs use in our final rule analysis. The reduction amount
was based on default factors in GREET that calculated this reduction
based on the same Argonne report used to determine DGs feed replacement
efficiency discussed in Section V.B.2.b.i. This resulted in a reduction
in the lifecycle GHG emissions for corn ethanol compared to the
proposal assumptions. More detail on the enteric fermentation methane
reductions of DGs use can be found in Chapter 2 of the RIA.
The proposal analysis also included the methane and N2O
emissions of livestock manure management based on IPCC default factors
for emissions from the different types of livestock and management
methods combined with FASOM results for livestock changes. We received
comments that this was a good approach as it quantifies the indirect
impacts of emissions associated with biofuel production. The same
approach was used for the final rule analysis.
Methane from Rice: For the proposal, methane emissions from rice
production were calculated by taking the FASOM output predicted changes
in rice acres, resulting from the increase in biofuel production, and
multiplying by default methane emission factors from IPCC to generate
GHG impacts. We received comments that this was a good approach as it
quantifies the indirect impacts of emissions associated with biofuel
production. The same approach was used for the final rule analysis.
ii. International Agricultural Sector Impacts
Agricultural Sector Inputs: For the proposal we determined
international fertilizer and energy use emissions based on applying
input data collected by the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of
the United Nations and the International Energy Agency (IEA) to the
FAPRI-CARD crop output data and then applied GREET defaults for
converting those inputs to GHG emissions.
As part of our public comment and peer review process we had this
component of our analysis specifically peer reviewed. The main comment
we received was to update our input data with newer data sources.
Therefore, for the final rule analysis we updated fertilizer and
pesticide consumption projections from the incorporation of updates
made by the FAO to its Fertistat and FAOStat datasets, as well as the
incorporation of more up-to-date fertilizer consumption statistics
provided by a recent International Fertilizer Institute (IFA) report.
This update had varying impacts on the amount of fertilizer used on
different crops in different countries but in general increased the
amount of fertilizer assumed and thus international agriculture
lifecycle GHG emissions from fertilizer use for all biofuels.
Another comment from the peer review was that we should include
lime use for some of the key crops modeled in our analysis. Lime use
was not included in the proposal because of lack of international data
on lime use by crop. Excluding lime used is an underestimate of
international agriculture GHG emissions. For our final rule analysis we
included lime use for sugarcane production in Brazil based on
information received from Brazilian agricultural experts provided as
part of the comment process. This led to an increase in GHG emissions
from sugarcane farming. We did not include lime use for other crops in
the final rule analysis because of lack of other data sources for other
crops.
Other comments we received on our approach were that we were
potentially underestimating GHG emissions from international
agriculture energy use. Our proposal based international agriculture
energy use on factors from the International Energy Agency (IEA) that
included all energy use for agriculture that we divided by all
agricultural sector land by country to get a GHG emission per acre for
each country considered. The comment raised the issue that by using all
agricultural land this includes pasture land that would not have the
same energy input as crop production. Effectively, higher energy use
from crop production was getting averaged with lower energy use for
pasture and then this lower number was applied only to crop production.
We specifically asked as part of our peer review for guidance and
comment on our international agriculture energy use calculation. We did
not receive significant comments or data to suggest that we change our
approach and reviewers generally
[[Page 14772]]
agreed we were using the best data available. Furthermore, the energy
use values represent all agriculture including forestry and fishing
which could in some countries be overestimating energy use for crop
production. So for our final rule analysis we used the same approach as
for the proposal to calculate international agriculture energy use GHG
emissions.
We also received comments on the applicability of applying GREET
defaults for fuel and fertilizer production to international fuel and
fertilizer use to generate GHG emissions. The comments noted that GREET
factors are developed for domestic US conditions and would not
necessarily apply internationally. Specifically on the issue of
nitrogen fertilizer production, the comments indicated that nitrogen
fertilizer production internationally could rely on coal as a fuel
source as opposed to natural gas used in the US, which would cause
international GHG emissions associated with fertilizer production and
hence biofuel production to be underestimated in our analysis. This was
also an area we asked peer reviewers for comment and guidance. The peer
review response generally supported our approach and did not offer
suggestions for other data sources. So for our final rule analysis we
used the same approach as for the proposal and applied GREET defaults
to calculate international fertilizer production GHG emissions.
As was the case in the proposal and for domestic agriculture, we
held the rates of international fertilizer application constant over
time. This is true for both of our yield scenarios considered as well
as for price induced yield increases. This was an area that was
specifically addressed in our peer review of International Agricultural
Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Factors. The reviewers supported the
approach we have taken, for example indicating that generally crop
production as a unit of fertilizer application has increased over time,
therefore, crop yields have increased with the same or lower fertilizer
applications.
N2O Emissions: For the proposal we included
N2O emissions from fertilizer application by applying IPCC
default factors for different crops in different countries. We use IPCC
default factors because we do not have the same level of regional
factors like we do in the US from the DAYCENT model. The IPCC guidance
has emission factors for four sources of N2O emissions from
crops, Direct N2O Emissions from Synthetic Fertilizer
Application, Indirect N2O Emissions from Synthetic
Fertilizer Application, Direct Emissions from Crop Residues, and
Indirect Emissions from Crop Residues. The proposal did not include
N2O emissions from the Direct and Indirect Emissions from
Crop Residues for cotton, palm oil, rapeseed, sugar beet, sugarcane, or
sunflower. These were not included for these crops because default
crop-specific IPCC factors used in the calculation were not available.
Comments from our peer review process suggested that we include
proxy emissions from these crops based on similar crop types that do
have default factors. Therefore, for our final rule analysis we have
included crop residue N2O emissions from sugarcane
production based on perennial grass as a proxy. Perennial grass is
chosen as a proxy based on input from N2O modeling experts.
This change results in an increase in N2O emissions from
sugarcane and therefore sugarcane ethanol production compared to the
proposal.
Livestock Emissions: Similar to domestic livestock impacts, enteric
fermentation and manure management GHG emissions were included in our
proposal analysis. The proposal calculated international livestock GHG
impacts based on activity data provided by the FAPRI-CARD model (e.g.,
number and type of livestock by country) multiplied by IPCC default
factors for GHG emissions.
Based on the peer review of the methodology used for the proposal
it was determined that the calculations for manure management did not
include emissions from soil application. These emissions were included
for our final rule analysis but do not cause a significant change in
the livestock GHG emission results.
Rice Emissions: To estimate rice emission impacts internationally,
the proposal used the FAPRI-CARD model to predict changes in
international rice production as a result of the increase in biofuels
demand in the U.S. We then applied IPCC default factors by country to
these predicted changes in rice acres to generate GHG emissions. We
received comments that this was a good approach as it quantifies the
indirect impacts of emissions associated with biofuel production. The
same approach was used for the final rule analysis.
b. Land Use Change
The following sections discuss our final rulemaking assessment of
GHG emissions associated with land use changes that occur domestically
and internationally as a result of the increase in renewable fuels
demand in the U.S. There are four main methodology questions addressed
both domestically and internationally:
Amount of Land Converted and Where.
Type of Land Converted.
GHG Emissions Associated with Conversion.
Timeframe of Emission Analysis.
Each of those methodology components are discussed as are the
comments we received as part of the comment and peer review process. We
also outline in addition to our main FASOM and FAPRI-CARD approach a
general equilibrium modeling approaches and its results.
i. Amount of Land Area Converted and Where
Based on a number of modeling changes made to the FASOM and FAPRI-
CARD models since the NPRM, the amount of land use change resulting
from an increase in biofuel demand in the U.S. is significantly lower
in this FRM analysis for most renewable fuels. Many of the changes made
were a direct result of comments received through the notice-and-
comment period, comments received from the peer-reviewers, or as a
result of incorporating new science that has become available since the
analysis was conducted in the proposal. Some of the key changes that
had the largest impact on the land use change estimates are included in
this section. For additional information, see Chapter 2 of the RIA.
As discussed in the NPRM, one of the key factors in determining the
amount of new land needed to meet an increase in biofuel demand is the
treatment of co-products of ethanol and biodiesel production. We
received many comments on this topic, particularly on the amount of
corn and soybean meal a pound of DGS, the byproduct of dry mill grain
ethanol production, can replace in animal feed. For the final rule, we
predict that distiller grains will be absorbed by livestock more
efficiently over time. We updated the displacement rate assumptions in
the FASOM and FAPRI-CARD models based on comments we received and on
the recent research conducted by Argonne National Laboratory and
others.\167\ According to this research, one pound of DGS replaces more
than a pound of corn and/or soybean meal in beef and dairy rations, in
part because cattle fed DGS show faster weight gain and increased milk
production compared to those fed a traditional diet. While this
[[Page 14773]]
study represents a significant increase over current DGS replacement
rates, we believe it is reasonable to assume that improvements will be
made in the use and efficiency of DGS over time as the DGS market
matures, the quality and consistency of DGS improves, and as livestock
producers learn to optimize DGS feed rations. As a result of this
modification, less land is needed to replace the amount of corn
diverted to ethanol production. Additional details on the DGS
assumptions are included in Chapters 2 and 5 of the RIA.
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\167\ Salil, A., M. Wu, and M. Wang. 2008. ``Update of
Distillers Grains Replacement Ratios for Corn Ethanol Life-Cycle
Analysis.'' Available at http://www.transportation.anl.gov/pdfs/AF/527.pdf.
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A second factor that can have a significant impact on the amount of
land that may be converted as a result of increasing biofuel demand are
changes in crop yields over time. As discussed in the NPRM, our
proposal based domestic yields on USDA projections for both the
reference case and the control case. As discussed in Section V.B.1.c,
for this FRM we have also included scenarios that use higher yield
projections in both the reference case and the control case. However,
in the NPRM we also requested comment on whether the higher prices
caused by an increased in demand for biofuels would increase future
yield projections in the policy case beyond the yield trends in the
reference case (sometimes referred to as ``price induced yields''), or
whether these price induced yields would be offset by the reduction in
yields associated with expanding production onto new marginal acres
(sometimes referred to as extensification). Based on the comments we
received, along with additional historical trend analysis conducted by
FAPRI-CARD, the international agricultural modeling framework now
incorporates a price induced yield component.\168\ The new yield
adjustments are partially offset by the extensification factor,
however, the combined impact is that fewer new acres are needed for
agricultural production to meet world agricultural demands.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\168\ Technical Report: An Analysis of EPA Renewable Fuel
Scenarios with the FAPRI-CARD International Models, CARD Staff,
January, 2010.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
One additional change we made to the yield assumptions was to
update the FASOM model with new analysis by Pacific Northwest National
Laboratories (PNNL) on switchgrass yields.\169\ We included this new
data for two reasons. First, we received several comments that our
assumptions on switchgrass yields were too low, based on more recent
field work. In addition, for out NPRM analysis, we did not have data
for switchgrass yields in certain regions of the US. Therefore, the
PNNL data helped to fill a pre-existing data gap. As a result of these
updates, less land is needed per gallon of switchgrass ethanol
produced. Additional details on switchgrass yields and other
agricultural sector modeling assumptions are included in RIA Chapter 5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\169\ Thomson, A.M., R.C. Izarrualde, T.O. West, D.J. Parrish,
D.D. Tyler, and J.R. Williams. 2009. Simulating Potential
Switchgrass Production in the United States. PNNL-19072. College
Park, MD: Pacific Northwest National Laboratory.
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One of the major changes made to the FAPRI-CARD model between the
NPRM and FRM includes the more detailed representation of Brazil
through a new integrated module. The Brazil module was developed by
Iowa State with input from Brazilian agricultural sector experts and we
believe it is an improvement over the approach used in the proposal. In
the NPRM, we requested additional data for countries outside the U.S.
We received comments encouraging us to use regional and country
specific data where it was available. We also received comments
encouraging us to take into account the available supply of abandoned
pastureland in Brazil as a potential source of new crop land. The new
Brazil module addresses these comments. Since the Brazil module
contains data specific to six regions, this additional level of details
allows FAPRI-CARD to more accurately capture real-world responses to
higher agricultural prices. For example, double cropping (the practice
of planting a winter crop of corn or wheat on existing crop acres) is a
common practice in Brazil. Increased double cropping is feasible in
response to higher agricultural prices, which increases total
production without increasing land use conversion. The new Brazil
module also explicitly accounts for changes in pasture acres, therefore
accounting for the competition between crop and pasture acres.
Furthermore, the Brazil module explicitly models livestock
intensification, the practice of increasing the number of heads of
cattle per acre of land in response to higher commodity prices or
increased demand for land.
In addition to modifying how pasture acres are treated in Brazil,
we also improved the methodology for calculating pasture acreage
changes in other countries. We received several comments through the
public comment period and peer reviewers supporting a better analysis
of the interaction between crops, pasture, and livestock. In the NPRM,
although we accounted for GHG emissions from livestock production
(e.g., manure management), we did not explicitly account for GHG
emissions from changes in pasture demand. In response to comments
received, our new methodology accounts for changes in pasture area
resulting from livestock fluctuations and therefore captures the link
between livestock and land used for grazing. Based on regional pasture
stocking rates (livestock per acre), we now calculate the amount of
land used for livestock grazing. The regional stocking rates were
determined with data on livestock populations from the UN Food and
Agricultural Organization (FAO) and data on pasture area measured with
agricultural inventory and satellite-derived land cover data. As a
result of this change, in countries where livestock numbers decrease,
less land is needed for pasture. Therefore, unneeded pasture acres are
available for crop land or allowed to revert to their natural state. In
countries where livestock numbers increase, more land is needed for
pasture, which can be added on abandoned cropland or unused grassland,
or it can result in deforestation. We believe this new methodology
provides a more realistic assessment of land use changes, especially in
regions where livestock populations are changing significantly. For
additional information on the pasture replacement methodology, see RIA
Chapter 2.
Although the total amount of land use conversion is lower in the
FRM analysis compared to the NPRM analysis, the regional distribution
of this land use change has shifted. Due to the many changes made in
response to comments associated with agriculture and livestock markets,
Brazil is now much more responsive to changes in world biofuel and
agricultural product demand. As a result, a larger portion of the
projected land use change occurs in Brazil compared to the NPRM
analysis. Additional details on the geographical location of land use
change are included in Chapter 2 of the RIA.
ii. Type of Land Converted
Based on a number of improvements in our analysis, the types of
land affected by biofuel-induced tend to be less carbon intensive
compared to the NPRM. Therefore, the net effect of our revisions to
this part of our analysis significantly reduced land use change GHG
emissions. The updated FAPRI-CARD Brazil model, discussed in the
previous section, showed more pasture expansion in the Amazon which
increased land use change emissions. However, the most important
revisions to this part of our international analysis, in terms of their
net effect on GHG emissions, were improvements that we made in our
modeling of the
[[Page 14774]]
interactions between livestock, pasture, crops and unused, or
underutilized, grasslands globally. In the NPRM we made the broad
assumption that international crop expansion would necessarily displace
pasture, which would require an equivalent amount of pasture to expand
into forests and shrublands. In the FRM analysis as discussed in the
previous section, we have linked international changes in livestock
production with changes in pasture area to allow for pasture
abandonment in regions where livestock production decreases as a result
of biofuel production. We also incorporated the ability of pasture to
expand onto unused, or underutilized, grasslands and savannas which on
a global basis reduced the amount of forest conversion compared to the
proposal. These revisions, as well as a quantitative uncertainty
assessment, are discussed in this section.
In the same way that the amount and location of land use change is
important, the type of land converted is also a critical determinant of
the magnitude of the GHG emissions impacts associated with biofuel
production. For example, the conversion of rainforest to agriculture
results in a much larger GHG release than conversion of grassland. In
the proposed rule analysis we used two approaches, based on the best
available information to us at the time, to evaluate the types of land
that would be affected domestically and internationally. Domestically,
we used the FASOM model, which simulates rental rates for different
types of land (e.g., forest, pasture, crop) and chooses the land uses
that would produce the highest net returns. Internationally, we used
the FAPRI-CARD/Winrock analysis whereby historical land conversion
trends, as evaluated with satellite imagery, are used to determine what
types of land are affected by agricultural land use changes in each
country or sub-region.
In the proposed rule we also explained several other options to
determine what types of land will be affected by biofuel-induced land
use changes, such as the use of general equilibrium models. EPA
specifically sought expert peer review input and public comment on our
approach and all of the analytical options for this part of the
lifecycle assessment. The expert peer reviewers agreed that EPA's
approach was scientifically justifiable, but they highlighted
problematic areas and suggested important revisions to improve our
analysis. The public comments received on this issue expressed a wide
range of views regarding EPA's approach. In general, the commenters
that objected to our analytical approach raised similar concerns as the
peer reviewers, such as the need for more data validation and
uncertainty assessment. As discussed below, we made significant
improvements to our analysis based on the recommendations and comments
we received. Based on the peer reviewers agreement that our general
approach is scientifically justifiable, and in light of the significant
improvements made, we think that our approach represents the best
available analysis of the types of land affected by biofuel-induced
land use changes. We did consider a range of other analytical options,
but based on all of the information considered and the requirements for
this analysis, we did not find any alternative approaches that are
superior at this time. As part of periodic updates to the lifecycle
analysis, we will continue to consider ways to improve this part of our
analysis, as well as the merits of alternate approaches.
Domestic: In response to comments received, we made two major
improvements to the FASOM model for the final rulemaking. As discussed
in the NPRM and supported by comments, we were able to include the
forestry sector into the FASOM analysis. Only the agricultural sector
of FASOM was analyzed for the NPRM, due to the fact that the forestry
sector component was undergoing model modifications. For this FRM
analysis, we were able to use the fully integrated forestry and
agricultural sector model, thereby capturing the interaction between
agricultural land and forests in the U.S. In addition, the inclusion of
the forestry model allows us to explicitly model the land use change
impacts of the competing demand for cellulosic ethanol from
agricultural sources with cellulosic ethanol from logging and mill
residues. As a result of this modification, the FRM analysis includes
some land use conversion from forests into agriculture in the U.S. as a
result of the increased demand for renewable fuels.
The second major modification we made in response to comments was
the disaggregation of different types of land included in FASOM. In the
proposed rulemaking, the FASOM model included three major categories of
land: cropland, pasture, and acres enrolled in the Conservation Reserve
Program (CRP). Although this categorization allowed for a detailed
regional analysis of land used to grow crops, acres used for livestock
production were not fully captured. We received comments requesting a
more detailed breakdown of land types in order to capture the
interaction between livestock, pasture, and cropland. Therefore, the
FASOM model now includes rangeland, pasture and forest land that can be
used for grazing. Since we also received comments that we should take
into account the potential for idle land to be used for other purposes
such as the production of cellulosic ethanol, FASOM now accounts for
the amount of land within each category that is either idle or used for
production.
These two major modifications to the FASOM model now allow us to
explicitly track land transfers between various land categories in the
U.S. As a result, we can more accurately capture the GHG impacts of
different types of land use changes domestically. More detail and
results of the FASOM model can be found in Section V.B.1.b of the
preamble.
International: The proposed rule included a detailed description of
the FAPRI-CARD/Winrock approach used to determine the type of land
affected internationally. This approach uses satellite data depicting
recent land conversion trends in conjunction with economic projections
from the FAPRI-CARD model (an economic model of global agricultural
markets) to determine the type of land converted internationally. In
the proposed rule we described areas of uncertainty in this approach,
illustrated the uncertainty with sensitivity analyses, and discussed
other potential approaches for this analysis. To encourage expert and
stakeholder feedback, EPA specifically invited comment on this issue,
held public hearings and workshops, and sponsored an independent peer-
review, all of which specifically highlighted this part of our analysis
for feedback. While there were a wide range of views expressed in these
forums, the feedback received by the Agency generally supported the
FAPRI-CARD/Winrock approach as appropriate for this analysis. For
example, all five experts that peer reviewed EPA's use of satellite
imagery agreed that it is scientifically justifiable to use historic
remote sensing data in conjunction with agricultural sector models to
evaluate and project land use change emissions associated with biofuel
production. Additionally, the peer reviewers and public commenters
highlighted problematic areas and suggested revisions to improve our
analysis. Below, we describe the key revisions that were implemented
which have significantly improved our analysis based on the feedback
received.
FAPRI-CARD/Satellite Data Approach: As described above in
[[Page 14775]]
Section V.B.1.b, the FAPRI-CARD model was used to determine the amount
of land use change in each country/region in response to increased
biofuel production. Because the FAPRI-CARD model does not provide
information about what type of land is converted to crop production or
pasture, we worked with Winrock International to evaluate the types of
land that would be affected internationally. Winrock is a global
nonprofit organization with years of experience in the development and
application of the IPCC agricultural forestry and other land use
(AFOLU) guidance. For the proposed rule, we used satellite data from
2001-2004 to provide a breakdown of the types of land converted to crop
production. A key strength of this approach is that satellite
information is based on empirical observations which can be verified
and statistically tested for accuracy. Furthermore, it is reasonable to
assume that recent land use change decisions have been driven largely
by economics, and, as such, recent patterns will continue in the
future, absent major economic or land use regime shifts caused, for
example, by changes in government policies.
As discussed above, all five of the expert peer reviewers that
reviewed our use of satellite imagery for this analysis agreed that our
general approach was scientifically justifiable. However, all of the
peer reviewers qualified that statement by describing relevant
uncertainties and highlighting revisions that would improve our
analysis. Some of the public commenters supported EPA's use of
satellite imagery, while other expressed concern. In general, both sets
of public commenters--those in favor and opposed--outlined the same
criticisms and suggestions as the expert peer reviewers. Among the many
valuable suggestions for satellite data analysis provided in the expert
peer reviews and public comments, several major recommendations
emerged: EPA should use the most recent satellite data set that covers
a period of at least 5 years; EPA should use higher resolution
satellite imagery; EPA's analysis should consider a wider range of land
categories; EPA should improve it's analysis of the interaction between
cropland, pasture and unused or underutilized land; and EPA's analysis
should include thorough data validation and a full assessment of
uncertainty. Below, we describe these and other recommendations and how
we addressed each of them to improve our analysis. Based on the peer
reviewers agreement that our general approach is scientifically
justifiable, and in light of the significant improvements made, we
think that our approach represents the best available analysis of the
types of land affected internationally.
One of the fundamental improvements in this analysis since the
proposed rule is that it now provides global coverage. The analysis for
the proposed rule included satellite imagery for 6 land categories in
314 regions across 35 of the most important countries, with a weighted
average applied to the rest of the world. We have since completed a
global satellite data analysis including 9 land categories in over 750
distinct regions across 160 countries. This was an analytical
improvement that we committed to do in the proposed rule. As described
below, the other major analytical enhancements were conducted in
response to the many technical recommendations that we received as part
of the peer review and public comment process.
All of the expert peer reviewers agreed that the version 4 MODIS
data set used in the proposed rule, which covers 2001-2004 with one
square-kilometer (1km) spatial resolution, was appropriate for our
analysis given the goals of the study at the time. However, almost all
of the reviewers strongly recommended using a data set covering a
longer time period. The reviewers argued that the 3-year time period
from 2001-2004 was too short to capture the often gradual, or
sequential, cropland expansion that has been observed in the tropics.
The short time period may also show unusual or temporary trends in land
use caused by short-term policy changes or market influences. The
reviewers suggested that remote sensing observations covering 5-10
years would be adequate to address these problems. The reviewers also
recommended that remote sensing observations should be as recent as
possible in order to capture current land use change drivers and
patterns (e.g., political systems, infrastructure, and protected
areas). To use the best available data and respond to the peer
reviewers' recommendations, the analysis was updated to include the
most recent MODIS data set, version 5, which covers the time period
2001-2007. MODIS land cover products are not available for years prior
to 2001, so it is not currently possible to analyze a time period
longer than six years (i.e., 2001-2007) with a single, or consistent,
data set. Thus, consistent with the peer review recommendations, we are
now using the most recent global data set which covers at least 5
years. There are other advantages to using the version 5 MODIS data,
such as improved spatial resolution, and robust data validation, which
are discussed below.
There was strong agreement among the peer reviewers that higher
resolution satellite imagery would be an important improvement over the
1-km resolution data used in the proposed rule analysis. Higher spatial
resolution is especially useful in categorizing highly fragmented
landscapes. One of the reviewers hypothesized that land use change
driven by biofuel production would likely involve large parcels of
land, and thus 1-km resolution may be sufficient. However, all of the
reviewers agreed that higher resolution data would be preferable. A
number of the peer reviewers specifically said that the version 5 MODIS
data set, with 500 meter resolution, would be adequate. With four-times
higher spatial resolution than version 4, the peer reviewers
anticipated that the 500m imagery would classify less area of ``mixed
class'' land, thus providing a more detailed representation of the land
in that category. Consistent with the peer reviewer's recommendations
and with our goal to use the best available information, our analysis
was updated with the higher resolution version 5 MODIS data.
Related to the issue of spatial resolution, the peer review experts
were asked whether they would recommend augmenting our global analysis
with even higher resolution data for specific regions where there is a
high degree of agricultural land use change. All of the peer reviews
agreed that this type of analysis would be worthwhile. In response to
this recommendation, we analyzed select geographic regions (e.g.,
Brazil, India) with the higher resolution 30m Landsat data set covering
2000-2005. The Landsat data set does not currently provide global
coverage, thus it was not an option for use in the full analysis;
instead, it was used as a way to check/validate the appropriateness of
the version 5 MODIS imagery. In general, the higher resolution data
showed similar land use change patterns as the MODIS data. The results
of this analysis are discussed further in Chapter 2 of the RIA.
Another issue that we invited comments on was the re-classification
of the MODIS data from 17 land cover categories into 6 aggregated
categories (e.g., open and closed shrubland were both re-classified as
shrubland). The category aggregation was intended to remove unnecessary
complexity from the analysis. All five expert reviewers agreed that the
methodology used to re-classify land cover categories using
International Geosphere-Biosphere Programme (IGBP) land definitions was
[[Page 14776]]
sound; however, the reviewers recommended inclusion of more than 6
aggregated land categories. The reviewers specifically recommended the
addition cropland/natural vegetation mosaic, permanent wetlands, and
barren or sparsely vegetated land, all of which are now included in our
analysis. Consistent with these recommendations, there are 9 aggregate
land categories in our revised analysis: barren, cropland, excluded
(e.g., urban, ice, water bodies), forest, grassland, mixed (i.e.,
cropland/natural vegetation mosaic), savanna, shrubland and wetland.
These land cover categories capture all significant types of land
affected by agricultural land use changes. As described below in
Section V.B.2.b.iii, we also estimated carbon sequestrations for all of
these land categories. The impact of adding these land categories to
our analysis is discussed further in RIA Chapter 2.
Another important addition to our analysis was consideration of the
types of land affected by changes in pasture area, and the interaction
of pasture land with cropland. In the proposed rule, we made a broad
assumption that the total land area used for pasture would stay the
same in each country or region. Thus, in the proposed rule, we assumed
that any crop expansion onto pasture would necessarily require an equal
amount of pasture to be replaced on forest or shrubland. We received a
large number of comments questioning these assumptions, and the expert
peer reviewers encouraged us to develop a better representation of the
interactions between cropland and pasture land. As described above in
Section V.B.2.6.i, the results from the FAPRI-CARD model are now used
to determine pasture area changes in each country or region. In regions
where we project that pasture and crop area both increase, the land
types affected by pasture expansion are determined using the same
analysis used for crop expansion. This new approach accounts for the
ability of pasture to expand on to previously unused, or underutilized,
grasslands and savanna. In regions where we project that crop and
pasture area will change in opposite directions (e.g., crop area
increases and pasture decreases) we assume that crops will expand onto
abandoned pasture, and vice versa. Our analysis also now accounts for
carbon sequestration resulting from crop or pasture abandonment. We
used our satellite analysis, which shows the dominant ecosystems and
land cover types in each region, to determine which types of ecosystems
would grow back on abandoned agricultural lands in each region. More
information about our analysis of pasture and abandoned agricultural
land are provided in RIA Chapter 2.
A sub-set of the expert peer reviewers recommended combining the
historic satellite imagery with other information on land use change
drivers (e.g., transportation infrastructure, poverty rates,
opportunity costs) as an additional means to estimate the types of land
affected. Consideration of these types of information could potentially
address two conceptual issues with the use of satellite imagery in this
analysis: First, biofuel-induced land use change could affect different
types of land than the generic agricultural expansion captured by the
historic data; and second, future land use change patterns may differ
from historic patterns. Our concerns with the first issue are allayed
to some degree by one of the peer reviewers who observed, ``While it is
theoretically possible that the changes in land use resulting from
biofuel production occur in ecosystems or regions that would not be the
ones affected by other drivers, this doesn't appear very likely.''
\170\ Furthermore, the economic drivers of land use change are to a
large degree captured by the economic models that are used in our
analysis. For example, the FAPRI-CARD model considers economic drivers
in its projections of where and how much crop production will change as
a result of specifically biofuel-induced changes. The second issue is
also addressed to some degree by the FAPRI-CARD model which includes
baseline forecasts of future international agricultural, economic and
demographic conditions. Furthermore, as discussed above, we used the
most recently available satellite data sets in order to capture the
most current land use change drivers. Thus, while we think that these
issues are currently addressed to a scientifically justifiable degree
for the purposes of this analysis, we recognize that these are areas
for future investigation, and we have tried to capture the uncertainty
from these factors in uncertainty and sensitivity analyses as described
below.
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\170\ Peer Review Report, Emissions from Land Use Change due to
Increased Biofuel Production: Satellite Imagery and Emissions Factor
Analysis, July 31, 2009, p. 2.
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While EPA has made significant improvements to the methodology in
response to peer review comments, the use of satellite data for
forecasting land use changes is a key area of uncertainty in the
analysis. To facilitate substantive comments on the impact of
uncertainty in international land use changes, and how to address the
uncertainty, the proposed rule highlighted areas of uncertainty and
included multiple sensitivity analyses. For example, we presented a
range of lifecycle results assuming at the high-end that all land
conversion caused deforestation and at the low-end that biofuels would
cause no deforestation. Further, EPA sought input on this issue in
public hearings and workshops, and expert feedback through the
independent peer review. The feedback we received, both from experts
and the public, overwhelmingly supported a more systematic analysis of
the uncertainty in using satellite data to project biofuel-induced land
use change patterns. Additionally, commenters recommended more data
validation, especially regarding the satellite imagery. To respond to
these comments, we incorporated satellite imagery validation and
conducted a Monte Carlo analysis of the MODIS satellite data using
assessments provided by NASA to quantitatively evaluate the uncertainty
in our application of satellite imagery.
One benefit of using the MODIS data set is that it is routinely and
extensively validated by NASA's MODIS land validation team. NASA uses
several validation techniques for quality assurance and to develop
uncertainty information for its products. NASA's primary validation
technique includes comparing the satellite classifications to data
collected through field and aircraft surveys, and other satellite data
sensors. The accuracy of the version 5 MODIS land cover product was
assessed over a significant set of international locations, including
roughly 1,900 sample site clusters covering close to 150 million square
kilometers. The results of these validation efforts are summarized in a
``confusion matrix'' which compares the satellite's land
classifications with the actual land types observed on the ground. We
used this information to assess the accuracy and systematic biases in
the published MODIS data. In general, the validation process found that
MODIS version 5 was quite accurate at distinguishing forest from
cropland or grassland. However, the satellite was more likely; for
example, to confuse savanna and shrubland because these land types can
look quite similar from space.
Using the data validation information from NASA about which types
of land MODIS tends to confuse which each other, our Monte Carlo
analysis was able to account for systematic misclassifications in the
MODIS data set. Therefore, part of the Monte Carlo analysis can be
viewed as a way to correct and reduce the inaccuracies in the MODIS
data. After this correction is performed, the uncertainty in the
satellite data is no longer solely a
[[Page 14777]]
function of the accuracy of the satellite. Instead, the sizes of the
standard errors for each classification are also a function of the
sample sizes in the data validation exercise. For example, if NASA
validated every pixel on Earth, the corrected data set would be 100%
accurate, even if the original satellite data were only 50% accurate.
Similarly, although NASA reports that the overall accuracy of the MODIS
version 5 land cover data set is approximately 75%, the standard errors
after the Monte Carlo procedure are less than 5% for each aggregate
land category. These standard errors were used to quantify the
uncertainty added by the satellite data used in our analysis. This
procedure and the results are described in more detail in Chapter 2 of
the RIA.
It should be noted that our assessment of satellite data
uncertainty did not try to fully quantify the uncertainty of using
historical data to make future projections about the types of land that
would be affected internationally. As noted above, we think it is
reasonable to assume that in general, recent land use change patterns
will continue in the future absent major economic or land use regime
shifts caused, for example, by changes in government policies. Thus,
our uncertainty assessment provides a reasonable estimate of the
variability in land use change patterns absent any fundamental shifts
in the factors that affect land use patterns. However, our uncertainty
assessment does not attempt to fully quantify the probability of major
shifts in land use regimes, such as the implementation of effective
international policies to curb deforestation.
Some of the peer reviewers recommended a satellite imagery analysis
approach known as change detection, instead of the ``differencing''
approach used in the Winrock analysis. However, there was disagreement
among the peer reviewers on this point, with one peer reviewer saying
that thematic differencing between land cover maps generated for two
specific dates, as conducted in this study, provides the best approach
for detecting and analyzing land use pattern changes globally. In
general terms, the differencing method employed by Winrock compared
global land cover maps from 2001 and 2007 to evaluate the pattern of
land use change during this period. Thus, the differencing method shows
all of the land that changed categories, as well as all of the land
that stayed the same over this period. For change detection, instead of
using comprehensive land cover maps, the data set only shows land
categories that changed. One advantage of change detection is that it
is better suited to capture the sequential nature of land use changes,
e.g., a forest could be converted to savanna, then grassland and then
cropland. The differencing method that we employed lends itself more
readily to comprehensive global analysis, data validation, and
uncertainty assessment. Given the timeframe and priorities for our
analysis, we think that the differencing method provides the best
approach available at this time. However, we will continue to consider
alternative analytical techniques, such as change detection, for use as
part of periodic updates to this analysis.
Some of the peer reviewers recommended additional alternative
technical approaches for satellite data and land use change analysis.
For example, some of the reviewers recommended the use of satellite
imagery to identify specific crop-types and rotations, and one reviewer
suggested that EPA develop a new interactive spatial model. The Summary
and Analysis of Comments document includes discussion of these and
other technical comments and recommendations that are not covered here.
iii. GHG Emissions Associated With Conversion
(1) Domestic Emissions
GHG emissions impacts due to domestic land use change are based on
GHG emissions the FASOM model generates in association with land type
conversions projected in the model. In the proposed rule analysis,
estimates of land use change emissions were limited to conversion
between different types of agricultural land (e.g., cropland, fallow
cropland, pasture). The analysis did not allow for the addition of new
domestic agricultural land.
In response to feedback EPA received during the public comment
period and based on commitments EPA made in the NPRM, several changes
and additions have augmented the analysis of domestic land use change
GHG emissions since the proposed rule analysis. The addition of the
forest land types and the interaction between cropland, pastureland,
forestland, and developed land to the FASOM model provides a more
complete emissions profile due to domestic land use change (see Section
V.B.4.b.ii). We have updated soil carbon accounting based on new
available data. Lastly, the methodology now captures GHG emission
streams over time associated with discrete land use changes.
For agricultural soils, FASOM models GHG emissions associated with
changes in crop production acreage and with changes in crop type
produced. FASOM generates soil carbon factors for cropland and pasture
according to IPCC Agriculture, Forestry, and Other Land Use (AFOLU)
Guidelines. In the proposed rule, we committed to updating FASOM soil
carbon accounting for agriculture. Per our commitment, we have updated
FASOM soil carbon accounting for cropland and pasture using the latest
DAYCENT modeling from Colorado State University.
In the proposed rule, EPA committed to incorporate the forestry
sector and the GHG emission impacts due to the land use interactions
between the domestic agricultural and forestry sectors into the FASOM
analysis. We received comment supporting the incorporation of the
forestry sector. By including the forestry sector in the FASOM domestic
model (see Section V.B.4.b.ii), we have incorporated GHG emission
impacts associated with change in forest above-ground and below-ground
biomass, forest soil carbon stocks, forest management practices (e.g.
timber harvest cycles), and forest products and product emission
streams over time. Forest carbon accounting in FASOM is based on the
FORCARB developed by the U.S. Forest Service and on data derived
largely from the U.S. Forest Service RPA modeling system.
With the changes to FASOM discussed above, we also updated the
final calculation method of domestic land use change GHG emissions to
account for FASOM's cumulative assessment of GHG emissions and the
continuous (rather than discrete) nature of soil carbon and forest
product emissions. For each category of agricultural and forestry land
use emissions, we calculated the mean cumulative emissions from the
initial year of FASOM modeling (2000) to 2022. Changes in agricultural
and forest soil carbon and forest products have a stream of GHG
emissions associated with them in addition to the initial pulse
associate with a discrete instance or year of land use change. For each
of these categories FASOM calculates the emissions over time associated
with the mean land use change over a year. We included in total
domestic land use change emissions the annualized emission streams
associated with all agricultural soil, forest soil, and forest product
changes included in the mean cumulative emissions (2000-2022) for 30
years after 2022.
[[Page 14778]]
(2) International Emissions
Based on input from the expert peer review and public comments, we
incorporated new data sources and made other methodological
improvements in our estimates of GHG emissions from international land
conversions. Some of these modifications increased land use change GHG
emissions compared to the NPRM, such as the consideration of carbon
releases from drained peat soils. Other modifications, such as more
conservative foregone sequestration estimates, tended to decrease land
use change GHG emissions. For example, our estimates of emissions per
acre of deforestation in Brazil tended to increase because of improved
data on forest biomass carbon stocks in that region. However, for
example, our deforestation estimates in China decreased, in part
because of new data on foregone forest sequestration. The net effect of
the revisions varied depending on the location and types of land use
changes in each biofuel scenario. The major changes to this part of our
analysis, including a quantitative uncertainty assessment, are
discussed in this section.
To determine the GHG emissions impacts of international land use
changes, we followed the 2006 IPCC Agriculture, Forestry, and Other
Land Use (AFOLU) Guidelines.\171\ We worked with Winrock, which has
years of experience developing and implementing the IPCC guidelines, to
estimate land conversion emissions factors, including changes in
biomass carbon stocks, soil carbon stocks, non-CO2 emissions
from clearing with fire and foregone forest sequestration (i.e., lost
future growth in vegetation and soil carbon). In addition to seeking
comment on our analysis in the proposed rule, EPA organized public
hearings and workshops, and an expert peer review specifically
eliciting feedback on this part of the lifecycle analysis. All of the
expert peer reviewers generally felt that our analysis followed IPCC
guidelines and was scientifically justifiable; however, they did make
several suggestions of new data sources and recommended areas that
could benefit from additional clarification. Based on the detailed
comments we received, we worked with Winrock to make a number of
important revisions, which have significantly improved this part of our
analysis.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\171\ 2006 IPCC Guidelines for National Greenhouse Gas
Inventories, Volume 4, Agriculture, Forestry and Other Land Use
(AFOLU). See http://www.ipcc-nggip.iges.or.jp/public/2006gl/vol4.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed rule analysis included land conversion emissions
factors for 5 land categories in 314 regions across 35 of the most
important countries, with a weighted average applied to the rest of the
world. We augmented this analysis to provide global coverage, including
emissions factors for 10 land categories in over 750 regions across 160
countries. Other significant improvements included incorporation of new
data sources, emissions factors for peat soil drainage, sequestration
factors for abandoned agricultural land, and a full uncertainty
assessment considering every data input.
Another significant improvement in our analysis was incorporation
of higher resolution soil carbon data. One of the expert peer reviewers
commented that the weakest part of EPA's international emissions factor
analysis for the proposed rule was the global soil carbon map that was
used because of its coarse resolution. To address this comment, we
incorporated the new Harmonized World Soil Database, released in March
2009. This dataset provides one square kilometer spatial resolution,
which is a major improvement compared to the proposed rule analysis.
This dataset also includes an updated soil map of China that the peer
reviewers recommended. Using this updated soil carbon data, the change
in soil carbon following conversion of natural land to annual crop
production was estimated following the 2006 IPCC guidelines. When land
is plowed in preparation for crop production the soil loses carbon over
time until a new equilibrium is established. To calculate soil carbon
emissions the IPCC approach considers both tillage practices and
agricultural inputs. Some of the peer reviewers expressed concern with
our annual soil carbon change estimates, which assumed a constant rate
of change over 20 years. However, for analytical timeframes greater
than 20 years, such as used in our lifecycle analysis, the peer
reviewers agreed that the our approach was scientifically justifiable.
More information about soil carbon stock estimates is available in
Chapter 2 of the RIA.
The expert peer reviewers generally agreed that EPA's estimate of
forest carbon stocks followed IPCC guidelines and used the best
available data. They did, however, recommend that the analysis could be
updated with improved forest biomass maps as they become available.
Consistent with these suggestions, we incorporated improved forest
biomass maps for regions where they were available. More information
about the specific data sources used is available in RIA Chapter 2.
In addition to estimating forest carbon stocks for each region,
EPA's analysis also includes estimates of annual forest carbon uptake.
When a forest is cleared the future carbon uptake from the forest is
lost; this is known as foregone forest sequestration. In the proposed
rule, to estimate annual forgone forest sequestration, we used IPCC
default data for the growth rates of forests greater than 20 years old.
The expert peer reviewers noted that these estimates could be refined
with more detailed information from the scientific literature. Many of
the public commenters were also concerned that EPA's approach
overestimated foregone sequestration because it did not adequately
account for natural disturbances, such as fires and disease. To address
these comments, our analysis has been updated with peer reviewed
studies of long-term growth rates for both tropical and temperate
forests. These estimates are based on long-term records (i.e.,
monitoring stations in old-growth forests for the tropics and multi-
decadal inventory comparisons for the temperate regions) and reflect
all losses/gains over time. These studies show that the old-growth
forests in the tropics that many once assumed to be in ``steady state''
(i.e., carbon gains equal losses) are in fact still gaining carbon. In
summary, our analysis now includes more conservative foregone forest
sequestration estimates that account for natural gains and losses over
time. More information about these estimates is provided in RIA Chapter
2.
Another consideration when estimating GHG emissions resulting from
deforestation is that some of the wood from the cleared forest can be
harvested and used in wooden products, such as a table, that retain
biogenic carbon for a long period of time. Some commenters argued that
consideration of the use of harvested wood in products would decrease
land use change emissions and reduce the impacts of biofuel production.
As part of analysis for the proposed rule, we investigated the share of
cleared forest biomass that is typically used in harvested wood
products (HWP). However, we did not account for this factor in the
proposed rule after it was determined that HWP would have a very small
impact on the magnitude of land use change emissions. A number of
commenters expressed concern that we did not account for HWP, and they
argued that HWP would be more significant than we had determined.
However, in response to specific questions on this topic, all of the
expert
[[Page 14779]]
peer reviewers agreed that EPA had properly accounted for HWP and other
factors (e.g., land filling) that could prevent or delay emissions from
land clearing. One of the peer reviewers noted that forests converted
to croplands are generally driven by interests unrelated to timber, and
thus the trees are simply burned and exceptions are probably of minor
importance. To study this issue further, we looked at FAO timber volume
estimates for 111 developing countries, and published literature on the
share of harvested timber used in wood products and the oxidation
period for wood products, such as wood-based panels and other
industrial roundwood. Consistent with the peer reviewers' statements,
our analysis concluded that even in countries with high rates of
harvested timber utilization, such as Indonesia, a very small share of
harvested forest biomass would be sequestered in HWP for longer than 30
years. The details of our HWP analysis are discussed further in RIA
Chapter 2. This is an area for further work, but based on our analysis,
and the feedback from expert commenters, we do not expect that
consideration of HWP would have a significant impact on the magnitude
of GHG emissions from international deforestation in our analysis.
Furthermore, the range of outcomes from consideration of HWP is
indirectly captured in our assessment of forest carbon stock
uncertainty, which is described below.
The land conversion emissions estimates used in our analysis
consider the carbon stored in crop biomass. In the proposed rule, we
used the IPCC default biomass sequestration factor of 5 metric tons of
carbon per hectare for annual crops, and applied this value to all
crops globally. The final rule analysis now distinguishes between
annual and perennial crops, with separate sequestration estimates for
sugarcane and oil palm determined from the scientific literature. The
peer reviewers suggested approaches to refine our biomass carbon
estimates for different types of annual crops, e.g., for corn versus
soybeans. However, we determined that adding crop-specific biomass
sequestration estimates would have a very small impact on our results,
because in general annual cropland carbon stocks range only from 3 to 7
tons per hectare and the average would likely be very close to the IPCC
default factor currently applied. This is an area for future work, but
we are confident that it would have very small impact. Furthermore, the
range of potential outcomes is captured in the uncertainty analysis
described below.
Other issues that were covered in the expert peer review and public
comments included EPA's carbon stock estimates for grasslands, savanna,
shrublands and wetlands, and our assumptions about which regions use
fire to clear land prior to agricultural expansion. There is less data
available for these parameters relative to some of the other issues
discussed above, e.g., forest carbon stocks. Therefore, we worked to
use expert judgment to derive global estimates for these parameters. In
general, the peer reviewers thought that EPA's approach to these issues
was reasonable and scientifically justifiable. Some of the peer
reviewers recommended more resource-intensive techniques to refine some
of our estimates. For example, regarding the issue of clearing with
fire, one of the peer reviewers suggested that we could review fire
events in the historical satellite data to estimate where fire is most
commonly used. We carefully considered these suggestions, but did not
make significant revisions to our analysis of these issues. Our review
concluded that given the timeframe and goals of our analysis, the
approach used in the proposed rule was most appropriate. We recognize
that these are areas for future work, and we will consider new data as
part of periodic updates. Furthermore, our uncertainty analysis,
described below, considered the fact that these are areas where less
data is available.
Other improvements in our analysis included the addition of
emissions from peat soil drainage in Indonesia and Malaysia, and
sequestration factors for abandoned agricultural land. Consistent with
the expert peer reviewers' recommendations, we considered a number of
recent studies to estimate average carbon emissions when peat soils are
drained in Indonesia and Malaysia (the countries where peat soil is
sometimes drained in preparation for new agricultural production). To
estimate annual sequestration on abandoned agricultural land we used
our foregone sequestration estimates and other data from IPCC. More
information about these estimates is available in RIA Chapter 2.
As discussed in Section V.A.2, the uncertainty of land use change
emissions is an important consideration in EPA's threshold
determinations as part of this rulemaking. We conducted a full
assessment of the uncertainty in international land use change
emissions factors consistent with 2006 IPCC guidance.\172\ This
analysis considers the uncertainty in the every parameter used in our
emissions factor estimates. Standard deviations for each parameter were
estimated based on the quality and quantity of the underlying data. For
example, in our analysis the standard errors (as a percent of the mean)
tend to be smallest for forest carbon stocks in Brazil, because a large
amount of high quality/resolution data was considered to estimate that
parameter. Standard errors are largest for parameters that were
estimated by scaling other data, or applying IPCC defaults, e.g.,
savanna carbon stocks in Yemen. More detail about our estimate of
parameter uncertainty is available in RIA Chapter 2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\172\ 2006 IPCC Guidelines for National Greenhouse Gas
Inventories, Volume 1: General Guidance and Reporting, Chapter 3:
Uncertainties, available at http://www.ipcc-nggip.iges.or.jp/public/2006gl/vol1.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Following IPCC guidance, the uncertainties in the individual
parameters of an emission factor can be combined using either error
propagation methods (IPCC Tier 1) or Monte Carlo simulation (IPCC Tier
2). We used the Tier 2 Monte Carlo simulation method for this analysis.
Monte Carlo is a method for analyzing uncertainty propagation by
randomly sampling from the probability distributions of model
parameters, calculating the results of the model from each sample, and
characterizing the probability of the outcomes. An important
consideration for Monte Carlo analysis is the treatment of correlation,
or dependencies, among parameter errors. Strong positive correlation
among parameter errors will result in greater overall uncertainty. As a
simplified example, if the errors in our forest carbon stock estimates
are positively correlated, then if we are overestimating forest carbon
in one region we are likely overestimating forest carbon in every
region. We worked with Winrock to estimate the degree of correlation
among variables--both the correlation of one variable across space as
well as the correlation of one variable to any others used in the
analysis. This was done by considering dependencies in the underlying
data used to estimate each parameter. For example, our forest carbon
stock estimates are correlated across Russia because they were derived
from one biomass map covering Russia. However, forest carbon stocks in
Russia are not correlated with China, because they were derived from
separate biomass maps. This partial correlation approach tended to
reduce the overall uncertainty
[[Page 14780]]
associated with GHG emissions factor data.
The information about the uncertainty in each parameter and the
degree of correlation across parameters was utilized in Monte Carlo
analysis to determine the overall uncertainty in our emissions factor
estimates. We used the Monte Carlo simulation to combine the emissions
factor and satellite data uncertainty for every biofuel scenario
analyzed. Uncertainty ranges varied across scenarios depending on the
types and locations of land use changes. For example, based on the
sources of uncertainty analyzed, the 95% confidence range for land use
change emissions (as a percent of the mean) was -27% to +32% for base
yield corn ethanol in 2022, and -56% to +76% for base yield soy
biodiesel in 2022.\173\ More details about this uncertainty analysis
are provided in RIA Chapter 2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\173\ The 95% confidence range indicates there is no more than a
5% chance the actual value is likely to be outside this range.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
iv. Timeframe of Emission Analysis
Based on input from the expert peer review and public comments, EPA
has chosen to analyze lifecycle GHG emissions using a 30 year time
period, over which emissions are not discounted, i.e., a zero discount
rate is applied to future emissions. The input we received and the
reasons for our use of this approach are described in this section.
As required by EISA, EPA must determine whether biofuels reduce GHG
emissions by the required percentage relative to the 2005 petroleum
baseline. In the proposal the Agency discussed a number of accounting
methods for capturing the full stream of GHG emissions and benefits
over time. When accounting for the time profile of lifecycle GHG
emissions, two important assumptions to consider are: (1) The time
period considered and (2) the discount rate (which could be zero)
applied to future emissions streams. At the time of proposal, EPA
requested public comment on the choice of time frames and discounting
approaches for purposes of estimating lifecycle GHG emissions. Also, as
part of the peer review process, EPA requested comment from expert peer
reviewers on the choice of the appropriate time frames and discount
rates for the RFS2 analysis. Below is a summary of the comments we
received on these issues and how we address them in our analytical
approach.
Time Period for Analysis: In the proposed rule, EPA highlighted two
time periods, 30 years and 100 years, for consideration in our
lifecycle analysis. The Agency discussed the relative advantages of
these, and other, time periods. In addition, the Agency sought comment
on whether it is appropriate to split the time period for GHG emissions
assessment based upon how long the biofuel would be produced (i.e., the
``project'' period) and the time period for which there would likely be
GHG emissions changes (i.e., the ``impact'' period). To encourage
expert and public comments on these issues, EPA held public hearings
and workshops and sponsored an expert peer review specifically focused
on this topic. The expert input and comments that we received included
many valuable points which guided our decisions about which time frame
should be the focus of our analysis. Below we summarize some of the key
arguments made by the peer reviewers and commenters, and how these
arguments factored into our choice of analytical approach.
The expert peer reviewers discussed a number of justifiable time
periods ranging from 13 to 100 years for assessing lifecycle GHG
emissions. A subset of the reviewers said that EPA's analysis should be
restricted to 2010-2022 based on the years specified in EISA, because
these reviewers argued that EPA should not assume that biofuel
production will continue beyond 2022 at the RFS2 levels. The reviewers
said that longer time frames, such as 100 years, were only appropriate
if the Agency used positive discount rates to value future emissions.
Almost all of the peer reviewers said that a time frame of 20 to 30
years would be a reasonable timeframe for assessing lifecycle GHG
emissions. They gave several reasons for why a short time period is
appropriate: This time frame is the average life of a typical biofuel
production facility; future emissions are less certain and more
difficult to value, so the analysis should be confined insofar as
possible to the foreseeable future; and a near-term time horizon is
consistent with the latest climate science that indicates that
relatively deep reductions of heat-trapping gasses are needed to avoid
catastrophic changes due to a warming climate. The peer reviewers
suggested that while there is no unassailable basis for choosing a
precise timeframe the expected average lifetime of a biofuel production
facility is the ``most sensible anchor'' for the choice of a timeframe.
There was support in the public comments for both the 30 year and
100 year time frames. A number of public commenters supported the use
of a 30 year time period, or less, and made arguments similar to those
of the expert peer reviewers. They argued that shorter time periods
give more weight to the known, more immediate, effects of biofuel
production and that use of longer time periods gives more weight to
activities that are much more uncertain, and that the 100 year
timeframe is inappropriate because it is much longer than the life of
individual biofuel plants.
On the issue of whether to split the time period for GHG emissions
analysis into the ``project and ``impact'' periods, there was little
support for the use of a split time frame for evaluating lifecycle GHG
emissions by the peer reviewers or in the public comments. The peer
reviewers thought that it would be difficult to find a scientific basis
for determining the length of the two different time horizons. Also,
splitting the time horizon would necessitate consideration of the land
use changes following the end of the project time horizon such as land
reversion. However, the majority of expert peer reviewers did not think
it was appropriate to attribute potential land reversions, following
the project time frame, to a biofuel's lifecycle.
Based upon the comments discussed above, EPA has decided to use a
30 year frame for assessing the lifecycle GHG emissions. There are
several reasons why the 30 year time frame was chosen. The full life of
a typical biofuel plant seems reasonable as a basis for the timeframe
for assessing the GHG emissions impacts of a biofuel, because it
provides a guideline for how long we can expect biofuels to be produced
from a particular entity using a specific processing technology. Also,
the 30 year time frame focuses on GHG emissions impacts that are more
near term and, hence, more certain. We also determined that longer time
periods were less appropriate because the peer reviewers recommended
that they should only be used in conjunction with positive discount
rates; but, for the reasons discussed below, we are using a zero
discount rate in our analysis. In addition, the 30 year time frame is
consistent with responses of the peer reviewers that EPA should not
split the time periods for analysis, or include potential land
reversions following the project time period in the biofuel lifecycle.
Discounting: In the RFS2 Proposal, EPA highlighted two principal
options for discounting the lifecycle GHG emission streams from
biofuels over time. The first involved the use of a 2% discount rate
using the 100 year time horizon for assessing lifecycle GHG emissions
streams. The second option involved using a 30 year time horizon for
examining lifecycle GHG emissions
[[Page 14781]]
impacts. In the 30 year case, each GHG emission is treated equally
through time, which implicitly assumes a zero discount rate to GHG
lifecycle emissions streams. The issue of whether to discount lifecycle
GHG emissions was raised as a topic that EPA sought comment on in both
the peer review process and in public comments.
EPA received numerous comments on the issue of whether the Agency
should be discounting lifecycle GHG emissions through time. While many
of peer reviewers thought that current GHG emissions reductions should
be more strongly weighted than future reductions, the peer reviewers
were in general agreement that a discount rate should only be applied
to a monetary unit, rather than a physical unit, such as GHG emissions.
Public commenters suggested that discounting is an essential part of
long term cost benefit analysis but it is not necessary in the context
of the physical aggregation of lifecycle GHG emissions called for in
the EISA. Further, public commenters expressed concerns that any
discount rate chosen by the Agency would be based upon relatively
arbitrary criteria.
After considering the comments on discounting from the peer review
and the public, EPA has decided not to discount (i.e., use a 0%
discount rate) GHG emissions due to the many issues associated with
applying an economic concept to a physical parameter. First, it is
unclear whether EISA intended lifecycle GHG emissions to be converted
into a metric whose underpinnings rest on principals of economic
valuation. A more literal interpretation of EISA is that EPA should
consider only physical GHG emissions. Second, even if the principle of
tying GHG emissions to economic valuation approaches were to be
accepted, there would still be the problem that there is a lack of
consensus in the scientific community about the best way to translate
GHG emissions into a proxy for economic damages. Also, there is a lack
of consensus as to the appropriate discount rate to apply to GHG
lifecycle emissions streams through time. Finally, since EPA has
decided to base threshold assessments of lifecycle GHG emissions on a
30 year time frame, the issue of whether to discount GHG emissions is
not as significant as if the EPA had chosen the 100 year time frame to
assess GHG emissions impacts. More discussion of discount rates and
their impact on the lifecycle results can be found in Chapter 2 of the
RIA.
v. GTAP and Other Models
Although we have used the partial equilibrium (PE) models FASOM and
FAPRI-CARD as the primary tools for evaluating whether individual
biofuels meet the GHG thresholds, as part of the peer review process,
we explicitly requested input on whether general equilibrium (GE)
models should be used. None of the comments recommended using a GE
model as the sole tool for estimating GHG emissions, given the limited
details on the agricultural sector contained in most GE models. The
peer reviewers generally supported the use of the FASOM and FAPRI-CARD
models for our GHG analysis given the need for additional detail
offered in the PE models, however several comments suggested
incorporating GE models into the analysis.
Given these recommendations, we opted to use the GTAP model to
inform the range of potential GHG emissions associated with land use
change resulting from an increase in renewable fuels. As discussed in
the NPRM, there are several advantages to using GTAP. As a general
equilibrium model, GTAP captures the interaction between different
markets (e.g., agriculture and energy) in different regions. It is
distinctive in estimating the complex international land use change
through trade linkages. In addition, GTAP explicitly models land-use
conversion decisions, as well as land management intensification. Most
importantly, in contrast to other models, GTAP is designed with the
framework of predicting the amount and types of land needed in a region
to meet demands for both food and fuel production. The GTAP framework
also allows predictions to be made about the types of land available in
the region to meet the needed demands, since it explicitly represents
different types of land cover within each Agro-Ecological Zone.
Like the peer reviewers, we felt that some of the drawbacks of the
GTAP model prevent us from using GTAP as the sole model for estimating
GHG emissions from biofuels. As discussed in the NPRM, GTAP does not
utilize unmanaged cropland, nor is it able to capture the long-run
baseline issues (e.g., the state of the economy in 2022). For our
analysis, the GTAP model was most valuable for providing another
estimate of the quantity and type of land conversion resulting from an
increase in corn ethanol and biodiesel given the competition for land
and other inputs from other sectors of the economy. These results were
therefore considered as part of the weight of evidence when determining
whether corn ethanol or biodiesel met the GHG thresholds.
The quantity of total acres converted to crop land projected by
FAPRI-CARD were within the range of values projected by GTAP when
normalized on a per BTU basis, although there were differences in the
regional distribution of these changes. The land use changes projected
by GTAP were smaller than land use changes predicted by FAPRI-CARD,
which is primarily due to several important differences in the modeling
frameworks. First, the GTAP model incorporates a more optimistic view
of intensification options by which higher prices induced by renewable
fuels results in higher yields, not just for corn, but also for other
displaced crops. Second, the demands for other uses of land are
explicitly captured in GTAP. Therefore, when land is withdrawn from
these uses, the prices of these products rise and provide a certain
amount of ``push-back'' on the conversion of land to crops from pasture
or forest. Third, none of the peer-reviewed versions of GTAP currently
contain unmanaged cropland, thereby omitting additional sources of
land. Finally, the GTAP model also predicted larger increases in forest
conversion than the FAPRI-CARD/Winrock analysis, in part because the
GTAP model includes only three types of land (i.e., crops, pasture,
forest). As discussed in the FAPRI-CARD/Winrock section, there are many
other categories of land which may be converted to pasture and crop
land.
As with all economic models, GTAP results are sensitive to certain
key parameter values. One advantage of this framework is that it offers
a readily usable approach to Systematic Sensitivity Analysis (SSA)
using efficient sampling techniques. We have exploited this tool in
order to develop a set of 95% confidence intervals around the projected
land use changes. Several key parameters were identified that have a
significant impact on the land use change projections, including the
yield elasticity (i.e., the change in yield that results from a change
in that commodity's price), the elasticity of transformation of land
supply (i.e., the measure of how easily land can be converted between
forest, pasture, and crop land), and the elasticity of transformation
of crop land (i.e., the measure of how easily land can be converted
between crops). Although the confidence intervals are relatively large,
in most cases the ranges do not bracket zero. Therefore, we conclude
that the impacts of the corn ethanol and soybean biodiesel mandates on
land use change are statistically significant. These confidence
intervals also bracket the FAPRI-CARD results. Additional
[[Page 14782]]
information on the GTAP results is discussed in RIA Chapter 2.
c. Feedstock Transport
To estimate the GHG impacts of transporting corn from the field to
an ethanol production facility and transporting the co-product DDGS
from the ethanol facility to the point of use, we used the method
described in the proposed rule. We also did not change our estimates
for the transport of cellulosic biofuel feedstock and biomass-based
diesel feedstock.
For sugarcane transport, we received the comment that the GREET
defaults used to estimate the energy consumption and associated GHG
emissions do not all reflect current industry practices. To address
this concern, we reviewed the current literature on sugarcane transport
and updated our assumptions on the distance sugarcane travels by truck
from the field to ethanol production facilities as well as the payload
and fuel economy of those trucks. We incorporated these revised inputs
into an updated version of the GREET model (Version 1.8c) in order to
estimate the GHG impacts of sugarcane transport. More details on these
updates can be found in Chapter 2 of the RIA.
In the proposal, we discussed updating our analysis to incorporate
the results of a recent study detailing biofuel production locations
and modes of transport. This study, conducted by Oak Ridge National
Laboratory, modeled the transportation of ethanol from production or
import facilities to petroleum blending terminals. Since the study did
not explicitly address the transport of biofuel feedstocks, we did not
implement the results for this part of the analysis. However, we did
incorporate the results into our assessment of the GHG impacts of fuel
transportation. We will continue to examine whether our feedstock
transport estimates could be significantly improved by implementing
more detailed information on the location of biofuel production
facilities.
We also discussed updating the transportation modes and distances
assumed for corn and DDGS to account for the secondary or indirect
transportation impacts. For example, decreases in exports will reduce
overall domestic agricultural commodity transport and emissions but
will increase transportation of commodities internationally. We did not
implement these secondary transportation impacts in this final rule.
While we do not anticipate that such impacts would significantly change
the lifecycle analysis, we plan to continue to look at this issue and
consider incorporating them in the future.
d. Biofuel Processing
For the proposal the GHG emissions from renewable fuel production
were calculated by multiplying the Btus of the different types of
energy inputs at biofuel process plants by emissions factors for
combustion of those fuel sources. The Btu of energy input was
determined based on analysis of the industry and specific work done as
part of the NPRM. The emission factors for the different fuel types are
from GREET and were based on assumed carbon contents of the different
process fuels. The emissions from producing electricity in the U.S.
were also taken from GREET and represent average U.S. grid electricity
production emissions.
We received comments on our approach and updated the analysis of
GHG emissions from biofuel process for the final rule specifically
regarding process energy use and the treatment of co-products.
Process Energy Use: For the final rule we updated each of our
biofuel pathways to include the latest data available on process energy
use. For the proposal, one of the key sources of information on energy
use for corn ethanol production was a study from the University of
Illinois at Chicago Energy Resource Center. Between proposal and final
rule, the study was updated, therefore, we incorporated the results of
the updated study in our corn ethanol pathways process energy use for
the final rule. We also updated corn ethanol production energy use for
different technologies in the final rule based on feedback from
industry technology providers as part of the public comment period. The
main difference between proposal and final corn ethanol energy use
values was a slight increase in energy use for the corn ethanol
fractionation process, based on feedback from industry technology
providers.
For the proposal we based biodiesel processing energy on a process
model developed by USDA-ARS to simulate biodiesel production from the
Fatty Acid Methyl Ester (FAME) transesterification process. We received
a number of comments from stakeholders that the energy balance for
biodiesel production was overestimating energy use and should be
updated. During the comment period USDA updated their energy balance
for biodiesel production to incorporate a different biodiesel
dehydration process based on a system which has resulted in a decrease
in energy requirements. This change was reflected in the energy use
values for biodiesel assumed in our final rule analysis which resulted
in reduced GHG impacts from the biodiesel production process.
In addition, for the final rule we have included an analysis of
algae oil production for biodiesel based on ASPEN process modeling from
NREL.\174\ The analysis is for two major cultivation pathways (open
pond and photobioreactors) for a facility that can be feasibly
commercialized in the future, represented by a ``2022'' target
production. We coupled the algae oil production process (which includes
cultivation, harvesting, and extraction) with the biodiesel production
energy use from virgin oils energy use model under the assumption that
algae oil is similar enough to that of virgin oil.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\174\ Davis, Ryan. November 2009. Techno-economic analysis of
microalgae-derived biofuel production. National Renewable Energy
Laboratory (NREL)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For the cellulosic biofuel pathways, we updated our final rule
energy consumption assumptions on process modeling also completed by
NREL. For the NPRM, NREL estimated energy use for the biochemical
enzymatic process to ethanol route in the near future (2010) and future
(2015 and 2022).175 176 177 As there are multiple processing
pathways for cellulosic biofuel, we have expanded the analysis for the
FRM to also include thermochemical processes (Mixed-Alcohols route and
Fischer-Tropsch to diesel route) for plants which assume woody biomass
as its feedstock.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\175\ Tao, Ling and Aden, Andy. November 2008. Techno-economic
Modeling to Support the EPA Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NOPR).
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL).
\176\ Aden, Andy. September 2009. Mixed Alcohols from Woody
Biomass--2010, 2015, 2022. National Renewable Energy Laboratory
(NREL).
\177\ Davis, Ryan. August 2009. Techno-economic analysis of
current technology for Fischer-Tropsch fuels. National Renewable
Energy Laboratory (NREL).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under the imported sugarcane ethanol cases we updated process
energy use assumptions to reflect anticipated increases in electricity
production for 2022 based on recent literature and comments to the
proposal. One major change was assuming the potential use of trash
(tops and leaves of sugarcane) collection in future facilities to
generate additional electricity. The NPRM had only assumed the use of
bagasse for electricity generation. Based on comments received, we are
also assuming marginal electricity production (i.e., natural gas)
instead of average electricity mix in Brazil which is mainly
hydroelectricity. This approach assumes surplus electricity will likely
displace electricity which is normally dispatched last, in this case
[[Page 14783]]
typically natural gas based electricity. The result of this change is a
greater credit for displacing marginal grid electricity and thus a
lower GHG emissions profile for imported sugarcane ethanol than that
assumed in the NPRM. We also received public comment that there are
differences in the types of process fuel e.g. used in the dehydration
process for ethanol. While using heavier fuels such as diesel or bunker
fuel tends to increase the imported sugarcane ethanol emissions
profile, the overall impact was small enough that lifecycle results did
not change dramatically.
Co-Products: In response to comments received, we included corn oil
fractionation and extraction as a potential source of renewable fuels
for this final rulemaking. Based on research of various corn ethanol
plant technologies, corn oil as a co-product from dry mill corn ethanol
plants can be used as an additional biodiesel feedstock source (see
Section VII.A.2 for additional information). Dry mill corn ethanol
plants have two different technological methods to withdraw corn oil
during the ethanol production process. The fractionation process
withdraws corn oil before the production of the DGS co-product. The
resulting product is food-grade corn oil. The extraction process
withdraws corn oil after the production of the DGS co-product,
resulting in corn oil that is only suitable for use as a biodiesel
feedstock.
Based on cost projections outlined in Section VII.A, it is
estimated that by 2022, 70% of dry mill ethanol plants will conduct
extraction, 20% will conduct fractionation, and that 10% will choose to
do neither. These parameters have been incorporated into the FASOM and
FAPRI-CARD models for the final rulemaking analysis, allowing for corn
oil from extraction as a major biodiesel feedstock.
Glycerin is a co-product of biodiesel production. Our proposal
analysis did not assume any credit for this glycerin product. The
assumption for the proposal was that by 2022 the market for glycerin
would be saturated due to the large increase in biodiesel production in
both the US and abroad and the glycerin would therefore be a waste
product. We received a number of comments that we should be factoring
in a co-product credit for glycerin as there would be some valuable use
for this product in the market. Based on these comments we have
included for the final rule analysis that glycerin would displace
residual oil as a fuel source on an energy equivalent basis. This is
based on the assumption that the glycerin market would still be
saturated in 2022 and that glycerin produced from biodiesel would not
displace any additional petroleum glycerin production. However, the
biodiesel glycerin would not be a waste and a low value use would be to
use the glycerin as a fuel source. The fuel source assumed to be
replaced by the glycerin is residual oil. This inclusion of a co-
product credit for glycerin reduces the overall GHG impact of biodiesel
compared to the proposal analysis.
e. Fuel Transportation
For the proposed rule, we estimated the GHG impacts associated with
the transportation and distribution of domestic and imported ethanol
and biomass-based diesel using GREET defaults. We have upgraded to the
most recent version of GREET (Version 1.8c) for our transportation
analysis in the final rule.\178\ We made several other updates to the
method we utilized in the proposed rule. These updates are described
here and in more detail in Chapter 2 of the RIA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\178\ The method used to estimate the GHG impacts associated
with biodiesel transportation has not been changed since the
proposal. This method utilized an earlier version of the GREET
model.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the proposal, we noted our intention to incorporate the results
of a recent study by Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) into our
transportation analysis for the final rule. The ORNL study models the
transportation of ethanol from refineries or import facilities to the
petroleum blending terminals by domestic truck, marine, and rail
distribution systems. We used ORNL's transportation projections for
2022 under the EISA policy scenario to update our estimates of the GHG
impacts associated with the transportation of corn, cellulosic, and
sugarcane ethanol. Since the study did not address the distribution of
ethanol from petroleum blending terminals to refueling stations, we
continued to use GREET defaults to estimate these impacts.
The ORNL study also did not address the transportation of imported
ethanol within its country of origin or en route to the import facility
in the United States. As in the proposal, we used GREET defaults to
estimate the impacts associated with the transportation of sugarcane
ethanol within Brazil. We updated the GREET default for the average
distance sugarcane ethanol travels by ocean tanker using recent
shipping data from EIA in order to account for both direct Brazilian
exports and the shipment of ethanol from countries in the Caribbean
Basin Initiative. We received several comments on the back-haul
emissions associated with ocean transport. For the final rule, we
assumed that these emissions were negligible.
f. Vehicle Tailpipe Emissions
We updated the CO2 emissions factors for ethanol and
biodiesel to be consistent with those used in the October 30, 2009
final rulemaking for the Mandatory GHG Reporting Rule. These changes
caused the tailpipe GHG emission factors to increase by 0.8% for
ethanol and to decrease by 1.5% for biodiesel. Specific tailpipe
combustion values used in this final rule can be found in Chapter 2 of
the RIA. Estimates for CH4 and N2O were made
using outputs from EPA's MOVES model.
3. Petroleum Baseline
For the proposed rule, we conducted an analysis to determine the
lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions for the petroleum baseline against
which renewable fuels were to be compared. We utilized the GREET model
(Version 1.8b), which uses an energy efficiency metric to calculate GHG
emissions associated with the production of petroleum-based fuels. We
received numerous comments regarding this approach.
Petroleum baseline calculation from proposed rule: The GREET model
relies on using average values as inputs to estimate aggregate
emissions, rather than using site-specific values. Commenters noted a
number of GREET input values that they believed to be incorrect. These
included: energy efficiency values for crude oil extraction; methane
emission factors for oil production and flaring; transportation
distances for crude oil and petroleum products; and the oil tanker
cargo payload value. Commenters also noted that GREET does not account
for the energy consumption associated with crude oil transport in the
country of extraction.
In addition, commenters stated that the crude oil import slate
assumed in the proposed rule was inconsistent with EIA crude oil
production and import data for 2005. Commenters also noted that the
gasoline and diesel mix that we used for the proposal did not match
with EIA prime supplier sales volume data. One specific comment focused
on the definition of low-sulfur diesel in GREET, where it is defined as
being 11 ppm sulfur content, which is inconsistent with EPA's
definition. As a result, in the proposed rule, all transportation
diesel produced in 2005 was assumed to be ultra-low sulfur diesel.
[[Page 14784]]
We largely agree with the above comments. An updated version of the
GREET model (Version 1.8c) is available, and it may address some of the
issues raised by commenters. We considered using this new version of
GREET with updated input values from publically available sources to
determine the petroleum baseline for the final rule. However, we have
decided that using the 2005 petroleum baseline model developed by the
National Energy Technology Laboratory (NETL) \179\ would address the
commenters' concerns, and result in a more accurate and comprehensive
assessment of the petroleum baseline than we could obtain using the
GREET model.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\179\ Department of Energy: National Energy Technology
Laboratory. 2009. NETL: Petroleum-Based Fuels Life Cycle Greenhouse
Gas Analysis--2005 Baseline Model.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Use of NETL study for final rule petroleum baseline calculation: In
the proposed rule, we requested comment on using the NETL study for our
2005 petroleum baseline for the final rulemaking. We only received one
comment, which agreed that the NETL values were generally more accurate
and better documented than the values in GREET. However, the commenter
also stated that NETL's use of 2002 crude oil extraction data would
underestimate extraction emissions for 2005, and that it would be
inconsistent to use the GREET model for determining GHG emissions from
biofuels, but not for petroleum.
We do not agree with the commenters' criticism of the NETL model.
We have not seen data that indicates that the GHG emissions associated
with crude oil extraction would be appreciably different in 2005 than
2002. EPA also believes that it is important to use the best available
tools to estimate a petroleum baseline that can be compared to
renewable fuels. The fact that some GREET emission factors are used in
the calculation of biofuel lifecycle GHG impacts is not a reason to use
the GREET model for the petroleum baseline analysis over what we feel
to be a better tool for the baseline calculation needed.
NETL states that the goal of their study is to ``determine the life
cycle greenhouse gas emissions for liquid fuels (conventional gasoline,
conventional diesel, and kerosene-based jet fuel) production from
petroleum as consumed in the U.S. in 2005 to allow comparisons with
alternative transportation fuel options on the same basis (i.e., life
cycle modeling assumptions, boundaries, and allocation procedures).''
Unlike GREET, the NETL study utilized site-specific data, such as
country-specific crude oil extraction profiles and port-to-port travel
distances for imported crude oil and petroleum products. The NETL model
also accounts for NGLs and unfinished oils as refinery inputs, which is
not available in GREET.
Thus, we believe that use of the NETL model addresses the
commenters' concerns with the GREET inputs used in the proposed rule.
We have also verified that the NETL model uses a crude oil input mix
and gasoline and diesel product slate consistent with EIA data for
2005.
For the final rule, we have also updated the CO2
emissions factors to be consistent with other EPA rulemakings. EPA
recently revised the CO2 emission factors for gasoline and
diesel and used them in the September 28, 2009 proposed rule to
establish GHG standards for light-duty vehicles. These new factors are
slightly lower than those used in the RFS2 proposal and result in a
decrease in tailpipe GHG emissions of 0.4% for gasoline of 0.6% and for
diesel.
Overall, with the switch to NETL and the updated tailpipe values,
the final petroleum baseline value calculated for the final rule
analysis does not differ significantly from what we calculated in the
proposed rule.
Inclusion of estimate for land use change: Numerous commenters
raised the issue of land use change with regard to oil production, both
on a direct and indirect basis. The proposed rule analysis for baseline
petroleum emissions did not consider any land use change emissions
associated with crude oil extraction. For the final rule, we do not
consider land use emissions associated with road or other
infrastructure construction for petroleum extraction, transport,
refining, or upgrading, as the land use change associated with roads
constructed for crop and livestock production was also not included.
Furthermore, land use associated with natural gas extracted for use in
oil sands extraction or upgrading was also not considered, as the land
use change from natural gas extracted for biofuels production was not
considered.
However, for the final rule we did consider the inclusion of land
use emissions associated with oil extraction. Using estimates for land-
use change from conventional oil production and oil sands in
conjunction with our data for the carbon intensity of land being
developed, we were able to determine GHG emissions associated with land
use change for oil production. Our analysis showed that the value was
negligible compared to the full petroleum lifecycle. More detail on
this analysis can be found in Chapter 2 of the RIA.
Consideration of marginal impacts: We received several comments
stating that we did not use consistent system boundaries in our
comparisons of biofuels and petroleum-based fuels, in particular by
using a marginal assessment of GHG emissions related to biofuel, but
not doing so for baseline petroleum fuels. According to commenters, by
not assessing the marginal impacts of petroleum production, we
overestimated the GHG impacts of an increase in biofuel use in the
proposed rule. Commenters argued that a consistent modeling approach
would involve a marginal analysis for both biofuels and the petroleum
baseline.
The reason the system boundaries used for threshold assessment in
the proposed rule and the final rule did not include a marginal
analysis of petroleum production was due to the definition of
``baseline lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions'' in Section 211(o)(1)(C)
of the CAA. The definitions of the different renewable fuel categories
specify that the lifecycle threshold analysis be compared to baseline
lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions, which are defined as:
The term `baseline lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions' means the
average lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions, as determined by the
Administrator, after notice and opportunity for comment, for
gasoline or diesel (whichever is being replaced by the renewable
fuel) sold or distributed as transportation fuel in 2005.
Therefore, the petroleum production component of the system
boundaries is specifically mandated by EISA to be based on the 2005
average for crude oil used to make gasoline or diesel sold or
distributed as transportation fuel, and not the marginal crude oil that
will be displaced by renewable fuel. Furthermore, as the EISA language
specifies that the baseline emissions are to be only ``average''
lifecycle emissions for this single specified year and volume, it does
not allow for a comparison of alternative scenarios. Indirect effects
can only be determined using such an analysis; therefore there are no
indirect emissions to include in the baseline lifecycle greenhouse gas
emissions.
On the other hand, assessing the lifecycle GHG emissions of
renewable fuel is not tied by statute to the 2005 baseline and could
therefore be based on a marginal analysis of anticipated changes in
transportation fuel as would result from meeting the EISA mandates.
[[Page 14785]]
Thus, Congress did not, as many commenters suggested, intend to
accomplish simply a reduction in GHG emissions as compared to the
situation that would exist in the future without enactment of EISA, as
would be the case if Congress had specified that EPA use a marginal
analysis in assessing the GHG emissions related to conventional
baseline fuels that the EISA-mandated biofuels would replace. Rather,
the statute specifies a logical approach for reducing the GHG emissions
of transportation fuel as compared to those emissions that occurred in
2005. Therefore, EPA has retained in today's final rule the basic
analytical approach (marginal analysis for biofuels and 2005 average
for baseline fuels) used in the proposed rule.
C. Threshold Determination and Assignment of Pathways
As required by EISA, EPA is making a determination of lifecycle GHG
emission threshold compliance for the range of pathways likely to
produce significant volumes of biofuel for use in the U.S. by 2022.
These threshold assessments only pertain to biofuels which are not
produced in production facilities that are grandfathered
(grandfathering of production facilities is discussed at the end of
Section V.C).
As described in Section I.A.3, because of the inherent uncertainty
and the state of the evolving science on this issue, EPA is basing its
GHG threshold compliance determinations for this rule on an approach
that considers the weight of evidence currently available. For fuel
pathways with a significant land use impact, the evidence considered
includes the best estimate as well as the range of possible lifecycle
greenhouse gas emission results based on formal uncertainty and
sensitivity analyses conducted by the Agency. In making the threshold
determinations for this rule, EPA weighed all of the evidence available
to it, while placing the greatest weight on the best estimate value for
the base yield scenario. In those cases where the best estimate for the
potentially conservative base yield scenario exceeds the reduction
threshold, EPA judges that there is a good basis to be confident that
the threshold will be achieved and is determining that the bio-fuel
pathway complies with the applicable threshold. To the extent the
midpoint of the scenarios analyzed lies further above a threshold for a
particular biofuel pathway, we have increasingly greater confidence
that the biofuel exceeds the threshold.
EPA recognizes that the state of scientific knowledge in this area
is continuing to evolve, and that as the science evolves, the lifecycle
greenhouse gas assessments for a variety of fuel pathways will continue
to change. Therefore, while EPA is making regulatory determinations for
fuel pathways as required by the statute in this final rule based on
its current assessment, EPA is at the same time committing to further
reassess these determinations and the lifecycle estimates. As part of
the ongoing effort, we will ask for the expert advice of the National
Academy of Sciences as well as other experts and then reflect this
advice and any updated information in a new assessment of the lifecycle
GHG emission performance of the biofuels being evaluated today. EPA
will request that the National Academy of Sciences evaluate the
approach taken in this rule, and the underlying science of lifecycle
assessment and in particular indirect land use change, and make
recommendations for subsequent rulemakings on this subject. This new
assessment could in some cases result in new determinations of
threshold compliance compared to those included in this rule which
would apply to future production from plants that are constructed after
each subsequent rule.
Nonetheless, EPA is required by EISA to make threshold
determinations at this time as to what fuels qualify for each of the
four different fuel categories and lifecycle GHG thresholds. In the
previous sections, we have described the analytical basis EPA is using
for its lifecycle GHG assessment. These analyses represent the most up
to date information currently available on the GHG emissions associated
with each element of the full lifecycle assessment. Notably these
analyses include an assessment of uncertainty for key parameters of the
pathways evaluated. The best estimates and ranges of results for the
different pathways can be used to help assess whether a particular
pathway should be considered as attaining the 20%, 50% or 60%
thresholds, as applicable. The graphs included in the discussion below
provide representative depictions of the results of our analysis
(including the uncertainty in the modeling) for typical pathways for
corn ethanol, biodiesel produced from soy oil and from waste oils, fats
and greases, sugarcane ethanol and cellulosic biofuel from switchgrass.
We have also conducted lifecycle modeling assessments for cellulosic
biofuel pathways using other feedstock sources, for biobutanol and for
two specific pathways for emerging biofuels that would use oil from
algae as their feedstock. Additional GHG performance assessment results
for other feedstock/fuel/technology combinations are also described
below as well as in the RIA Chapter 2.
Below we consider the analytical results of scenarios and fuel
pathways modeled by EPA as well as additional appropriate information
to determine the threshold compliance for an array of biofuels likely
to be produced in 2022.
Ethanol from corn starch: While EPA analyzed the lifecycle GHG
performance of a variety of ethanol from corn starch pathways (complete
results can be found in the RIA), for purposes of this threshold
determination we have focused the discussion on the impacts of those
plant designs that are most likely to be built in the future. We have
focused this discussion on new plant designs because production from
existing plants is grandfathered for purposes of compliance with the
20% lifecycle GHG threshold. Only new plants and expanded capacity at
existing plants need to comply with a 20% lifecycle GHG emissions
threshold to comply with the total renewable fuel mandate under the
RFS2.
While we focus our lifecycle GHG threshold analysis on the new
plant designs most likely to be built through 2022, we also note that
some existing plant designs, although subject to the grandfathering
provisions, would not qualify if having to meet the 20% performance
threshold. For example, existing designs of ethanol plants using coal
as their process heat source would not qualify.
As discussed in Section IV, EPA anticipates that by 2022 any new
dry mill plants producing ethanol from corn starch will be equipped
with more energy efficient technology and/or enhanced co-product
production than today's average plant. These predictions are largely
based on economic considerations. To compete economically, future
ethanol plants will need to employ energy saving technologies and other
value added technologies that have the effect of also reducing their
GHG footprint. For example, while only in limited use today, we predict
approximately 90% of all plants will be producing corn oil as a by-
product either through a fractionation or extraction process; it is
likely most if not all new plants will elect to include such
technology. We also predict that all will use natural gas, biomass or
biogas as the process energy
[[Page 14786]]
source.180 181 We also expect that, to lower their operating
costs, most facilities will sell a portion of their co-product DGS
prior to drying thus reducing energy consumption and improving the
efficiency and lifecycle GHG performance of the plant. The current
national average plant sells approximately 37% of the DGS co-product
prior to drying.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\180\ Dry mill corn ethanol plants using coal as a process
energy source would not qualify as exceeding the 20% reduction
threshold as modeled. We do not expect plants relying on coal for
process energy to be built through 2022. However, if they were
built, they would need to use technology improvements such as carbon
capture and storage (CCS) technology. We did not model what the
performance would be if these plants also installed CCS technology.
\181\ We do not believe new wet mill corn ethanol plants will be
built through 2022 since this design is much more complicated and
expensive than a dry mill plant. Especially since dry mill plants
equipped with corn oil fractionation will produce additional
supplies of food grade corn oil (one of the products and therefore
reasons to construct a wet mill plant), we see no near term
incentive for additional wet mill ethanol production capacity.
However, we have modeled the lifecycle GHG impact of ethanol
produced at a wet mill plant when relying on biomass as the process
energy source and have determined it would meet the 20% GHG
threshold. Therefore, this type of facility is also included in
Table V.C-6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In analyzing the corn ethanol plant designs we expect could be
built through 2022 using natural gas or biomass for process energy and
employing advanced technology, in all cases, the midpoint and therefore
the majority of the scenarios analyzed are above the 20% threshold.
This indicates that, based on the current modeling approaches and sets
of assumptions, we are over 50% confident the actual GHG performance of
the ethanol from new corn ethanol plants will exceed the threshold of
20% improvement in lifecycle GHG emissions performance compared to the
gasoline it is replacing.
We are determining at this time that the corn ethanol produced at
such new plants (and existing plants with expanded capacity employing
the same technology) will exceed the 20% GHG performance threshold. A
complete listing of complying facilities using advanced technologies
and operating procedures is included in Table V.C-6.
Figure V.C-1 shows the percent change in the lifecycle GHG
emissions compared to the petroleum gasoline baseline in 2022 for a
corn ethanol dry mill plant using natural gas for its process energy
source, drying the national average of 63% of the DGS it produces and
employing corn oil fractionation technology. Lifecycle GHG emissions
equivalent to the gasoline baseline are represented on the graph by the
zero on the X-axis. The 20% reduction threshold is represented by the
dashed line at -20 on the graph. The results for this corn ethanol
scenario are that the midpoint of the range of results is a 21%
reduction in GHG emissions compared to the gasoline 2005 baseline. The
95% confidence interval around that midpoint ranges from a 7% reduction
to a 32% reduction compared to the gasoline baseline.
[[Page 14787]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR26MR10.424
Table V.C-1 below includes lifecycle GHG emissions broken down by
several stages of the lifecycle impacts for a natural gas dry mill corn
ethanol facility as compared to the 2005 baseline average for gasoline.
This table (and similar tables which follow in the discussion for other
biofuels) is included to transparently demonstrate the contribution of
each stage and their relative significance. Lifecycle emissions are
normalized per energy unit of fuel produced and presented in kilograms
of carbon-dioxide equivalent GHG emissions per million British Thermal
Units of renewable fuel produced (kg CO2e/mmBTU). The
domestic and international agriculture rows include emissions from
changes in agricultural production (e.g., fertilizer and energy use,
rice methane) and livestock production. The fuel production row
includes emissions from the fuel production or refining facility,
primarily from energy consumption. For renewable fuels, tailpipe
emissions only include non-CO2 gases, because the carbon
emitted as a result of fuel combustion is offset by the uptake of
biogenic carbon during feedstock production. Note, that while the table
separates the emissions into different categories, the results are
based on integrated modeling; therefore, one component can not be
removed without impacting the other results. For example, domestic land
use and agricultural sector emissions depend on the international
assumptions. If a case without international impacts were modeled, the
domestic results would likely be significantly different.
The table includes our mean estimate of international land use
change emissions as well as the 95% confidence range from our
uncertainty assessment, which accounts for uncertainty in the types of
land use changes and the magnitude of resulting GHG emissions. The last
row includes mean, low and high total lifecycle GHG emissions based on
the 95% confidence range for land use change emissions. For the
petroleum baseline, the fuel production stage includes emissions from
extraction, transport, refining and distribution of petroleum
transportation fuel. Petroleum tailpipe emissions include
CO2 and non-CO2 gases emitted from fuel
combustion.
[[Page 14788]]
Table V.C-1--Lifecycle GHG Emissions for Corn Ethanol, 2022
[kg CO2e/mmBTU]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
2005
Fuel type Ethanol Gasoline
baseline
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fuel Production Technology......... Natural Gas Fired Dry ...........
Mill.
Net Domestic Agriculture (w/o land 4..................... ...........
use change).
Net International Agriculture (w/o 12.................... ...........
land use change).
Domestic Land Use Change........... -2.................... ...........
International Land Use Change, Mean 32 (21/46)............ ...........
(Low/High).
Fuel Production.................... 28.................... 19
Fuel and Feedstock Transport....... 4..................... ...........
Tailpipe Emissions................. 1..................... 79
------------------------------------
Total Emissions, Mean (Low/High)... 79 (54/97)............ 98
------------------------------------------------------------------------
While we are projecting technology enhancements which would allow
corn ethanol plants to exceed the threshold, plant designs which do not
include such advanced technology would not comply. For example, a basic
plant which is not equipped with combinations of advanced technologies
such as corn oil fractionation or dries more than 50% of its DGS is
predicted to not comply. While we do not expect such a basic, low
technology plant to be built nor existing plants to expand their
production without also installing such advanced technology, if this
were to occur, ethanol produced at such facilities would not comply
with the 20% threshold.
Biodiesel from soybean oil: We analyzed the lifecycle GHG emission
impacts of producing biodiesel using soy oil as a feedstock for
compliance with a lifecycle GHG performance threshold of 50%. The
modeling framework for this analysis was much the same as used for the
proposal. However, as noted above, based on comments, updated
information and enhanced models, the results are significantly updated.
As in the case of ethanol produced from corn starch, EPA has relied
on a weight of evidence in developing its threshold assessment for
biodiesel produced from soybean oil. In analyzing the base yield case,
the midpoint and therefore the majority of the scenarios analyzed
exceed the threshold. This indicates that based on currently available
information and our current analysis over the range of scenarios
considered, the actual performance of soy oil-based biodiesel likely
exceeds the applicable 50% threshold.
The scenarios analyzed also indicate, based on current data, we are
at least 95% confident biodiesel produced from soy oil will have GHG
impacts which are better than the 2005 baseline diesel fuel. From a GHG
impact perspective, we therefore conclude that even in the less likely
event the actual performance of biodiesel from soy oil does not exceed
the 50% threshold, GHG emission performance of transportation fuel
would still improve if this biodiesel replaced diesel fuel.
We are further confident that biodiesel exceeds the 50% threshold
since our assessment of biodiesel GHG performance does not include any
prediction of significant improvements in plant technology or
unanticipated energy saving improvements that would further improve GHG
performance. Additionally, our assumption that the co-product of
glycerin would only have GHG value as replacement for residual heating
oil could be conservative. While we have not analyzed the range of
potential uses of glycerin, potential uses of glycerin including as a
feedstock to the chemical industry could be higher in GHG benefit than
its assumed use as a heating fuel.
Considering all of the above current information and analyses, EPA
concludes that biodiesel made from soy oil will exceed its lifecycle
GHG threshold. Further, we see no benefit in lowering the threshold to
as low as 40% as allowed under EISA as this will neither benefit
available supply nor GHG performance of the fuel. Therefore, the
threshold for this rule will be maintained at 50%.
Figure V.C-2 shows the percent change in the typical 2022 soybean
biodiesel lifecycle GHG emissions compared to the petroleum diesel fuel
2005 baseline. Lifecycle GHG emissions equivalent to the diesel fuel
baseline are represented on the graph by the zero on the X-axis. The
50% reduction threshold is represented by the dashed line at -50 on the
graph. The results for soybean biodiesel are that the midpoint of the
range of results is a 57% reduction in GHG emissions compared to the
diesel fuel baseline. The 95% confidence interval around that midpoint
results in range of a 22% reduction to an 85% reduction compared to the
diesel fuel 2005 baseline.
[[Page 14789]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR26MR10.425
Biodiesel from waste oils, fats and greases: The lifecycle
assessment of GHG performance for biodiesel produced from waste oils,
fats and greases is much simpler than comparable assessments for
biofuels made from crops. In the case of biodiesel made from waste
material, there is no land use impact so the agricultural assessments
required for crop-based biofuels are unnecessary. Without the
uncertainty concerns due to land use impacts, there was no need to
conduct an uncertainty analysis for biodiesel from waste oils, fats and
greases. The assessment methodology for biofuel from waste oils fats
and greases is much the same as that analyzed for the proposal. As was
the case for the proposal, the assessment of each element in the
lifecycle process is straight forward and includes collecting and
transporting the feedstock, transforming it into a biofuel and
distributing and using the fuel. Based on the lifecycle assessment for
this final rule, we are estimating biofuel from waste oils, fats and
greases result in an 86% reduction in GHG emissions compared to the
2005 baseline for petroleum diesel. As was the case for the assessment
included in the proposal, biofuel from these feedstock sources easily
exceeds the applicable threshold of 50%.
Table V.C-2 below breaks down by stage the lifecycle GHG emissions
for soy-based biodiesel, biodiesel from waste grease feedstocks and the
2005 diesel baseline. The average 2022 biodiesel production process
reflected in this table assumes that natural gas is used for process
energy and accounts for co-product glycerin displacing residual oil.
This table demonstrates the contribution of each stage and their
relative significance.
Table V.C-2--Lifecycle GHG Emissions for Biodiesel, 2022
[kg CO2e/mmBTU]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Soy-based Waste grease 2005 Diesel
Fuel type biodiesel biodiesel baseline
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net Domestic Agriculture (w/o land use change).................. -10 0 ..............
Net International Agriculture (w/o land use change)............. 1 0 ..............
Domestic Land Use Change........................................ -9 0 ..............
International Land Use Change,.................................. 43 (15/76) 0 ..............
Mean (Low/High).................................................
[[Page 14790]]
Fuel Production................................................. 13 10 18
Fuel and Feedstock Transport.................................... 3 3 ..............
Tailpipe Emissions.............................................. 1 1 79
-----------------------------------------------
Total Emissions, Mean........................................... 42 (14/76) 14 97
(Low/High)......................................................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Biodiesel from algae oil: We analyzed the lifecycle GHG emission
impacts of producing biodiesel from algae oil as a feedstock for
compliance with a lifecycle performance threshold of 50%. Our analyses
were based on technoeconomic modeling completed by NREL, as previously
discussed. The NREL modeling included algae cultivation, harvesting,
extraction, and recovery of algae oil. Algae oil is further assumed to
use the same oil to biodiesel production technology as soy oil, which
was updated based on enhanced models. As algae are expected to be grown
on relatively small amounts of non-arable lands, it is expected that
the land use impact will be negligible. Based on our current lifecycle
assessment of algae oil for the final rule, we are determining that
biodiesel from algae oil will comply with the lifecycle performance
advanced biofuel threshold of 50%.
Ethanol from sugarcane: As is the case for other crop-based
biofuels, EPA considered the weight of evidence currently available
information in assessing the lifecycle GHG performance of this fuel. As
noted in Section I.A.3, this lifecycle GHG assessment includes
significant updates from the analysis performed for the proposal. We
have added pathways for sugarcane ethanol such that we now distinguish
sugarcane ethanol produced assuming most crop residue (leaves and
stalks) are collected and therefore available for burning as process
energy, or sugarcane produced without the extra crop residue being
collected nor burned as process energy. We also analyzed pathways
assuming the ethanol is distilled in Brazil or alternatively being
distilled in the Caribbean. We did not analyze a ``high yield'' case
for sugarcane as we did for corn and soy since we had no information
available suggesting there could be an appreciable range in expected
sugarcane yields.
Based on the currently available information, the midpoint and thus
the majority of the scenarios analyzed exceed the 50% threshold
applicable to advanced biofuels. This indicates that based on currently
available information and our current analysis, it is more than 50%
likely that the actual performance of ethanol produced from sugarcane
exceeds the applicable 50% threshold.
The analyses also indicate, based on current data, ethanol produced
from sugarcane will clearly have GHG impacts which are better than the
2005 baseline gasoline. From a GHG impact perspective, we therefore
conclude that even in the less likely event the actual performance of
sugarcane does not exceed the 50% threshold, GHG emission performance
of ethanol from sugarcane would be better than gasoline.
We also considered what would happen if we determine that ethanol
from sugarcane does not comply with a 50% threshold due to the
relatively low risk that this biofuel will actually be below that
threshold. Based on our current analysis of available pathways for
producing advanced biofuel, we believe that it will be necessary to
include over 2 billion gallons of sugarcane ethanol in order to meet
the advanced biofuel volumes anticipated by EISA. If sugarcane ethanol
was not an eligible source of advanced biofuel and other unanticipated
sources did not become available, the standard for advanced biofuel
would have to be lower to the extent necessary to compensate for the
lack of eligible sugarcane ethanol. The lower amount of advanced
biofuel would then most likely be replaced with petroleum-based
gasoline. The replacement fuel would have a worse GHG performance than
the sugarcane ethanol. Therefore, GHG performance of the transportation
fuel pool would suffer.
Considering the above, EPA has concluded that, based on currently
available information and our analysis, ethanol from sugarcane
qualifies as an advanced biofuel.
Figure V.C-3 shows the percent change in the average 2022 sugarcane
ethanol lifecycle GHG emissions compared to the petroleum gasoline 2005
baseline. These results assume the ethanol is produced and dehydrated
in Brazil prior to being imported into the U.S. Lifecycle GHG emissions
equivalent to the gasoline baseline are represented on the graph by the
zero on the X-axis. The 50% reduction threshold is represented by the
dashed line at -50 on the graph. The results for this sugarcane ethanol
scenario are that the midpoint of the range of results is a 61%
reduction in GHG emissions compared to the gasoline baseline. The 95%
confidence interval around that midpoint results in a range of a 52% to
71% reduction compared to the gasoline 2005 baseline.
[[Page 14791]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR26MR10.426
Table V.C-3 below presents results for sugarcane ethanol production
and use by lifecycle stage. This table demonstrates the contribution of
each stage and their relative significance. The fuel production
emissions include displacement of marginal Brazilian electricity
because electricity is generated with the sugarcane bagasse co-product.
As in similar previous tables, domestic emissions include all emissions
sources in the United States, with all other emissions--including
emissions from Brazil--presented in the international categories.
Table V.C-3--Lifecycle GHG Emissions for Sugarcane Ethanol, 2022
[kg CO2e/mmBTU]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sugarcane 2005 Gasoline
Fuel type ethanol baseline
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net Domestic Agriculture (w/o land use 0 0
change)...............................
Net International Agriculture (w/o land 38 0
use change)...........................
Domestic Land Use Change............... 1 0
International Land Use Change, Mean 4 (-5/12) 0
(Low/High)............................
Fuel Production........................ -11 19
Fuel and Feedstock Transport........... 5 0
Tailpipe Emissions..................... 1 79
--------------------------------
Total Emissions, Mean (Low/High)... 38 (29/46) 98
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cellulosic Biofuels: In the proposal, we analyzed biochemical
cellulosic ethanol pathways from both switchgrass and corn stover, and
on that basis proposed that such cellulosic biofuels met the required
60% lifecycle threshold by a considerable margin. As described in
Section V.B, we have considerably updated our lifecycle analysis, and
have analyzed additional cellulosic biofuel pathways (i.e.,
thermochemical cellulosic ethanol and a
[[Page 14792]]
BTL diesel pathway). We analyzed the GHG impacts of each element of the
lifecycle for producing and using biofuels from cellulosic biomass, and
as for other fuel pathways, considered the range of possible outcomes.
Figure V.C-4 shows the percent change in the average lifecycle GHG
emissions in 2022 for ethanol produced from switchgrass using the
biochemical process compared to the petroleum gasoline 2005 baseline.
Lifecycle GHG emissions equivalent to the gasoline baseline are
represented on the graph by the zero on the X-axis. The 60% reduction
threshold is represented by the dashed line at -60 on the graph. The
results for this switchgrass ethanol scenario are that the midpoint of
the range of results is a 110% reduction in GHG emissions compared to
the gasoline baseline. The 95% confidence interval around that midpoint
ranges from 102% reduction to a 117% reduction compared to the gasoline
baseline.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR26MR10.427
Table V.C-4 below shows lifecycle GHG emissions for cellulosic
ethanol produced from switchgrass (as depicted in Figure V.C-4, above)
and also corn residue by lifecycle stage, comparing these to the 2005
baseline gasoline. This table is included to demonstrate the
contribution of each stage and their relative significance. Results are
presented for the biochemical production technology depicted in Figure
V.C-4 above and also for thermochemical production technologies. The
fuel production emissions for the biochemical pathway include credit
for excess electricity generation at the fuel production facility.
Table V.C-4--Lifecycle GHG Emissions for Cellulosic Ethanol, 2022
[kg CO2e/mmBTU]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fuel type Switchgrass ethanol Corn residue
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2005 Gasoline
Fuel production technology Bio-chemical Thermo-chemical Bio-chemical Thermo-chemical baseline
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net Domestic Agriculture (w/o land use change)........... 6 6 11 11 0
[[Page 14793]]
Net International Agriculture (w/o land use change)...... 0 0 0 0 0
Domestic Land Use Change................................. -2 -3 -11 -11 0
International Land Use Change, Mean (Low/High)........... 15 (9/23) 16 1(9/24) 0 0 0
Fuel Production.......................................... -33 4 -33 4 19
Fuel and Feedstock Transport............................. 3 3 2 2 0
Tailpipe Emissions....................................... 1 1 1 1 79
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Emissions, Mean (Low/High)..................... -10 (-17/-2) 27 (20/35) -29 7 98
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table V.C-5 below presents lifecycle GHG emissions for cellulosic
diesel produced with a Fischer-Tropsch process by lifecycle stage.
Table V.C-5--Lifecycle GHG Emissions for Cellulosic Diesel, 2022
[kg CO2e/mmBTU]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fuel type Switchgrass Corn residue diesel
---------------------------------------------------- diesel --------------------- 2005 Diesel
------------------- baseline
Fuel production technology F-T diesel F-T diesel
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net Domestic Agriculture (w/o land use change)..... 6 11 0
Net International Agriculture (w/o land use change) 0 0 0
Domestic Land Use Change........................... -3 -11 0
International Land Use Change, Mean (Low/High)..... 16 (9/24) 0 0
Fuel Production.................................... 5 5 18
Fuel and Feedstock Transport....................... 3 2 0
Tailpipe Emissions................................. 1 1 79
------------------------------------------------------------
Total Emissions, Mean (Low/High)............... 29 (22/37) 9 97
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Based on the currently available information, we conclude that all
modeled cellulosic biofuel pathways are expected to exceed the 60%
threshold applicable to cellulosic biofuels.
Assessments of similar feedstock sources: In the proposal, we
indicated that although we did not specifically analyze all potential
feedstock sources, some feedstock sources are similar enough to those
modeled that we believe the modeled results could be extended to these
similar feedstock types. Comments received supported this approach and
the specific recommendations for similar feedstock designations as
proposed.
For this final rule, consistent with what was proposed, we are
relying on modeling results and only expanding to additional pathways
where we have good information these additional pathways will have
lifecycle GHG results which either will not impact our overall
assessment of the performance of that fuel pathway or would have at
least as good as the modeled pathways. The agricultural sector modeling
used for our lifecycle analysis does not predict any soybean biodiesel
or corn ethanol will be imported into the U.S., or any imported
sugarcane ethanol from production in countries other than Brazil.
However, these rules do not prohibit the use in the U.S. of these fuels
produced in countries not modeled if they are also expected to comply
with the eligibility requirements including meeting the thresholds for
GHG performance. Although the GHG emissions of producing these fuels
from feedstock grown or biofuel produced in other countries has not
been specifically modeled, we do not anticipate their use would impact
our conclusions regarding these feedstock pathways. The emissions of
producing these fuels in other countries could be slightly higher or
lower than what was modeled depending on a number of factors. Our
analyses indicate that crop yields for the crops in other countries
where these fuels are also most likely to be produced are similar or
lower than U.S. values indicating the same or slightly higher GHG
impacts. Agricultural sector inputs for the crops in these other
countries are roughly the same or lower than the U.S. pointing toward
the same or slightly lower GHG impacts. If crop production were to
expand due to biofuels in the countries where the models predict these
biofuels might additionally be produced, this would tend to lower our
assessment of international indirect impacts but could increase our
assessment of the domestic (i.e., the country of origin) land use
impacts. EPA believes, because of these offsetting factors along with
the small amounts of fuel potentially coming from other countries, that
incorporating fuels produced in other countries will not impact our
threshold analysis. Therefore, fuels of the same fuel type, produced
from the same feedstock using the same fuel production technology as
modeled fuel pathways will be assessed the same GHG performance
decisions regardless of country of origin.
We are also able to conclude that some feedstock types not
specifically modeled should be covered as we have good reason to
believe their performance would be better than the feedstock pathways
modeled. Thus for example, we can conclude that, as in the case of corn
stover which we have modeled as a feedstock source, cellulosic biofuel
produced from other agricultural waste will also have no land use
impact and would be expected to
[[Page 14794]]
have lifecycle GHG emission impacts similar enough to the modeled corn
stover feedstock pathway such that they would also comply. Similarly,
we have information on miscanthus indicating that this perennial will
yield more feedstock per acre than the modeled switchgrass feedstock
without additional GHG inputs such as fertilizer. Therefore we are
concluding that since cellulosic biofuel from switchgrass complies with
the cellulosic threshold of 60% reduction, fuel produced using
miscanthus and other perennial grasses will also surely comply.
We are also determined that biofuel from separated yard and food
wastes (which may contain incidental and post-recycled paper and wood
wastes) satisfy biofuel thresholds. Separated food waste is largely
starch-based and thus qualifies for the advanced biofuel standard of
50% reduction. If the biofuel producer can demonstrate that it is able
to quantify the cellulosic portion of food wastes, fuel made from the
cellulosic portion can qualify as cellulosic biofuel. Since we have
determined that yard wastes are largely cellulosic, biofuel from yard
waste will qualify as cellulosic biofuel. The use of separated yard and
food wastes for biofuel production including the requirements for
demonstrating what portion of food waste is cellulosic feedstock is
discussed further in Section II.B.4.d. EPA believes that renewable fuel
produced from feedstocks consisting of wastes that would normally be
discarded or put to a secondary use, and which have not been
intentionally rendered unfit for productive use, should be assumed to
have little or no land use emissions of GHGs. The use of wastes that
would normally be discarded does not increase the demand for land. For
example, the use in biofuel production of food waste from a food
processing facility that would normally be placed in a landfill will
not increase the demand for land to grow the crops that were purchased
by the food processing facility. Similarly, wastes that would not
normally be discarded because there are alternative secondary uses for
them (for example contaminated vegetable oil might be burned in a
boiler) are not produced for the purpose of such secondary use and the
use of these feedstocks also does not increase demand for land. Since
these waste-derived feedstocks have little or no land use impact, the
lifecycle GHG emissions associated with their use for biofuel
production are largely the result of the energy required to collect and
process the feedstock prior to conversion, and the energy required to
convert that feedstock into a biofuel. This has led us to conclude it
is reasonable to include a restricted set of additional feedstocks in
pathways complying with the applicable threshold.
The look-up table identifies a number of individual fuel
``pathways'' that allow for the use of waste feedstocks. These
feedstocks include (1) waste ethanol from beverage production, (2)
waste starches from food production and agricultural residues, (3)
waste oils/fats/greases, (4) waste sugar from food and beverage
production, and (5) food and beverage production wastes. For the
purpose of this rule only, EPA will consider these feedstocks to be
``wastes'' if they are used as feedstock to produce fuel, but would
otherwise normally be discarded or used for another secondary purpose
because they are no longer suitable for their original intended use.
They may be unsuitable for their original intended use either because
they are themselves waste from that original use (e.g., table scraps)
or because of contamination, spoilage or other unintentional acts. EPA
will not consider any material that has been intentionally rendered
unsuitable for its original use to be a ``waste.''
As discussed in more detail in Section II.B.4.d, EPA has also
determined that the biogenic portion of post recycled MSW is eligible
to produce renewable fuel and will largely be made up of cellulosic
material. Therefore biofuel made from this waste-derived material will
qualify as cellulosic biofuel.
EPA has also considered biofuels produced from annual cover crops
such as cover crops grown in the winter. These annual cover crops are
normally planted as a rotation between primary planted crops or between
trees and vines in orchards and vineyards, typically to protect soil
from erosion, improve the soil between periods of regular crops, or for
other conservation purposes. For annual cover crops grown on the same
land as the primary crops, we have determined that there is little or
no land use impact such that the GHG emissions associated with them
would largely result due to inputs required to grow the crop,
harvesting and transporting to the biofuel production facility, turning
that feedstock into a biofuel and transporting it to its end use. As
such, the biofuel from cellulosic biomass from annual cover crops are,
for example, determined to meet requirements of cellulosic biofuel, oil
from annual cover crops are determined to meet the requirements of
renewable diesel and starches from annual cover crops are determined to
meet the requirements of advanced biofuel.
While we have not been able to model all possible feedstocks that
can and are being used for renewable fuel production, there are a
variety of feedstocks that should have similar enough characteristics
to those already modeled to allow them to be grouped in with already
modeled fuel pathways. In particular, as discussed below, there are
five categories of biofuel feedstock sources for which we are
confident, by virtue of their lack of any land-use change impact, in
qualifying them for particular renewable fuel standards (D-codes) on
the basis of our existing modeling.
1. All crop residues which provide starch or cellulosic feedstock.
By virtue of the fact that they do not cause any land-use change
impacts, they should all have similar lifecycle GHG impacts. Thus,
modeling conducted for corn stover is being extended to other crop
residues such as wheat straw, rice straw, and citrus residue. These
residues are what remains after a primary crop is harvested, and can be
similarly collected, transported and used in biofuel production.
2. Slash, forest thinnings, and forest residue providing cellulosic
feedstock. As excess material, these represent another form of residue
which should also result in no land-use change GHG impacts. Their GHG
emission impacts would only be associated with collection, transport,
and processing into biofuel. Consequently, modeling conducted for corn
stover is also being extended to these residues.
3. Annual cover crops planted on existing crop land such as winter
cover crops and providing cellulosic material, starch or oil for
biofuel production. While different from crop residues, these secondary
crops also have no land use impact since they are planted on land
otherwise used for primary crop production. GHG emissions would only be
associated with growing, harvesting and transporting the secondary crop
and then processing into biofuel. In the case of secondary crops that
might be used for cellulosic biofuel production, they would also have
no land-use change impact, and consequently modeling conducted for corn
stover is also being extended to these crops. In the case of secondary
crops used for oil production, they would then have no land-use change
similar to waste fats, oils and greases. Consequently, modeling
conducted for biodiesel and renewable diesel from these waste oils is
also being extended to these annual cover crops.
4. Separated food and yard wastes, including food and beverage
wastes
[[Page 14795]]
from food production and processing are another category of waste
product that would not have any land-use change impact. These waste
products can be used as feedstock for advanced biofuel production or
cellulosic biofuel production. Waste oils have already been modeled as
complying with the biomass-based diesel standard. Applying our
sugarcane results without the land-use change component to waste sugars
clearly demonstrates compliance with the advanced biofuel threshold.
Applying our corn results without the land-use component to waste
starches clearly demonstrates compliance with the renewable fuel
standard
5. Perennial grasses including switchgrass and miscanthus. We
modeled switchgrass and miscanthus has higher yield per acre without
any significant (or perhaps less) inputs such as fertilizer per acre.
We believe other perennial grasses likely to compete as feedstock
sources will have similar land use and agricultural inputs are
therefore confident the results from switchgrass can be extended to
miscanthus and other perennial grasses. However, we note that the
energy crop industry is just starting to develop and therefore as
favored perennial grasses start to emerge, additional analyses may be
warranted.
Applicable D-Codes for Fuel Pathways: Based on the above, corn
ethanol facilities using natural gas or biomass as the process energy
source will meet the applicable 20% GHG performance threshold if it
either also uses at least two of the technologies Table V.C-6 or one of
the technologies in Table V.C-6 but marketing at least 35% of its DGS
as wet. Alternatively, a facility using none of the advanced
technologies listed in Table V.C-6 will qualify as producing ethanol
meeting the 20% performance threshold if it sells at least 50% of its
DGS prior to drying.
Table V.C-6--Modeled Advanced Technologies
------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Corn oil fractionation
Corn oil extraction
Membrane separation
Raw starch hydrolysis
Combined heat and power
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Following the criteria for D-Codes defined in Section II.A-1, the
following renewable fuel pathways have been found to comply with the
applicable lifecycle GHG thresholds and are therefore eligible for the
D-Codes specified in Table V.C-7.
Table V.C-7--D-Code Designations
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Production process
Fuel type Feedstock requirements D-Code
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ethanol........................... Corn starch.......... All of the following: 6 (renewable fuel)
Drymill process,
using natural gas,
biomass or biogas
for process energy
and at least two
advanced
technologies from
Table V.C-6).
Ethanol........................... Corn starch.......... All of the following: 6 (renewable fuel)
Dry mill process,
using natural gas,
biomass or biogas
for process energy
and one of the
advanced
technologies from
Table V.C-6 plus
drying no more than
65% of the DGS it
markets annually.
Ethanol........................... Corn starch.......... All of the following: 6 (renewable fuel)
Dry mill process,
using natural gas,
biomass or biogas
for process energy
and drying no more
than 50% of the DGS
it markets annually.
Ethanol........................... Corn starch.......... Wet mill process 6 (renewable fuel)
using biomass or
biogas for process
energy.
Ethanol........................... Starches from Fermentation using 6 (renewable fuel)
agricultural natural gas, biomass
residues; starches or biogas for
from annual cover process energy.
crops.
Biodiesel, and renewable diesel... Soy bean oil; One of the following: 4 (biomass-based diesel)
Oil from annual cover Trans-Esterification.
crops.
Algal oil............ Hydrotreating........
Biogenic waste oils/ Excluding processes
fats/greases; that coprocess
renewable biomass
and petroleum.
Non-food grade corn
oil.
Biodiesel, and renewable diesel... Soy bean oil; One of the following: 5 (Advanced)
Oil from annual cover Trans-Esterification.
crops.
Algal oil............ Hydrotreating........
Biogenic waste oils/ Includes only
fats/greases; processes that
coprocess renewable
biomass and
petroleum.
Non-food grade corn
oil.
Ethanol........................... Sugarcane............ Fermentation (Any)... 5 (Advanced)
Ethanol........................... Cellulosic Biomass Any.................. 3 (Cellulosic Biofuel)
from agricultural
residues, slash,
forest thinnings,
forest product
residues, annual
cover crops,
switchgrass and
miscanthus;
cellulosic
components of
separated yard
wastes; cellulosic
components of
separated food
wastes; and
cellulosic
components of
separated MSW.
[[Page 14796]]
Cellulosic Diesel, Jet Fuel and Cellulosic Biomass Any.................. 7 (Cellulosic Biofuel or
Heating Oil. from agricultural Biomass-Based Diesel)
residues, slash,
forest thinnings,
forest product
residues, annual
cover crops,
switchgrass and
miscanthus;
cellulosic
components of
separated yard
wastes, cellulosic
components of
separated food
wastes, and
cellulosic
components of
separated MSW.
Butanol.......................... Corn starch.......... Fermentation; dry 6 (renewable fuel)
mill using natural
gas, biomass or
biogas for process
energy.
Cellulosic Naphtha................ Cellulosic Biomass Fischer-Tropsch 3 (Cellulosic Biofuel)
from agricultural process.
residues, slash,
forest thinnings,
forest product
residues, annual
cover crops,
switchgrass and
miscanthus;
cellulosic
components of
separated yard
wastes, cellulosic
components of
separated food
wastes, and
cellulosic
components of
separated MSW.
Ethanol, renewable diesel, jet The non-cellulosic Any.................. 5 (Advanced)
fuel, heating oil, and naphtha. portions of
separated food
wastes.
Biogas............................ Landfills, sewage and Any.................. 5 (Advanced)
waste treatment
plants, manure
digesters.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pathways for which we have not made a threshold compliance
decision: The pathways identified in the Table V.C-6 represent those
pathways we have analyzed and determined meet the applicable thresholds
as establish by EISA. We did not analyze all pathways that might be
feasible through 2022. In some cases, we did not have sufficient time
to complete the necessary lifecycle GHG impact assessment for this
final rule. In addition to the pathways identified in Table V.C-6, EPA
anticipates modeling grain sorghum ethanol, woody pulp ethanol, and
palm oil biodiesel after this final rule and including the
determinations in a rulemaking within 6 months. Based on current and
projected commercial trends and the status of current analysis at EPA,
biofuels from these three pathways are either currently being produced
or are planned production in the near-term. Our analyses project that
they will be used in meeting the RFS2 volume standard in the near-term.
During the course of the NPRM comment period, EPA received detailed
information on these pathways and is currently in the process of
analyzing these pathways. We have received comments on several
additional feedstock/fuel pathways, including rapeseed/canola,
camelina, sweet sorghum, wheat, and mustard seed, and we welcome
parties to utilize the petition process described below to request EPA
to examine additional pathways.
In other cases, we have not modeled the lifecycle GHG performance
of pathways because we did not have sufficient information. For those
fuel pathways that are different than those pathways EPA has listed in
today's regulations, EPA is establishing a petition process whereby a
party can petition the Agency to consider new pathways for GHG
reduction threshold compliance. The petition process is meant for
parties with serious intention to moved forward with production via the
petitioned fuel pathway and who have moved sufficiently forward in the
business process to show feasibility of the fuel pathway's
implementation. The Agency will not consider frivolous petitions with
insufficient information and clarity for Agency analysis. In addition,
if the petition addresses a fuel pathway that already complies for one
or more types of renewable fuels under RFS (e.g., renewable fuel or
advanced biofuel), the pathway must have the potential to result in the
pathway qualifying for a new renewable fuel category for which it was
not previously qualified. Thus, for example, the Agency will not
undertake any additional review for a party wishing to get a modified
LCA value for a previously approved fuel pathway if the desired new
value would not change the overall pathway classification. EPA will
process these petitions as expeditiously as possible, taking into
consideration that some fuel pathways are closer to the commercial
production stage than others. In all events, parties are expected to
begin this process with ample lead time as compared to their commercial
start dates.
In addition to the technical information described below and listed
in today's regulations (see Sec. 80.1416), a petition must include all
information required in the registration process except the engineering
review. The petition should demonstrate technical and commercial
feasibility. For example, a petition could include copies of
applications for air or construction permits, copies of blue prints of
the facility, or photographs of the facility or pilot plant. The
petition must include information necessary to allow EPA to effectively
determine the lifecycle green house gas emissions of the fuel. The
petitioner must describe the alternative production facility technology
applied and supply data establishing the energy savings that will
result from the use of the alternative technology. The information
required would include, at a minimum, a mass and energy balance for the
proposed fuel production process. This would include for example, mass
inputs of raw material feedstocks and consumables, mass outputs of fuel
product produced as well as co-products and waste materials production.
Energy inputs information should include fuels used by type, including
purchased electricity. If steam or hot water is purchased, the source
and fuel required for its generation would also be reported.
[[Page 14797]]
Energy output information should include energy content of the fuel
product produced (with heating value specified) as well as energy
content of any co-products. The petitioner should also report the
extent to which excess electricity is generated and distributed outside
the production facility. Information on co-products should include the
expected use of the co-products and their market value. All information
should be provided in a format such that it can be normalized on a fuel
output basis (for example, tons feedstock per gallon of fuel produced).
Other process descriptions necessary to understand the fuel production
process should be included (e.g., process modeling flowcharts). Any
other relevant information, including that pertaining to energy saving
technologies or other process improvements that document significant
differences between the fuel production processes outlined in this rule
and that used by the renewable fuel producer, should also be submitted
with the petition.
For fuel pathways that utilize feedstocks that have not yet been
modeled for this rulemaking, the petition must also submit information
on the feedstock. Information would include, at a minimum, the
feedstock type and feedstock production source and data on the market
value of the feedstock and current uses of the feedstock, if any. The
petition should also include chemical input requirements (e.g.,
fertilizer, pesticides, etc.) and energy use in feedstock production
listed by type of energy. Yield information would also be required for
both the current yields of the feedstock as well as anticipated changes
in feedstock yields over time.
EPA will use the data supplied in the petition and other data and
information available to the Agency to technically evaluate whether the
information is sufficient for EPA to make a determination of the RFS
standards for which the fuel pathway may qualify. If EPA determines
that the petition is insufficient for determination, the petitioner
will be so notified. If EPA determines it has been provided sufficient
data from the petitioner to evaluate the fuel pathway, we will then
proceed with any analyses required to make a technical determination of
compliance.
EPA anticipates that for some petitioned fuel pathways with unique
modifications or enhancements to production technologies of pathways
otherwise modeled for the regulations listed today, EPA may be able to
evaluate the pathway as a reasonably straight-forward extension of our
current assessments. We expect such a determination would be pathway
specific, and would be based on a technical analysis that compared the
applicant fuel pathway to the fuel to pathway(s) that had already been
analyzed. In these cases, EPA would be able to make a determination
without proceeding through a full rulemaking process. For example,
petitions may submit unique biofuel production facility configurations,
operations, or co-product pathways that could result in greater
efficiencies than the pathways modeled for this rulemaking, but
otherwise do not differ greatly from the modeled fuel pathways. In such
cases, we would expect to make a decision for that specific pathway
without conducting a full rulemaking process. We would expect to
evaluate whether the pathway is consistent with the definitions of
renewable fuel types in the regulations, generally without going
through rulemaking, and issue an approval or disapproval that applies
to the petitioner. We anticipate that we will subsequently propose to
add the pathway to the regulations.
If EPA determines that a petitioned fuel pathway requires
significant new analysis and/or modeling, EPA will need to give notice
and seek public comment. For example, we anticipate that pathways with
feedstocks or fuel types not yet modeled by EPA will require additional
modeling and public comment before a determination of compliance can be
made. In these cases, the determination would be incorporated into the
annual rulemaking process established in today's regulations.
When EPA makes a technical determination is made that a petitioned
fuel pathway qualifies for a RFS volume standard, a D-code will be
assigned to the fuel pathway. We anticipate that renewable fuel
producers and importers will be able to generate RINs for the
additional pathway after the next available update of the EPA Moderated
Transaction System (EMTS) that follows a determination. EPA expects to
update the EMTS quarterly, as long as necessary. Renewable fuel
producers will be able to register the fuel pathway through the EPA
Fuels Programs Registration System two weeks after the date of
determination, but as described above, will not be able to generate
RINs until the quarterly EMTS update.
In the proposal, we suggested a system of temporary D-codes for
biofuel pathways we had not analyzed. This was proposed as a means of
assuring no undue hardship for biofuel producers using feedstock
sources or processing technologies not analyzed by EPA. As proposed,
these producers could market their fuel on the basis of temporarily
assigned D-codes. While the objective was sound, EPA now believes it is
best to properly assure compliance with thresholds on the basis of
completed lifecycle GHG assessments. As noted above, the Agency commits
to expedited assessment and rulemaking for those pathways most likely
to generate biofuel in the immediate future, including ethanol produced
from grain sorghum, ethanol, woody pulp ethanol, and palm oil
biodiesel. We also plan to continue to model additional pathways we
expect will be commercially available in the U.S. as soon as sufficient
information is available to complete a quality lifecycle assessment.
For these reasons, EPA is not finalizing a provision for assigning
temporary D-codes.
D. Total GHG Reductions
Similar to the analysis done in our proposal, our analysis of the
overall GHG emission impacts of increased volumes of renewable fuel was
performed in parallel with the lifecycle analysis performed to develop
the individual fuel thresholds described in previous sections. The same
sources of emissions apply such that this analysis includes the effects
of three main areas: (a) Emissions related to the production of
biofuels, including the growing of feedstock (corn, soybeans, etc.)
with associated domestic and international land use change impacts,
transport of feedstock to fuel production plants, fuel production, and
distribution of finished fuel; (b) emissions related to the extraction,
production and distribution of petroleum gasoline and diesel fuel that
is replaced by use of biofuels; and (c) difference in tailpipe
combustion of the renewable and petroleum based fuels.
The main difference between the results of the proposal analysis
and the final rule analysis are higher domestic land use change
emissions in the final rule analysis. As was the case in the proposal,
simply adding up the individual lifecycle results determined in Section
V.C. multiplied by their respective volumes would yield a different
assessment of the overall impacts. The two analyses are separate in
that the overall impacts capture interactions between the different
fuels that can not be broken out into per fuels impacts, while the
threshold values represent impacts of specific fuels but do not account
for all the interactions.
While individual fuel analysis generally had small domestic land
use change emission impacts, the overall impacts had larger domestic
land use change emissions. The primary reason
[[Page 14798]]
for the difference in domestic land use change between the individual
fuel scenarios and the combined fuel scenarios is that when looking at
individual fuels there is some interaction between different crops
(e.g., corn replacing soybeans), but with combined volume scenario when
all mandates need to be met there is less opportunity for crop
replacement (e.g., both corn and soybean acres needed) and therefore
more land is required.
As discussed in previous sections on lifecycle GHG thresholds there
is an initial one time release from land conversion and smaller ongoing
releases, but there are also ongoing benefits of using renewable fuels
over time replacing petroleum fuel use. Based on the volume scenario
considered, the one time land use change impacts result in 313 million
metric tons of CO2-eq. emissions increase. There are,
however, based on the biofuel use replacing petroleum fuels, GHG
reductions in each year. Totaling the emissions impacts over 30 years
but assuming a 0% discount rate over this 30 year period would result
in an estimated total NPV reduction in GHG emissions of 4.15 billion
tons over 30 years.
This total NPV reduction can be converted into annual average GHG
reductions, which can be used for the calculations of the monetized GHG
benefits as shown in Section VIII.C.3. This annualized value is based
on converting the lump sum present values described above into their
annualized equivalents. A comparable value assuming 30 years of GHG
emissions changes, but not applying a discount rate to those emissions
results in an estimated annualized average emission reduction of
approximately 138 million metrics tons of CO2-eq. emissions.
We also considered the uncertainty in the international land use
change emission estimates for the overall impacts. Based on the range
of results for the international land use change emissions the overall
annualized average emission reductions of increased volumes of
renewable fuel could range from -136 to -140 million metrics tons of
CO2-eq. emissions.
E. Effects of GHG Emission Reductions and Changes in Global Temperature
and Sea Level
The reductions in CO2 and other GHGs associated with
increased volumes of renewable fuel will affect climate change
projections. GHGs mix well in the atmosphere and have long atmospheric
lifetimes, so changes in GHG emissions will affect future climate for
decades to centuries. Two common indicators of climate change are
global mean surface temperature and global mean sea level rise. This
section estimates the response in global mean surface temperature and
global mean sea level rise projections to the estimated net global GHG
emissions reductions associated with increased volumes of renewable
fuel.
EPA estimated changes in projected global mean surface temperatures
to 2050 using the MiniCAM (Mini Climate Assessment Model) integrated
assessment model \182\ coupled with the MAGICC (Model for the
Assessment of Greenhouse-Gas Induced Climate Change) simple climate
model.\183\ MiniCAM was used to create the globally and temporally
consistent set of climate relevant variables required for running
MAGICC. MAGICC was then used to estimate the change in the global mean
surface temperature over time. Given the magnitude of the estimated
emissions reductions associated with the increased volumes of renewable
fuel, a simple climate model such as MAGICC is reasonable for
estimating the climate response.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\182\ MiniCAM is a long-term, global integrated assessment model
of energy, economy, agriculture and land use, that considers the
sources of emissions of a suite of greenhouse gases (GHGs), emitted
in 14 globally disaggregated global regions (i.e., U.S., Western
Europe, China), the fate of emissions to the atmosphere, and the
consequences of changing concentrations of greenhouse related gases
for climate change. MiniCAM begins with a representation of
demographic and economic developments in each region and combines
these with assumptions about technology development to describe an
internally consistent representation of energy, agriculture, land-
use, and economic developments that in turn shape global emissions.
Brenkert A, S. Smith, S. Kim, and H. Pitcher, 2003: Model
Documentation for the MiniCAM. PNNL-14337, Pacific Northwest
National Laboratory, Richland, Washington. For a recent report and
detailed description and discussion of MiniCAM, see Clarke, L., J.
Edmonds, H. Jacoby, H. Pitcher, J. Reilly, R. Richels, 2007.
Scenarios of Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Atmospheric
Concentrations. Sub-report 2.1A of Synthesis and Assessment Product
2.1 by the U.S. Climate Change Science Program and the Subcommittee
on Global Change Research. Department of Energy, Office of
Biological & Environmental Research, Washington, DC., USA, 154 pp.
\183\ MAGICC consists of a suite of coupled gas-cycle, climate
and ice-melt models integrated into a single framework. The
framework allows the user to determine changes in GHG
concentrations, global-mean surface air temperature and sea-level
resulting from anthropogenic emissions of carbon dioxide
(CO2), methane (CH4), nitrous oxide (N2O), reactive gases
(e.g., CO, NOX, VOCs), the halocarbons (e.g. HCFCs, HFCs,
PFCs) and sulfur dioxide (SO2). MAGICC emulates the global-mean
temperature responses of more sophisticated coupled Atmosphere/Ocean
General Circulation Models (AOGCMs) with high accuracy. Wigley,
T.M.L. and Raper, S.C.B. 1992. Implications for Climate and Sea-
Level of Revised IPCC Emissions Scenarios Nature 357, 293-300.
Raper, S.C.B., Wigley T.M.L. and Warrick R.A. 1996. In Sea-Level
Rise and Coastal Subsidence: Causes, Consequences and Strategies
J.D. Milliman, B.U. Haq, Eds., Kluwer Academic Publishers,
Dordrecht, The Netherlands, pp. 11-45. Wigley, T.M.L. and Raper,
S.C.B. 2002. Reasons for larger warming projections in the IPCC
Third Assessment Report J. Climate 15, 2945-2952.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
EPA applied the estimated annual GHG emissions changes for the
final rule to a MiniCAM baseline emissions scenario.\184\ Specifically,
the CO2, N2O, and CH4 annual emission
changes from 2022-2052 from Section V.D were applied as net reductions
to this baseline scenario for each GHG.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\184\ The reference scenario is the MiniCAM reference (no
climate policy) scenario used as the basis for the Representative
Concentration Pathway RCP4.5 using historical emissions until 2005.
This scenario is used because it contains a comprehensive suite of
greenhouse and pollutant gas emissions including carbonaceous
aerosols. The four RCP scenarios will be used as common inputs into
a variety of Earth System Models for inter-model comparisons leading
to the IPCC AR5 (Moss et al. 2008). The MiniCAM RCP4.5 is based on
the scenarios presented in Clarke et al. (2007) with non-
CO2 and pollutant gas emissions implemented as described
in Smith and Wigley (2006). Base-year information has been updated
to the latest available data for the RCP process.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table V.E-1 provides our estimated reductions in projected global
mean surface temperatures and mean sea level rise associated with the
reductions in GHG emissions due to the increase in renewable fuels in
2022. To capture some of the uncertainty in the climate system, we
estimated the changes in projected temperatures and sea level across
the most current Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) range
of climate sensitivities, 1.5 [deg]C to 6.0 [deg]C.\185\ To illustrate
the time profile of the estimated reductions in projected global mean
surface temperatures and mean sea level rise, we have also provided
Figures V.E-1 and V.E-2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\185\ In IPCC reports, equilibrium climate sensitivity refers to
the equilibrium change in the annual mean global surface temperature
following a doubling of the atmospheric equivalent carbon dioxide
concentration. The IPCC states that climate sensitivity is
``likely'' to be in the range of 2 [deg]C to 4.5 [deg]C and
described 3 [deg]C as a ``best estimate.'' The IPCC goes on to note
that climate sensitivity is ``very unlikely'' to be less than 1.5
[deg]C and ``values substantially higher than 4.5 [deg]C cannot be
excluded.'' IPCC WGI, 2007, Climate Change 2007--The Physical
Science Basis, Contribution of Working Group I to the Fourth
Assessment Report of the IPCC, http://www.ipcc.ch/.
[[Page 14799]]
Table V.E-1--Estimated Reductions in Projected Global Mean Surface Temperature and Global Mean Sea Level Rise
From Baseline in 2020-2050
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Climate sensitivity
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1.5 2 2.5 3 4.5 6
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Year Change in global mean surface temperatures (degrees Celsius)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2020.......................................... 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000
2025.......................................... 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000
2030.......................................... 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000
2035.......................................... -0.001 -0.001 -0.001 -0.001 -0.001 -0.001
2040.......................................... -0.001 -0.001 -0.001 -0.001 -0.001 -0.001
2045.......................................... -0.001 -0.001 -0.001 -0.001 -0.002 -0.002
2050.......................................... -0.001 -0.001 -0.002 -0.002 -0.002 -0.002
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Year Change in global mean sea level rise (centimeters)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2020.......................................... 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000
2025.......................................... 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000
2030.......................................... -0.001 -0.001 -0.001 -0.001 -0.001 -0.001
2035.......................................... -0.002 -0.002 -0.002 -0.003 -0.003 -0.003
2040.......................................... -0.003 -0.004 -0.004 -0.005 -0.005 -0.006
2045.......................................... -0.005 -0.006 -0.006 -0.007 -0.008 -0.009
2050.......................................... -0.006 -0.008 -0.009 -0.009 -0.011 -0.012
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The results in Table V.E-1 and Figures V.E-1 and V.E-2 show small
reductions in the global mean surface temperature and sea level rise
projections across all climate sensitivities. Overall, the reductions
are small relative to the IPCC's ``best estimate'' temperature
increases by 2100 of 1.8 [deg]C to 4.0 [deg]C.\186\ Although IPCC does
not issue ``best estimate'' sea level rise projections, the model-based
range across SRES scenarios is 18 to 59 cm by 2099.\187\ While the
distribution of potential temperatures in any particular year is
shifting down, the shift is not uniform. The magnitude of the decrease
is larger for higher climate sensitivities. The same pattern appears in
the reductions in the sea level rise projections. Thus, we can conclude
that the impact of increased volumes of renewable fuel is to lower the
risk of climate change, as the probabilities of temperature increase
and sea level rise are reduced.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\186\ IPCC WGI, 2007.
\187\ ``Because understanding of some important effects driving
sea level rise is too limited, this report does not assess the
likelihood, nor provide a best estimate or an upper bound for sea
level rise.'' IPCC Synthesis Report, p. 45.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
VI. How Would the Proposal Impact Criteria and Toxic Pollutant
Emissions and Their Associated Effects?
This section presents our assessment of the changes in emissions
and air quality resulting from the increased renewable fuel volumes
needed to meet the RFS2 standards. Increases in emissions of
hydrocarbons, nitrogen oxides, particulate matter, and other pollutants
are projected to lead to increases in population-weighted annual
average ambient PM and ozone concentrations. The air quality impacts,
however, are highly variable from region to region. Ambient
PM2.5 is likely to increase in areas associated with biofuel
production and transport and decrease in other areas; for ozone, many
areas of the country will experience increases and a few areas will see
decreases. Ethanol concentrations will increase substantially; for the
other modeled air toxics there are some localized impacts, but
relatively little impact on national average concentrations.
A. Overview of Emissions Impacts
Today's action will affect the emissions of ``criteria'' pollutants
(those pollutants for which EPA has established a National Ambient Air
Quality Standard has been established), criteria pollutant
precursors,\188\ and air toxics, which may affect overall air quality
and health. Emissions are affected by the processes required to produce
and distribute large volumes of biofuels required by today's action and
the direct effects of these fuels on vehicle and equipment emissions.
As detailed in Chapter 3 of the Regulatory Impact Analysis (RIA), we
have estimated emissions impacts of production and distribution-related
emissions using the life cycle analysis methodology described in
Section V with emission factors for criteria and toxic emissions for
each stage of the life cycle, including agriculture, feedstock
transportation, and the production and distribution of biofuel;
included in this analysis are the impacts of reduced gasoline and
diesel refining as these fuels are displaced by biofuels. Emission
impacts of tailpipe and evaporative emissions for on and off road
sources have been estimated by incorporating ``per vehicle'' fuel
effects from recent research into mobile source emission inventory
estimation methods.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\188\ NOX and VOC are precursors to the criteria
pollutant ozone; we group them with criteria pollutants in this
chapter for ease of discussion.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the proposal we analyzed a single renewable fuel volume
scenario, largely dependent on ethanol, relative to three different
reference cases, including the RFS1 base case. For today's rule we are
presenting emission impacts for three fuel volume scenarios relative to
two reference cases (RFS1 mandate and AEO) to show a range of the
possible effects of biofuels depending on the relative quantities of
various biofuels that may be used to meet the overall renewable fuel
requirements. We have also updated our modeling for the RFS1 mandate
reference case to better reflect the emissions for this case. Table
VI.A-1 shows the fuel volumes for the two reference cases and all three
control scenarios. Further discussion of these fuel volumes and the
subcategories within each are available in Section IV.A. The emission
impacts of the primary control scenario (22.2 Bgal of ethanol) are
presented here relative to both reference cases. The corresponding
results for all three control cases are available in Chapter 3 of the
Regulatory Impact Analysis for this rule.
[[Page 14800]]
Table VI.A-1--Renewable Fuel Volumes for Each Reference Case and Control Scenario
[Bgal/year in 2022]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ethanol
Scenario -------------------------------------------------------- Biodiesel Renewable Cellulosic
Corn Cellulosic Imported Total diesel diesel
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
RFS1 Ref.............................................. 7.046 0.0 0.0 7.046 0.303 0.0 0.0
AEO Ref............................................... 12.29 0.25 0.64 13.18 0.38 0.0 0.0
Low Ethanol........................................... 15.0 0.25 2.24 17.49 1.67 0.15 9.26
Mid Ethanol (Primary)................................. 15.0 4.92 2.24 22.16 1.67 0.15 6.52
High Ethanol.......................................... 15.0 16.0 2.24 33.24 1.67 0.15 0.0
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
There have been a number of other enhancements and corrections to
the non-GHG emission inventory estimates since the NPRM, some of which
were included in the air quality modeling inventories, while others
occurred later than that. The major changes are mentioned here, and all
the significant changes are explained in detail in Chapter 3 of the
RIA.
One significant change relates to the ``downstream'' vehicle and
equipment emission impacts of using the increased proportions of
renewable fuels. In the proposal we provided two different analyses
based on two different assumptions regarding the effects of E10 and E85
versus E0 on exhaust emissions from cars and trucks. Those were
referred to as ``less sensitive'' and ``more sensitive'' cases. Based
on analysis of recent emissions test data conducted since publication
of the NPRM, we are modeling a single case. As detailed in Section
VI.C, the case modeled for the final rule is a hybrid approach,
applying ``more sensitive'' impacts for E10 and pre-Tier 2 light duty
vehicles, and applying the ``less sensitive'' E10 effects for Tier 2
light duty cars and trucks, which means no impact for NOX or
non-methane hydrocarbons (NMHC). We have also updated our estimates of
evaporative permeation impacts of E10 based on recent studies. Finally,
for the final rule inventories we are only claiming emission effects
with use of E85 in flex-fueled vehicles relative to E0 for two
pollutants: ethanol and acetaldehyde, for which data suggests the
effects are more certain. For the ``more sensitive case'' presented in
the NPRM, and used in the air quality modeling, we had estimated
changes to additional pollutants (including significant PM reductions)
based on some very limited data. Until such time as additional data is
collected to enhance this analysis it is premature to use such
assumptions.
For ``upstream'' emissions associated with fuel production and
distribution, the largest change that was included in the air quality
modeling was the improved estimate of VOC and ethanol vapor emissions
during ethanol transport, made possible by a detailed analysis of costs
and transport modes conducted by Oak Ridge National Laboratory
(ORNL).\189\ This change alone more than doubled the predicted overall
increase in ethanol emissions from the increased use of renewable
fuels, increasing the VOC enough to change the overall VOC impact from
a decrease to a substantial increase.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\189\ ``Analysis of Fuel Ethanol Transportation Activity and
Potential Distribution Constraints,'' Oak Ridge National Laboratory,
U.S. Department of Energy, March 2009.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Significant updates have also been made to emissions from
cellulosic biofuel plants, in part to reflect the assumed shift in
volumes from cellulosic ethanol to diesel between the proposed and
final rules. For cellulosic ethanol plants, after the air quality
modeling was done we discovered that the calculation of emissions from
these plants had been overestimated due to failing to account for the
portion of biomass that is not used for process energy. This change
decreases the estimated NOX and CO impacts, and shifts the
PM impact of these plants from an increase to a small decrease.
However, these changes are counterbalanced by varying degrees by
shifting some of the cellulosic volume from ethanol to diesel, which
requires nearly twice the biomass as needed by ethanol to produce one
gallon. While the net effect of the changes in cellulosic plant
emissions is a decrease in NOX and CO emission impacts
relative to the proposal, the shift to cellulosic diesel under the
primary scenario results in a larger increase in ``upstream'' PM
emissions than reported in the NPRM or used in the air quality
analysis.
Updates to agricultural modeling assumptions made between proposal
and final had a significant impact on ammonia (NH3) emissions. Final
modeling reflects an increase in fertilizer use with the primary
control case, which results in a 1.2 percent increase in NH3 emissions,
a change from the 0.5 percent decrease projected for the proposal and
negligible impact used in the air quality analyses.
Analysis of criteria and toxic emission impacts was performed for
calendar year 2022, since this year reflects the full implementation of
today's rule. Our 2022 projections account for projected growth in
vehicle travel and the effects of applicable emission and fuel economy
standards, including Tier 2 and Mobile Source Air Toxics (MSAT) rules
for cars and light trucks and recently finalized controls on spark-
ignited off-road engines.
The analysis presented here provides estimates of the change in
national emission totals that would result from the increased use of
renewable fuels to meet the statutory requirements of EISA. These
totals may not be a good indication of local or regional air quality
and health impacts. These results are aggregated across highly
localized sources, such as emissions from ethanol plants and
evaporative emissions from cars, and reflect offsets such as decreased
emissions from gasoline refineries. The location and composition of
emissions from these disparate sources may strongly influence the air
quality and health impacts of the increased use of renewable fuels, so
full-scale photochemical air quality modeling was also performed to
accurately assess this. These localized impacts are discussed in
Section VI.D.
Our projected emission impacts for the primary renewable fuel
scenario relative to the two reference cases are shown in Table VI.A-2
for 2022. This shows the expected emission changes for the U.S. in that
year, and the percent contribution of this impact relative to the total
U.S. inventory. Overall we project that increases in the use of
renewable fuels will result in significant increases in ethanol and
acetaldehyde emissions--increasing the total U.S. inventories of these
pollutants by 16-18 percent in 2022 relative to the RFS1 mandate case.
We project more modest increases in NOX, HC, PM,
formaldehyde, 1,3-butadiene, acrolein, and ammonia (NH3) relative to
the RFS1 mandate case. We project a 5 percent
[[Page 14801]]
decrease in CO (due to impacts of ethanol on exhaust emissions from
vehicles and nonroad equipment), and a 2.4 percent decrease in benzene
(due to displacement of gasoline with ethanol in the fuel pool).
Impacts on SO2 and naphthalene are much smaller. Relative to
the AEO reference case the results are similar directionally, but
smaller in magnitude due to the less drastic differences in fuel
volumes.
Table VI.A-2--Total Combined Upstream and Downstream Emission Impacts in 2022 for Primary Scenario Relative to
Each Reference Case
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
RFS1 Mandate AEO
---------------------------------------------------------------
Pollutant Annual short % of total Annual short % of Total
tons U.S. inventory tons U.S. inventory
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NOX............................................. 247,604 1.95 184,820 1.45
HC.............................................. 100,762 0.87 24,523 0.21
PM10............................................ 69,013 1.92 63,323 1.76
PM2.5........................................... 15,549 0.46 14,393 0.42
CO.............................................. -2,869,842 -5.30 -376,419 -0.69
Benzene......................................... -4,264 -2.41 -1,004 -0.57
Ethanol......................................... 100,123 18.20 54,137 9.84
1,3-Butadiene................................... 224 1.70 59 0.45
Acetaldehyde.................................... 5,848 15.80 3,108 8.40
Formaldehyde.................................... 355 0.48 130 0.17
Naphthalene..................................... -1 -0.01 -4 -0.03
Acrolein........................................ 22 0.38 21 0.35
SO2............................................. 3,286 0.04 5,065 0.06
NH3............................................. 48,711 1.15 48,711 1.15
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The breakdown of these results by the fuel production/distribution
(``well-to-pump'' emissions) and vehicle and equipment (``pump-to-
wheel'') emissions is discussed in the following sections.
B. Fuel Production & Distribution Impacts of the Proposed Program
Fuel production and distribution emission impacts of the increased
use of renewable fuels were estimated in conjunction with the
development of life cycle GHG emission impacts and the GHG emission
inventories discussed in Section V. These emissions are calculated
according to the breakdowns of agriculture, feedstock transport, fuel
production, and fuel distribution; the basic calculation is a function
of fuel volumes in the analysis year and the emission factors
associated with each process or subprocess. Additionally, the emission
impact of displaced petroleum is estimated, using the same domestic/
import shares discussed in Section V above.
In general the basis for this life cycle evaluation was the
analysis conducted as part of the Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS1)
rulemaking, but enhanced significantly. While our approach for the RFS1
was to rely heavily on the ``Greenhouse Gases, Regulated Emissions, and
Energy Use in Transportation'' (GREET) model, developed by the
Department of Energy's Argonne National Laboratory (ANL), we are now
able to take advantage of additional information and models to
significantly strengthen and expand our analysis for this rule. In
particular, the modeling of the agriculture sector was greatly expanded
beyond the RFS1 analysis, employing economic and agriculture models to
consider factors such as land-use impact, agricultural burning,
fertilizer, pesticide use, livestock, crop allocation, and crop
exports.
Other updates and enhancements to the GREET model assumptions
include updated feedstock energy requirements and estimates of excess
electricity available for sale from new cellulosic ethanol plants,
based on modeling by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL).
Per-gallon emission factors for new corn ethanol plants were updated
based on EPA analysis of energy efficiency technologies currently
available (such as combined heat and power) and their expected market
penetrations. There are no new standards planned at this time that
would offer any additional control of emissions from corn or cellulosic
ethanol plants. EPA also updated the fuel and feedstock transport
emission factors to account for recent EPA emission standards and
modeling, such as the locomotive and commercial marine standards
finalized in 2008, and revised heavy-duty truck emission rates
contained in EPA's draft MOVES2009 model. EPA also modified the ethanol
transport distances based on a detailed analysis of costs versus
transport mode conducted by Oak Ridge National Laboratory. In addition,
GREET does not include air toxics or ethanol. Thus emission factors for
ethanol and the following air toxics were added: benzene, 1,3-
butadiene, formaldehyde, acetaldehyde, acrolein and naphthalene.
Results of these calculations relative to each reference case in
2022 are shown in Table VI.B-1 for the criteria pollutants, ammonia,
ethanol and individual air toxic pollutants. Due to the complex
interactions involved in projections in the agricultural modeling, we
did not attempt to adjust the agricultural inputs of the AEO reference
case for the RFS1 mandate reference case. So the fertilizer and
pesticide quantities, livestock counts, and total agricultural acres
were the same for both reference cases. The agricultural modeling that
had been done for the RFS1 rule itself was much simpler and
inconsistent with the new modeling, so it would be inappropriate to use
those estimates.
The fuel production and distribution impacts of the increased use
of renewable fuels on VOC are mainly due to increases in emissions
connected with biofuel production, countered by decreases in emissions
associated with gasoline production and distribution as ethanol
displaces some of the gasoline. Increases in PM2.5,
SOX and especially NOX are driven by stationary
combustion emissions from the substantial increase in corn and
cellulosic ethanol production. Biofuel plants (corn and cellulosic)
tend to have greater combustion emissions relative to petroleum
refineries on a per-BTU of fuel produced basis. Increases in
SOX emissions are also due to increases in agricultural
chemical production and transport, while substantial PM
[[Page 14802]]
increases are also associated with fugitive dust from agricultural
operations. Ammonia emissions are expected to increase substantially
due to increased ammonia from fertilizer use.
Ethanol vapor and most air toxic emissions associated with fuel
production and distribution are projected to increase. Relative to the
US total reference case emissions with RFS1 mandate ethanol volumes,
increases of 4-13 percent for acetaldehyde and ethanol vapor are
especially significant because they are driven directly by the
increased ethanol production and distribution. Formaldehyde and
acrolein increases are smaller, on the order of 0.4-1 percent. There
are also very small decreases in benzene, 1,3-butadiene and naphthalene
relative to the US total emissions.
Table VI.B-1--``Upstream'' Fuel Production and Distribution Impacts of the Primary Scenario in 2022 Relative to
Each Reference Case
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
RFS1 mandate AEO
---------------------------------------------------------------
Pollutant Annual short % of Total Annual short % of Total
tons U.S. inventory tons U.S. inventory
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NOX............................................. 169,665 1.34 164,170 1.29
HC.............................................. 77,014 0.67 19,737 0.17
PM10............................................ 69,583 1.94 63,892 1.78
PM2.5........................................... 15,864 0.47 14,707 0.43
CO.............................................. 135,658 0.25 130,172 0.24
Benzene......................................... -231 -0.13 -236 -0.13
Ethanol......................................... 69,445 12.63 35,865 6.52
1,3-Butadiene................................... -1 -0.01 0 0.00
Acetaldehyde.................................... 1,617 4.37 933 2.52
Formaldehyde.................................... 293 0.39 187 0.25
Naphthalene..................................... -8 -0.06 -6 -0.04
Acrolein........................................ 67 1.13 37 0.63
SO2............................................. 3,266 0.04 5,044 0.06
NH3............................................. 48,711 1.15 48,711 1.15
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. Vehicle and Equipment Emission Impacts of Fuel Program
The effects of the increased use of renewable fuels on vehicle and
equipment emissions are a direct function of the effects of these fuels
on exhaust and evaporative emissions from vehicles and off-road
equipment, and evaporation of fuel from portable containers. To assess
these impacts we conducted separate analyses to quantify the emission
impacts of additional E10 due to the increased use of renewable fuels
on gasoline vehicles, nonroad spark-ignited engines and portable fuel
containers; E85 on cars and light trucks; biodiesel on diesel vehicles;
and increased refueling events due to lower energy density of
biofuels.\190\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\190\ The impact of renewable diesel was not estimated for this
analysis; we expect little overall impact on criteria and toxic
emissions due to the relatively small volume change, and because
emission effects relative to conventional diesel are presumed to be
negligible.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the proposal we provided two different analyses based on two
different assumptions regarding the effects of E10 and E85 on exhaust
emissions from cars and trucks. Those were referred to as ``less
sensitive'' and ``more sensitive'' cases. Based on analysis of recent
studies, today's analysis is based on a hybrid of these two scenarios.
As detailed in the RIA, EPA and other parties have been gathering
additional data on the emission impacts of ethanol fuels on later model
vehicles. Data available in time for this analysis supports the
hypothesis of the ``less sensitive'' case that newer technology Tier 2
vehicles are generally able to control for changes to emissions
associated with low level ethanol blends; for this analysis we
therefore are not attributing any NOX or VOC impact to the
use of E10 on these vehicles. The data does show sensitivity for older
technology (pre-Tier 2) vehicles, so this analysis does attribute an
increase in NOX and decrease in NMHC to the use of E10 in
these vehicles. This analysis does not include any emission impacts
with use of E85 in flex-fueled vehicles, except for increases in
ethanol and acetaldehyde, as the limited data currently available is
insufficient to quantify the impact with any degree of certainty.
Overall the sensitivity of exhaust emissions to ethanol assumed for the
final rule analysis is closer to the ``less sensitive'' case presented
in the proposal; and is generally less sensitive than the case used for
the air quality modeling, as discussed in Section VI.D.
We have also updated our estimates of E10 effects on permeation
emissions from light-duty vehicles based on testing recently completed
by the Coordinating Research Council (CRC), showing that the relative
increase in VOC emissions is higher for newer technology vehicles.
Nonroad spark ignition (SI) emission impacts of E10 were based on EPA's
NONROAD model and show trends similar to light duty vehicles. Biodiesel
effects for this analysis were unchanged from the proposal, and are
based on an analysis of recent biodiesel testing, detailed in the RIA,
showing a 2 percent increase in NOX with a 20 percent
biodiesel blend, a 16 percent decrease in PM, and a 14 percent decrease
in HC. These results essentially confirm the results of an earlier EPA
analysis. This analysis does not attribute any downstream emission
impact from the use of renewable diesel or cellulosic-based diesel
relative to conventional diesel due to their chemical similarity to
diesel fuel and limited test data.
Summarized vehicle and equipment emission impacts in 2022, updated
as noted above, are shown in Table VI.C-1 relative to each reference
case. The totals shown below reflect the net impacts from all mobile
sources, including car and truck evaporative emissions, off road
emissions, and portable fuel containers. Additional breakdowns by
mobile source category can be found in Chapter 3 of the RIA.
Carbon monoxide, PM, benzene, and acrolein are projected to
decrease in 2022 as a result of the increased use of renewable fuels,
while NOX, HC and the other air toxics, especially ethanol
and acetaldehyde, are projected to increase due to the impacts of E10.
[[Page 14803]]
Table VI.C-1--``Downstream'' Vehicle and Equipment Emission Impacts of the Primary Scenario in 2022 Relative to
Each Reference Case
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
RFS1 Mandate AEO
---------------------------------------------------------------
Pollutant Annual short % of Total Annual short % of Total
tons U.S. inventory tons U.S. inventory
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NOX............................................. 77,939 0.61 20,650 0.16
HC.............................................. 23,748 0.21 4,786 0.04
PM10............................................ -569 -0.02 -569 -0.02
PM2.5........................................... -315 -0.01 -315 -0.01
CO.............................................. -3,005,500 -5.55 -506,591 -0.94
Benzene......................................... -4,033 -2.28 -768 -0.43
Ethanol......................................... 30,678 5.58 18,272 3.32
1,3-Butadiene................................... 225 1.71 59 0.45
Acetaldehyde.................................... 4,231 11.43 2,175 5.88
Formaldehyde.................................... 62 0.08 -57 -0.08
Naphthalene..................................... 7 0.05 2 0.01
Acrolein........................................ -44 -0.75 -16 -0.28
SO2............................................. 21 0.00 21 0.00
NH3............................................. 0 0.00 0 0.00
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
D. Air Quality Impacts
Air quality modeling was performed to assess the projected impact
of the renewable fuel volumes required by RFS2 on emissions of criteria
and air toxic pollutants. Our air quality modeling reflects the impact
of increased renewable fuel use required by RFS2 compared with two
different reference cases that include the use of renewable fuels: A
2022 reference case projection based on the RFS1-mandated volume of 7.1
billion gallons of renewable fuels, and a 2022 reference case
projection based on the AEO 2007 volume of roughly 13.6 billion gallons
of renewable fuels. Thus, the results represent the impact of an
incremental increase in ethanol and other renewable fuels. We note that
the air quality modeling results presented in this final rule do not
constitute the ``anti-backsliding'' analysis required by Clean Air Act
section 211(v). EPA will be analyzing air quality impacts of increased
renewable fuel use through that study and will promulgate appropriate
mitigation measures under section 211(v), separate from this final
action.
It is critical to note that a key limitation of the analysis is
that it employed interim emission inventories, which were somewhat
enhanced compared to what was described in the proposal, but due to the
timing of the analysis did not include some of the later enhancements
and corrections of the final emission inventories presented in this FRM
(see Section VI.A through VI.C of this preamble). Most significantly,
our modeling of the air quality impacts of the renewable fuel volumes
required by RFS2 relied upon interim inventories that assumed that
ethanol will make up 34 of the 36 billion gallon renewable fuel
mandate, that approximately 20 billion gallons of this ethanol will be
in the form of E85, and that the use of E85 results in fewer emissions
of direct PM2.5 from vehicles. The emission impacts and air
quality results would be different if, instead of E85, more non-ethanol
biofuels are used or mid-level ethanol blends are approved.
In fact, as explained in Section IV, our more recent analyses
indicate that ethanol and E85 volumes are likely to be significantly
lower than what we assumed in the interim inventories. Furthermore, the
final emission inventories do not include vehicle-related PM reductions
associated with E85 use, as discussed in Section VI.A and VI.C of this
preamble. There are additional, important limitations and uncertainties
associated with the interim inventories that must be kept in mind when
considering the results:
Error in PM2.5 emissions from locomotive engines
After the air quality modeling was completed, we discovered an
error in the way that PM2.5 emissions from locomotive
engines were allocated to counties in the inventory. Although there was
very little impact on national-level PM2.5 emissions,
PM2.5 emission changes were too high in some counties and
too low in others, by varying degrees. As a result, we do not present
the modeling results for specific localized PM2.5 impacts.
However, we have concluded that PM2.5 modeling results are
still informative for national-level benefits assessment, as discussed
at more length in Section VIII.D of this preamble and the RIA.
Sensitivity of light-duty vehicle exhaust emissions to
ethanol blends
As discussed above in Sections VI.A and VI.C of this preamble, the
interim emission inventories used for the air quality modeling analysis
are the ``more sensitive'' case described in the proposal. As a result,
the interim inventories used for air quality modeling assume that
vehicles operating on E10 have higher NOX emissions and
lower VOC, CO and PM exhaust emissions compared to the FRM inventories.
Cellulosic plant emissions
The interim emission inventories used in air quality modeling
generally assumed higher emissions from cellulosic plants than the FRM
inventories, which used revised estimates based on updates to the
fraction of biomass burned at these plants. However, as noted in
Section VI.A, the shift of some cellulosic volume from ethanol to
diesel results in higher PM emissions from cellulosic plants in the
final rule inventories than used in the air quality modeling
inventories.
Ethanol volume
As mentioned above, the interim emission inventories used in our
air quality modeling reflect the use of ethanol in about 34 of the
mandated 36 billion gallons and do not include any cellulosic diesel.
As shown in Table VI.A-1, the FRM inventories assume 22 billion gallons
of ethanol in the primary case and 6.5 billion gallons of cellulosic
diesel. The inventories used for air quality modeling assume ethanol
volumes are more consistent with the FRM's high-ethanol case inventory,
which reflects the use of 33 billion gallons of ethanol and no
cellulosic diesel.
Renewable fuel transport emissions
[[Page 14804]]
As discussed in Section 3.3, the estimates of renewable fuel
transport volumes and distances differ between the air quality modeling
and final rule inventories.
In this section, we present information on current modeled levels
of pollution as well as projections for 2022, with respect to ambient
PM2.5, ozone, selected air toxics, and nitrogen and sulfur
deposition. The air quality modeling results indicate that ambient
PM2.5 is likely to increase in areas associated with biofuel
production and transport and decrease in other areas. The results of
the air quality modeling also indicate that many areas of the country
will experience increases in ambient ozone and a few areas will see
decreases in ambient ozone as a result of the renewable fuel volumes
required by RFS2. The modeling also shows that ethanol concentrations
increase substantially with increases in renewable fuel volumes. For
the other modeled air toxics, there are some localized impacts, but
relatively little impact on national average concentrations. Our air
quality modeling does not show substantial overall nationwide impacts
on the annual total sulfur and nitrogen deposition occurring across the
U.S. However, the air quality modeling results indicate that the entire
Eastern half of the U.S. along with the Pacific Northwest would see
increases in nitrogen deposition as a result of increased renewable
fuel use. The results of the modeling also show that sulfur deposition
will increase in the Midwest and in some rural areas of the west
associated with biofuel production. The results are discussed in more
detail below and in Section 3.4 of the RIA.
We used the Community Multi-scale Air Quality (CMAQ) photochemical
model, version 4.7, for our analysis. This version of CMAQ includes a
number of improvements to previous versions of the model that are
important in assessing impacts of the increased use of renewable fuels,
including additional pathways for formation of soluble organic aerosols
(SOA). These improvements are discussed in Section 3.4 of the RIA.
In addition to the limitations of the analysis that result from the
use of interim emission inventories rather than the FRM inventories,
there are uncertainties in the air quality analysis that should be
noted. First, there are uncertainties inherent in the modeling process.
Pollutants such as ozone, PM, acetaldehyde, formaldehyde, acrolein, and
1,3-butadiene can be formed secondarily through atmospheric chemical
processes. These processes can be very complex, and there are
uncertainties in emissions of precursor compounds and reaction
pathways. In addition, simplifications of chemistry must be made in
order to handle reactions of thousands of chemicals in the atmosphere.
Another source of uncertainty involves the hydrocarbon speciation
profiles, which are applied to the VOC inventories to break VOC down
into individual constituent compounds which react in the atmosphere.
Given the complexity of the atmospheric chemistry, the hydrocarbon
speciation has an important influence on the air quality modeling
results. Speciation profiles for a number of key sources are based on
data with significant limitations. Finally, there are uncertainties in
the surrogates used to allocate emissions spatially and temporally;
this is particularly significant in projecting the location of new
ethanol plants, especially future cellulosic biofuel plants. These
plants can have large impacts on local emissions. A more detailed
discussion of these and additional uncertainties and limitations
associated with our air quality modeling is presented in Section 3.4 of
the RIA.
1. Particulate Matter
a. Current Levels
PM2.5 concentrations exceeding the level of the
PM2.5 NAAQS occur in many parts of the country. In 2005, EPA
designated 39 nonattainment areas for the 1997 PM2.5 NAAQS
(70 FR 943, January 5, 2005). These areas are composed of 208 full or
partial counties with a total population exceeding 88 million. The 1997
PM2.5 NAAQS was recently revised and the 2006 24-hour
PM2.5 NAAQS became effective on December 18, 2006. On
October 8, 2009, the EPA issued final nonattainment area designations
for the 2006 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS (74 FR 58688, November 13,
2009). These designations include 31 areas composed of 120 full or
partial counties with a population of over 70 million. In total, there
are 54 PM2.5 nonattainment areas composed of 245 counties
with a population of 101 million people.
b. Projected Levels Without RFS2 Volumes
States with PM2.5 nonattainment areas are required to
take action to bring those areas into compliance in the future. Areas
designated as not attaining the 1997 PM2.5 NAAQS will need
to attain the 1997 standards in the 2010 to 2015 time frame, and then
maintain them thereafter. The 2006 24-hour PM2.5
nonattainment areas will be required to attain the 2006 24-hour
PM2.5 NAAQS in the 2014 to 2019 time frame and then be
required to maintain the 2006 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS
thereafter.
EPA has already adopted many emission control programs that are
expected to reduce ambient PM2.5 levels and which will
assist in reducing the number of areas that fail to achieve the
PM2.5 NAAQS. Even so, recent air quality modeling for the
``Control of Emissions from New Marine Compression-Ignition Engines at
or Above 30 Liters per Cylinder'' rule projects that in 2020, at least
10 counties with a population of almost 25 million may not attain the
1997 annual PM2.5 standard of 15 [micro]g/m\3\ and 47
counties with a population of over 53 million may not attain the 2006
24-hour PM2.5 standard of 35 [micro]g/m\3\.\191\ These
numbers do not account for those areas that are close to (e.g., within
10 percent of) the PM2.5 standards. These areas, although
not violating the standards, will also benefit from any reductions in
PM2.5 ensuring long-term maintenance of the PM2.5
NAAQS.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\191\ US EPA (2009). Final Rule ``Control of Emissions from New
Marine Compression-Ignition Engines at or Above 30 Liters per
Cylinder''. (This rule was signed on December 18, 2009 but has not
yet been published in the Federal Register. The signed version of
the rule is available at http://epa.gov/otaq/oceanvessels.htm).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
c. Projected Levels With RFS2 Volumes
We are not able to present air quality modeling results which
detail changes in PM2.5 design values for specific local
areas due to the error in the locomotive inventory mentioned in the
introduction to this section. However, we do know that ambient
PM2.5 increases in some areas of the country and decreases
in other areas of the country. Ambient PM2.5 is likely to
increase as a result of emissions at biofuel production plants and from
biofuel transport, both of which are more prevalent in the Midwest. PM
concentrations are likely to decrease in some areas due to reductions
in SOA formation and reduced emissions from gasoline refineries. In
addition, decreases in ambient PM are predicted because our modeling
inventory assumed that E85 usage reduces PM tailpipe emissions. The
decreases in ambient PM from reductions in SOA and tailpipe emissions
are likely to occur where there is a higher density of vehicles, such
as the Northeast. See Section VIII.D for a discussion of the changes in
national average population-weighted PM2.5 concentrations.
[[Page 14805]]
2. Ozone
a. Current Levels
8-hour ozone concentrations exceeding the level of the ozone NAAQS
occur in many parts of the country. In 2008, the U.S. EPA amended the
ozone NAAQS (73 FR 16436, March 27, 2008). The final 2008 ozone NAAQS
rule set forth revisions to the previous 1997 NAAQS for ozone to
provide increased protection of public health and welfare. As of
January 6, 2010 there are 51 areas designated as nonattainment for the
1997 8-hour ozone NAAQS, comprising 266 full or partial counties with a
total population of over 122 million people. These numbers do not
include the people living in areas where there is a future risk of
failing to maintain or attain the 1997 8-hour ozone NAAQS. The numbers
above likely underestimate the number of counties that are not meeting
the ozone NAAQS because the nonattainment areas associated with the
more stringent 2008 8-hour ozone NAAQS have not yet been
designated.\192\ Table VI.D-1 provides an estimate, based on 2005-07
air quality data, of the counties with design values greater than the
2008 8-hour ozone NAAQS of 0.075 ppm.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\192\ EPA recently proposed to reconsider the 2008 NAAQS.
Because of the uncertainty the reconsideration proposal creates
regarding the continued applicability of the 2008 ozone NAAQS, EPA
has used its authority to extend by 1 year the deadline for
promulgating designations for those NAAQS. The new deadline is March
2011. EPA intends to complete the reconsideration by August 31,
2010.
Table VI.D-1--Counties With Design Values Greater Than the 2008 Ozone
NAAQS Based on 2005-2007 Air Quality Data
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of
counties Population a
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1997 Ozone Standard: Counties within the 266 122,343, 799
51 areas currently designated as
nonattainment (as of 1/6/10)...........
2008 Ozone Standard: Additional counties 227 41,285,262
that would not meet the 2008 NAAQS b...
-------------------------------
Total............................... 493 163,629,061
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Notes:
a Population numbers are from 2000 census data.
b Area designations for the 2008 ozone NAAQS have not yet been made.
Nonattainment for the 2008 Ozone NAAQS would be based on three years
of air quality data from later years. Also, the county numbers in this
row include only the counties with monitors violating the 2008 Ozone
NAAQS. The numbers in this table may be an underestimate of the number
of counties and populations that will eventually be included in areas
with multiple counties designated nonattainment.
b. Projected Levels Without RFS2 Volumes
States with 8-hour ozone nonattainment areas are required to take
action to bring those areas into compliance in the future. Based on the
final rule designating and classifying 8-hour ozone nonattainment areas
for the 1997 standard (69 FR 23951, April 30, 2004), most 8-hour ozone
nonattainment areas will be required to attain the ozone NAAQS in the
2007 to 2013 time frame and then maintain the NAAQS thereafter. EPA has
recently proposed to reconsider the 2008 ozone NAAQS. If EPA
promulgates different ozone NAAQS in 2010 as a result of the
reconsideration, they would fully replace the 2008 ozone NAAQS and
there would no longer be a requirement to designate areas for the 2008
NAAQS. EPA would designate nonattainment areas for a potential new 2010
primary ozone NAAQS based on the reconsideration of the 2008 ozone
NAAQS in 2011. The attainment dates for areas designated nonattainment
for a potential new 2010 primary ozone NAAQS are likely to be in the
2014 to 2031 timeframe, depending on the severity of the problem.
EPA has already adopted many emission control programs that are
expected to reduce ambient ozone levels and assist in reducing the
number of areas that fail to achieve the ozone NAAQS. Even so, our air
quality modeling projects that in 2022, with all current controls but
excluding the impacts of the renewable fuel volumes required by RFS2,
up to 7 counties with a population of over 22 million may not attain
the 2008 ozone standard of 0.075 ppm (75 ppb). These numbers do not
account for those areas that are close to (e.g., within 10 percent of)
the 2008 ozone standard. These areas, although not violating the
standards, will also benefit from any reductions in ozone ensuring
long-term maintenance of the ozone NAAQS.
c. Projected Levels With RFS2 Volumes
Our modeling indicates that the required renewable fuel volumes
will cause increases in ozone design value concentrations in many areas
of the country and decreases in ozone design value concentrations in a
few areas. Air quality modeling of the expected impacts of the
renewable fuel volumes required by RFS2 shows that in 2022, most
counties with modeled data, especially those in the southeast U.S.,
will see increases in their ozone design values. These adverse impacts
are likely due to increased upstream emissions of NOX in
many areas that are NOX-limited (acting as a precursor to
ozone formation). The majority of these design value increases are less
than 0.5 ppb. The maximum projected increase in an 8-hour ozone design
value is in Morgan County, Alabama, 1.56 ppb and 1.27 ppb when compared
with the RFS1 mandate and AEO 2007 reference cases respectively. As
mentioned above there are some areas which see decreases in their ozone
design values. This is likely due to VOC emission reductions at the
tailpipe in urban areas that are VOC-limited (reducing VOC's role as a
precursor to ozone formation). The maximum decrease projected in an 8-
hour ozone design value is in Riverside, CA, 0.66 ppb and 0.6 ppb when
compared with the RFS1 mandate and AEO 2007 reference cases
respectively. On a population-weighted basis, the average modeled
future-year 8-hour ozone design values are projected to increase by
0.28 ppb in 2022 when compared with the RFS1 mandate reference case and
increase by 0.16 ppb when compared with the AEO 2007 reference case. On
a population-weighted basis the design values for those counties that
are projected to be above the 2008 ozone standard in 2022 will see
decreases of 0.14 ppb when compared with the RFS1 mandate reference
case and 0.15 ppb when compared with the AEO 2007 reference case.
[[Page 14806]]
3. Air Toxics
a. Current Levels
The majority of Americans continue to be exposed to ambient
concentrations of air toxics at levels which have the potential to
cause adverse health effects.\193\ The levels of air toxics to which
people are exposed vary depending on where people live and work and the
kinds of activities in which they engage, as discussed in detail in
U.S. EPA's recent Mobile Source Air Toxics Rule.\194\ According to the
National Air Toxic Assessment (NATA) for 2002,\195\ mobile sources were
responsible for 47 percent of outdoor toxic emissions, over 50 percent
of the cancer risk, and over 80 percent of the noncancer hazard.
Benzene is the largest contributor to cancer risk of all 124 pollutants
quantitatively assessed in the 2002 NATA and mobile sources were
responsible for 59 percent of benzene emissions in 2002. Over the
years, EPA has implemented a number of mobile source and fuel controls
resulting in VOC reductions, which also reduce benzene and other air
toxic emissions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\193\ U. S. EPA. (2009) 2002 National-Scale Air Toxics
Assessment. http://www.epa.gov/ttn/atw/nata2002/.
\194\ U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (2007). Control of
Hazardous Air Pollutants from Mobile Sources; Final Rule. 72 FR
8434, February 26, 2007.
\195\ U.S. EPA. (2009) 2002 National-Scale Air Toxics
Assessment. http://www.epa.gov/ttn/atw/nata2002/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
b. Projected Levels
Our modeling indicates that, while there are some localized
impacts, the renewable fuel volumes required by RFS2 have relatively
little impact on national average ambient concentrations of the modeled
air toxics. An exception is increased ambient concentrations of
ethanol. For more information on the air toxics modeling results, see
Section 3.4 of the RIA for annual average results and Appendix 3A of
the RIA for seasonal average results. Our discussion of the air quality
modeling results focuses primarily on impacts of the renewable fuel
volumes required by RFS2 in reference to the RFS1 mandate for 2022.
Except where specifically discussed below, air quality modeling results
of increased renewable fuel use with RFS2 as compared to the AEO 2007
reference case are presented in Appendix 3A of this RIA.
i. Acetaldehyde
Our air quality modeling does not show substantial overall
nationwide impacts on ambient concentrations of acetaldehyde as a
result of the renewable fuel volumes required by this rule, although
there is considerable uncertainty associated with the results. Annual
percent changes in ambient concentrations of acetaldehyde are less than
1% for most of the country, and annual absolute changes in ambient
concentrations of acetaldehyde are generally less than 0.1 [mu]g/
m3. Some urban areas show decreases in ambient acetaldehyde
concentrations ranging from 1 to 10%, and some rural areas associated
with new ethanol plants show increases in ambient acetaldehyde
concentrations ranging from 1 to 10% with RFS2 volumes. This increase
is due to an increase in emissions of primary acetaldehyde and
precursor emissions from ethanol plants. A key reason for the decrease
in urban areas is reductions in certain acetaldehyde precursors,
primarily alkenes (olefins). Most ambient acetaldehyde is formed from
secondary photochemical reactions of numerous precursor compounds, and
many photochemical mechanisms are responsible for this process.
The uncertainty associated with these results is described in more
detail in Section 3.4 of the RIA. For example, some of the modeled
decreases would likely become increases using data recently collected
by EPA's Office of Research and Development on the composition of
hydrocarbon emissions from gasoline storage, gasoline distribution, and
gas cans. Furthermore, as noted in the introduction to Section VI.D,
the inventories used for air quality modeling may overestimate
NOX, because they assumed that use of E10 would lead to
increases in NOX emissions for later model year vehicles.
The emission inventories for the final rule no longer make this
assumption, based on recent EPA testing results.\196\ Because increases
in NOX may result in more acetyl peroxy radical forming PAN
rather than acetaldehyde, our air quality modeling results may
underestimate the ambient concentrations of acetaldehyde.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\196\ ``Summary of recent findings for fuel effects of a 10%
ethanol blend on light duty exhaust emissions'', Memo from Aron
Butler to Docket EPA-HQ-OAR-2005-0161.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Some previous U.S. monitoring studies have suggested an
insignificant or small impact of increased use of ethanol in fuel on
ambient acetaldehyde, as discussed in more detail in Section 3.4 of the
RIA. These studies suggest that increases in direct emissions of
acetaldehyde are offset by decreases in the secondary formation of
acetaldehyde. Other past studies have shown increases in ambient
acetaldehyde with increased use of ethanol in fuel, although factors
such as differences in vehicle fleet, lack of RVP control, and
exclusion of upstream impacts may limit the ability of these studies to
inform expected impacts on ambient air quality Given the conflicting
results among past studies and the limitations of our analysis,
considerable additional work is needed to address the impacts of the
renewable fuel volumes required by this rule on ambient concentrations
of acetaldehyde.
ii. Formaldehyde
Our air quality modeling results do not show substantial impacts on
ambient concentrations of formaldehyde from the renewable fuel volumes
required by this rule. Most of the U.S. experiences a 1% or less change
in ambient formaldehyde concentrations. Decreases in ambient
formaldehyde concentrations range between 1 and 5% in a few urban
areas. Increases range between 1 and 2.5% in some rural areas
associated with new ethanol plants; this result is due to increases in
emissions of primary formaldehyde and formaldehyde precursors from the
new ethanol plants. Absolute changes in ambient concentrations of
formaldehyde are generally less than 0.1 [mu]g/m3.
iii. Ethanol
Our modeling projects that the renewable fuel volumes required by
this rule will lead to significant nationwide increases in ambient
ethanol concentrations. Increases ranging between 10 to 50% are seen
across most of the country. The largest increases (more than 100%)
occur in urban areas with high amounts of on-road emissions and in
rural areas associated with new ethanol plants. Absolute increases in
ambient ethanol concentrations are above 1.0 ppb in some urban areas.
Analysis of a modeling error that impacted ethanol emissions suggests
that this error resulted in overestimates of ethanol impacts by more
than 10% across much of the country. For a detailed discussion of this
error, please refer to the emissions modeling TSD, found in the docket
for this rule (EPA-HQ-OAR-2005-0161).
iv. Benzene
Our modeling projects that the renewable fuel volumes required by
this rule will lead to small nationwide decreases in ambient benzene
concentrations. Decreases in ambient benzene concentrations range
between 1 and 10% across most of the country and can be higher in a few
urban areas. Absolute changes in ambient concentrations of benzene show
reductions up to 0.2 [mu]g/m3.
[[Page 14807]]
v. 1,3-Butadiene
The results of our air quality modeling show small increases and
decreases in ambient concentrations of 1,3-butadiene in parts of the
U.S. as a result of increases in renewable fuel volumes required by
RFS2. Generally, decreases occur in some southern areas of the country
and increases occur in some northern areas and areas with high
altitudes. Percent changes in 1,3-butadiene concentrations are over 50%
in several areas; but the changes in absolute concentrations of ambient
1,3-butadiene are generally less than 0.005 [mu]g/m \3\. Annual
increases in ambient concentrations of 1,3-butadiene are driven by
wintertime changes. These increases appear in rural areas with cold
winters and low ambient levels but high contributions of emissions from
snowmobiles, and a major reason for this modeled increase may be
deficiencies in available emissions test data used to estimate
snowmobile 1,3-butadiene emission inventories.
vi. Acrolein
Our air quality modeling shows small regional increases and
decreases in ambient concentrations of acrolein as a result of
increases in renewable fuel volumes required by this rule. Decreases in
acrolein concentrations occur in some eastern and southern parts of the
U.S. and increases occur in some northern areas and areas associated
with new ethanol plants. Changes in absolute ambient concentrations of
acrolein are between 0.001 [micro]g/m[sup3] with the
exception of the increases associated with new ethanol plants. These
increases can be up to and above 0.005 [micro]g/m[sup3] with percent
changes above 50% and are due to increases in emissions of acrolein
from the new plants. Ambient acrolein increases in northern regions are
driven by wintertime changes, and occur in the same areas of the
country that have wintertime increases in ambient 1,3-butadiene. 1,3-
butadiene is a precursor to acrolein, and these increases are likely
associated with the same emission inventory issues in areas of high
snowmobile usage seen for 1,3-butadiene, as described above.
vii. Population Metrics
To assess the impact of projected changes in ambient air toxics as
a result of increases in renewable fuel volumes required by this rule,
we developed population metrics that show the population experiencing
increases and decreases in annual ambient concentrations of the modeled
air toxics. Table VI.D-2 below illustrates the percentage of the
population impacted by changes of various magnitudes in annual ambient
concentrations with the renewable fuel volumes required by RFS2, as
compared to the RFS1 mandate reference case.
Table VI.D-2--Percent of Total Population Impacted by Changes in Annual Ambient Concentrations of Toxic Pollutants: RFS2 Compare to RFS1 Mandate
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Percent change in annual ambient Acetaldehyde Acrolein Benzene 1,3-Butadiene Ethanol Formaldehyde
concentration (percent) (percent) (percent) (percent) (percent) (percent)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<=-100...................................... ................ ................ ................ ................ ................ ................
>-100 to <=-50.............................. ................ ................ ................ ................ ................ ................
>-50 to <=-10............................... 0.76 ................ 1.18 1.38 ................ ................
>-10 to <=-5................................ 8.17 0.18 12.92 28.11 ................ ................
>-5 to <=-2.5............................... 13.29 13.66 48.76 31.98 ................ 4.11
>-2.5 to <=-1............................... 25.26 40.13 23.60 12.87 ................ 19.30
>-1 to <1................................... 52.24 36.03 13.55 19.37 ................ 76.08
>=1 to <2.5................................. 0.24 3.44 ................ 1.53 ................ 0.48
>=2.5 to <5................................. 0.04 2.93 ................ 1.13 0.22 0.01
>=5 to <10.................................. 0.02 2.00 ................ 1.13 1.23 ................
>=10 to <50................................. ................ 1.51 ................ 2.15 63.29 ................
>=50 to <100................................ ................ 0.08 ................ 0.28 34.49 ................
>=100....................................... ................ 0.05 ................ 0.06 0.77 ................
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table VI.D-3 shows changes in the population-weighted average
ambient concentrations of air toxics that are projected to occur in
2022 with increased renewable fuel use as required by this rule.
Table VI.D-3--Population-Weighted Average Ambient Concentrations of Air Toxics in 2022 With RFS2 Renewable Fuel
Requirements
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Population-weighted concentration Population-weighted concentration
(Annual average in [mu]g/m \3\) (Annual average in [mu]g/m \3\)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
RFS2 v. RFS1 mandate reference case RFS2 v. AEO 2007 reference case
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
RFS1 Diff. RFS2- Diff. RFS2-
RFS2 mandate RFS1 RFS2 AEO 2007 AEO
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Acetaldehyde...................... 1.590 1.618 -0.028 1.590 1.613 -0.023
Acrolein.......................... 0.017 0.018 -0.001 0.017 0.017 -0.0001
Benzene........................... 0.520 0.535 -0.015 0.520 0.527 -0.007
1,3-Butadiene..................... 0.022 0.023 -0.001 0.022 0.230 -0.208
Ethanol........................... 1.521 1.039 0.482 1.521 1.112 0.409
Formaldehyde...................... 1.549 1.558 -0.009 1.549 0.004 -0.006
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 14808]]
4. Nitrogen and Sulfur Deposition
a. Current Levels
Over the past two decades, the EPA has undertaken numerous efforts
to reduce nitrogen and sulfur deposition across the U.S. Analyses of
long-term monitoring data for the U.S. show that deposition of both
nitrogen and sulfur compounds has decreased over the last 17 years
although many areas continue to be negatively impacted by deposition.
Deposition of inorganic nitrogen and sulfur species routinely measured
in the U.S. between 2004 and 2006 were as high as 9.6 kilograms of
nitrogen per hectare per year (kg N/ha/yr) and 21.3 kilograms of sulfur
per hectare per year (kg S/ha/yr). The data show that reductions were
more substantial for sulfur compounds than for nitrogen compounds.
These numbers are generated by the U.S. national monitoring network and
they likely underestimate nitrogen deposition because neither ammonia
nor organic nitrogen is measured. In the eastern U.S., where data are
most abundant, total sulfur deposition decreased by about 36% between
1990 and 2005, while total nitrogen deposition decreased by 19% over
the same time frame.\197\
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\197\ U.S. EPA. U.S. EPA's 2008 Report on the Environment (Final
Report). U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, DC, EPA/
600/R-07/045F (NTIS PB2008-112484).
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b. Projected Levels
Our air quality modeling does not show substantial overall
nationwide impacts on the annual total sulfur and nitrogen deposition
occurring across the U.S. as a result of increased renewable fuel
volumes required by this rule. For sulfur deposition, when compared to
the RFS1 mandate reference case, the RFS2 renewable fuel volumes will
result in annual percent increases in the Midwest ranging from 1% to
more than 4%. Some rural areas in the west, likely associated with new
ethanol plants, will also have increases in sulfur deposition ranging
from 1% to more than 4% as a result of the RFS2 renewable fuel volumes.
When compared to the AEO 2007 reference case, the changes are more
limited. The Midwest will still have sulfur deposition increases
ranging from 1% to more than 4%, but the size of the area with these
changes will be smaller. The Pacific Northwest has minimal areas with
increases in sulfur deposition when compared to the AEO 2007 reference
case. When compared to both the RFS1 mandate and AEO 2007 reference
cases, areas along the Gulf Coast in Louisiana and Texas will
experience decreases in sulfur deposition of 2% to more than 4%. The
remainder of the country will see only minimal changes in sulfur
deposition, ranging from decreases of less than 1% to increases of less
than 1%. For a map of 2022 sulfur deposition impacts and additional
information on these impacts, see Section 3.4.2.2 of the RIA.
Overall, nitrogen deposition impacts in 2022 resulting from the
renewable fuel volumes required by RFS2 are more widespread than the
sulfur deposition impacts. When compared to the RFS1 mandate 2007
reference case, nearly the entire eastern half of the United States
will see nitrogen deposition increases ranging from 0.5% to more than
2%. The largest increases will occur in the states of Illinois,
Michigan, Indiana, Wisconsin, and Missouri, with large portions of each
of these states seeing nitrogen deposition increases of more than 2%.
The Pacific Northwest will also experience increases in nitrogen of
0.5% to more than 2%. When compared to the AEO 2007 reference case, the
changes in nitrogen deposition are more limited. The eastern half of
the United States will still see nitrogen deposition increases ranging
from 0.5% to more than 2%; however, the size of the area with these
changes will be smaller. Increases of more than 2% will primarily occur
only in Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, and Missouri. Fewer areas in the
Pacific Northwest will have increases in nitrogen deposition when
compared to the AEO 2007 reference case. In both the RFS1 mandate and
AEO 2007 reference cases, the Mountain West and Southwest will see only
minimal changes in nitrogen deposition, ranging from decreases of less
than 0.5% to increases of less than 0.5%. A few areas in Minnesota and
western Kansas would experience reductions of nitrogen up to 2%. See
Section 3.4.2.2 of the RIA for a map and additional information on
nitrogen deposition impacts.
E. Health Effects of Criteria and Air Toxics Pollutants
1. Particulate Matter
a. Background
Particulate matter is a generic term for a broad class of
chemically and physically diverse substances. It can be principally
characterized as discrete particles that exist in the condensed (liquid
or solid) phase spanning several orders of magnitude in size. Since
1987, EPA has delineated that subset of inhalable particles small
enough to penetrate to the thoracic region (including the
tracheobronchial and alveolar regions) of the respiratory tract
(referred to as thoracic particles). Current NAAQS use PM2.5
as the indicator for fine particles (with PM2.5 referring to
particles with a nominal mean aerodynamic diameter less than or equal
to 2.5 [mu]m), and use PM10 as the indicator for purposes of
regulating the coarse fraction of PM10 (referred to as
thoracic coarse particles or coarse-fraction particles; generally
including particles with a nominal mean aerodynamic diameter greater
than 2.5 [mu]m and less than or equal to 10 [mu]m, or
PM10-2.5). Ultrafine particles are a subset of fine
particles, generally less than 100 nanometers (0.1 [mu]m) in
aerodynamic diameter.
Fine particles are produced primarily by combustion processes and
by transformations of gaseous emissions (e.g., SOX,
NOX and VOC) in the atmosphere. The chemical and physical
properties of PM2.5 may vary greatly with time, region,
meteorology, and source category. Thus, PM2.5 may include a
complex mixture of different pollutants including sulfates, nitrates,
organic compounds, elemental carbon and metal compounds. These
particles can remain in the atmosphere for days to weeks and travel
hundreds to thousands of kilometers.
b. Health Effects of PM
Scientific studies show ambient PM is associated with a series of
adverse health effects. These health effects are discussed in detail in
EPA's 2004 Particulate Matter Air Quality Criteria Document (PM AQCD)
and the 2005 PM Staff Paper.198 199 200 Further discussion
of health effects associated with PM can also be found in the RIA for
this rule.
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\198\ U.S. EPA (2004). Air Quality Criteria for Particulate
Matter. Volume I EPA600/P-99/002aF and Volume II EPA600/P-99/002bF.
Retrieved on March 19, 2009 from Docket EPA-HQ-OAR-2003-0190 at
http://www.regulations.gov/.
\199\ U.S. EPA. (2005). Review of the National Ambient Air
Quality Standard for Particulate Matter: Policy Assessment of
Scientific and Technical Information, OAQPS Staff Paper. EPA-452/R-
05-005a. Retrieved March 19, 2009 from http://www.epa.gov/ttn/naaqs/standards/pm/data/pmstaffpaper_20051221.pdf.
\200\ The PM NAAQS is currently under review and the EPA is
considering all available science on PM health effects, including
information which has been published since 2004, in the development
of the upcoming PM Integrated Science Assessment Document (ISA). A
second draft of the PM ISA was completed in July 2009 and was
submitted for review by the Clean Air Scientific Advisory Committee
(CASAC) of EPA's Science Advisory Board. Comments from the general
public have also been requested. For more information, see http://cfpub.epa.gov/ncea/cfm/recordisplay.cfm?deid=210586.
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Health effects associated with short-term exposures (hours to days)
to ambient PM include premature mortality, aggravation of
cardiovascular and lung disease (as indicated by
[[Page 14809]]
increased hospital admissions and emergency department visits),
increased respiratory symptoms including cough and difficulty
breathing, decrements in lung function, altered heart rate rhythm, and
other more subtle changes in blood markers related to cardiovascular
health.\201\ Long-term exposure to PM2.5 and sulfates has
also been associated with mortality from cardiopulmonary disease and
lung cancer, and effects on the respiratory system such as reduced lung
function growth or development of respiratory disease. A new analysis
shows an association between long-term PM2.5 exposure and a
subclinical measure of atherosclerosis.202 203
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\201\ U.S. EPA. (2006). National Ambient Air Quality Standards
for Particulate Matte. 71 FR 61144, October 17, 2006.
\202\ K[uuml]nzli, N., Jerrett, M., Mack, W.J., et al. (2004).
Ambient air pollution and atherosclerosis in Los Angeles. Environ
Health Perspect.,113, 201-206.
\203\ This study is included in the 2006 Provisional Assessment
of Recent Studies on Health Effects of Particulate Matter Exposure.
The provisional assessment did not and could not (given a very short
timeframe) undergo the extensive critical review by CASAC and the
public, as did the PM AQCD. The provisional assessment found that
the ``new'' studies expand the scientific information and provide
important insights on the relationship between PM exposure and
health effects of PM. The provisional assessment also found that
``new'' studies generally strengthen the evidence that acute and
chronic exposure to fine particles and acute exposure to thoracic
coarse particles are associated with health effects. Further, the
provisional science assessment found that the results reported in
the studies did not dramatically diverge from previous findings, and
taken in context with the findings of the AQCD, the new information
and findings did not materially change any of the broad scientific
conclusions regarding the health effects of PM exposure made in the
AQCD. However, it is important to note that this assessment was
limited to screening, surveying, and preparing a provisional
assessment of these studies. For reasons outlined in Section I.C of
the preamble for the final PM NAAQS rulemaking in 2006 (see 71 FR
61148-49, October 17, 2006), EPA based its NAAQS decision on the
science presented in the 2004 AQCD.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Studies examining populations exposed over the long term (one or
more years) to different levels of air pollution, including the Harvard
Six Cities Study and the American Cancer Society Study, show
associations between long-term exposure to ambient PM2.5 and
both all cause and cardiopulmonary premature
mortality.204 205 206 In addition, an extension of the
American Cancer Society Study shows an association between
PM2.5 and sulfate concentrations and lung cancer
mortality.\207\
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\204\ Dockery, D.W., Pope, C.A. III, Xu, X, et al. (1993). An
association between air pollution and mortality in six U.S. cities.
N Engl J Med, 329, 1753-1759. Retrieved on March 19, 2009 from
http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/full/329/24/1753.
\205\ Pope, C.A., III, Thun, M.J., Namboodiri, M.M., Dockery,
D.W., Evans, J.S., Speizer, F.E., and Heath, C.W., Jr. (1995).
Particulate air pollution as a predictor of mortality in a
prospective study of U.S. adults. Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med,
151, 669-674.
\206\ Krewski, D., Burnett, R.T., Goldberg, M.S., et al. (2000).
Reanalysis of the Harvard Six Cities study and the American Cancer
Society study of particulate air pollution and mortality. A special
report of the Institute's Particle Epidemiology Reanalysis Project.
Cambridge, MA: Health Effects Institute. Retrieved on March 19, 2009
from http://es.epa.gov/ncer/science/pm/hei/Rean-ExecSumm.pdf.
\207\ Pope, C. A., III, Burnett, R.T., Thun, M. J., Calle, E.E.,
Krewski, D., Ito, K., Thurston, G.D., (2002). Lung cancer,
cardiopulmonary mortality, and long-term exposure to fine
particulate air pollution. J. Am. Med. Assoc., 287, 1132-1141.
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2. Ozone
a. Background
Ground-level ozone pollution is typically formed by the reaction of
VOC and NOX in the lower atmosphere in the presence of heat
and sunlight. These pollutants, often referred to as ozone precursors,
are emitted by many types of pollution sources, such as highway and
nonroad motor vehicles and engines, power plants, chemical plants,
refineries, makers of consumer and commercial products, industrial
facilities, and smaller area sources.
The science of ozone formation, transport, and accumulation is
complex.\208\ Ground-level ozone is produced and destroyed in a
cyclical set of chemical reactions, many of which are sensitive to
temperature and sunlight. When ambient temperatures and sunlight levels
remain high for several days and the air is relatively stagnant, ozone
and its precursors can build up and result in more ozone than typically
occurs on a single high-temperature day. Ozone can be transported
hundreds of miles downwind from precursor emissions, resulting in
elevated ozone levels even in areas with low local VOC or
NOX emissions.
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\208\ U.S. EPA. (2006). Air Quality Criteria for Ozone and
Related Photochemical Oxidants (Final). EPA/600/R-05/004aF-cF.
Washington, DC: U.S. EPA. Retrieved on March 19, 2009 from Docket
EPA-HQ-OAR-2003-0190 at http://www.regulations.gov/.
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b. Health Effects of Ozone
The health and welfare effects of ozone are well documented and are
assessed in EPA's 2006 Air Quality Criteria Document (ozone AQCD) and
2007 Staff Paper.209 210 Ozone can irritate the respiratory
system, causing coughing, throat irritation, and/or uncomfortable
sensation in the chest. Ozone can reduce lung function and make it more
difficult to breathe deeply; breathing may also become more rapid and
shallow than normal, thereby limiting a person's activity. Ozone can
also aggravate asthma, leading to more asthma attacks that require
medical attention and/or the use of additional medication. In addition,
there is suggestive evidence of a contribution of ozone to
cardiovascular-related morbidity and highly suggestive evidence that
short-term ozone exposure directly or indirectly contributes to non-
accidental and cardiopulmonary-related mortality, but additional
research is needed to clarify the underlying mechanisms causing these
effects. In a recent report on the estimation of ozone-related
premature mortality published by the National Research Council (NRC), a
panel of experts and reviewers concluded that short-term exposure to
ambient ozone is likely to contribute to premature deaths and that
ozone-related mortality should be included in estimates of the health
benefits of reducing ozone exposure.\211\ Animal toxicological evidence
indicates that with repeated exposure, ozone can inflame and damage the
lining of the lungs, which may lead to permanent changes in lung tissue
and irreversible reductions in lung function. People who are more
susceptible to effects associated with exposure to ozone can include
children, the elderly, and individuals with respiratory disease such as
asthma. Those with greater exposures to ozone, for instance due to time
spent outdoors (e.g., children and outdoor workers), are of particular
concern.
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\209\ U.S. EPA. (2006). Air Quality Criteria for Ozone and
Related Photochemical Oxidants (Final). EPA/600/R-05/004aF-cF.
Washington, DC: U.S. EPA. Retrieved on March 19, 2009 from Docket
EPA-HQ-OAR-2003-0190 at http://www.regulations.gov/.
\210\ U.S. EPA. (2007). Review of the National Ambient Air
Quality Standards for Ozone: Policy Assessment of Scientific and
Technical Information, OAQPS Staff Paper. EPA-452/R-07-003.
Washington, DC, U.S. EPA. Retrieved on March 19, 2009 from Docket
EPA-HQ-OAR-2003-0190 at http://www.regulations.gov/.
\211\ National Research Council (NRC), 2008. Estimating
Mortality Risk Reduction and Economic Benefits from Controlling
Ozone Air Pollution. The National Academies Press: Washington, DC.
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The 2006 ozone AQCD also examined relevant new scientific
information that has emerged in the past decade, including the impact
of ozone exposure on such health effects as changes in lung structure
and biochemistry, inflammation of the lungs, exacerbation and causation
of asthma, respiratory illness-related school absence, hospital
admissions and premature mortality. Animal toxicological studies have
suggested potential interactions between ozone and PM with increased
responses observed to mixtures of the two pollutants compared to either
ozone or PM alone. The respiratory morbidity observed in animal studies
along with
[[Page 14810]]
the evidence from epidemiologic studies supports a causal relationship
between acute ambient ozone exposures and increased respiratory-related
emergency room visits and hospitalizations in the warm season. In
addition, there is suggestive evidence of a contribution of ozone to
cardiovascular-related morbidity and non-accidental and cardiopulmonary
mortality.
3. NOX and SOX
a. Background
Nitrogen dioxide (NO2) is a member of the NOX
family of gases. Most NO2 is formed in the air through the
oxidation of nitric oxide (NO) emitted when fuel is burned at a high
temperature. SO2, a member of the sulfur oxide
(SOX) family of gases, is formed from burning fuels
containing sulfur (e.g., coal or oil derived), extracting gasoline from
oil, or extracting metals from ore.
SO2 and NO2 can dissolve in water
vapor and further oxidize to form sulfuric and nitric acid which react
with ammonia to form sulfates and nitrates, both of which are important
components of ambient PM. The health effects of ambient PM are
discussed in Section VI.D.1 of this preamble. NOX along with
non-methane hydrocarbon (NMHC) are the two major precursors of ozone.
The health effects of ozone are covered in Section VI.D.2.
b. Health Effects of NOX
Information on the health effects of NO2 can be found in
the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Integrated Science Assessment
(ISA) for Nitrogen Oxides.\212\ The U.S. EPA has concluded that the
findings of epidemiologic, controlled human exposure, and animal
toxicological studies provide evidence that is sufficient to infer a
likely causal relationship between respiratory effects and short-term
NO2 exposure. The ISA concludes that the strongest evidence
for such a relationship comes from epidemiologic studies of respiratory
effects including symptoms, emergency department visits, and hospital
admissions. The ISA also draws two broad conclusions regarding airway
responsiveness following NO2 exposure. First, the ISA
concludes that NO2 exposure may enhance the sensitivity to
allergen-induced decrements in lung function and increase the allergen-
induced airway inflammatory response following 30-minute exposures of
asthmatics to NO2 concentrations as low as 0.26 ppm. In
addition, small but significant increases in non-specific airway
hyperresponsiveness were reported following 1-hour exposures of
asthmatics to 0.1 ppm NO2. Second, exposure to
NO2 has been found to enhance the inherent responsiveness of
the airway to subsequent nonspecific challenges in controlled human
exposure studies of asthmatic subjects. Enhanced airway responsiveness
could have important clinical implications for asthmatics since
transient increases in airway responsiveness following NO2
exposure have the potential to increase symptoms and worsen asthma
control. Together, the epidemiologic and experimental data sets form a
plausible, consistent, and coherent description of a relationship
between NO2 exposures and an array of adverse health effects
that range from the onset of respiratory symptoms to hospital
admission.
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\212\ U.S. EPA (2008). Integrated Science Assessment for Oxides
of Nitrogen--Health Criteria (Final Report). EPA/600/R-08/071.
Washington, DC,: U.S.EPA. Retrieved on March 19, 2009 from http://cfpub.epa.gov/ncea/cfm/recordisplay.cfm?deid=194645.
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Although the weight of evidence supporting a causal relationship is
somewhat less certain than that associated with respiratory morbidity,
NO2 has also been linked to other health endpoints. These
include all-cause (nonaccidental) mortality, hospital admissions or
emergency department visits for cardiovascular disease, and decrements
in lung function growth associated with chronic exposure.
c. Health Effects of SOX
Information on the health effects of SO2 can be found in
the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Integrated Science Assessment
for Sulfur Oxides.\213\ SO2 has long been known to cause
adverse respiratory health effects, particularly among individuals with
asthma. Other potentially sensitive groups include children and the
elderly. During periods of elevated ventilation, asthmatics may
experience symptomatic bronchoconstriction within minutes of exposure.
Following an extensive evaluation of health evidence from epidemiologic
and laboratory studies, the EPA has concluded that there is a causal
relationship between respiratory health effects and short-term exposure
to SO2. Separately, based on an evaluation of the
epidemiologic evidence of associations between short-term exposure to
SO2 and mortality, the EPA has concluded that the overall
evidence is suggestive of a causal relationship between short-term
exposure to SO2 and mortality.
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\213\ U.S. EPA. (2008). Integrated Science Assessment (ISA) for
Sulfur Oxides--Health Criteria (Final Report). EPA/600/R-08/047F.
Washington, DC: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Retrieved on
March 18, 2009 from http://cfpub.epa.gov/ncea/cfm/recordisplay.cfm?deid=198843.
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4. Carbon Monoxide
Carbon monoxide (CO) forms as a result of incomplete fuel
combustion. CO enters the bloodstream through the lungs, forming
carboxyhemoglobin and reducing the delivery of oxygen to the body's
organs and tissues. The health threat from exposures to lower levels of
CO is most serious for those who suffer from cardiovascular disease,
particularly those with angina or peripheral vascular disease.
Epidemiological studies have suggested that exposure to ambient levels
of CO is associated with increased risk of hospital admissions for
cardiovascular causes, fetal effects, and possibly premature
cardiovascular mortality. Healthy individuals also are affected, but
only when they are exposed to higher CO levels. Exposure of healthy
individuals to elevated CO levels is associated with impairment of
visual perception, work capacity, manual dexterity, learning ability
and performance of complex tasks. Carbon monoxide also contributes to
ozone nonattainment since carbon monoxide reacts photochemically in the
atmosphere to form ozone.\214\ Additional information on CO related
health effects can be found in the Carbon Monoxide Air Quality Criteria
Document (CO AQCD).215 216
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\214\ U.S. EPA (2000). Air Quality Criteria for Carbon Monoxide,
EPA/600/P-99/001F. This document is available in Docket EPA-HQ-OAR-
2004-0008.
\215\ U.S. EPA (2000). Air Quality Criteria for Carbon Monoxide,
EPA/600/P-99/001F. This document is available in Docket EPA-HQ-OAR-
2004-0008.
\216\ The CO NAAQS is currently under review and the EPA is
considering all available science on CO health effects, including
information which has been published since 2000, in the development
of the upcoming CO Integrated Science Assessment Document (ISA). A
second draft of the CO ISA was completed in September 2009 and was
submitted for review by the Clean Air Scientific Advisory Committee
(CASAC) of EPA's Science Advisory Board. For more information, see
http://cfpub.epa.gov/ncea/cfm/recordisplay.cfm?deid=213229.
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5. Air Toxics
The population experiences an elevated risk of cancer and noncancer
health effects from exposure to the class of pollutants known
collectively as ``air toxics.''\217\ Fuel combustion contributes to
ambient levels of air toxics that can include, but are not limited to,
acetaldehyde, acrolein, benzene, 1,3-butadiene, formaldehyde, ethanol,
naphthalene and peroxyacetyl nitrate
[[Page 14811]]
(PAN). Acrolein, benzene, 1,3-butadiene, formaldehyde and naphthalene
have significant contributions from mobile sources and were identified
as national or regional risk drivers in the 2002 National-scale Air
Toxics Assessment (NATA).\218\ PAN, which is formed from precursor
compounds by atmospheric processes, is not assessed in NATA. Emissions
and ambient concentrations of compounds are discussed in Chapter 3 of
the RIA and Section VI.D.3 of this preamble.
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\217\ U. S. EPA. 2002 National-Scale Air Toxics Assessment.
http://www.epa.gov/ttn/atw/nata2002/risksum.html.
\218\ U.S. EPA .2009. National-Scale Air Toxics Assessment for
2002. http://www.epa.gov/ttn/atw/nata2002.
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a. Acetaldehyde
Acetaldehyde is classified in EPA's IRIS database as a probable
human carcinogen, based on nasal tumors in rats, and is considered
toxic by the inhalation, oral, and intravenous routes.\219\
Acetaldehyde is reasonably anticipated to be a human carcinogen by the
U.S. DHHS in the 11th Report on Carcinogens and is classified as
possibly carcinogenic to humans (Group 2B) by the
IARC.220 221 EPA is currently conducting a reassessment of
cancer risk from inhalation exposure to acetaldehyde.
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\219\ U.S. EPA. 1991. Integrated Risk Information System File of
Acetaldehyde. Research and Development, National Center for
Environmental Assessment, Washington, DC. This material is available
electronically at http://www.epa.gov/iris/subst/0290.htm.
\220\ U.S. Department of Health and Human Services National
Toxicology Program 11th Report on Carcinogens available at:
ntp.niehs.nih.gov/index.cfm?objectid=32BA9724-F1F6-975E-7FCE50709CB4C932.
\221\ International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC). 1999.
Re-evaluation of some organic chemicals, hydrazine, and hydrogen
peroxide. IARC Monographs on the Evaluation of Carcinogenic Risk of
Chemical to Humans, Vol 71. Lyon, France.
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The primary noncancer effects of exposure to acetaldehyde vapors
include irritation of the eyes, skin, and respiratory tract.\222\ In
short-term (4 week) rat studies, degeneration of olfactory epithelium
was observed at various concentration levels of acetaldehyde
exposure.223 224 Data from these studies were used by EPA to
develop an inhalation reference concentration. Some asthmatics have
been shown to be a sensitive subpopulation to decrements in functional
expiratory volume (FEV1 test) and bronchoconstriction upon acetaldehyde
inhalation.\225\ The agency is currently conducting a reassessment of
the health hazards from inhalation exposure to acetaldehyde.
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\222\ U.S. EPA. 1991. Integrated Risk Information System File of
Acetaldehyde. This material is available electronically at http://www.epa.gov/iris/subst/0290.htm.
\223\ Appleman, L. M., R. A. Woutersen, V. J. Feron, R. N.
Hooftman, and W. R. F. Notten. 1986. Effects of the variable versus
fixed exposure levels on the toxicity of acetaldehyde in rats. J.
Appl. Toxicol. 6: 331-336.
\224\ Appleman, L.M., R.A. Woutersen, and V.J. Feron. 1982.
Inhalation toxicity of acetaldehyde in rats. I. Acute and subacute
studies. Toxicology. 23: 293-297.
\225\ Myou, S.; Fujimura, M.; Nishi K.; Ohka, T.; and Matsuda,
T. 1993. Aerosolized acetaldehyde induces histamine-mediated
bronchoconstriction in asthmatics. Am. Rev. Respir.Dis.148(4 Pt 1):
940-3.
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b. Acrolein
Acrolein is extremely acrid and irritating to humans when inhaled,
with acute exposure resulting in upper respiratory tract irritation,
mucus hypersecretion and congestion. The intense irritancy of this
carbonyl has been demonstrated during controlled tests in human
subjects, who suffer intolerable eye and nasal mucosal sensory
reactions within minutes of exposure.\226\ These data and additional
studies regarding acute effects of human exposure to acrolein are
summarized in EPA's 2003 IRIS Human Health Assessment for
acrolein.\227\ Evidence available from studies in humans indicate that
levels as low as 0.09 ppm (0.21 mg/m\3\) for five minutes may elicit
subjective complaints of eye irritation with increasing concentrations
leading to more extensive eye, nose and respiratory symptoms.\228\
Lesions to the lungs and upper respiratory tract of rats, rabbits, and
hamsters have been observed after subchronic exposure to acrolein.\229\
Acute exposure effects in animal studies report bronchial hyper-
responsiveness.\230\ In a recent study, the acute respiratory irritant
effects of exposure to 1.1 ppm acrolein were more pronounced in mice
with allergic airway disease by comparison to non-diseased mice which
also showed decreases in respiratory rate.\231\ Based on animal data,
individuals with compromised respiratory function (e.g., emphysema,
asthma) are expected to be at increased risk of developing adverse
responses to strong respiratory irritants such as acrolein.
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\226\ Sim VM, Pattle RE. Effect of possible smog irritants on
human subjects JAMA165: 1980-2010, 1957.
\227\ U.S. EPA (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency). (2003)
Toxicological review of acrolein in support of summary information
on Integrated Risk Information System (IRIS) National Center for
Environmental Assessment, Washington, DC. EPA/635/R-03/003.
Available online at: http://www.epa.gov/ncea/iris.
\228\ Weber-Tschopp, A; Fischer, T; Gierer, R; et al. (1977)
Experimentelle reizwirkungen von Acrolein auf den Menschen. Int Arch
Occup Environ Hlth 40(2):117-130. In German
\229\ Integrated Risk Information System File of Acrolein.
Office of Research and Development, National Center for
Environmental Assessment, Washington, DC. This material is available
at http://www.epa.gov/iris/subst/0364.htm.
\230\ U.S. EPA (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency). (2003)
Toxicological review of acrolein in support of summary information
on Integrated Risk Information System (IRIS) National Center for
Environmental Assessment, Washington, DC. EPA/635/R-03/003.
Available online at: http://www.epa.gov/ncea/iris.
\231\ Morris JB, Symanowicz PT, Olsen JE, et al. 2003. Immediate
sensory nerve-mediated respiratory responses to irritants in healthy
and allergic airway-diseased mice. J Appl Physiol 94(4):1563-1571.
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EPA determined in 2003 that the human carcinogenic potential of
acrolein could not be determined because the available data were
inadequate. No information was available on the carcinogenic effects of
acrolein in humans and the animal data provided inadequate evidence of
carcinogenicity.\232\ The IARC determined in 1995 that acrolein was not
classifiable as to its carcinogenicity in humans.\233\
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\232\ U.S. EPA. 2003. Integrated Risk Information System File of
Acrolein. Research and Development, National Center for
Environmental Assessment, Washington, DC. This material is available
at http://www.epa.gov/iris/subst/0364.htm.
\233\ International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC). 1995.
Monographs on the evaluation of carcinogenic risk of chemicals to
humans, Volume 63, Dry cleaning, some chlorinated solvents and other
industrial chemicals , World Health Organization, Lyon, France.
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c. Benzene
The EPA's IRIS database lists benzene as a known human carcinogen
(causing leukemia) by all routes of exposure, and concludes that
exposure is associated with additional health effects, including
genetic changes in both humans and animals and increased proliferation
of bone marrow cells in mice.234 235 236 EPA states in its
IRIS database that data indicate a causal relationship between benzene
exposure and acute lymphocytic leukemia and suggest a relationship
between benzene exposure and chronic non-lymphocytic leukemia and
chronic lymphocytic leukemia. The International Agency for Research on
Carcinogens (IARC) has determined that benzene is a human carcinogen
and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) has
characterized
[[Page 14812]]
benzene as a known human carcinogen.237 238
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\234\ U.S. EPA. 2000. Integrated Risk Information System File
for Benzene. This material is available electronically at http://www.epa.gov/iris/subst/0276.htm.
\235\ International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC). 1982.
Monographs on the evaluation of carcinogenic risk of chemicals to
humans, Volume 29, Some industrial chemicals and dyestuffs, World
Health Organization, Lyon, France, p. 345-389.
\236\ Irons, R.D.; Stillman, W.S.; Colagiovanni, D.B.; Henry,
V.A. 1992. Synergistic action of the benzene metabolite hydroquinone
on myelopoietic stimulating activity of granulocyte/macrophage
colony-stimulating factor in vitro, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 89:3691-
3695.
\237\ International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC). 1987.
Monographs on the evaluation of carcinogenic risk of chemicals to
humans, Volume 29, Supplement 7, Some industrial chemicals and
dyestuffs, World Health Organization, Lyon, France.
\238\ U.S. Department of Health and Human Services National
Toxicology Program 11th Report on Carcinogens available at: http://ntp.niehs.nih.gov/go/16183.
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A number of adverse noncancer health effects including blood
disorders, such as preleukemia and aplastic anemia, have also been
associated with long-term exposure to benzene.239 240 The
most sensitive noncancer effect observed in humans, based on current
data, is the depression of the absolute lymphocyte count in
blood.241 242 In addition, recent work, including studies
sponsored by the Health Effects Institute (HEI), provides evidence that
biochemical responses are occurring at lower levels of benzene exposure
than previously known.243 244 245 246 EPA's IRIS program has
not yet evaluated these new data.
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\239\ Aksoy, M. (1989). Hematotoxicity and carcinogenicity of
benzene. Environ. Health Perspect. 82: 193-197.
\240\ Goldstein, B.D. (1988). Benzene toxicity. Occupational
medicine. State of the Art Reviews. 3: 541-554.
\241\ Rothman, N., G.L. Li, M. Dosemeci, W.E. Bechtold, G.E.
Marti, Y.Z. Wang, M. Linet, L.Q. Xi, W. Lu, M.T. Smith, N. Titenko-
Holland, L.P. Zhang, W. Blot, S.N. Yin, and R.B. Hayes (1996)
Hematotoxicity among Chinese workers heavily exposed to benzene. Am.
J. Ind. Med. 29: 236-246.
\242\ U.S. EPA (2002) Toxicological Review of Benzene (Noncancer
Effects). Environmental Protection Agency, Integrated Risk
Information System (IRIS), Research and Development, National Center
for Environmental Assessment, Washington DC. This material is
available electronically at http://www.epa.gov/iris/subst/0276.htm.
\243\ Qu, O.; Shore, R.; Li, G.; Jin, X.; Chen, C.L.; Cohen, B.;
Melikian, A.; Eastmond, D.; Rappaport, S.; Li, H.; Rupa, D.;
Suramaya, R.; Songnian, W.; Huifant, Y.; Meng, M.; Winnik, M.; Kwok,
E.; Li, Y.; Mu, R.; Xu, B.; Zhang, X.; Li, K. (2003) HEI Report 115,
Validation & Evaluation of Biomarkers in Workers Exposed to Benzene
in China.
\244\ Qu, Q., R. Shore, G. Li, X. Jin, L.C. Chen, B. Cohen, et
al. (2002) Hematological changes among Chinese workers with a broad
range of benzene exposures. Am. J. Industr. Med. 42: 275-285.
\245\ Lan, Qing, Zhang, L., Li, G., Vermeulen, R., et al. (2004)
Hematotoxically in Workers Exposed to Low Levels of Benzene. Science
306: 1774-1776.
\246\ Turtletaub, K.W. and Mani, C. (2003) Benzene metabolism in
rodents at doses relevant to human exposure from Urban Air. Research
Reports Health Effect Inst. Report No.113.
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d. 1,3-Butadiene
EPA has characterized 1,3-butadiene as carcinogenic to humans by
inhalation.247 248 The IARC has determined that 1,3-
butadiene is a human carcinogen and the U.S. DHHS has characterized
1,3-butadiene as a known human carcinogen.249 250 There are
numerous studies consistently demonstrating that 1,3-butadiene is
metabolized into genotoxic metabolites by experimental animals and
humans. The specific mechanisms of 1,3-butadiene-induced carcinogenesis
are unknown; however, the scientific evidence strongly suggests that
the carcinogenic effects are mediated by genotoxic metabolites. Animal
data suggest that females may be more sensitive than males for cancer
effects associated with 1,3-butadiene exposure; there are insufficient
data in humans from which to draw conclusions about sensitive
subpopulations. 1,3-butadiene also causes a variety of reproductive and
developmental effects in mice; no human data on these effects are
available. The most sensitive effect was ovarian atrophy observed in a
lifetime bioassay of female mice.\251\
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\247\ U.S. EPA (2002) Health Assessment of 1,3-Butadiene. Office
of Research and Development, National Center for Environmental
Assessment, Washington Office, Washington, DC. Report No. EPA600-P-
98-001F. This document is available electronically at http://www.epa.gov/iris/supdocs/buta-sup.pdf.
\248\ U.S. EPA (2002) Full IRIS Summary for 1,3-butadiene (CASRN
106-99-0). Environmental Protection Agency, Integrated Risk
Information System (IRIS), Research and Development, National Center
for Environmental Assessment, Washington, DC http://www.epa.gov/iris/subst/0139.htm.
\249\ International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) (1999)
Monographs on the evaluation of carcinogenic risk of chemicals to
humans, Volume 71, Re-evaluation of some organic chemicals,
hydrazine and hydrogen peroxide and Volume 97 (in preparation),
World Health Organization, Lyon, France.
\250\ U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (2005)
National Toxicology Program 11th Report on Carcinogens available at:
ntp.niehs.nih.gov/index.cfm?objectid=32BA9724-F1F6-975E-7FCE50709CB4C932.
\251\ Bevan, C.; Stadler, J.C.; Elliot, G.S.; et al. (1996)
Subchronic toxicity of 4-vinylcyclohexene in rats and mice by
inhalation. Fundam. Appl. Toxicol. 32:1-10.
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e. Ethanol
EPA is conducting an assessment of the cancer and noncancer effects
of exposure to ethanol, a compound which is not currently listed in
EPA's IRIS. A description of these effects to the extent that
information is available will be presented, as required by Section 1505
of EPAct, in a Report to Congress on public health, air quality and
water resource impacts of fuel additives. We expect to release that
report in 2010.
Extensive data are available regarding adverse health effects
associated with the ingestion of ethanol while data on inhalation
exposure effects are sparse. As part of the IRIS assessment,
pharmacokinetic models are being evaluated as a means of extrapolating
across species (animal to human) and across exposure routes (oral to
inhalation) to better characterize the health hazards and dose-response
relationships for low levels of ethanol exposure in the environment.
The IARC has classified ``alcoholic beverages'' as carcinogenic to
humans based on sufficient evidence that malignant tumors of the mouth,
pharynx, larynx, esophagus, and liver are causally related to the
consumption of alcoholic beverages.\252\ The U.S. DHHS in the 11th
Report on Carcinogens also identified ``alcoholic beverages'' as a
known human carcinogen (they have not evaluated the cancer risks
specifically from exposure to ethanol), with evidence for cancer of the
mouth, pharynx, larynx, esophagus, liver and breast.\253\ There are no
studies reporting carcinogenic effects from inhalation of ethanol. EPA
is currently evaluating the available human and animal cancer data to
identify which cancer type(s) are the most relevant to an assessment of
risk to humans from a low-level oral and inhalation exposure to
ethanol.
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\252\ International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC). 1988.
Monographs on the evaluation of carcinogenic risk of chemicals to
humans, Volume 44, Alcohol Drinking, World Health Organization,
Lyon, France.
\253\ U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. 2005.
National Toxicology Program 11th Report on Carcinogens available at:
ntp.niehs.nih.gov/index.cfm?objectid=32BA9724-F1F6-975E-7FCE50709CB4C932.
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Noncancer health effects data are available from animal studies as
well as epidemiologic studies. The epidemiologic data are obtained from
studies of alcoholic beverage consumption. Effects include neurological
impairment, developmental effects, cardiovascular effects, immune
system depression, and effects on the liver, pancreas and reproductive
system.\254\ There is evidence that children prenatally exposed via
mothers' ingestion of alcoholic beverages during pregnancy are at
increased risk of hyperactivity and attention deficits, impaired motor
coordination, a lack of regulation of social behavior or poor
psychosocial functioning, and deficits in cognition, mathematical
ability, verbal fluency, and spatial
[[Page 14813]]
memory.255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 In some people,
genetic factors influencing the metabolism of ethanol can lead to
differences in internal levels of ethanol and may render some
subpopulations more susceptible to risks from the effects of ethanol.
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\254\ U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. 2000. 10th
Special Report to the U.S. Congress on Alcohol and Health. June.
2000.
\255\ Goodlett CR, KH Horn, F Zhou. 2005. Alcohol
teratogeniesis: mechanisms of damage and strategies for
intervention. Exp. Biol. Med. 230:394-406.
\256\ Riley EP, CL McGee. 2005. Fetal alcohol spectrum
disorders: an overview with emphasis on changes in brain and
behavior. Exp. Biol. Med. 230:357-365.
\257\ Zhang X, JH Sliwowska, J Weinberg. 2005. Prenatal alcohol
exposure and fetal programming: effects on neuroendocrine and immune
function. Exp. Biol. Med. 230:376-388.
\258\ Riley EP, CL McGee, ER Sowell. 2004. Teratogenic effects
of alcohol: a decade of brain imaging. Am. J. Med. Genet. Part C:
Semin. Med. Genet. 127:35-41.
\259\ Gunzerath L, V Faden, S Zakhari, K Warren. 2004. National
Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism report on moderate
drinking. Alcohol. Clin. Exp. Res. 28:829-847.
\260\ World Health Organization (WHO). 2004. Global status
report on alcohol 2004. Geneva, Switzerland: Department of Mental
Health and Substance Abuse. Available: http://www.who.int/substance_abuse/publications/global_status_report_2004_overview.pdf
\261\ Chen W-JA, SE Maier, SE Parnell, FR West. 2003. Alcohol
and the developing brain: neuroanatomical studies. Alcohol Res.
Health 27:174-180.
\262\ Driscoll CD, AP Streissguth, EP Riley. 1990. Prenatal
alcohol exposure comparability of effects in humans and animal
models. Neurotoxicol. Teratol. 12:231-238.SGPO Galley End:?>
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f. Formaldehyde
Since 1987, EPA has classified formaldehyde as a probable human
carcinogen based on evidence in humans and in rats, mice, hamsters, and
monkeys.\263\ EPA is currently reviewing recently published
epidemiological data. For instance, research conducted by the National
Cancer Institute (NCI) found an increased risk of nasopharyngeal cancer
and lymphohematopoietic malignancies such as leukemia among workers
exposed to formaldehyde.264 265 In an analysis of the
lymphohematopoietic cancer mortality from an extended follow-up of
these workers, NCI confirmed an association between lymphohematopoietic
cancer risk and peak exposures.\266\ A recent National Institute of
Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) study of garment workers also
found increased risk of death due to leukemia among workers exposed to
formaldehyde.\267\ Extended follow-up of a cohort of British chemical
workers did not find evidence of an increase in nasopharyngeal or
lymphohematopoietic cancers, but a continuing statistically significant
excess in lung cancers was reported.\268\ Recently, the IARC re-
classified formaldehyde as a human carcinogen (Group 1).\269\
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\263\ U.S. EPA (1987) Assessment of Health Risks to Garment
Workers and Certain Home Residents from Exposure to Formaldehyde,
Office of Pesticides and Toxic Substances, April 1987.
\264\ Hauptmann, M.; Lubin, J. H.; Stewart, P. A.; Hayes, R. B.;
Blair, A. 2003. Mortality from lymphohematopoetic malignancies among
workers in formaldehyde industries. Journal of the National Cancer
Institute 95: 1615-1623.
\265\ Hauptmann, M.; Lubin, J. H.; Stewart, P. A.; Hayes, R. B.;
Blair, A. 2004. Mortality from solid cancers among workers in
formaldehyde industries. American Journal of Epidemiology 159: 1117-
1130.
\266\ Beane Freeman, L. E.; Blair, A.; Lubin, J. H.; Stewart, P.
A.; Hayes, R. B.; Hoover, R. N.; Hauptmann, M. 2009. Mortality from
lymphohematopoietic malignancies among workers in formaldehyde
industries: The National Cancer Institute cohort. J. National Cancer
Inst. 101: 751-761.
\267\ Pinkerton, L. E. 2004. Mortality among a cohort of garment
workers exposed to formaldehyde: an update. Occup. Environ. Med. 61:
193-200.
\268\ Coggon, D, EC Harris, J Poole, KT Palmer. 2003. Extended
follow-up of a cohort of British chemical workers exposed to
formaldehyde. J National Cancer Inst. 95:1608-1615.
\269\ International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC). 2006.
Formaldehyde, 2-Butoxyethanol and 1-tert-Butoxypropan-2-ol. Volume
88. (in preparation), World Health Organization, Lyon, France.
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Formaldehyde exposure also causes a range of noncancer health
effects, including irritation of the eyes (burning and watering of the
eyes), nose and throat. Effects from repeated exposure in humans
include respiratory tract irritation, chronic bronchitis and nasal
epithelial lesions such as metaplasia and loss of cilia. Animal studies
suggest that formaldehyde may also cause airway inflammation--including
eosinophil infiltration into the airways. There are several studies
that suggest that formaldehyde may increase the risk of asthma--
particularly in the young.270 271
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\270\ Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR).
1999. Toxicological profile for Formaldehyde. Atlanta, GA: U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services, Public Health Service.
http://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/toxprofiles/tp111.html.
\271\ WHO (2002) Concise International Chemical Assessment
Document 40: Formaldehyde. Published under the joint sponsorship of
the United Nations Environment Programme, the International Labour
Organization, and the World Health Organization, and produced within
the framework of the Inter-Organization Programme for the Sound
Management of Chemicals. Geneva.
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g. Peroxyacetyl nitrate (PAN)
Peroxyacetyl nitrate (PAN) has not been evaluated by EPA's IRIS
program. Information regarding the potential carcinogenicity of PAN is
limited. As noted in the EPA air quality criteria document for ozone
and related photochemical oxidants, cytogenetic studies indicate that
PAN is not a potent mutagen, clastogen (a compound that can cause
breaks in chromosomes), or DNA-damaging agent in mammalian cells either
in vivo or in vitro. Some studies suggest that PAN may be a weak
bacterial mutagen at high concentrations much higher than exist in
present urban atmospheres.\272\
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\272\ U.S. EPA. 2006. Air quality criteria for ozone and related
photochemical oxidants (Ozone CD). Research Triangle Park, NC:
National Cetner for Environmental Assesssment; report no. EPA/600/R-
05/004aF-cF.3v. page 5-78 Available at http://cfpub.epa.gov/ncea/.
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Effects of ground-level smog causing intense eye irritation have
been attributed to photochemical oxidants, including PAN.\273\ Animal
toxicological information on the inhalation effects of the non-ozone
oxidants has been limited to a few studies on PAN. Acute exposure to
levels of PAN can cause changes in lung morphology, behavioral
modifications, weight loss, and susceptibility to pulmonary infections.
Human exposure studies indicate minor pulmonary function effects at
high PAN concentrations, but large inter-individual variability
precludes definitive conclusions.\274\
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\273\ U.S. EPA Air Quality Criteria for Ozone and Related
Photochemical Oxidants (Final). U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, Washington, DC, EPA 600/R-05/004aF-cF, 2006. page 5-63. This
document is available in Docket EPA-HQ-OAR-2005-0161. This document
may be accessed electronically at: http://www.epa.gov/ttn/naaqs/standards/ozone/s_o3_cr_cd.html.
\274\ U.S. EPA Air Quality Criteria for Ozone and Related
Photochemical Oxidants (Final). U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, Washington, DC, EPA 600/R-05/004aF-cF, 2006. page 5-78. This
document is available in Docket EPA-HQ-OAR-2005-0161. This document
may be accessed electronically at: http://www.epa.gov/ttn/naaqs/standards/ozone/s_o3_cr_cd.html.
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h. Naphthalene
Naphthalene is found in small quantities in gasoline and diesel
fuels. Naphthalene emissions have been measured in larger quantities in
both gasoline and diesel exhaust compared with evaporative emissions
from mobile sources, indicating it is primarily a product of
combustion. EPA released an external review draft of a reassessment of
the inhalation carcinogenicity of naphthalene based on a number of
recent animal carcinogenicity studies.\275\ The draft reassessment
completed external peer review.\276\ Based on external peer review
[[Page 14814]]
comments received, additional analyses are being undertaken. This
external review draft does not represent official agency opinion and
was released solely for the purposes of external peer review and public
comment. The National Toxicology Program listed naphthalene as
``reasonably anticipated to be a human carcinogen'' in 2004 on the
basis of bioassays reporting clear evidence of carcinogenicity in rats
and some evidence of carcinogenicity in mice.\277\ California EPA has
released a new risk assessment for naphthalene, and the IARC has
reevaluated naphthalene and re-classified it as Group 2B: possibly
carcinogenic to humans.\278\ Naphthalene also causes a number of
chronic non-cancer effects in animals, including abnormal cell changes
and growth in respiratory and nasal tissues.\279\
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\275\ U. S. EPA. 2004. Toxicological Review of Naphthalene
(Reassessment of the Inhalation Cancer Risk), Environmental
Protection Agency, Integrated Risk Information System, Research and
Development, National Center for Environmental Assessment,
Washington, DC. This material is available electronically at http://www.epa.gov/iris/subst/0436.htm.
\276\ Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education. (2004).
External Peer Review for the IRIS Reassessment of the Inhalation
Carcinogenicity of Naphthalene. August 2004. http://cfpub.epa.gov/ncea/cfm/recordisplay.cfm?deid=84403.
\277\ National Toxicology Program (NTP). (2004). 11th Report on
Carcinogens. Public Health Service, U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services, Research Triangle Park, NC. Available from: http://ntp-server.niehs.nih.gov.
\278\ International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC).
(2002). Monographs on the Evaluation of the Carcinogenic Risk of
Chemicals for Humans. Vol. 82. Lyon, France.
\279\ U. S. EPA. 1998. Toxicological Review of Naphthalene,
Environmental Protection Agency, Integrated Risk Information System,
Research and Development, National Center for Environmental
Assessment, Washington, DC. This material is available
electronically at http://www.epa.gov/iris/subst/0436.htm.
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i. Other Air Toxics
In addition to the compounds described above, other compounds in
gaseous hydrocarbon and PM emissions from vehicles will be affected by
today's final action. Mobile source air toxic compounds that will
potentially be impacted include ethylbenzene, polycyclic organic
matter, propionaldehyde, toluene, and xylene. Information regarding the
health effects of these compounds can be found in EPA's IRIS
database.\280\
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\280\ U.S. EPA Integrated Risk Information System (IRIS)
database is available at: http://www.epa.gov/iris.
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F. Environmental Effects of Criteria and Air Toxic Pollutants
In this section we discuss some of the environmental effects of PM
and its precursors such as visibility impairment, atmospheric
deposition, and materials damage and soiling, as well as environmental
effects associated with the presence of ozone in the ambient air, such
as impacts on plants, including trees, agronomic crops and urban
ornamentals, and environmental effects associated with air toxics.
1. Visibility
Visibility can be defined as the degree to which the atmosphere is
transparent to visible light.\281\ Airborne particles degrade
visibility by scattering and absorbing light. Visibility is important
because it has direct significance to people's enjoyment of daily
activities in all parts of the country. Individuals value good
visibility for the well-being it provides them directly, where they
live and work, and in places where they enjoy recreational
opportunities. Visibility is also highly valued in significant natural
areas such as national parks and wilderness areas and special emphasis
is given to protecting visibility in these areas. For more information
on visibility, see the final 2004 PM AQCD as well as the 2005 PM Staff
Paper.282 283
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\281\ National Research Council, 1993. Protecting Visibility in
National Parks and Wilderness Areas. National Academy of Sciences
Committee on Haze in National Parks and Wilderness Areas. National
Academy Press, Washington, DC. This document is available in Docket
EPA-HQ-OAR-2005-0161. This book can be viewed on the National
Academy Press Web site at http://www.nap.edu/books/0309048443/html/.
\282\ U.S. EPA (2004) Air Quality Criteria for Particulate
Matter (Oct 2004), Volume I Document No. EPA600/P-99/002aF and
Volume II Document No. EPA600/P-99/002bF. This document is available
in Docket EPA-HQ-OAR-2005-0161.
\283\ U.S. EPA (2005) Review of the National Ambient Air Quality
Standard for Particulate Matter: Policy Assessment of Scientific and
Technical Information, OAQPS Staff Paper. EPA-452/R-05-005. This
document is available in Docket EPA-HQ-OAR-2005-0161.
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EPA is pursuing a two-part strategy to address visibility. First,
to address the welfare effects of PM on visibility, EPA has set
secondary PM2.5 standards which act in conjunction with the
establishment of a regional haze program. In setting this secondary
standard, EPA has concluded that PM2.5 causes adverse
effects on visibility in various locations, depending on PM
concentrations and factors such as chemical composition and average
relative humidity. Second, section 169 of the Clean Air Act provides
additional authority to address existing visibility impairment and
prevent future visibility impairment in the 156 national parks, forests
and wilderness areas categorized as mandatory class I federal areas (62
FR 38680-81, July 18, 1997).\284\ In July 1999, the regional haze rule
(64 FR 35714) was put in place to protect the visibility in mandatory
class I federal areas. Visibility can be said to be impaired in both
PM2.5 nonattainment areas and mandatory class I federal
areas.
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\284\ These areas are defined in CAA section 162 as those
national parks exceeding 6,000 acres, wilderness areas and memorial
parks exceeding 5,000 acres, and all international parks which were
in existence on August 7, 1977.
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2. Atmospheric Deposition
Wet and dry deposition of ambient particulate matter delivers a
complex mixture of metals (e.g., mercury, zinc, lead, nickel, aluminum,
cadmium), organic compounds (e.g., POM, dioxins, furans) and inorganic
compounds (e.g., nitrate, sulfate) to terrestrial and aquatic
ecosystems. The chemical form of the compounds deposited depends on a
variety of factors including ambient conditions (e.g., temperature,
humidity, oxidant levels) and the sources of the material. Chemical and
physical transformations of the compounds occur in the atmosphere as
well as the media onto which they deposit. These transformations in
turn influence the fate, bioavailability and potential toxicity of
these compounds. Atmospheric deposition has been identified as a key
component of the environmental and human health hazard posed by several
pollutants including mercury, dioxin and PCBs.\285\
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\285\ U.S. EPA (2000) Deposition of Air Pollutants to the Great
Waters: Third Report to Congress. Office of Air Quality Planning and
Standards. EPA-453/R-00-0005. This document is available in Docket
EPA-HQ-OAR-2005-0161.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Adverse impacts on water quality can occur when atmospheric
contaminants deposit to the water surface or when material deposited on
the land enters a waterbody through runoff. Potential impacts of
atmospheric deposition to waterbodies include those related to both
nutrient and toxic inputs. Adverse effects to human health and welfare
can occur from the addition of excess nitrogen via atmospheric
deposition. The nitrogen-nutrient enrichment contributes to toxic algae
blooms and zones of depleted oxygen, which can lead to fish kills,
frequently in coastal waters. Deposition of heavy metals or other
toxins may lead to the human ingestion of contaminated fish, human
ingestion of contaminated water, damage to the marine ecology, and
limits to recreational uses. Several studies have been conducted in
U.S. coastal waters and in the Great Lakes Region in which the role of
ambient PM deposition and runoff is
[[Page 14815]]
investigated.286 287 288 289 290
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\286\ U.S. EPA (2004) National Coastal Condition Report II.
Office of Research and Development/Office of Water. EPA-620/R-03/
002. This document is available in Docket EPA-HQ-OAR-2005-0161.
\287\ Gao, Y., E.D. Nelson, M.P. Field, et al. 2002.
Characterization of atmospheric trace elements on PM2.5 particulate
matter over the New York-New Jersey harbor estuary. Atmos. Environ.
36: 1077-1086.
\288\ Kim, G., N. Hussain, J.R. Scudlark, and T.M. Church. 2000.
Factors influencing the atmospheric depositional fluxes of stable
Pb, 210Pb, and 7Be into Chesapeake Bay. J. Atmos. Chem. 36: 65-79.
\289\ Lu, R., R.P. Turco, K. Stolzenbach, et al. 2003. Dry
deposition of airborne trace metals on the Los Angeles Basin and
adjacent coastal waters. J. Geophys. Res. 108(D2, 4074): AAC 11-1 to
11-24.
\290\ Marvin, C.H., M.N. Charlton, E.J. Reiner, et al. 2002.
Surficial sediment contamination in Lakes Erie and Ontario: A
comparative analysis. J. Great Lakes Res. 28(3): 437-450.
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Atmospheric deposition of nitrogen and sulfur contributes to
acidification, altering biogeochemistry and affecting animal and plant
life in terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems across the U.S. The
sensitivity of terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems to acidification from
nitrogen and sulfur deposition is predominantly governed by geology.
Prolonged exposure to excess nitrogen and sulfur deposition in
sensitive areas acidifies lakes, rivers and soils. Increased acidity in
surface waters creates inhospitable conditions for biota and affects
the abundance and nutritional value of preferred prey species,
threatening biodiversity and ecosystem function. Over time, acidifying
deposition also removes essential nutrients from forest soils,
depleting the capacity of soils to neutralize future acid loadings and
negatively affecting forest sustainability. Major effects include a
decline in sensitive forest tree species, such as red spruce (Picea
rubens) and sugar maple (Acer saccharum), and a loss of biodiversity of
fishes, zooplankton, and macro invertebrates.
In addition to the role nitrogen deposition plays in acidification,
nitrogen deposition also causes ecosystem nutrient enrichment leading
to eutrophication that alters biogeochemical cycles. Excess nitrogen
also leads to the loss of nitrogen sensitive lichen species as they are
outcompeted by invasive grasses as well as altering the biodiversity of
terrestrial ecosystems, such as grasslands and meadows. For a broader
explanation of the topics treated here, refer to the description in
Section 3.6.2 of the RIA.
Adverse impacts on soil chemistry and plant life have been observed
for areas heavily influenced by atmospheric deposition of nutrients,
metals and acid species, resulting in species shifts, loss of
biodiversity, forest decline and damage to forest productivity.
Potential impacts also include adverse effects to human health through
ingestion of contaminated vegetation or livestock (as in the case for
dioxin deposition), reduction in crop yield, and limited use of land
due to contamination.
Atmospheric deposition of pollutants can reduce the aesthetic
appeal of buildings and culturally important articles through soiling,
and can contribute directly (or in conjunction with other pollutants)
to structural damage by means of corrosion or erosion. Atmospheric
deposition may affect materials principally by promoting and
accelerating the corrosion of metals, by degrading paints, and by
deteriorating building materials such as concrete and limestone.
Particles contribute to these effects because of their electrolytic,
hygroscopic, and acidic properties, and their ability to adsorb
corrosive gases (principally sulfur dioxide). The rate of metal
corrosion depends on a number of factors, including: the deposition
rate and nature of the pollutant; the influence of the metal protective
corrosion film; the amount of moisture present; variability in the
electrochemical reactions; the presence and concentration of other
surface electrolytes; and the orientation of the metal surface.
3. Plant and Ecosystem Effects of Ozone
Elevated ozone levels contribute to environmental effects, with
impacts to plants and ecosystems being of most concern. Ozone can
produce both acute and chronic injury in sensitive species depending on
the concentration level and the duration of the exposure. Ozone effects
also tend to accumulate over the growing season of the plant, so that
even low concentrations experienced for a longer duration have the
potential to create chronic stress on vegetation. Ozone damage to
plants includes visible injury to leaves and impaired photosynthesis,
both of which can lead to reduced plant growth and reproduction,
resulting in reduced crop yields, forestry production, and use of
sensitive ornamentals in landscaping. In addition, the impairment of
photosynthesis, the process by which the plant makes carbohydrates (its
source of energy and food), can lead to a subsequent reduction in root
growth and carbohydrate storage below ground, resulting in other, more
subtle plant and ecosystems impacts.
These latter impacts include increased susceptibility of plants to
insect attack, disease, harsh weather, interspecies competition and
overall decreased plant vigor. The adverse effects of ozone on forest
and other natural vegetation can potentially lead to species shifts and
loss from the affected ecosystems, resulting in a loss or reduction in
associated ecosystem goods and services. Lastly, visible ozone injury
to leaves can result in a loss of aesthetic value in areas of special
scenic significance like national parks and wilderness areas. The final
2006 Ozone Air Quality Criteria Document presents more detailed
information on ozone effects on vegetation and ecosystems.
4. Environmental Effects of Air Toxics
Fuel combustion emissions contribute to ambient levels of
pollutants that contribute to adverse effects on vegetation. PAN is a
well-established phytotoxicant causing visible injury to leaves that
can appear as metallic glazing on the lower surface of leaves with some
leafy vegetables exhibiting particular sensitivity (e.g., spinach,
lettuce, chard).291 292 293 PAN has been demonstrated to
inhibit photosynthetic and non-photosynthetic processes in plants and
retard the growth of young navel orange trees.294 295 In
addition to its oxidizing capability, PAN contributes nitrogen to
forests and other vegetation via uptake as well as dry and wet
deposition to surfaces. As noted in Section IX, nitrogen deposition can
lead to saturation of terrestrial ecosystems and research is needed to
understand the impacts of excess nitrogen deposition experienced in
some areas of the country on water quality and ecosystems.\296\
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\291\ Nouchi I, S Toyama. 1998. Effects of ozone and
peroxyacetyl nitrate on polar lipids and fatty acids in leaves of
morning glory and kidney bean. Plant Physiol. 87:638-646.
\292\ Oka E, Y Tagami, T Oohashi, N Kondo. 2004. A physiological
and morphological study on the injury caused by exposure to the air
pollutant, peroxyacetyl nitrate (PAN), based on the quantitative
assessment of the injury. J Plant Res. 117:27-36.
\293\ Sun E-J, M-H Huang. 1995. Detection of peroxyacetyl
nitrate at phytotoxic level and its effects on vegetation in Taiwan.
Atmos. Env. 29:2899-2904.
\294\ Koukol J, WM Dugger, Jr., RL Palmer. 1967. Inhibitory
effect of peroxyacetyl nitrate on cyclic photophosphorylation by
chloroplasts from black valentine bean leaves. Plant Physiol.
42:1419-1422.
\295\ Thompson CR, G Kats. 1975. Effects of ambient
concentrations of peroxyacetyl nitrate on navel orange trees. Env.
Sci. Technol. 9:35-38.
\296\ Bytnerowicz A, ME Fenn. 1995. Nitrogen deposition in
California forests: A Review. Environ. Pollut. 92:127-146.
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Volatile organic compounds (VOCs), some of which are considered air
toxics, have long been suspected to play a role in vegetation
damage.\297\ In laboratory experiments, a wide range of tolerance
[[Page 14816]]
to VOCs has been observed.\298\ Decreases in harvested seed pod weight
have been reported for the more sensitive plants, and some studies have
reported effects on seed germination, flowering and fruit ripening.
Effects of individual VOCs or their role in conjunction with other
stressors (e.g., acidification, drought, temperature extremes) have not
been well studied. In a recent study of a mixture of VOCs including
ethanol and toluene on herbaceous plants, significant effects on seed
production, leaf water content and photosynthetic efficiency were
reported for some plant species.\299\
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\297\ US EPA. 1991. Effects of organic chemicals in the
atmosphere on terrestrial plants. EPA/600/3-91/001.
\298\ Cape JN, ID Leith, J Binnie, J Content, M Donkin, M
Skewes, DN Price AR Brown, AD Sharpe. 2003. Effects of VOCs on
herbaceous plants in an open-top chamber experiment. Environ.
Pollut. 124:341-343.
\299\ Cape JN, ID Leith, J Binnie, J Content, M Donkin, M
Skewes, DN Price AR Brown, AD Sharpe. 2003. Effects of VOCs on
herbaceous plants in an open-top chamber experiment. Environ.
Pollut. 124:341-343.
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Research suggests an adverse impact of vehicle exhaust on plants,
which has in some cases been attributed to aromatic compounds and in
other cases to nitrogen oxides.300 301 302 The impacts of
VOCs on plant reproduction may have long-term implications for
biodiversity and survival of native species near major roadways. Most
of the studies of the impacts of VOCs on vegetation have focused on
short-term exposure and few studies have focused on long-term effects
of VOCs on vegetation and the potential for metabolites of these
compounds to affect herbivores or insects.
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\300\ Viskari E-L. 2000. Epicuticular wax of Norway spruce
needles as indicator of traffic pollutant deposition. Water, Air,
and Soil Pollut. 121:327-337.
\301\ Ugrekhelidze D, F Korte, G Kvesitadze. 1997. Uptake and
transformation of benzene and toluene by plant leaves. Ecotox.
Environ. Safety 37:24-29.
\302\ Kammerbauer H, H Selinger, R Rommelt, A Ziegler-Jons, D
Knoppik, B Hock. 1987. Toxic components of motor vehicle emissions
for the spruce Pciea abies. Environ. Pollut. 48:235-243.
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VII. Impacts on Cost of Renewable Fuels, Gasoline, and Diesel
We have assessed the impacts of the renewable fuel volumes required
by EISA on their costs and on the costs of the gasoline and diesel
fuels into which the renewable fuels will be blended. More details of
feedstock costs are addressed in Section VIII.A.
A. Renewable Fuel Production Costs
1. Ethanol Production Costs
a. Corn Ethanol
A significant amount of work has been done in the last decade
surveying and modeling the costs involved in producing ethanol from
corn in order to serve business and investment purposes as well as to
try to educate energy policy decisions. Corn ethanol costs for our work
were estimated using models developed and maintained by USDA. Their
work has been described in a peer-reviewed journal paper on cost
modeling of the dry-grind corn ethanol process, and compares well with
cost information found in surveys of existing plants.
303 304 The USDA models were adjusted to reflect the energy
usage we anticipate for the average ethanol plant in 2022 and
intermediate years, as well as the prices of energy and agricultural
commodities as projected by AEO and the FASOM model respectively.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\303\ Kwaitkowski, J.R., Macon, A., Taylor, F., Johnston, D.B.;
Industrial Crops and Products 23 (2006) 288-296.
\304\ Shapouri, H., Gallagher, P.; USDA's 2002 Ethanol Cost-of-
Production Survey (published July 2005).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For our policy case scenario, we used corn prices of $3.60/bu in
2022 with corresponding DDGS prices of $124.74/ton (all 2007$). These
estimates are taken from agricultural economics modeling work done for
this rule using the Forestry and Agricultural Sector Optimization Model
(see Section VIII.A).
For natural gas-fired ethanol production producing dried co-product
(currently describes the largest fraction of the industry), in the
policy case corn feedstock minus DDGS sale credit represents about 54%
of the final per-gallon cost, while utilities, facility, chemical and
enzymes, and labor comprise about 22%, 13%, 7%, and 4%, respectively.
Thus, the cost of ethanol production is most sensitive to the prices of
corn and the primary co-product, DDGS, and relatively insensitive to
economy of scale over the range of plant sizes typically seen (40-100
MMgal/yr).
We expect that several process fuels will be used to produce corn
ethanol (see RIA Section 1.4), which are presented by their projected
2022 volume production share in Table VII.A.1-1 and cost impacts for
each in Table VII.A.1-2.\305\
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\305\ Projected fuel mix was taken from Mueller, S., Energy
Research Center at the University of Chicago; An Analysis of the
Projected Energy Use of Future Dry Mill Corn Ethanol Plants (2010-
2030); cost estimates were derived from modifications to the USDA
process models.
Table VII.A.1-1--Projected 2022 Breakdown of Fuel Types Used to Estimate Production Cost of Corn Ethanol,
Percent Share of Total Production Volume
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Plant type Fuel type Total by
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- plant type
Natural gas -------------
Biomass % Coal % % Biogas % All fuels
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Coal/Biomass Boiler....................... 11 0 ............ ............ 11
Coal/Biomass Boiler + CHP................. 10 4 ............ ............ 14
Natural Gas Boiler........................ ............ ............ 49 14 63
Natural Gas Boiler + CHP.................. ............ ............ 12 ............ 12
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Total by Fuel Type.................... 21 4 61 14 100
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table VII.A.1-2--Projected 2022 Breakdown of Cost Impacts By Fuel Type Used in Estimating Production Cost of
Corn Ethanol, Dollars Per Gallon Relative to Natural Gas Baseline
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Plant type Fuel type Total by
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- plant type
-------------
Biomass \a\ Coal Natural gas Biogas \b\ All fuels
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Coal/Biomass Boiler....................... +$0.009 +$0.009
[[Page 14817]]
Coal/Biomass Boiler + CHP................. -0.021 -0.021
Natural Gas Boiler........................ ............ ............ baseline +$0.00
Natural Gas Boiler + CHP.................. ............ ............ -$0.032
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Total by Fuel Type.................... ............ ............ ............ ............ -$0.006
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\a\ Assumes biomass has same plant-delivered cost as coal.
\b\ Assumes biogas has same plant-delivered cost as natural gas.
In addition to the primary fuel type used by ethanol production
facilities, we also anticipate new technologies and efficiency
improvements will impact the cost of ethanol production. More efficient
motors and turbines are currently under development and are likely to
be adopted by ethanol producers as ways to lower green house gas
emissions and reduce energy costs. Several new process technologies,
including corn oil extraction, corn fractionation, cold starch
fermentation, and ethanol dehydration membranes will allow ethanol
producers to further reduce energy consumption and produce higher value
co-products. These technologies are discussed in sections 1.4.1.3 and
1.5.1.3 of the RIA. In order to reflect the cost advantages of ethanol
producers using these technologies the USDA models were adapted to take
into account the capital costs, lower energy usage, and higher value
co-products that result from the adoption of these new technologies.
The projected adoption rates of these technologies, and their impacts
on the production cost of corn ethanol, are summarized in Table
VII.A.1-3 below. More detail on how the USDA models were adjusted and
the impact this had on the average price of ethanol production can be
found in section 4.1.1.1 of the RIA.
Table VII.A.1-3--Projected Cost Impacts or New Corn Ethanol Technologies
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Percent of
plants
Technology adopting Cost impact (change from Weighted cost impact
technology baseline)
(percent)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
More Efficient Boilers/Motors/Turbines... 100 Baseline.................. $0.00/gal
Raw Starch Hydrolysis.................... 22 -$0.066/gal............... -$0.015/gal
Corn Fractionation....................... 20 -$0.093/gal............... -$0.019/gal
Corn Oil Extraction...................... 70 -$0.079/gal............... -$0.055/gal
Membrane Separation...................... 5 -$0.064/gal............... -$0.003/gal
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Cost Impact.................... N/A N/A....................... -$0.092/gal
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Whether or not the distillers grains and solubles (DGS) are dried
also has an impact on the cost of ethanol production. Drying the DGS is
an energy intensive process and results in a significant increase in
energy usages as well as cost. The advantages of dry DGS are reduced
transportation costs and a product that is less susceptible to
spoilage, and can therefore be sold to a much wider market. If the DGS
can be sold wet, the cost of ethanol production can be reduced by
$0.083 per gallon. A 2007 survey of ethanol producers indicated that
37% of DGS were being sold wet. We anticipate that this percentage of
wet DGS will remain constant in 2022. The net cost impact of selling
37% of the DGS wet is an average cost reduction of $0.031 per gallon.
Table VII.A.1-4--Average Ethanol Cost of Production
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Baseline Cost of Production (Natural Gas, $1.627/gal
no new technologies, 100% dry DGS).
Fuel Type Cost Impact..................... -$0.006/gal
New Technology Cost Impact................ -$0.092/gal
DGS Drying Cost Impact.................... -$0.031/gal
Average Cost of Ethanol Production (2022). $1.499/gal
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Based on energy prices from EIA's Annual Energy Outlook (AEO) April
2009 updated reference case ($116/bbl crude oil), we arrive at a
production cost of $1.50/gal. More details on the ethanol production
cost estimates can be found in Chapter 4 of the RIA. This estimate
represents the full cost to the plant operator, including purchase of
feedstocks, energy required for operations, capital depreciation,
labor, overhead, and denaturant, minus revenue from sale of co-
products. The capital cost for a 65 MMgal/yr natural gas fired dry mill
plant is estimated at $97MM (the projected average size of such plants
in 2022).
Similarly, coal and biomass fired plants were assumed to be 110 MGY
in capacity, with an estimated capital cost of $184MM.\306\ Despite the
lower operating costs of coal and biomass fired plants the higher
capital costs result, on average, ethanol produced in a facility using
coal or biomass as a primary energy source results in a per-gallon cost
$0.01/gal higher compared to production using natural gas. See Chapter
4.1 of the RIA for more details.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\306\ Capital costs for a natural gas fired plant were taken
from USDA cost model; incremental costs to use coal as the primary
energy source were derived from conversations with ethanol plant
construction contractors.
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[[Page 14818]]
In this cost estimation work, we did not assume any pelletizing of
DDGS. Pelletizing is expected to improve ease of shipment to more
distant markets, which may become more important at the larger volumes
projected for the future. However, while many in industry are aware of
this technology, those we spoke with are not employing it in their
plants, and do not expect widespread use in the foreseeable future.
According to USDA's model, pelletizing adds $0.035/gal to the ethanol
production cost.
Note that the ethanol production cost given here does not account
for any subsidies on production or sale of ethanol, and is independent
of the market price of ethanol.
b. Cellulosic Ethanol
i. Feedstock Costs
Cellulosic Feedstock Costs
To estimate the cost of producing cellulosic biofuels, it was first
necessary to estimate the cost of harvesting, storing, processing and
transporting the feedstocks to the biofuel production facilities.
Ethanol or other cellulosic biofuels can be produced from crop residues
such as corn stover, wheat, rice, oat, and barley straw, sugar cane
bagasse, and sorghum, from other cellulosic plant matter such as forest
thinnings and forest-fuel removal, pulping residues, and from the
cellulosic portions of municipal solid waste (MSW).
Our feedstock supply analysis projected that energy crops would be
the most abundant of the cellulosic feedstocks, comprising about 49% of
the total biomass feedstock inventory. Agricultural residues,
predominantly corn stover, make up approximately 36% of the total,
followed by MSW at approximately 15% and forestry residue at about 1%.
At present, there are no commercial sized cellulosic ethanol plants in
the U.S. Likewise, there are no commercially proven, fully-integrated
feedstock supply systems dedicated to providing any of the feedstocks
we mentioned to ethanol facilities of any size, although certain
biomass is harvested for other purposes. For this reason, our feedstock
cost estimates are projections and not based on any existing market
data.
Our feedstock costs include an additional preprocessing cost that
many other feedstock cost estimates do not include--thus our costs may
seem higher. We used biofuel plant cost estimates provided by NREL
which no longer includes the cost for finely grinding the feedstock
prior to feeding it to the biofuel plant. Thus, our feedstock costs
include an $11 per dry ton cost to account for the costs of this
grinding operation, regardless of whether this operation occurs in the
field or at the plant gate.
Crop Residue and Energy Crops
Crop residue harvest is currently a secondary harvest; that is they
are harvested or gathered only after the prime crop has been harvested.
In most northern areas, the harvest periods will be short due to the
onset of winter weather. In some cases, it may be necessary to gather a
full year's worth of residue within just a few weeks. Consequently, to
accomplish this hundreds of pieces of farm equipment will be required
for a few weeks each year to complete a harvest. Winter conditions in
the South make it somewhat easier to extend the harvest periods; in
some cases, it may be possible to harvest a residue on an as needed
basis.
During the corn grain harvest, generally only the cob and the
leaves above the cob are taken into the harvester. Thus, the stover
harvest would likely require some portion of the standing-stalks be
mowed or shredded, following which the entire residue, including that
discharged from the combine residue-spreader, would need to be raked.
Balers, likely a mix of large round and large square balers, would
follow the rakes. The bales would then be removed from the field,
usually to the field-side in the first operation of the actual harvest,
following which they would then be hauled to a satellite facility for
intermediate storage. For our analysis we assumed that bales would then
be hauled by truck and trailer to the processing plant on an as needed
basis.
The small grain straws (wheat, rice, oats, barley, sorghum) are cut
near the ground at the time of grain harvest and thus likely won't
require further mowing or shredding. They will likely need to be raked
into a windrow prior to baling. Because small grain straws have been
baled and stored for many years, we don't expect unusual requirements
for handling these residues. Their harvest and storage costs will
likely be less than those for corn stover, but their overall quantity
is much less than corn stover (corn stover makes up about 68% of all
the crop residues), so we don't expect their lower costs to have,
individually or collectively, a huge effect on the overall feedstock
costs. Thus, we project that for several years, the feedstock costs
will be largely a function of the cost to harvest, store, and haul corn
stover.
For the crop residues, we relied on the FASOM agricultural cost
model for farm harvesting and collection costs. FASOM estimates corn
stover would cost $34.49 per dry ton at the farm gate. This reflects
the cost to mow, rake, bale, and field haul the bales and replace
nutrients. This farm gate cost could be lower if new equipment is
developed that would allow the farmer to harvest the corn stover at the
same time as the corn. Energy crops such as switchgrass and miscanthus
would be harvested, baled, stored and transported in a manner very
similar to crop residues. The FASOM model estimates switch grass, which
we are using to be representative of all energy crops, would be
available at farm side at a cost of $40.85.
Forestry Residue
Harvest and transport costs for woody biomass in its different
forms vary due to tract size, tree species, volumes removed, distance
to the wood-using/storage facility, terrain, road condition, and many
other considerations. There is a significant variation in these factors
within the United States, so timber harvest and delivery systems must
be designed to meet constraints at the local level. Harvesting costs
also depend on the type of equipment used, season in which the
operation occurs, along with a host of other factors. Much of the
forest residue is already being harvested by logging operations, or is
available from milling operations. However, the smaller branches and
smaller trees proposed to be used for biofuel production are not
collected for their lumber so they are normally left behind. Thus, this
forest residue would have to be collected and transported out of the
forest, and then most likely chipped before transport to the biofuel
plant.
In general, most operators in the near future would be expected to
chip at roadside in the forest, blowing the chips directly into a chip
van. When the van is full it will be hauled to an end user's facility
and a new van will be moved into position at the chipper. The process
might change in the future as baling systems become economically
feasible or as roll-off containers are proven as a way to handle
logging slash. At present, most of the chipping for biomass production
is done in connection with forest thinning treatments as part of a
forest fire prevention strategy. The major problem associated with
collecting logging residues and biomass from small trees is handling
the material in the forest before it gets to the chipper. Specially-
built balers and roll-off containers offer some promise to reduce this
cost. Whether the material is
[[Page 14819]]
collected from a forest thinning operation or a commercial logging
operation, chips from residues will be dirty and will require screening
or some type of filtration at the end-user's facility.\307\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\307\ Personal Communication, Eini C. Lowell, Research
Scientist, USDA Forest Service
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As with agricultural residues and energy crops we relied on the
FASOM model for road side costs for forestry residue. The FASOM model
estimates costs for both hardwood and softwood logging residues. We
anticipate that forestry residue for the production of cellulosic
biofuels would be a mixture of both hard and soft woods. In order to
obtain a cost for forest residues to be used as a feedstock for
cellulosic biofuels we averaged the costs of the hardwood and softwood
logging residue prices reported by FASOM. This resulted in a forestry
residue price of $20.79 at the roadside. Note that this does not
include the cost of the grinding operation that would be required
before the forestry residues can be processed by the biofuel producer.
Municipal Solid Waste
Millions of tons of municipal solid waste (MSW) continue to be
disposed of in landfills across the country, despite recent large gains
in waste reduction and diversion. The biomass fraction of this total
stream represents a potentially significant resource for renewable
energy (including electricity and biofuels). Because this waste
material is already being generated, collected and transported (it
would only need to be transported to a different location), its use is
likely to be less expensive than other cellulosic feedstocks. One
important difficulty facing those who plan to use MSW fractions for
fuel production is that in many places, even today, MSW is a mixture of
all types of wastes, including biomaterials such as animal fats and
grease, tin, iron, aluminum, and other metals, painted woods, plastics,
and glass. Many of these materials can't be used in biochemical and
thermochemical ethanol production, and, in fact, would inflate the
transportation costs, impede the operations at the cellulosic ethanol
plant and cause an expensive waste stream for biofuel producers.
In today's regulation the definition of ``renewable biomass''
includes the separated yard and food waste portion of MSW. As discussed
in Section III.B.4.d, we are including as part of separated yard and
food waste, incidental and post-recycled paper and wood wastes. Thus,
firms planning on using MSW for producing cellulosic biofuels will be
required to account for those components of the waste. We offer three
methods for performing such accounting. One method is ``feedstock
accounting'' in which the components of the waste stream are
inventoried to obtain the fraction representing the portion of the
waste stream that qualifies as renewable biomass. The second method is
that upon verification that the food and yard waste is reasonably
separated, that 100 percent of such waste may be counted as renewable
biomass for purpose of generating RINs. Reasonable separation is
considered to occur where curbside recycling is implemented, or where
technologies are employed that ensure a maximum degree of separation,
including but not limited to material recovery facilities. Under the
second method, the renewable portion of the fuel so produced must be
verified via a carbon dating method (ASTM D-6866 method) which is
specified and incorporated by reference in today's regulation. The
third method is the application of a default fraction of 50% to be
applied to the waste stream purchased and used by the fuel producer.
One method for sorting that would qualify to ensure reasonable
separation has occurred is single stream recycling, in which the waste
is sorted either at a sorting facility or at the landfill prior to
dumping. There are two prominent options here. The first is that there
is no sorting at the waste creation site, the home or business, and
thus a single waste stream must be sorted at the facility. The second
is that the sorting occurs at the waste collection facility. The
sorting would likely be done by hand or by automated equipment at the
facility known as material recovery facilities (MRFs). To do so by hand
is very labor intensive and somewhat slower than using an automated
system. In most cases the `by-hand' system produces a slightly cleaner
stream, but the high cost of labor usually makes the automated system
more cost-effective. Perhaps the best approach for low cost and a clean
stream is the combination of hand sorting with automated sorting.
Another method is a combination of the two which requires that
there is at least some sorting at the home or business which helps to
prevent contamination of the waste material, but then the final sorting
occurs downstream at a sorting site, or at the landfill.
We have little data and few estimates for the cost to sort MSW. One
estimate generated by our Office of Solid Waste for a combination of
mechanically and manually sorting a single waste stream downstream of
where the waste is generated puts the cost in the $20 to $30 per ton
range. There is a risk, though, that the waste stream could still be
contaminated and this would increase the cost of both transporting the
material and using this material at the biofuel plant due to the toxic
ash produced which would require disposal at a toxic waste facility. If
a less contaminated stream is desired it would probably require sorting
at the generation site--the home or business--which would likely be
more costly since many more people in society would then have to be
involved and special trucks would need to be used. Also, widespread
participation is difficult when a change in human behavior is required
as some may not be so willing to participate. Offering incentives could
help to speed the transition to curbside recycling (i.e., charging a
fee for nonsorted waste, or paying a small amount for sorted tree
trimmings and construction and demolition waste). Assuming that
curbside sorting is involved, at least in a minor way, total sorting
costs might be in the $30 to $40 per ton range.
These sorting costs would be offset by the cost savings for not
disposing of the waste material. Most landfills charge tipping fees,
the cost to dump a load of waste into a landfill. In the United States,
the national average nominal tipping fee increased fourfold from 1985
to 2000. The real tipping fee almost doubled, up from a national
average (in 1997 dollars) of about $12 per ton in 1985 to just over $30
in 2000. Equally important, it is apparent that the tipping fees are
much higher in densely populated regions and for areas along the U.S.
coast. For example, in 2004, the tipping fees were $9 per ton in Denver
and $97 per ton in Spokane. Statewide averages also varied widely, from
$8 a ton in New Mexico to $75 in New Jersey. Tipping fees ranged from
$21 to 98 per ton in 2006 for MSW and $18/ton to $120/ton for
construction and demolition waste. It is likely that the tipping fees
are highest for contaminated waste that require the disposal of the
waste in more expensive waste sites that can accept the contaminated
waste as opposed to a composting site. However, this same contaminated
material would probably not be desirable to biofuel producers.
Presuming that only the uncontaminated cellulosic waste (yard
trimmings, building construction and demolition waste and some paper)
is collected as feedstocks for biofuel plants, the handling and tipping
fees are
[[Page 14820]]
likely much lower, in the $30 per ton range.\308\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\308\ We plan on conducting a more thorough analysis of tipping
fees by waste type for the final rulemaking.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The wide variance in the cost of many of these areas affecting the
final cost of MSW as a cellulosic feedstock, including costs for
collecting and sorting MSW as well as the tipping fees for disposing of
waste materials, makes approximating the cost of MSW a difficult task.
Rather than attempt to build a model ourselves that would estimate the
cost of sorted MSW, we decided to contact several companies that are
currently planning on using MSW as a feedstock for cellulosic biofuel
production. In confidential conversations with these companies they
indicated that they believed that sorted MSW would be available at a
near zero cost. In one case they had already begun securing MSW sources
of feedstock for future biofuel production facilities. They indicated
to us that while there would be a significant cost associated with
sorting the MSW, this would be offset, or nearly so, by income
generated from the sale of recovered materials (paper, metals,
plastics, etc.) and the avoidance of tipping fees. There would still,
however, be some costs associated with the transportation and disposal
of materials unfit for the biofuels production process. Based on this
information, we conservatively estimate that MSW would be available for
use in a cellulosic biofuel production process at a cost of $15 per
ton. See section 4.1 of the RIA for further discussion on the cost of
MSW as a feedstock for cellulosic biofuels production.
Secondary Storage and Transportation
In addition to the roadside costs cited in the preceding sections,
there will also be a cost to transport the cellulosic materials from
the farm or forest to the production facility. We relied on our own
cost analysis to determine the transportation costs. For MSW we do not
anticipate any additional costs to transport the cellulosic material to
the biofuel production facility if it is sourced from within the same
county as the production facility. This is because this material is
already being collected and transported to a sorting center landfill,
and would simply be re-routed to the production facility.
For agricultural residues, energy crops, and forestry residue,
however, there will be additional costs associated with transporting
them from the farm or forest side to the production facility. These
costs are heavily dependent on the distance that the feedstock must be
transported from the places where it is produced to the biofuel
production facility. In order to estimate these costs we created a cost
estimating tool that calculated transportation costs based on the
distance the cellulosic material would have to be transported from the
farm or forest side to the production facility. This tool relies on
data provided by the National Agricultural Statistics Service for
information on the availability and location of agricultural residue.
Information on abandoned crop land, which was assumed to be the source
of energy crops, was provided by Elliot Campbell at UC Davis. Data on
the availability and location of forest residues was provided by the
national forestry service. For more information on this secondary
storage and transportation cost estimating tool that we used to
estimate transportation costs see Chapter 4.1 of the RIA.
We also believe that some cellulosic feedstocks will require
secondary storage. Agricultural residues and energy crops will
generally be harvested annually, sometimes in time periods as short as
a few weeks in order to complete the harvest before the onset of winter
weather. The large quantity of feedstock required for a commercial
scale biofuel production plant makes it highly unlikely that a year's
worth of feedstock would be stored at the production facility. It is
also unlikely that farmers would tolerate the baled agricultural
residues or energy crops to be stored on their farms and transported to
the production facility on an as needed basis unless they were
compensated for the space bales occupy and damage done to their fields
by the heavy traffic that would be involved in the collection of this
material from their farms. Bales left exposed to the weather would also
decompose much more rapidly resulting in a higher cost per ton of
usable cellulosic material to biofuel producers. This loss would be
minimized if the bales are stored in covered sheds. Our cost estimating
tool takes these secondary storage costs into account for agricultural
residues and energy crops. MSW and forestry residues have no secondary
storage costs as they can be collected and transported on an as needed
basis.
Cellulosic Feedstock Cost Curve
When the various costs described above are combined, together with
the cost of grinding the cellulosic material ($11/ton), the result is
not a single cost, but rather a cost curve. This is due to the fact
that each feedstock source has a unique price based on the FASOM
estimate of the cost of production of the feedstock and the cost of
transportation and secondary storage (if appropriate), where feedstocks
have the lowest total cost in the parts of the country where the
cellulosic plants are likely to be located. The cost per ton of
feedstock is lower when the total production of cellulosic biofuel is
low as the cheapest feedstocks are utilized first. As cellulosic
biofuel production increases, so does the cost of cellulosic
feedstocks, as more expensive sources of feedstock are used. The cost
curve for cellulosic feedstocks for the production of up to 16 billion
ethanol equivalent gallons of cellulosic biofuels is shown in Graph
VIII.A.1-1 below. The average cost of cellulosic feedstock at a
production level of 16 billion ethanol equivalent gallons is $67.42,
and is summarized in Table VII.A.1-5.
[[Page 14821]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR26MR10.428
Table VII.A.1-5--Summary of Cellulosic Feedstock Costs
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ag Residue Switchgrass Forest Residue MSW
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
36% of Total Feedstock............... 49% of total Feedstock. 1% of Total Feedstock.. 15% of Total Feedstock
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mowing, Raking, Baling, Hauling, Mowing, Raking, Baling, Harvesting, Hauling to Sorting, Contaminant
Nutrients and Farmer Payment $34.49/ Hauling, Nutrients and Forest Edge, $20.79/ Removal, Tipping Fees
ton. Farmer Payment $40.85/ ton. Avoided, $15/ton
ton.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hauling to Secondary Storage, Secondary Storage, Hauling to Plant
$21.53/ton (average)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Grinding
$11/ton
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total
$67.42/ton
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ii. Production Costs for Cellulosic Biofuels
In this section, we discuss the cost to biochemically and
thermochemically convert cellulosic feedstocks into fuel ethanol.
Biochemical Ethanol
The National Renewable Energy Laboratory has been evaluating the
state of biochemical cellulosic plant technology over the past decade
or so, and it has identified principal areas for improvement. In 1999,
it released its first report on the likely design concept for an nth
generation biochemical cellulosic ethanol plant which projected the
state of technology in some future year after the improvements were
adopted. In 2002, NREL released a follow-up report which delved deeper
into biochemical plant design in areas that it had identified in the
1999 report as deserving for additional research. Again, the 2002
report estimated the ethanol production cost for an nth generation
biochemical cellulosic ethanol plant. These reports not only helped to
inform policy makers on the likely capability and cost for
biochemically converting cellulose to ethanol, but it helped to inform
biochemical technology researchers on the most likely technology
improvements that could be incorporated into these plant designs.
To comply with the RFS 2 requirements, NREL assessed the likely
state of biochemical cellulosic plant technology for EPA over the years
that the RFS standard is being phased in. The specific years assessed
by NREL were 2010, 2015 and 2022. The year 2010 technology essentially
represents the status of today's biochemical cellulosic plants. The
year 2015 technology captures the expected near-term improvements
including the rapid improvements being made in enzyme technology. The
year 2022 technology captures the cost of mature biochemical cellulosic
plant technology. Table VII.A.1-6 summarizes NREL's estimated and
projected production costs for biochemical cellulosic ethanol plant
technology for their projected year 2022 technology in 2007 dollars
reflecting a 7 percent before tax rate of return on investment. The
biochemical cellulosic
[[Page 14822]]
ethanol costs are based on a cellulosic feedstock cost of 67 per dry
ton.
Table VII.A.1-6--Year 2022 Biochemical Cellulosic Ethanol Production Costs Provided by NREL
[2007 dollars and 7% before tax rate of return]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Year technology 2022
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Plant Size............................................................................................................................ 71
MMgal/yr
Capital Cost.......................................................................................................................... 199
$MM
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
$MM/yr c/gal
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Capital Cost 7% ROI before taxes........................................................................................................................................ 22 31
Fixed Costs............................................................................................................................................................. 8 12
Feedstock Cost.......................................................................................................................................................... 52 73
Other raw matl. costs................................................................................................................................................... 12 16
Enzyme Cost............................................................................................................................................................. 5 8
Enzyme nutrients........................................................................................................................................................ 2 2
Electricity............................................................................................................................................................. -12 -16
Waste disposal.......................................................................................................................................................... 1 1
-----------------------
Total Costs......................................................................................................................................................... 90 127
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Thermochemical Ethanol
Thermochemical conversion is another reaction pathway which exists
for converting cellulose to ethanol. Thermochemical technology is based
on the heat and pressure-based gasification or pyrolysis of nearly any
biomass feedstock, including those we've highlighted as likely
biochemical feedstocks. The syngas could then be converted into mixed
alcohols, hydrocarbon fuels, chemicals, and power. In the case that the
syngas is converted to ethanol, a possible means for doing so would be
to pass the syngas over a catalyst which converts the syngas to mixed
alcohols--mainly methanol. The methanol can be reacted further to
ethanol.
NREL has authored a thermochemical report: Phillips, S
Thermochemical Ethanol via Indirect Gasification and Mixed Alcohol
Synthesis of Lignocellulosic Biomass; April, 2007, which already
provided a cost estimate. However, this report only hypothesized how a
thermochemical ethanol plant could achieve production costs at a very
low cost of $1 per gallon. Rather than rely on a very aggressively
analyzed cost assessment that may not be achievable within the
timeframe of our program, EPA contracted NREL to assess the costs for a
thermochemical technology which produces mixed alcohols for years 2010,
2015 and 2022. Table VII.A.1-7 summarizes NREL's estimated and
projected production costs for biochemical cellulosic ethanol plant
technology for their projected year 2022 technology in 2007 dollars
reflecting a 7 percent before tax rate of return on investment. The
costs are based on a cellulosic feedstock cost of 67 per dry ton.
Table VII.A.1-7--Year 2022 Thermochemical Cellulosic Production Costs of Mixed Alcohols Provided by NREL
[2007 dollars and 7% before tax rate of return]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Year technology 2022
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Plant Size............................................................................................................................ 72.7 Total
Alcohol.
MMgal/yr.............................................................................................................................. 61.9 Ethanol.
Capital Cost.......................................................................................................................... 207.
$MM
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
$MM/yr c/gal
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Capital Cost 7% ROI before taxes........................................................................................................................................ 23 37
Fixed Costs............................................................................................................................................................. 13 21
Feedstock Cost.......................................................................................................................................................... 52 85
Coproduct Credit........................................................................................................................................................ -13 -21
Other Raw Material, Waste Disposal and Catalyst Costs................................................................................................................... 1 4
-----------------------
Total Costs............................................................................................................................................................. 76 126
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cost estimates for both biochemical and thermochemical ethanol
pathways ended up being ultimately identical. For our cost analysis, we
based the cellulosic ethanol costs on the average of the biochemical
and thermochemical cellulosic ethanol costs.
BTL Diesel Fuel
If cellulose is converted to syngas, rather than converting the
syngas to mixed alcohols, a Fischer Tropsch reactor can be added to
convert the syngas to diesel fuel and naphtha. This technology is
commonly termed biomass-to-liquids (BTL) because of its similarity to
gas-to-liquids and coal-to-
[[Page 14823]]
liquids technology. Diesel fuel's higher energy density per gallon than
ethanol and even biodiesel provides it an inherent advantage over these
other fuels. In addition, BTL diesel fuel can be more easily
distributed from production to retail outlets and used by motor
vehicles. The diesel fuel produced by the Fischer Tropsch process tends
to be comprised of paraffins which provide a much higher cetane number
than petroleum diesel fuel, with a downside of poorer cloud point which
reduces its widespread use in cold temperatures.
The naphtha produced by the BTL process is also largely comprised
of paraffins, however, as a gasoline blendstock it is poor because of
its very low octane (potentially as low as 50 octane). This material
could be processed by refinery isomerization units raising its octane
to perhaps 70 octane, but it cannot be processed by refinery reformers
since it does not contain the naphthenic compounds that are necessary
for octane improvement by those units. Because of the large amount of
octane rich ethanol which is expected to be made available from both
corn and cellulose, it could be that BTL naphtha could be blended along
with the ethanol into the gasoline pool. Rather than prejudge how this
naphtha may be utilized in the future, for our cost analysis we simply
assigned it a coproduct credit. So we set the BTL naphtha cost to be
83% as much of the cost of BTL diesel fuel based on its relative energy
density.
Although there were several studies available which provided costs
estimates for BTL diesel fuel, they did not provide sufficient detail
to understand all the cost elements of BTL diesel fuel and naphtha. EPA
therefore asked NREL to estimate the production costs for BTL diesel
fuel and naphtha. Like the other technologies, we asked for cost
estimates for the same years assessed above for cellulosic ethanol
which was for 2010, 2015 and 2022, however, NREL did not believe that
the costs would change that much over this time span. So NREL only
provided the costs for 2022, advising us that the costs would only be
slightly less for earlier years, and most of that difference would
because of the poorer economies of scale for the initial smaller sized
plants.
Table VII.A.1-8 summarizes NREL's estimated and projected
production costs for a thermochemical Fischer Tropsch biochemical
cellulosic ethanol plant technology for their projected year 2022
technology in 2007 dollars reflecting a 7 percent before tax rate of
return on investment. The costs are based on a cellulosic feedstock
cost of 67 per dry ton.
Table VII.A.1-8--Year 2022 Production Costs of Thermochemical (BTL)
Cellulosic Fischer Tropsch Diesel Fuel Provided by NREL
[2007 dollars and 7% before tax rate of return]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
33.2 Diesel fuel
Plant Size MMgal/yr 49.4 all liquid
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Capital Cost $MM.................................. 346
Capital Cost 7% ROI before taxes ($MM/yr)......... 38
Fixed Costs ($MM/yr).............................. 18
Feedstock Cost ($MM/yr)........................... 52
Coproduct Credit ($MM/yr)\a\...................... -32
Other raw matl. Costs ($MM/yr).................... 1.5
Waste Disposal and Catalyst Costs ($MM/yr)........ 1.5
Total Costs ($MM/yr).............................. 79
Total Costs (cents/gallon of diesel fuel)......... 237
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\a\ Based on a naphtha coproduct value of 198 cents per gallon.
Other Cellulosic Diesel Fuel Costs
For our volumes analysis, we assumed early on for our final rule
analysis that there would likely be several different cellulosic
biofuel technologies, other than BTL, producing cellulosic diesel fuel.
However, we were either not able to obtain cost information from them,
or we were uncertain enough about their future that we felt that we
should not base the cost of the program on them. For example, Cello
Energy has already built a cellulosic diesel fuel facility in Alabama
here in the US with projected costs of about one dollar per gallon of
diesel fuel. However, the facility has had difficulty operating as
designed. As a result, perhaps very conservatively, we assumed that the
other cellulosic diesel fuel costs would be the same as the BTL diesel
fuel costs, and used the 237 cents per gallon cost for BTL diesel fuel
for the entire cost for cellulosic diesel fuel.
c. Imported Sugarcane Ethanol
We based our imported ethanol fuel costs on cost estimates of
sugarcane ethanol in Brazil. Generally, ethanol from sugarcane produced
in developing countries with warm climates is much cheaper to produce
than ethanol from grain or sugar beets. This is due to favorable
growing conditions, relatively low cost feedstock and energy inputs,
and other cost reductions gained from years of experience.
As discussed in Chapter 4 of the RIA, our literature search of
production costs for sugar cane ethanol in Brazil indicates that
production costs tend to range from as low as $0.57 per gallon of
ethanol to as high as $1.48 per gallon of ethanol. This large range for
estimating production costs is partly due to the significant variations
over time in exchange rates, costs of sugarcane and oil products, etc.
For example, earlier estimates may underestimate current crude and
natural gas costs which influence the cost of feedstock as well as
energy costs at the plant. Another possible difference in production
cost estimates is whether or not the estimates are referring to hydrous
or anhydrous ethanol. Costs for anhydrous ethanol (for blending with
gasoline) are typically several cents per gallon higher than hydrous
ethanol (for use in dedicated ethanol vehicles in Brazil).\309\ It is
not entirely clear from the majority of studies whether reported costs
are for hydrous or anhydrous ethanol. Yet another difference could be
the slate of products the plant is producing, for example, future
plants may be dedicated ethanol facilities while others involve the
production of both sugar and ethanol in the same facility. Due to
economies of scale, production costs are also typically smaller per
gallon for larger facilities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\309\ International Energy Agency (IEA), ``Biofuels for
Transport: An International Perspective,'' 2004.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The study by OECD (2008) entitled ``Biofuels: Linking Support to
[[Page 14824]]
Performance'', appears to provide the most recent and detailed set of
assumptions and production costs. As such, our estimate of sugarcane
production costs primarily relies on the assumptions made for the
study, which are shown in Table VII.A.1-9. The estimate assumes an
ethanol-dedicated mill and is based off an internal rate of return of
12%, a debt/equity ratio of 50% with an 8% interest rate and a selling
of surplus power at $57 per MWh.
Table VII.A.1-9--Cost of Production in a Standard Ethanol Project in Brazil
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sugarcane Productivity........................ 71.5 t/ha.
Sugarcane Consumption......................... 2 million tons/year.
Harvesting days............................... 167.
Ethanol productivity.......................... 85 liters/ton (22.5 gal/ton).
Ethanol Production............................ 170 million liters/year (45 MGY).
Surplus power produced........................ 40 kWh/ton sugarcane.
Investment cost in mill....................... USD 97 million.
Investment cost for sugarcane production...... USD 36 million.
O & M (Operating & Maintenance) costs......... $0.26/gal.
Variable sugarcane production costs........... $0.64/gal.
Capital costs................................. $0.49/gal.
Total production costs........................ $1.40/gal.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The estimate above is based on the costs of producing ethanol in
Brazil on average, today. However, we are interested in how the costs
of producing ethanol will change by the year 2022. Although various
cost estimates exist, analysis of the cost trends over time shows that
the cost of producing ethanol in Brazil has been steadily declining due
to efficiency improvements in cane production and ethanol conversion
processes. Between 1980 and 1998 (total span of 19 years) ethanol cost
declined by approximately 30.8%.\310\ This change in the cost of
production over time in Brazil is known as the ethanol cost ``Learning
Curve''.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\310\ Goldemberg, J. as sited in Rothkopf, Garten, ``A Blueprint
for Green Energy in the Americas,'' 2006.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The change in ethanol costs will depend on the likely productivity
gains and technological innovations that can be made in the future. As
the majority of learning may have already occurred, it is likely that
the decline in sugarcane ethanol costs will be less drastic in the
future as the production process and cane practices have matured.
Industrial efficiency gains are already at about 85% and are expected
to increase to 90% in 2015.\311\ Most of the productivity growth is
expected to come from sugarcane production, where yields are expected
to grow from the current 70 tons/ha, to 96 tons/ha in 2025.\312\
Sugarcane quality is also expected to improve, with sucrose content
growing from 14.5% to 17.3% in 2025.\313\ All productivity gains
together could allow the increase in the production of ethanol from
6,000 liters/ha (at 85 liters/ton sugarcane in 2005) to 10,400 liters/
ha (at 109 liters/ton sugarcane) by 2025.\314\ Although not reflected
here, there could also be cost and efficiency improvements related to
feedstock collection, storage, and distribution.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\311\ Unicamp ``A Expans[amacr]o do Proalcool como Programa de
Desenvolvimento Nacional''. Powerpoint presentation at Ethanol
Seminar in BNDES, 2006. As sited in OECD, ``Biofuels: Linking
Support to Performance,'' ITF Round Tables No. 138, March 2008.
\312\ Ibid.
\313\ Ibid.
\314\ Ibid.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Assuming that ethanol productivity increases to 100 liters/ton by
2015 and 109 liters/ton by 2025, variable sugarcane ethanol production
costs are be expected to decrease to approximately $0.51/gal from
$0.64/gal since less feedstock is needed to produce the same volume of
ethanol using the estimates from Table VII.A.1-7, above. We assumed a
linear decrease between data points for 2005, 2015, and 2025. Adding
operating ($0.26/gal) and capital costs ($0.49/gal) from Table VII.A.1-
7, to a sugarcane cost of $0.51/gal, total production costs are $1.26/
gal in 2022.
Brazil sugarcane producers are also expected to move from burned
cane manual harvesting to mechanical harvesting. As a result, large
amounts of straw are expected to be available. Costs of mechanical
harvesting are lower compared to manually harvesting, therefore, we
would expect costs for sugarcane to decline as greater sugarcane
producers move to mechanical harvesting. However, diesel use increases
with mechanical harvesting and with diesel fuel prices expected to
increase in the future, costs may be higher than expected. Therefore,
we have not assumed any changes to harvesting costs due to the
switchover from manual harvesting to mechanical harvesting.
As more straw is expected to be collected at future sugarcane
ethanol facilities, there is greater potential for production of excess
electricity. The production costs estimates in the OECD study assumes
an excess of 40 kWh per ton sugarcane, however, future sugarcane plants
are expected to produce 135 kWh per ton sugarcane assuming the use of
higher efficiency condensing-extraction steam turbine (CEST) systems
and use of 40% of available straw.\315\ Assuming excess electricity is
sold for $57 per MWh, the production of 95 kWh per ton would be
equivalent to a credit of $0.22 per gallon ethanol produced. We have
included this potential additional credit from greater use of bagasse
and straw in our estimates at this time, calculated as a decrease in
operating costs from $0.26 per gallon to $0.04 per gallon.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\315\ Macedo. I.C., ``Green house gases emissions in the
production and use of ethanol from sugarcane in Brazil: The 2005/
2006 Averages and a Prediction for 2020,'' Biomass and Bioenergy,
2008.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
It is also important to note that ethanol production costs can
increase if the costs of compliance with various sustainability
criteria are taken into account. For instance, using organic or green
cane production, adopting higher wages, etc. could increase production
costs for sugarcane ethanol.\316\ Such sustainability criteria could
also be applicable to other feedstocks, for example, those used in
corn- or soy-based biofuel production. If these measures are adopted in
the future, production costs will be higher than we have projected.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\316\ Smeets E, Junginger M, Faaij A, Walter A, Dolzan P,
Turkenburg W, ``The sustainability of Brazilian Ethanol--An
Assessment of the possibilities of certified production,'' Biomass
and Bioenergy, 2008.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition to production costs, there are also logistical and port
costs. We used the report from AgraFNP to estimate such costs since it
was the only resource that included both logistical
[[Page 14825]]
and port costs. The total average logistical and port cost for
sugarcane ethanol is $0.20/gal and $0.09/gal, respectively, as shown in
Table VII.A.1-10.
Table VII.A.1-10--Imported Ethanol Cost at Port in Brazil
[2006 $]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Logistical
Region costs US ($/ Port cost US
gal) ($/gal)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
NE Sao Paulo............................ 0.150 0.097
W Sao Paulo............................. 0.210 0.097
SE Sao Paulo............................ 0.103 0.097
S Sao Paulo............................. 0.175 0.097
N Parana................................ 0.238 0.097
S Goias................................. 0.337 0.097
E Mato Grosso do sul.................... 0.331 0.097
Triangulo mineiro....................... 0.207 0.097
NE Cost................................. 0.027 0.060
Sao Francisco Valley.................... 0.193 0.060
Average................................. 0.197 0.089
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total fuel costs must also include the cost to ship ethanol from
Brazil to the U.S. The average cost from 2006-2008 was estimated to be
approximately $0.17 per gallon of ethanol.\317\ Costs were estimated as
the difference between the unit value cost of insurance and freight
(CIF) and the unit value customs price. The average cost to ship
ethanol from Caribbean countries (e.g. El Salvador, Jamaica, etc.) to
the U.S. from 2006-2008 was approximately $0.13 per gallon of ethanol.
Although this may seem to be an advantage for Caribbean countries, it
should be noted that there would be some additional cost for shipping
ethanol from Brazil to the Caribbean country. Therefore, we assume all
costs for shipping ethanol to be $0.17 per gallon regardless of the
country importing ethanol to the U.S.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\317\ Official Statistics of the U.S. Department of Commerce,
USITC.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total imported ethanol fuel costs (at U.S. ports) prior to tariff
and tax for 2022 is shown in Table VII.A.1-11, at $1.50/gallon. Direct
Brazilian imports are also subject to an additional $0.54 per gallon
tariff, whereas those imports arriving in the U.S. from Caribbean Basin
Initiative (CBI) countries are exempt from the tariff. In addition, all
imports are given an ad valorem tax of 2.5% for undenatured ethanol and
a 1.9% tax for denatured ethanol. We assumed an ad valorem tax of 2.5%
for all ethanol. Thus, including tariffs and ad valorem taxes, the
average cost of imported ethanol is shown in Table VII.A.1-12 in the
``Brazil Direct w/Tax & Tariff'' and ``CBI w/Tax'' columns for 2022.
Table VII.A.1-11--Average Imported Ethanol Costs Prior to Tariff and Taxes in 2022
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Transport cost
Sugarcane production cost ($/gal) Operating cost Capital cost Logistical cost Port cost ($/ from port to US Total cost ($/
($/gal) ($/gal) ($/gal) gal) ($/gal) gal)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
0.51.............................................. 0.04 0.49 0.20 0.09 0.17 1.50
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table VII.A.1-12--Average Imported Ethanol Costs in 2022
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Brazil direct w/
Brazil direct ($/gal) tax & tariff CBI ($/gal) CBI w/tax ($/
($/gal) gal)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1.50......................................................... 2.08 1.50 1.54
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Biodiesel and Renewable Diesel Production Costs
Biodiesel and renewable diesel production costs are primarily a
function of the feedstock cost, and to a much lesser extent, the
capital and other operating costs of the facility.
a. Biodiesel
Biodiesel production costs for this rule were estimated using two
versions of a biodiesel production facility model obtained from USDA,
one using degummed soy oil as a feedstock and the other using yellow
grease. The biodiesel from yellow grease model includes acid pre-
treatment steps required to utilize feedstocks with high free fatty
acid content.
The production model simulates a 10 million-gallon-per-year plant
operating a continuous flow transesterification process. USDA used the
SuperPro Designer chemical process simulation software to estimate heat
and material flowrates and equipment sizing. Outputs from this software
were then
[[Page 14826]]
combined in a spreadsheet with equipment, energy, labor, and chemical
costs to generate a final estimate of production cost. The model is
described in a 2006 publication in Bioresource Technology, peer-
reviewed scientific journal. \318\ For the purpose of estimating
biodiesel production cost for this rulemaking, a model with updated
facility, labor, and chemical costs was used. Installed capital cost
was $11.9 million, and energy prices were taken from AEO 2009: natural
gas at $7.75/MMBtu and electricity at $0.066/kWh. Capital charge plus
maintenance was assumed to be 14% of total capital per year. Table
VII.A.2-1 shows the production cost allocation for the soy oil-to-
biodiesel facility as modeled in the 2022 policy case.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\318\ Haas, M.J, A process model to estimate biodiesel
production costs, Bioresource Technology 97 (2006) 671-678.
Table VII.A.2-1--Production Cost Allocation for Soy Biodiesel for Policy
Case in 2022
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Contribution to
Cost category cost (percent)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Soy Oil................................................ 85
Other Materials \a\.................................... 6
Capital & Facility..................................... 6
Labor.................................................. 2
Utilities.............................................. 2
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\a\ Includes acids, bases, methanol, catalyst.
Soy oil costs were generated by the FASOM agricultural model
(described in more detail in Section VIII.A). Historically, the
majority of biodiesel production in the U.S. has used soy oil, a
relatively high-value feedstock, but a growing fraction of biodiesel is
being made from yellow grease (rendered or reclaimed oil that is not
suitable for use in food products). This material has historically sold
for about 70% of the value of virgin soy oil. However, conversion of
yellow grease into biodiesel requires an additional acid pre-treatment
step, and therefore the processing costs are higher than for virgin soy
oil (40-50 cents/gal if feedstock costs are equal), reducing the
attractiveness of the cheaper feedstock to some extent. Another
feedstock we expect to be used in significant quantities in the future
is distressed corn oil extracted from process streams that make up
distillers' grains. This material will also require processing in acid
pre-treatment facilities, and is projected by the FASOM model to have
about one half the value of soy oil.
Finally, we project a small amount of algae-derived oil (or
similarly advanced feedstock) will be used by 2022. As algal biofuel
technology is still in a relatively early stage of development, there
are many possible configurations for the production of this material
and thus there is considerable uncertainty regarding process
performance and cost. Based on work done by NREL at the time of this
rulemaking, we assumed a production cost of $0.68/lb for this
feedstock.\319\ More details on how this estimate was made can be found
in Chapter 4.1 of the RIA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\319\ See Technical Memo in the docket entitled ``Techno-
economic analysis of microalgae-derived biofuel production'' by Ryan
Davis of the National Renewable Energy Laboratory.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A co-product of transesterification is crude glycerin. With the
upswing in worldwide biodiesel production in recent years, its price
has been depressed in most markets. Closure of remaining petrochemical
glycerin plants, along with development of processes to make new use of
it as a feedstock for other commodity chemicals has provided some
support for a price recovery. Some companies are experimenting with
using glycerin as a fuel for process or facility heat. We expect new
uses for this coproduct to continue growing to reach an equilibrium
with supply at or near its heating value, which we estimate to be
$0.15/lb. As a result, the sale of this material as a co-product
reduces biodiesel production cost by about $0.13/gal in our control
case.
b. Renewable Diesel
Renewable diesel production can occur in a few different
configurations: within the boundaries of an existing refinery where it
may or may not be coprocessed with petroleum, or at a stand-alone plant
that may or may not be co-located with other facilities that provide
utilities or hydrogen. Given changes in the tax incentives as well as
current project announcements, we have chosen to project that all
renewable diesel will be produced in stand-alone facilities, not
coprocessing with petroleum. The 75 MMgal/yr Syntroleum facility
scheduled to come online in Geismar, Louisiana, in 2010 is an example
of such a plant.
Our production cost estimates used hydrogen requirements made
available publicly by UOP, Inc. and overall project cost of $150MM
taken from Syntroleum, Corp. materials.320 321 The feedstock
was assumed to be yellow grease or similar rendered material. Hydrogen
and co-product prices were taken from refinery modeling done for this
rule, while an aggregate figure of $0.069/gal, derived from the UOP
publication, was used to cover other variable operating costs besides
hydrogen (includes labor, catalyst, and utilities). Cost contributions
of various process aspects are shown in Table VII.A.2-2. More details
are available in Chapter 4.1 of the RIA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\320\ A New Development in Renewable Fuels: Green Diesel, AM-07-
10 Annual Meeting NPRA, March 18-20, 2007.
\321\ Taken from Syntroleum Investor Presentation, November 5,
2009. See http://www.syntroleum.com/Presentations/SyntroleumInvestorPresentation.November%205.2009.FINAL.pdf.
Table VII.A.2-2--Production Cost Allocation for Renewable Diesel for
Policy Case in 2022
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Contribution to
Cost category cost (percent)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Feedstock.............................................. 78
Capital & Facility..................................... 11
Hydrogen............................................... 7
Other variable costs................................... 3
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table VII.A.2-3 summarizes the production costs for biodiesel and
renewable diesel as estimated for this rule, as well as their projected
volume contribution in 2022. Biodiesel made from yellow grease is
projected to be about 10% cheaper to produce despite its higher
production cost due to the large influence of the feedstock cost, which
is about 30% lower. Biodiesel from extracted corn oil is expected to be
significantly cheaper to produce than this, again due to the projected
feedstock cost being about half that of soy oil. Finally, renewable
diesel from stand-alone production is estimated in this analysis to
have total production cost similar to biodiesel from yellow grease.
However, given the business partnership between the fuel production and
animal processing companies who have announced or are constructing the
U.S. plants to date, we expect the feedstock being used there may be
made available at a lower cost than we are projecting here for yellow
grease.
[[Page 14827]]
Table VII.A.2-3--Summary of Cost for Biodiesel and Renewable Diesel for
Policy Case in 2022
[2007$]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fuel
Fuel/feedstock Feedstock production
price ($/lb) cost ($/gal)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Biodiesel/soy oil....................... 0.33 \a\ 2.73
Biodiesel/corn oil extraction at ethanol 0.17 \a\ 1.90
plants.................................
Biodiesel/yellow grease or other 0.23 \b\ 2.43
rendered fats..........................
Biodiesel/algae or other advanced virgin 0.58 \c\ 4.52 \d\
oil feedstock..........................
Renewable diesel/yellow grease or other 0.23 \b\ 2.42
rendered fats..........................
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\a\ Taken from outputs of FASOM model.
\b\ Derived from outputs of FASOM model, assuming 70% value of soy oil.
\c\ Derived from figures in a Technical Memo by Ryan Davis of NREL
entitled ``Techno-economic analysis of microalgae-derived biofuel
production'' (available in docket).
\d\ This production cost assumes this advanced feedstock has very low
free fatty acid content.
B. Biofuel Distribution Costs
Our analysis of the costs associated with distributing the volume
of biofuels that we project will be used under RFS2 focuses on: (1) The
capital cost of making the necessary upgrades to the fuel distribution
infrastructure system directly related to handling these fuels, and (2)
the ongoing additional freight costs associated with shipping renewable
fuels to the point where they are blended with petroleum-based
fuels.\322\ The following sections outline our estimates of the
distribution costs for the additional volumes of ethanol, cellulosic
distillate fuel, renewable diesel fuel, and biodiesel that we project
would be used in response to the RFS2 standards under the three control
scenarios that we analyzed relative to the two reference cases.\323\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\322\ The anticipated ways that the renewable fuels projected to
be used in response to the EISA will be distributed is discussed in
Section IV.C. of today's preamble.
\323\ Please refer to Section 4.2 of the RIA for additional
discussion of how these estimates were derived.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A discussion of the capability of the transportation system to
accommodate the volumes of renewable fuels projected to be used under
RFS2 is contained in Section IV.C. of today's preamble and 1.6 of the
RIA. There will be ancillary costs associated with upgrading the basic
rail, marine, and road transportation nets to handle the increase in
freight volume due to the RFS2. We have not sought to quantify these
ancillary costs because (1) the growth in freight traffic that is
attributable to RFS2 represents a small fraction of the total
anticipated increase in freight tonnage (approximately 3% of rail
traffic by 2022, see Section IV.C.1), and (2) we do not believe there
is an adequate way to estimate such non-direct costs.
1. Ethanol Distribution Costs
The capital costs to upgrade the distribution system to handle the
increased volumes of ethanol vary substantially under the three control
scenarios that we analyzed. Table VII.B.1-1 contains our estimates of
the fuel distribution infrastructure capital costs to support the use
of the additional ethanol that we project will be used under the three
use scenarios by 2022 relative to the RFS1 reference case forecast of
7.05 BGY.\324\ The total estimated capital costs under our primary case
are estimated at $7.90 billion which when amortized equates to
approximately 6 cents per gallon of the additional ethanol volume that
would be used in 2022 in response to the RFS2 standards relative to the
RFS1 reference case.\325\ Capital costs under the low-ethanol and high-
ethanol scenarios are estimated at $5.47 billion and $11.92 billion
respectively. This equates to 6 and 5 cents per gallon respectively
relative to the RFS1 reference case.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\324\ See Section IV.C. of today's preamble for discussion of
the upgrades we project will be needed to the distribution system to
handle the increase in ethanol volumes under EISA. The derivation of
these estimates is discussed in Section 4.2 of the RIA.
\325\ These capital costs will be incurred incrementally through
2022 as ethanol volumes increase. Capital costs for tank trucks were
amortized over 10 years with a 7% cost of capital. Other capital
costs were amortized over 15 years with a 7% return on capital.
Table VII.B.1-1--Estimated Ethanol Distribution Infrastructure Capital Costs Under the RFS1 Reference Case
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Million $
-----------------------------------------------
Low-ethanol Primary High-ethanol
scenario scenario scenario
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fixed Facilities:
Marine Import Facilities.................................... 49 53 63
Marine Facilities for Shipment Inside U.S................... 98 130 186
Unit Train Receipt Facilities............................... 444 586 838
Manifest Rail Receipt Facilities............................ 15 20 28
Petroleum Terminals:
Terminal Storage Tanks...................................... 859 1,243 2,073
Blending & Misc. Equipment.................................. 1,006 1,064 1,144
E85 Retail.................................................. 1,957 3,293 4,973
Mobile Facilities:
Rail Cars................................................... 884 1,279 2,218
Barges...................................................... 53 77 133
Tank Trucks................................................. 107 154 268
-----------------------------------------------
[[Page 14828]]
Total Capital Costs (Million $)......................... 5,471 7,898 11,922
-----------------------------------------------
Total Capital Costs (cents per gallon ethanol).......... 6 6 5
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table VII.B.1-2 contains our estimates of the fuel distribution
infrastructure costs to support the use of the additional ethanol that
we project will be used under the three use scenarios by 2022 relative
to the AEO reference case forecast of 13.18 BGY. The total estimated
capital costs under our primary case are estimated at $5.50 billion
which when amortized equates to approximately 7 cents per gallon of the
additional ethanol volume that would be used in 2022 in response to the
RFS2 standards relative to the AEO reference case. Capital costs under
the low-ethanol and high-ethanol scenarios are estimated at $3.02
billion and $9.93 billion respectively. This equates to 8 and 6 cents
per gallon respectively relative to the AEO reference case.
Table VII.B.1-2--Estimated Ethanol Distribution Infrastructure Capital Costs Under the AEO Reference Case
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Million $
-----------------------------------------------
Low-ethanol Primary High-ethanol
scenario scenario scenario
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fixed Facilities:
Marine Import Facilities.................................... 49 53 63
Marine Facilities for Shipment Inside U.S................... 76 100 144
Unit Train Receipt Facilities............................... 238 434 748
Manifest Rail Receipt Facilities............................ 7 12 21
Petroleum Terminals:
Terminal Storage Tanks...................................... 355 739 1,568
Blending & Misc. Equipment.................................. 345 411 503
E85 Retail.................................................. 1,526 2,863 4,893
Mobile Facilities:
Rail Cars................................................... 309 522 1,133
Barges...................................................... 16 38 63
Tank Trucks................................................. 68 103 194
-----------------------------------------------
Total Capital Costs (Million $)......................... 3,025 5,505 9,935
-----------------------------------------------
Total Capital Costs (cents per gallon ethanol).......... 8 7 6
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
We estimate that ethanol freight costs under the primary and high-
ethanol scenarios would be 13 cents per gallon on a national average
basis. Ethanol freight costs under the high-ethanol scenario are
estimated at 12 cents per gallon. These estimates are based on an
analysis conducted for EPA by Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL)
which were modified to reflect projected higher transportation fuel
costs in the future, the likely installation of fewer unit train
receipt facilities than that projected by ORNL based on industry
comments, and to conform to the ethanol volumes under the three control
scenarios analyzed in today's rule.\326\ The ORNL analysis contains
detailed projections of which transportation modes and combination of
modes (e.g. unit train to barge) are best suited for delivery of
ethanol to specific markets considering ethanol source and end use
locations, the current configuration and projected evolution of the
distribution system, and cost considerations for the different
transportation modes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\326\ ``Analysis of Fuel Ethanol Transportation Activity and
Potential Distribution Constraints'', prepared for EPA by Oak Ridge
National Laboratory, March 2009. The ORNL analysis indicates that
ethanol freight costs decrease somewhat with increasing ethanol
volume. See Section 4.2 of the RIA for additional discussion of the
estimation of ethanol freight costs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summing the freight and capital costs estimates results in an
estimate of 19 cents per gallon for ethanol distribution costs for our
primary and low-ethanol scenarios under the RFS1 reference case. Total
ethanol distribution costs under the RFS1 reference case for the high-
ethanol scenario are estimated at 17 cents per gallon. Under the AEO
reference case, total ethanol distribution costs are estimated at 21,
20, and 18 cents per gallon respectively for the low-ethanol, primary,
and high-ethanol scenarios.
As discussed in Section IV.C. of today's preamble, ASTM
International is considering a change to specification on the minimum
ethanol content in E85 to facilitate the manufacture of E85 at
terminals which meets minimum volatility specifications using commonly-
available finished gasoline. If the current difficulties in blending
E85 to meet minimum volatility specifications can not be resolved by
lowering the minimum ethanol concentration of E85, high vapor pressure
blendstocks will need to be supplied to approximately two thirds of
petroleum terminals for blending with E85.\327\ This would necessitate
the
[[Page 14829]]
installation of new blending/storage equipment at petroleum terminals
and additional butane tank cars and tank trucks. The capital costs for
such facilities would be $2.2 billion, $1.4 billion, and $0.6 billion
under the high-ethanol, primary, and low-ethanol scenarios respectively
under both reference cases. By amortizing these capital costs and
adding in butane freight costs, we estimate that the need to supply
special blendstocks at terminals for E85 blending would add
approximately 1 cent per gallon to ethanol distribution costs for all
three analysis scenarios relative to the RFS1 reference case. Relative
to the AEO reference case, the additional cost would be approximately 2
cents per gallon under the primary and low-ethanol scenarios, and
approximately 1 cent per gallon under the high-ethanol scenario.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\327\ If this is the case, EPA would need to reconsider its
policies regarding what blendstocks can be used at petroleum
terminals in the manufacture of E85.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the NPRM, we estimated that half of the new ethanol rail receipt
capability needed to support the use of the projected ethanol volumes
under the EISA would be installed at petroleum terminals, and half
would be installed at rail terminals. Based on input from industry and
a study conducted for us by ORNL, we now believe that all unit train
receipt facilities will be installed at new dedicated locations.\328\
This change results in the need for additional tank truck receipt
equipment at terminals and additional tank trucks to carry ethanol from
rail to petroleum terminals compared to the NPRM. However, we also
received additional input from industry on the cost of unit train
facilities which indicates that such facilities are not as costly as we
projected in the NPRM. We also increased the average E85 facility cost
relative to the NPRM to reflect the likely need for additional E85
dispensers and a larger underground storage tank to maintain sufficient
throughput per facility.\329\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\328\ ``Analysis of Fuel Ethanol Transportation Activity and
Potential Distribution Constraints'', prepared for EPA by Oak Ridge
National Laboratory (ORNL), March 2009.
\329\ This is a sensitivity case that was evaluated in the NPRM.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Cellulosic Distillate and Renewable Diesel Distribution Costs
We chose to evaluate the distribution costs for cellulosic
distillate and renewable diesel together because the same
considerations apply to their handling in the fuel distribution system
and because the projected volume of renewable diesel fuel is relatively
small.
Table VII.B.2-1 contains our estimates of the fuel distribution
infrastructure capital costs to support the use of the cellulosic
distillate and renewable diesel fuel that we project will be used under
the three use scenarios by 2022 under the RFS1 reference case.\330\ The
total estimated capital costs by 2022 under our primary and low-ethanol
scenarios are estimated at $1.38 billion and $2.00 billion respectively
under the RFS1 reference case.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\330\ See Section IV.C. of today's preamble for discussion of
the upgrades we project will be needed to the distribution system to
handle the increase in ethanol volumes under EISA. The derivation of
these estimates is discussed in Section 1.6 of the RIA.
Table VII.B.2-1--Estimated Cellulosic Distillate Fuel Distribution Infrastructure Capital Costs Under the RFS1
Reference Case
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Million $
-----------------------------------------------
Low-ethanol Primary High-ethanol
scenario scenario case
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fixed Facilities:
Marine Facilities for Shipment Inside US.................... 87 56 -
Unit Train Receipt Facilities............................... 394 253 ..............
Manifest Rail Receipt Facilities............................ 13 8 ..............
Petroleum Terminals:
Terminal Storage Tanks...................................... 218 154 ..............
Blending & Misc. Equipment.................................. 361 252 ..............
Mobile Facilities:
Rail Cars................................................... 784 552 ..............
Barges...................................................... 47 33 ..............
Tank Trucks................................................. 95 .............. ..............
-----------------------------------------------
Total Capital Costs (Million $)......................... 1,999 1,375 \NA\
-----------------------------------------------
Total Capital Costs (cents per gallon of cellulosic 2 2 \NA\
distillate fuel).......................................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table VII.B.2-2 contains our estimates of the infrastructure
changes and associated capital costs to support the use of the
cellulosic distillate and renewable diesel fuel that we project will be
used under the three use scenarios by 2022 under the AEO reference
case. Total capital costs are estimated at $1.02 and $1.46 billion for
the primary and low-ethanol scenarios respectively under the AEO
reference case. The difference in estimated capital costs for the two
control scenarios under the two reference scenarios is obscured by
rounding when translating these costs to a cents-per-gallon basis. When
amortized, these capital costs equate to approximately 2 cents per
gallon for both control scenarios under both reference cases.\331\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\331\ These capital costs will be incurred incrementally through
2022 as ethanol volumes increase. Capital costs for tank trucks were
amortized over 10 years with a 7% cost of capital. Other capital
costs were amortized over 15 years with a 7% return on capital.
[[Page 14830]]
Table VII.B.2-2--Estimated Cellulosic Distillate Fuel Distribution Infrastructure Capital Costs Under the AEO
Reference Case
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Million $
-----------------------------------------------
Low-ethanol Primary High-ethanol
scenario scenario case
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fixed Facilities:
Marine Facilities for Shipment Inside US.................... 67 43 ..............
Unit Train Receipt Facilities............................... 511 315 ..............
Manifest Rail Receipt Facilities............................ 15 9 ..............
Petroleum Terminals:
Terminal Storage Tanks...................................... 218 154 ..............
Blending & Misc. Equipment.................................. 304 223 ..............
Mobile Facilities:
Rail Cars................................................... 784 552 ..............
Barges...................................................... 47 33 ..............
Tank Trucks................................................. 90 63 ..............
-----------------------------------------------
Total Capital Costs (Million $)......................... 2,036 1,392 NA
-----------------------------------------------
Total Capital Costs (cents per gallon of cellulosic distillate 2 2 NA
fuel)..........................................................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
We estimate that cellulosic distillate freight costs would be 13
cents per gallon on a national average basis under both the primary and
low-ethanol scenarios. This estimate is based on the application to
cellulosic distillate freight costs of an analysis conducted for EPA by
Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) of ethanol freight costs.\332\ The
underlying premise is that both ethanol and cellulosic distillate fuel
would be handled by the same types of distribution facilities on the
journey to petroleum terminals.\333\ Summing the freight and capital
costs results in an estimated 15 cents per gallon in total distribution
costs for both the primary and low-ethanol scenarios under both
reference cases.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\332\ ``Analysis of Fuel Ethanol Transportation Activity and
Potential Distribution Constraints'', prepared for EPA by Oak Ridge
National Laboratory, March 2009. See Section 4.2 of the RIA for
additional discussion of the estimation of cellulosic distillate
freight costs.
\333\ The same unit train and manifest rail receipt facilities
would be used to handle shipments of both fuels.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The ethanol and cellulosic distillate distribution cost estimates
are based on the projections of the location of biofuel production
facilities and end use areas contained in the NPRM. The extent to which
new biofuel production facilities are more dispersed than projected in
the NPRM, distribution costs for ethanol from new production facilities
and for all cellulosic distillate facilities may tend be lower than
those projected by this analysis as the fuel has more opportunity to be
used locally. This would potentially be a greater benefit in lowering
cellulosic distillate distribution costs than overall ethanol
distribution costs given the large number of ethanol production
facilities currently located in the Midwest. Cellulosic distillate
costs should also tend to be lower than those for ethanol because
cellulosic distillate fuel blends are compatible with existing
petroleum distribution equipment, whereas there are special
considerations associated with the distribution of ethanol. The most
notable of these considerations is the need for special fuel retail
equipment for E85 (as evidenced in Table VII.B.1-1). Thus, the
cellulosic distillate distribution costs estimated here are likely to
be conservative.
3. Biodiesel Distribution Costs
Table VII.B.3-1 contains our estimates of the infrastructure
changes and associated capital costs to support the use of the
additional biodiesel that we project will be used under RFS2 by 2022
relative to the RFS reference case of 300 MGY by 2022.\334\ The total
capital costs are estimated at $1.2 billion which equates to
approximately 10 cents per gallon of additional biodiesel volume.\335\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\334\ We project that by 2022 300 MGY of biodiesel would be used
under the RFS1 reference case, 380 MGY of biodiesel would be used
under the RFS reference case and that a total of 1.67 BGY of
biodiesel would be used under the EISA. Biodiesel use is projected
to be the same under all three of analysis scenarios.
\335\ These capital costs will be incurred incrementally through
2022 as biodiesel volumes increase. Capital costs for tank trucks
were amortized over 10 years with a 7% cost of capital. Other
capital costs were amortized over 15 years with a 7% return on
capital.
Table VII.B.3-1--Estimated Biodiesel Distribution Infrastructure Capital
Costs Under the RFS1 Reference Case
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Million $
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fixed Facilities:
Petroleum Terminals:
Storage Tanks............................................. 411
Blending & Misc. Equipment................................ 612
Mobile Facilities:
Rail Cars................................................. 111
Barges.................................................... 53
Tank Trucks............................................... 25
-----------
Total Capital Costs (Million $)......................... 1,212
-----------
Total Capital Costs (cents per gallon of biodiesel)......... 10
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table VII.B.3-2 contains our estimates of the infrastructure
changes and associated capital costs to support the use of the
additional biodiesel that we project will be used under RFS2 by 2022
relative to the AEO reference case of 380 MGY. The total capital costs
are estimated at $1.1 billion which equates to approximately 10 cents
per gallon of additional biodiesel volume.
Table VII.B.3-2--Estimated Biodiesel Distribution Infrastructure Capital
Costs Under the AEO Reference Case
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Million $
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fixed Facilities:
Petroleum Terminals:
Storage Tanks............................................. 387
Blending & Misc. Equipment................................ 576
Mobile Facilities:
Rail Cars................................................. 105
Barges.................................................... 50
[[Page 14831]]
Tank Trucks............................................... 24
-----------
Total Capital Costs (Million $)......................... 1,141
-----------
Total Capital Costs (cents per gallon of biodiesel)......... 10
------------------------------------------------------------------------
We estimate that biodiesel freight costs would be 10 cents per
gallon on a national average basis. State biodiesel use requirements
and biodiesel production locations were taken into account in
formulating this estimate.\336\ The biodiesel blend ratio was estimated
to vary between 2 and 5%. Adding the estimated freight costs to the
amortized capital costs results in an estimate of total biodiesel
distribution costs of 20 cents per gallon under both the RFS1 and AEO
reference cases.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\336\ See Section 4.2 of the RIA for a discussion of our
derivation of biodiesel distribution costs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. Reduced U.S. Refining Demand
As renewable and alternative fuel use increases, the volume of
petroleum-based products, such has gasoline and diesel fuel, would
decrease. This reduction in finished refinery petroleum products
results in reduced refinery industry costs. The reduced costs would
essentially be the volume of fuel displaced multiplied by the cost for
producing the fuel. There is also a reduction in capital costs as
investment in new refinery capacity is displaced by investments in
renewable and alternative fuels capacity.
Although we conducted refinery modeling for estimating the cost of
blending ethanol (see Section VII.B), we did not rely on the refinery
model results for estimating the volume of displaced petroleum as other
economic factors also come into play. Instead we conducted an energy
balance around the increased use of renewable fuels, estimating the
energy-equivalent volume of gasoline or diesel fuel displaced. This
allowed us to more easily apply our best estimates for how much of the
petroleum would displace imports of finished products versus crude oil
for our energy security analysis which is discussed in Section VIII.B
of this preamble.
As part of this petroleum displacement analysis, we accounted for
the change in petroleum demanded by upstream processes related to
additional production of the renewable fuels as well as reduced
production of petroleum fuels. For example, growing corn used for
ethanol production requires the use of diesel fuel in tractors, which
reduces the volume of petroleum displaced by the ethanol. Similarly,
the refining of crude oil uses by-product hydrocarbons for heating
within the refinery, therefore the overall effect of reduced gasoline
and diesel fuel consumption is actually greater because of the
additional upstream effect. We used the lifecycle petroleum demand
estimates provided for in the GREET model to account for the upstream
consumption of petroleum for each of the renewable and alternative
fuels, as well as for gasoline and diesel fuel. Although there may be
some renewable fuel used for upstream energy, we assumed that this
entire volume is petroleum because the volume of renewable and
alternative fuels is fixed by the RFS2 standard.
We assumed that a portion of the gasoline displaced by ethanol
would have been produced from domestic refineries causing reduced
demand from U.S. refineries, while the rest of the additional ethanol
displaces imported gasoline or gasoline blendstocks which does not
affect domestic refining sector costs. To estimate the portion of new
ethanol which displaces U.S. refinery production we relied on some
Markal refinery modeling conducted for us by DOE. The Markal refinery
model models all the refinery sectors of the world and thus can do a
fair job estimating how renewable fuels would impact imports of
finished gasoline and gasoline blendstocks. The Markal refinery model
estimated that \2/3\rds of a reduction in petroleum gasoline demand
would be met by a reduction in imported gasoline or gasoline
blendstocks, while the other \1/3\rd would be met by reduced refining
production by the U.S. refining sector. In the case of biodiesel and
renewable diesel, all of it is presumed to offset domestic diesel fuel
production. For ethanol, biodiesel and renewable diesel, the amount of
petroleum fuel displaced is estimated based on the relative energy
contents of the renewable fuels to the fuels which they are displacing.
The savings due to lower imported gasoline and diesel fuel is accounted
for in the energy security analysis contained in Section VIII.B.
For estimating the U.S. refinery industry cost reductions, we
multiplied the estimated volume of domestic gasoline and diesel fuel
displaced by the projected wholesale price for each of these fuels in
2022, which are $3.42 per gallon for gasoline, and $3.83 per gallon for
diesel fuel. For the volume of petroleum displaced upstream, we valued
it using the wholesale diesel fuel price. Table VII.C-1 shows the net
volumetric impact on the petroleum portion of gasoline and diesel fuel
demand, as well as the reduced refining industry costs for 2022.
Table VII.C-1--Changes in U.S. Refinery Industry Volumes and Costs for Increased Renewable Fuel Volumes in 2022
Relative to the AEO 2007 Reference Case
[2007 dollars]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Low ethanol case Primary case (mid- High ethanol case
------------------------ ethanol case) ---------------------
----------------------
Bil gals Bil $ Bil gals Bil $ Bil gals Bil $
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Upstream:
Petroleum............................... 0.34 1.3 0.34 1.3 0.33 1.3
End Use:
Gasoline................................ -0.9 -3.1 -2.0 -6.8 -4.4 -15.0
Diesel Fuel............................. -10.1 -38.7 -7.5 -28.7 -1.3 -5.0
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Total............................... -10.7 -40.5 -9.2 -34.2 -5.4 -18.7
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 14832]]
For the primary control case relative to the AEO 2007 reference
case, this analysis estimates that the increased volumes of renewable
fuel would reduce the gasoline and diesel fuel production volume of US
refineries by 9.2 billion gallons in 2022, which would reduce their raw
material purchases and production costs by $34 billion dollars.
Accounting for all the petroleum displaced (domestic and foreign), the
increased volumes of renewable fuel caused by the RFS 2 fuels program
are estimated to reduce gasoline and diesel fuel demand by 13.2 billion
gallons.
D. Total Estimated Cost Impacts
The previous sections of this chapter presented estimates of the
cost of producing and distributing corn-based and cellulosic-based
ethanol, cellulosic diesel fuel, imported ethanol, biodiesel, and
renewable diesel. In this section, we briefly summarize the methodology
used and the results of our analysis to estimate the cost and other
implications for increased use of renewable fuels to displace gasoline
and diesel fuel. An important aspect of this analysis is refinery
modeling which primarily was used to estimate the costs of blending
ethanol into gasoline, as well as the overall refinery industry impacts
of the fuel program. A detailed discussion of how the renewable fuel
volumes affect refinery gasoline production volumes and cost is
contained in Chapter 4 of the RIA.
1. Refinery Modeling Methodology
The refinery modeling was conducted in three distinct steps. The
first step involved the establishment of a 2004 base case which
calibrated the refinery model against 2004 volumes, gasoline quality,
and refinery capital in place. The EPA and ASTM fuel quality
constraints in effect by 2004 are imposed on the products.
For the second step, we established two year 2022 future year
reference cases which based their energy demand off of the 2009 Annual
Energy Outlook (AEO). One of the reference cases assumes business-as-
usual demand growth from the AEO 2007 reference case discussed in
Section IV.A.1. The other utilized the RFS1 reference case. The
refinery modeling results are based on $116 per barrel crude oil prices
which are the 2022 projected prices by EIA in its 2009 AEO. We also
modeled the implementation of several new environmental programs that
will have required changes in fuel quality by 2022, including the 30
part per million (ppm) average gasoline sulfur standard, the 15 ppm cap
standards on highway and nonroad diesel fuel, the Mobile Source Air
Toxics (MSAT) 0.62 volume percent benzene standard. We also modeled the
implementation of EPAct of 2005, which by rescinding the reformulated
gasoline oxygenate standard, resulted in the discontinued use of MTBE,
and a large increase in the amount of ethanol blended into reformulated
gasoline. We also modeled the EISA Energy Bill corporate average fuel
economy (caf[eacute]) standards in the reference case because it will
be phasing-in, and affect the phase-in of the RFS2.
The third step, or the control cases, involved the modeling of
three different possible renewable fuels volumes. The three different
volumes were designed to capture the additional use of corn ethanol and
biodiesel and a range of cellulosic ethanol and cellulosic diesel fuel
volumes. The volumes that we assessed in our analysis are summarized in
Section IV.A above.
The price of ethanol and E85 used in the refinery modeling is a
critical determinant of the overall economics of using ethanol. Ethanol
was priced initially based on the historical average price spread
between regular grade conventional gasoline and ethanol, but then
adjusted post-modeling to reflect the projected production cost for
both corn and cellulosic-based ethanol. The refinery modeling assumed
that all ethanol added to gasoline for E10 is match-blended for octane
by refiners in the reference and control cases. For the control case,
E85 was assumed to be priced lower than gasoline to reflect its lower
energy content, longer refueling time and lower availability (see
Chapter 4 of the RIA for a detailed discussion for how we projected E85
prices). For the refinery modeling, E85 was assumed to be blended with
gasoline blendstock designed for blending with E10, and with butane to
bring the RVP of E85 up to that allowed by ASTM International standards
for E85. Thus, unlike current practices today where E85 is blended at
85% in the summer and E70 in the winter, we assumed that E85 is blended
at 85% year-round. As E85 specifications are still under consideration
by ASTM, this assumption may differ from future procedures. E85 use in
any one market is limited to levels which we estimated would reflect
the ability of FFV vehicles in the area to consume the E85 volume. Our
costs also include the incremental costs of producing flexible fuel
vehicles (FFVs) over that of conventionally fueled vehicles.
The refinery model was provided some flexibility and also was
constrained with respect to the applicable gasoline volatility
standards for blending up E10. The refinery model allowed conventional
gasoline and most low RVP control programs to increase by 1.0 pounds
per square inch (psi) in Reid Vapor Pressure (RVP) waiver during the
summer. However, wintertime conventional gasoline was assumed to comply
with the wintertime ASTM RVP and Volume/Liquid (V/L) standards.
The costs for producing, distributing and using biodiesel and
renewable diesel are accounted for outside the refinery modeling. Their
production and distribution costs are estimated first, compared to the
costs of producing diesel fuel, and then are added to the costs
estimated by the refinery cost model for blending the ethanol.
2. Overall Impact on Fuel Cost
Utilizing the refinery modeling output conducted for today's final
rule, we calculated the costs for each control case, which represented
the three different renewable fuels scenarios in 2022, relative to the
AEO 2007 and RFS1 reference cases. The costs are reported separately
for blending ethanol into gasoline, as E10 and E85, and for blending
cellulosic diesel fuel, biodiesel and renewable diesel into petroleum-
based diesel fuel. These costs do not include the biofuel consumption
tax subsidies. The costs are based on 2007 dollars and the capital
costs are amortized at seven percent return on investment (ROI) before
taxes.
Tables VII.D.2-1 and VII.D.2-2 summarize the costs for each of the
three control cases, including the aggregated total for all the fuel
changes and the per-gallon costs, relative to the AEO 2007 and RFS1
reference cases, respectively. This estimate of costs reflects the
changes in gasoline that are occurring with the expanded use of
renewable and alternative fuels. These costs include the labor, utility
and other operating costs, fixed costs and the capital costs for all
the fuel changes expected. These cost estimates do not account for the
various tax subsidies. The per-gallon costs are derived by dividing the
total costs over all U.S. gasoline and diesel fuel projected to be
consumed in 2022. These costs are only for the incremental renewable
fuel volumes beyond the volumes modeled in the two reference cases.
[[Page 14833]]
Table VII.D.2-1--Estimated Fuel Costs of Increased Volumes of Renewable Fuel in 2022 Incremental to the AEO 2007
Reference Case
[2007 dollars, 7% ROI before taxes]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Primary case
Low ethanol (mid-ethanol High ethanol
case case) case
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Gasoline Impacts:
$billion/yr............................................... -0.67 -3.31 -5.90
c/gal..................................................... -0.48 -2.35 -4.08
Diesel Fuel Impacts:
$billion/yr............................................... -11.7 -8.5 -1.27
c/gal..................................................... -16.4 -12.1 -1.79
Total Impact:
$billion/yr............................................... -12.4 -11.8 -7.17
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Incremental to the AEO 2007 reference case, our analysis shows that
for the low ethanol case which models mostly cellulosic diesel instead
of cellulosic ethanol, the gasoline and diesel fuel costs are projected
to decrease by $0.7 billion and $11.70 billion, respectively, for a
total savings of $12.4 billion. Expressed as per-gallon costs, these
fuel changes would decrease the cost of producing gasoline and diesel
fuel by 0.5 and 16.4 cents per gallon, respectively.
For our primary case which models a mix of cellulosic diesel fuel
and cellulosic ethanol, the gasoline and diesel fuel costs are
projected to decrease by $3.3 billion and $8.5 billion, respectively,
for a total savings of $11.8 billion. Expressed as per-gallon costs,
these fuel changes would decrease the cost of producing gasoline and
diesel fuel by 2.4 and 12.1 cents per gallon, respectively.
For the high ethanol case where the cellulosic biofuel is
cellulosic ethanol (as in the proposal), the gasoline and diesel fuel
costs are projected to decrease by $5.9 billion and $1.3 billion,
respectively, for a total savings of $7.2 billion. Expressed as per-
gallon costs, these fuel changes would decrease the cost of producing
gasoline and diesel fuel by 4.1 and 1.8 cents per gallon, respectively.
Crude oil prices have been very volatile over the last several
years which raises uncertainty about future crude oil prices. Because
our cost model was created to be able to assess the cost of the program
at a higher crude oil price, we can also assess the cost at other crude
oil prices. As a sensitivity, we varied crude oil prices in our model
to find the break-even (no cost) point of the RFS2 program. Using our
cost model we estimate that, for the primary control case relative to
the AEO 2007 reference case, the RFS2 program (total of gasoline and
diesel fuel costs) would break-even at a 2022 crude oil price of $88
per barrel. Thus, in 2022 if crude oil is priced lower than $88 per
barrel, the RFS2 program would cost money; if crude oil is priced
higher than $88 per barrel, the RFS2 program would result in a cost
savings.
Table VII.D.2-2--Estimated Fuel Costs of Increased Volumes of Renewable Fuel in 2022 Incremental to the RFS1
Reference Case
[2007 dollars, 7% ROI before taxes]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Primary case
Low ethanol (mid-ethanol High ethanol
case case) case
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Gasoline Impacts:
$billion/yr............................................... -3.12 -5.63 -7.79
c/gal..................................................... -2.24 -4.00 -5.38
Diesel Fuel Impacts:
$billion/yr............................................... -11.7 -8.6 -1.35
c/gal..................................................... -16.5 -12.1 -1.90
Total Impact:
$billion/yr............................................... -14.8 -14.2 -9.14
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Incremental to the RFS1 reference case, our analysis shows that for
the low ethanol case which models mostly cellulosic diesel instead of
cellulosic ethanol, the gasoline and diesel fuel costs are projected to
decrease by $3.1 billion and $11.70 billion, respectively, for a total
savings of $14.8 billion. Expressed as per-gallon costs, these fuel
changes would decrease the cost of producing gasoline and diesel fuel
by 2.4 and 16.5 cents per gallon, respectively.
For our primary case which models a mix of cellulosic diesel fuel
and cellulosic ethanol, the gasoline and diesel fuel costs are
projected to decrease by $5.6 billion and $8.6 billion, respectively,
for a total savings of $14.2.billion. Expressed as per-gallon costs,
these fuel changes would decrease the cost of producing gasoline and
diesel fuel by 4.0 and 12.1 cents per gallon, respectively.
For the high ethanol case where the cellulosic biofuel is
cellulosic ethanol (as in the proposal), the gasoline and diesel fuel
costs are projected to decrease by $7.8 billion and $1.4 billion,
respectively, for a total savings of $9.1 billion. Expressed as per-
gallon costs, these fuel changes would decrease the cost of producing
gasoline and diesel fuel by 5.4 and 1.9 cents per gallon, respectively.
Both the gasoline and diesel fuel costs are negative because of the
relatively high crude oil prices estimated by EIA for the year 2022.
Given the higher projected crude oil prices and these savings, it is
difficult to quantify how
[[Page 14834]]
much of the increase in renewable fuels and the associated savings is
due to the RFS 2 program versus what would have happened regardless in
the marketplace. However, even with the high crude oil prices as
projected by EIA, some or perhaps even most of the investments in these
emerging renewable fuels technologies may not occur without the RFS 2
program in place. The reason for this is that investors are hesitant to
invest in emerging technologies when the threat remains for a drop in
the price of crude oil leaving their investment dollars stranded. The
RFS2 program provides certainty for investors to invest in renewable
fuel technologies.
There are two important reasons why the diesel fuel costs are more
negative than the gasoline costs when comparing the low ethanol case
(high cellulosic diesel case) to the high ethanol case: (1) Cellulosic
ethanol costs include the costs for fuel flexible vehicles, while
vehicles using cellulosic diesel fuel are not expected to require any
vehicle modifications, hence there is no additional estimated cost, (2)
the crude oil price adjustment based on crude oil and finished gasoline
and diesel fuel price data from 2002 to 2008 increases the estimated
production cost for petroleum diesel fuel more so than for gasoline--
therefore cellulosic diesel shows a greater cost savings. If the diesel
fuel prices do not increase more than gasoline prices with higher crude
oil prices, then the significantly higher savings for renewable diesel
fuel over that for renewable ethanol would be less than that modeled
here.
The increased use of renewable and alternative fuels would require
capital investments in corn and cellulosic ethanol plants, and
renewable diesel fuel plants. In addition to producing the fuels,
storage and distribution facilities along the whole distribution chain,
including at retail, will have to be constructed for these new fuels.
Conversely, as these renewable and alternative fuels are being
produced, they supplant gasoline and diesel fuel demand which results
in less new investments in refineries compared to business-as-usual. In
Table VII.D.2-3, we list the total incremental capital investments that
we project would be made for this RFS2 rulemaking incremental to the
RFS1 reference case (refer to Chapter 4 of the RIA for more detail).
Table VII.D.2-3--Total Projected U.S. Capital Investments To Meet the Increased Volumes of Renewable Fuel
[Incremental to the AEO 2007 reference case, billion dollars]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Primary case
Cost type Plant type Low ethanol (mid-ethanol High ethanol
case case) case
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Production Costs.............. Corn Ethanol.................... 3.9 3.9 3.9
Cellulosic Ethanol.............. 0 14.3 48.3
Cellulosic Diesel \a\........... 96.5 68.0 0
Renewable Diesel and Algae...... 1.1 1.1 1.1
Distribution Costs............ All Ethanol..................... 5.6 8.2 11.9
Cellulosic and Renewable Diesel 2.0 1.4 ..............
Fuel.
Biodiesel....................... 1.2 1.2 1.2
FFV Costs....................... 0.8 1.8 6.1
Refining........................ -10.7 -9.4 -4.1
-----------------------------------------------
Total Capital Investments. ................................ 110.4 90.5 68.4
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\a\ Cellulosic diesel fuel is assumed to be produced by BTL plants which is a very capital intensive technology.
If some or even most of this volume comes from other cellulosic diesel fuel technologies which are less
capital intensive, the capital costs attributed to cellulosic diesel would be much lower.
Table VII.D.2-3 shows that the total U.S. capital investments
attributed to this program ranges from $71 to $111 billion in 2022 for
the high ethanol to low ethanol cases. The capital investments made for
renewable fuels technologies are much more than the decrease in
refining industry capital investments because (1) a large part of the
decrease in petroleum gasoline supply was from reduced imports, (2)
renewable fuels technologies are more capital intensive per gallon of
fuel produced than incremental increases in gasoline and diesel fuel
production at refineries, and (3) ethanol and biodiesel require
considerable distribution and retail infrastructure investments.
VIII. Economic Impacts and Benefits
A. Agricultural and Forestry Impacts
EPA used two principal tools to model the potential domestic and
international impacts of the RFS2 on the U.S. and global agricultural
sectors. The Forest and Agricultural Sector Optimization Model (FASOM),
developed by Professor Bruce McCarl of Texas A&M University and others,
provides detailed information on the domestic agricultural and forestry
sectors, as well as greenhouse gas impacts of renewable fuels. The Food
and Agricultural Policy Research Institute (FAPRI) at Iowa State
University and the University of Missouri-Columbia maintains a number
of econometric models that are capable of providing detailed
information on impacts on international agricultural markets from the
wider use of renewable fuels in the U.S. EPA worked directly with the
Center for Agriculture and Rural Development (CARD) at Iowa State
University to implement the FAPRI model to analyze the impacts of the
RFS2 on the global agriculture sector. Thus, this model will henceforth
be referred to as the FAPRI-CARD model.
FASOM is a long-term economic model of the U.S. agriculture and
forestry sectors that attempts to maximize total revenues for producers
while meeting the demands of consumers. FASOM can be utilized to
estimate which crops, livestock, forest stands, and processed
agricultural and forestry products would be produced in the U.S. given
RFS2 biofuel requirements. In each model simulation, crops compete for
price sensitive inputs such as land and labor at the regional level and
the cost of these and other inputs are used to determine the price and
level of production of primary commodities (e.g., field crops,
livestock, and biofuel products). FASOM also estimates prices using
costs associated with the processing of primary commodities into
secondary products (e.g., converting livestock to meat and
[[Page 14835]]
dairy, crushing soybeans to soybean meal and oil, etc.). FASOM does not
capture short-term fluctuations (i.e., month-to-month, annual) in
prices and production, however, as it is designed to identify long-term
trends (i.e., five to ten years).
There are a few notable changes that have been made to both the
FASOM and FAPRI-CARD models, as well as to some of the underlying
assumptions used in the agro-economic analysis since the release of the
proposed rulemaking analysis. These changes were made as a result of
further research and consultation with experts, as well as in response
to comments received during the public comment period following the
release of the proposed rulemaking. In regards to the FASOM model, the
first major change made to the model is the inclusion of the full
interaction between the forestry and agriculture sectors, as discussed
in the NPRM and supported by comments received. For the proposed
rulemaking, the FASOM model was only capable of modeling the changes in
the agriculture sector alone. In terms of land use, the only land use
that could be examined was cropland and pasture use. With the
incorporation of a forestry sector that dynamically interacts with the
agriculture, we are able to examine how crop and forest acres compete
for land in response to changes in policy. Also, similar to the
agriculture sector, the forestry sector has its own set of forestry
products, including logging and milling residues that are available for
the production of cellulosic ethanol.
The second major change to the FASOM model is the addition of a
full accounting of major land types in the U.S., including cropland,
cropland pasture, forestland, forest pasture, rangeland, acres enrolled
in the Conservation Reserve Program (CRP), and developed land. These
changes address comments raised by peer reviewers and the general
public that we should more explicitly link the interaction between
livestock, pasture land, cropland, and forest land, as well as have a
detailed accounting of acres in the U.S. across different land uses.
Cropland is actively managed cropland, used for both traditional crops
(e.g., corn and soybeans) and dedicated energy crops (e.g.,
switchgrass). Cropland pasture is managed pasture land used for
livestock production, but which can also be converted to cropland
production. Forestland contains a number of sub-categories, tracking
the number of acres both newly and continually harvested (reforested),
the number of acres harvested and converted to other land uses
(afforested), as well as the amount of forest acres on public land.
Forest pasture is unmanaged pasture land with varying amounts of tree
cover that can be used for livestock production. A portion of this land
may be used for timber harvest. Rangeland is unmanaged land that can be
used for livestock grazing production. While the amount of rangeland
idled or used for production may vary, rangeland may not be used for
any other purpose than for cattle grazing.
A third major change in the FASOM model is the adoption of updated
cellulosic ethanol conversion rates. We updated the cellulosic ethanol
conversion rates based on new data provided by the National Renewable
Energy Laboratory (NREL). The new analysis by NREL simplified and
updated the conversion yields of the different types of feedstocks. As
a result of these changes, the gallons per ton yields for switchgrass
and several other feedstocks increased from the values used in the
proposal, while the yields for corn residue and several other
feedstocks decreased slightly from the NPRM values. In addition, we
also updated our feedstock production yields based on new work
conducted by the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL).\337\
This analysis increased the tons per acre yields for several dedicated
energy crops. These changes increased the amount of cellulosic ethanol
projected to come from energy crops. Additional details on the FASOM
model changes can be found in Chapter 5 of the RIA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\337\ Thomson, A.M., R.C. Izarrualde, T.O. West, D.J. Parrish,
D.D. Tyler, and J.R. Williams. 2009. Simulating Potential
Switchgrass Production in the United States. PNNL-19072. College
Park, MD: Pacific Northwest National Laboratory.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The FAPRI-CARD models are econometric models covering many
agricultural commodities. These models capture the biological,
technical, and economic relationships among key variables within a
particular commodity and across commodities. They are based on
historical data analysis, current academic research, and a reliance on
accepted economic, agronomic, and biological relationships in
agricultural production and markets. The international modeling system
includes international grains, oilseeds, ethanol, sugar, and livestock
models. In general, for each commodity sector, the economic
relationship that supply equals demand is maintained by determining a
market-clearing price for the commodity. In countries where domestic
prices are not solved endogenously, these prices are modeled as a
function of the world price using a price transmission equation. Since
econometric models for each sector can be linked, changes in one
commodity sector will impact other sectors. Elasticity values for
supply and demand responses are based on econometric analysis and on
consensus estimates.
As one of the largest and fastest developing countries in the
world, a major producer and exporter of sugar ethanol, and in
possession of one of the world's largest carbon sinks, the Amazon,
Brazil is acknowledged to be an important part of our analysis in terms
of indirect land use change. For the proposal's analysis, the FAPRI-
CARD model analyzed Brazil at a national level as any other non-US
nation in the model, covering only crop area and commodity prices.
Comments and feedback received indicated the importance of analyzing
Brazil at a regional level, given its diverse natural lands across the
country, and to also closely examine livestock production in terms of
land use.
In response to these comments, the FAPRI-CARD model now includes an
integrated Brazil module that provides additional detail on
agricultural land use in Brazil for six geographic regions. The new
Brazil module explicitly models the competition between cropland and
pastureland used for livestock production in each region. In addition,
the Brazil module allows for region-specific agriculture practices such
as double cropping and livestock intensification in response to higher
commodity prices. The addition of the Brazil module allows for a more
refined analysis of land use change and economic impacts in Brazil than
what was able to be done for the proposal's analysis.
Another topic that we received comments on was in regards to price-
induced yields. Namely that with an increase in price for a particular
crop, seed producers and/or farmers have a greater incentive to
increase yields for that particular crop in order to maximize revenue.
In the analysis for proposal, the FAPRI-CARD model did not include
impacts of commodity price changes on yields. For the final rulemaking,
the FAPRI-CARD model now includes feedback from changes in commodity
prices on yields. The elasticities for these responses are based on an
econometric analysis of historical data on yield and price changes for
various commodities. Additional details on the FAPRI-CARD modeling
updates can be found in Chapter 5 of the RIA.
In the NPRM, we specifically requested comments on our assumptions
regarding distiller grain with solubles (DGS) replacement rates.
[[Page 14836]]
For the proposal, we assumed that one pound of DGS replaced one pound
of total of corn and soybean meal for all fed animals. We received
numerous comments on this assumption. Many commenters suggested that we
adopt the replacement rates included in the recent research by Argonne
National Laboratory (ANL) and others.\338\ The ANL study found that one
pound of DGS can be used to replace 1.196 pounds total of corn and
soybean meal for various fed animals due to the higher nutritional
content of DGS per pound compared to corn and soybean meal. For the
final rulemaking analysis, these replacement rates are incorporated in
both the FASOM and FAPRI-CARD models, and are treated as a maximum
replacement rate possibility that is fully phased in by 2015. In
addition, the maximum inclusion rates for DGS in an animal's diet have
also been incorporated into the models. Given these parameters, each
agriculture sector model determines the total quantity of DGS used in
feed based on relative prices for competing feed sources.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\338\ Salil Arora, May Wu, and Michael Wang, ``Update of
Distillers Grains Displacement Ratios for Corn Ethanol Life-Cycle
Analysis,'' September 2008. See http://www.transportation.anl.gov/pdfs/AF/527.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition, both FASOM and FAPRI-CARD now explicitly model corn
oil from the dry mill ethanol extraction process as a new source of
biodiesel. Based on engineering research (refer to Section VII.A)
regarding expected technological adoption, it is estimated that 70% of
dry mill ethanol plants will withdraw corn oil via extraction (from
DGS), resulting in corn oil that is non-food grade and can only be used
as a biodiesel source; 20% will withdraw corn oil via fractionation
(prior to the creation of DGS), resulting in corn oil that is food-
grade; and 10% will do neither extraction or fractionation. Based on
this research, both the FASOM and FAPRI-CARD models are estimating that
approximately 681 million gallons of biodiesel can be produced from
non-food grade corn oil from extraction by 2022 in the Control Case.
Additional information regarding these changes to the FASOM and FAPRI-
CARD models can be found in RIA Chapter 5.
1. Biofuel Volumes Modeled
For the agricultural sector analysis using the FASOM and FAPRI-CARD
models of the RFS2 biofuel volumes, we assumed 15 billion gallons
(Bgal) of corn ethanol would be produced for use as transportation fuel
by 2022, an increase of 2.7 Bgal from the Reference Case. Also, we
modeled 1.7 Bgal of biodiesel use as fuel in 2022, an increase of 1.3
Bgal from the Reference Case. In addition, we modeled an increase of 16
Bgal of cellulosic ethanol in 2022. In FASOM, this volume consists of
4.9 billion gallons of cellulosic ethanol coming from corn residue in
2022, 7.9 billion gallons from switchgrass, 0.6 billion gallons from
sugarcane bagasse, and 0.1 billion gallons from forestry residues.
Given the nature of the models, there are some limitations on what
each model may explicitly model as a biofuel feedstock source. For
example, since FASOM is a domestic agricultural sector model it cannot
be utilized to examine the impacts of the wider use of biofuel imports
into the U.S. Similarly, the FAPRI-CARD model does not explicitly model
the forestry sector in the U.S. and therefore does not include biofuels
produced from the U.S. forestry sector. Also, neither of the two models
used for this analysis--FASOM or FAPRI-CARD--include biofuels derived
from domestic municipal solid waste. Thus, for the RFS2 agricultural
sector analysis, these biofuel sources are analyzed outside of the
agricultural sector models.
All of the results presented in this section are relative to the
AEO 2007 Reference Case renewable fuel volumes, which include 12.3 Bgal
of grain-based ethanol, 0.4 Bgal of biodiesel, and 0.3 Bgal of
cellulosic ethanol in 2022. The domestic figures are provided by FASOM,
and all of the international numbers are provided by FAPRI-CARD. The
detailed FASOM results, detailed FAPRI-CARD results, and additional
sensitivity analyses are described in more detail in the RIA.
Table VIII.A.1-1--Ethanol Source Volumes Modeled in 2022
[Billions of gallons]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
AEO 2007
Ethanol source reference Control Change
case case
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Corn Ethanol..................... 12.3 15.0 2.7
Corn Residue Cellulosic Ethanol * 0 4.9 4.9
Sugarcane Bagasse Cellulosic 0.2 0.6 0.4
Ethanol *.......................
Switchgrass Cellulosic Ethanol *. 0 7.9 7.9
Forestry Residue Cellulosic 0 0.1 0.1
Ethanol *.......................
Net Imports of Sugarcane Ethanol 0.6 2.2 1.6
**..............................
Other Ethano ***................. 0.1 2.6 2.5
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Cellulosic Ethanol feedstocks are not explicitly modeled in FAPRI-
CARD.
** Net Imports of Sugarcane Ethanol is not explicitly modeled in FASOM.
*** Includes MSW, which is not explicitly modeled by either FASOM or
FAPRI-CARD.
Table VIII.A.1-2--Biodiesel Source Volumes Modeled in 2022
[Millions of gallons]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
AEO 2007
Biodiesel source reference Control Change
case case
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Soybean Oil...................... 119.9 659.4 539.5
Corn Oil (Dry Mill Extraction)... 0.4 681.3 680.8
Animal Fats...................... 93.9 126.9 33.0
Yellow Grease.................... 170.9 253.1 82.3
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 14837]]
2. Commodity Price Changes
For the scenario modeled, FASOM predicts that in 2022 U.S. corn
prices would increase by $0.27 per bushel (8.2%) above the Reference
Case price of $3.32 per bushel. By 2022, U.S. soybean prices would
increase by $1.02 per bushel (10.3%) above the Reference Case price of
$9.85 per bushel. In 2022, U.S. soybean oil prices would increase
$183.32 per ton (37.9%) above the Reference Case price of $483.10 per
ton. Hardwood lumber prices are unaffected by the increase in biofuel
demand, however softwood lumber prices increase by $0.46 per board foot
(0.1%) in 2022 to $386 per board foot. Additional price impacts are
included in Section 5 of the RIA.
Table VIII.A.2-1--Change in U.S. Commodity Prices From the AEO 2007
Reference Case
[2007$]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Commodity Change % Change
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Corn............................. 0.27/bushel............. 8.2
Soybeans......................... 1.02/bushel............. 10.3
Soybean Oil...................... 183.32/ton.............. 37.9
Hardwood Lumber.................. 0.00/board foot......... 0
Softwood Lumber.................. 0.46/board foot......... 0.1
------------------------------------------------------------------------
By 2022, the price of switchgrass would increase by $20.12 per wet
ton to the Control Case price of $40.85 per wet ton. Additionally, the
farm gate feedstock price of corn residue would increase by $29.48 per
wet ton to the Control Case price of $34.49 per wet ton. The price of
sugarcane bagasse would increase $23.27 to the Control Case price of
$29.70 per wet ton by 2022. Softwood logging residue prices would
increase $8.99 per wet ton to $18.37 per wet ton in the Control Case in
2022. Similarly, the price of hardwood logging residues would increase
by $17.85 per wet ton to the Control Case price of $23.22 per wet ton
in 2022. These prices do not include the storage, handling, or delivery
costs, which would result in a delivered price to the ethanol facility
of at least twice the farm gate cost, depending on the region.
Table VIII.A.2-2--Change in U.S. Cellulosic Feedstock Prices From the
AEO 2007 Reference Case
[2007$]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Commodity Control case price Change
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Switchgrass..................... $40.85/wet ton.... $20.12/wet ton.
Corn Residue.................... 34.49/wet ton..... 29.48/wet ton.
Sugarcane Bagasse............... 29.70/wet ton..... 23.27/wet ton.
Softwood Logging Residue........ 18.37/wet ton..... 8.99/wet ton.
Hardwood Logging Residue........ 23.22............. 17.85/wet ton.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
3. Impacts on U.S. Farm Income
The increase in renewable fuel production provides a significant
increase in net farm income to the U.S. agricultural sector. FASOM
predicts that net U.S. farm income would increase by $13 billion
dollars in 2022 (36%), relative to the AEO 2007 Reference Case.
4. Commodity Use Changes
Changes in the consumption patterns of U.S. corn can be seen by the
increasing percentage of corn used for ethanol. FASOM estimates the
amount of domestically produced corn used for ethanol in 2022 would
increase to 40.5%, relative to the 33.2% usage rate under the Reference
Case.
The rising price of corn and soybeans in the U.S. would also have a
direct impact on how corn is used. Higher domestic corn prices would
lead to lower U.S. exports as the world markets shift to other sources
of these products or expand the use of substitute grains. FASOM
estimates that U.S. corn exports would drop 188 million bushels (-8.2%)
to 2.1 billion bushels by 2022. In value terms, U.S. exports of corn
would fall by $57 million (-0.8%) to $7.5 billion in 2022. U.S. exports
of soybeans would also decrease due to the increased use of renewable
fuels. FASOM estimates that U.S. exports of soybeans would decrease 135
million bushels (-13.6%) to 858 million bushels by 2022. In value
terms, U.S. exports of soybeans would decrease by $453 million (-4.6%)
to $9.3 billion in 2022.
Table VIII.A.4-1--Change in U.S. Exports From the AEO 2007 Reference
Case in 2022
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Change
(millions) % Change
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Exports
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Corn in Bushels................................. -188 -8.2
Soybeans in Bushels............................. -135 -13.6
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Value of Exports
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Corn (2007$).................................... - $57 -0.8
Soybeans (2007$)................................ - $453 -4.6
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Lumber production in the U.S. is affected as well, as forestry
acres decrease as a result of expanding crop acres (see below). In
2022, hardwood lumber production increases by 0.2%, and softwood
production decreases by -0.2%.
Table VIII.A.4-2--Percent Change in U.S. Lumber Production From the AEO
2007 Reference Case in 2022
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Commodity % Change
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hardwood Lumber............................................. 0.2
[[Page 14838]]
Softwood Lumber............................................. -0.2
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Higher U.S. demand for corn for ethanol production would cause a
decrease in the use of corn for U.S. livestock feed. Substitutes are
available for corn as a feedstock, and this market is price sensitive.
Several ethanol processing byproducts could also be used to replace a
portion of the corn used as feed, depending on the type of animal. One
of the major byproducts of the ethanol production process that can be
used as a feed source, and as a substitute for corn and soybean meal,
is distiller grains with solubles (DGS). DGS are a by-product of the
dry mill ethanol production process. As discussed above, the
replacement rates of DGs for corn and soybean meal in the diets of fed
animals is higher than what was used in the proposal based on the
latest scientific research regarding nutritional content of feed
sources. In addition, as discussed above and in Chapter VI, there are
new processes for withdrawing corn oil from the dry mill ethanol
production process. Therefore, we are now modeling two types of DGS:
Those that are created during the extraction/fractionation process
(fractionated DGS), and those created in plants that do not conduct
fractionation or extraction (traditional DGS). In addition, other
byproducts that can be used as feed substitutes include gluten meal and
gluten feed, which are byproducts of wet milling ethanol production. In
2022, traditional DGS used in feed decreases by 27.5 million tons from
the Reference Case to 6.5 million tons in the Control Case. However,
the use of fractionated DGS increases by 32.7 million tons from 20
thousand tons used in the Reference Case in 2022. Gluten meal used in
feed decreases by 0.1 million tons (-4.5%) to 2.1 million tons in the
Control Case. Gluten feed use increases by 0.3 million tons (6.4%) in
2022 to 4.8 million tons in the Control Case. By 2022, FASOM predicts
total ethanol byproducts used in feed would increase by 5.4 million
tons (13.2%) to 46.1 million tons, compared to 40.8 million tons under
the Reference Case.
Table VIII.A.4-3--Change in Ethanol Byproducts Use in Feed Relative to
the AEO 2007 Reference Case
[Millions of tons]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Control
Category case Change
------------------------------------------------------------------------
DGS (Traditional)............................... 6.5 -27.5
DGS (Fractionated).............................. 32.7 32.7
Gluten Meal..................................... 2.1 -0.1
Gluten Feed..................................... 4.8 0.3
-----------------------
Total Ethanol Byproducts...................... 46.1 5.4
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The EISA cellulosic ethanol requirements result in the production
of residual agriculture and forestry products, as well as dedicated
energy crops. By 2022, FASOM predicts production of 97.4 million tons
of switchgrass and 59.9 million tons of corn residue. Sugarcane bagasse
for cellulosic ethanol production increases by 6 million tons to 9.6
million tons in 2022 relative to the Reference Case. In addition, FASOM
predicts production of 1.7 million tons of forestry residues for
cellulosic ethanol production.
5. U.S. Land Use Changes
Higher U.S. corn prices would have a direct impact on the value of
U.S. agricultural land. As demand for corn and other farm products
increases, the amount of land devoted to cropland production would
increase. FASOM estimates an increase of 3.6 million acres (4.6%) in
harvested corn acres, relative to 77.9 million acres harvested under
the Reference Case by 2022.\339\ Most of the new corn acres come from a
reduction in existing crop acres, such as rice, wheat, and hay.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\339\ Total U.S. planted corn acres increases to 87.1 million
acres from the Reference Case level of 83.5 million acres in 2022.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Though demand for biodiesel increases, FASOM predicts a fall in
U.S. soybean acres harvested. According to the model, harvested soybean
acres would decrease by approximately 1.4 million acres (-2.1%),
relative to the Reference Case acreage of 68.1 million acres in 2022.
Despite the decrease in soybean acres in 2022, soybean oil production
would increase by 0.5 million tons (4.7%) by 2022 over the Reference
Case. This occurs due to the decrease in soybean exports mentioned
above. Additionally, FASOM predicts that soybean oil exports would
decrease 1.2 million tons by 2022 (-51%) relative to the Reference
Case.
As the demand for cellulosic ethanol increases, most of the
production is derived from switchgrass. By 2022, switchgrass acres from
nearly zero acres in the Reference Case, to 12.5 million acres in the
Control Case as demand for cellulosic ethanol increases between cases.
Similarly, as demand for cellulosic ethanol from bagasse increases,
sugarcane acres increase by 0.1 million acres (20%) to 0.9 million
acres by 2022. Although we received comments suggesting that acres
enrolled in the Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) may decrease below
the 32 million acres assumed in the NPRM, we did not revise this
assumption for several reasons. First, the commodity price changes
predicted by FASOM are relatively modest and would therefore have a
limited impact on the decision to re-enroll in the program. Second, the
CRP program is designed to allow for increased payment if land rental
rates increase. Therefore, for the reasons outlined in the NPRM, we
believe the assumption that CRP acres will not drop below 32 million
acres is a plausible future projection.
Table VIII.A.5-1--Change in U.S. Crop Acres Relative to the AEO 2007
Reference Case in 2022
[Millions of acres]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Crop Change % Change
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Corn............................................ 3.6 4.6
Soybeans........................................ -1.4 -2.1
Sugarcane....................................... 0.1 20
Switchgrass..................................... 12.5 20,000
------------------------------------------------------------------------
With the increase in biofuel demand that results from the
implementation of the RFS2 policy, there is an increase of 3.1 million
acres are dedicated towards crop production. This increase in crop
acres results in a decrease of -1.9 million pasture acres, an increase
of 1.1 million acres of forest pasture, and a decrease of 1.2 million
forestry acres.
Table VIII.A.5-2--Change in U.S. Crop Acres Relative to the AEO 2007
Reference Case in 2022
[Millions of acres]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Land type Change % Change
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cropland........................................ 3.1 1.0
Cropland Pasture................................ -1.9 -5.8
Forest Pasture.................................. 1.1 0.7
Forestry........................................ -1.2 -0.3
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The additional demand for corn and other crops for biofuel
production also results in increased use of fertilizer in the U.S. In
2022, FASOM estimates that U.S. nitrogen fertilizer use would increase
1.5 billion pounds (5.7%) over
[[Page 14839]]
the Reference Case nitrogen fertilizer use of 26.2 billion pounds. In
2022, U.S. phosphorous fertilizer use would increase by 714 million
pounds (12.7%) relative to the Reference Case level of 5.6 billion
pounds.
Table VIII.A.5-3--Change in U.S. Fertilizer Use Relative to the AEO 2007
Reference Case
[Millions of pounds]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fertilizer Change % Change
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Nitrogen........................................ 1,501 5.7
Phosphorous..................................... 714 12.7
------------------------------------------------------------------------
6. Impact on U.S. Food Prices
Due to higher commodity prices, FASOM estimates that U.S. food
costs \340\ would increase by roughly $10 per person per year by 2022,
relative to the Reference Case.\341\ Total effective farm gate food
costs would increase by $3.6 billion (0.2%) in 2022.\342\ To put these
changes in perspective, average U.S. per capita food expenditures in
2007 were $3,778 or approximately 10% of personal disposable income.
The total amount spent on food in the U.S. in 2007 was $1.14 trillion
dollars.\343\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\340\ FASOM does not calculate changes in price to the consumer
directly. The proxy for aggregate food price change is an indexed
value of all food prices at the farm gate. It should be noted,
however, that according to USDA, approximately 80% of consumer food
expenditures are a result of handling after it leaves the farm
(e.g., processing, packaging, storage, marketing, and distribution).
These costs consist of a complex set of variables, and do not
necessarily change in proportion to an increase in farm gate costs.
In fact, these intermediate steps can absorb price increases to some
extent, suggesting that only a portion of farm gate price changes
are typically reflected at the retail level. See http://www.ers.usda.gov/publications/foodreview/septdec00/FRsept00e.pdf.
\341\ These estimates are based on U.S. Census population
projections of 331 million people in 2017 and 348 million people in
2022. See http://www.census.gov/population/www/projections/summarytables.html.
\342\ Farm Gate food prices refer to the prices that farmers are
paid for their commodities.
\343\ See www.ers.usda.gov/Briefing/CPIFoodAndExpenditures/Data/table15.htm.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
7. International Impacts
Changes in the U.S. agriculture economy are likely to have affects
in other countries around the world in terms of trade, land use, and
the global price and consumption of fuel and food. We utilized the
FAPRI-CARD model to assess the impacts of the increased use of
renewable fuels in the U.S. on world agricultural markets.
The FAPRI-CARD modeling shows that world corn prices would increase
by $0.12 per bushel (3.1%) to $3.88 per bushel in 2022, relative to the
Reference Case. The impact on world soybean prices is somewhat smaller,
increasing $0.08 per bushel (0.8%) to $9.63 per bushel in 2022.
This increase in international commodity prices has a direct impact
on world food consumption.\344\ The FAPRI-CARD model indicates that
world consumption of corn for food would decrease by 0.6 million metric
tons in 2022 relative to the Reference Case. Similarly, the FAPRI-CARD
model estimates that world consumption of oil for food (e.g., vegetable
oils) decreases by 1.7 million metric tons by 2022. Wheat consumption
is not estimated to change substantially in 2022. The model also
estimates a small change in world meat consumption, decreasing by -0.1
million metric tons in 2022. When considering all the food uses
included in the model, world food consumption decreases by 2.4 million
metric tons by 2022 (-0.11%). While FAPRI-CARD provides estimates of
changes in world food consumption, estimating effects on global
nutrition is beyond the scope of this analysis.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\344\ The food commodities included in the FAPRI model include
corn, wheat, sorghum, barley, soybeans, sugar, peanuts, oils, beef,
pork, poultry, and dairy products.
Table VIII.A.7-1--Change in World Food Consumption Relative to the AEO
2007 Reference Case
[Millions of metric tons]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Category 2022
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Corn........................................................... -0.6
Wheat.......................................................... 0.0
Vegetable Oils................................................. -1.7
Meat........................................................... -0.1
--------
Total Food................................................... -2.4
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additional information on the U.S. agricultural and forestry
sectors, as well as international trade impacts are described in more
detail in the RIA (Chapter 5).
B. Energy Security Impacts
Increasing usage of renewable fuels helps to reduce U.S. petroleum
imports. A reduction of U.S. petroleum imports reduces both financial
and strategic risks associated with a potential disruption in supply or
a spike in cost of a particular energy source. This reduction in risks
is a measure of improved U.S. energy security. In this section, we
detail an updated methodology for estimating the energy security
benefits of reduced U.S. oil imports which explicitly includes biofuels
and, based upon this updated approach, we estimate the monetary value
of the energy security benefits of the RFS2 required renewable fuel
volumes.
1. Implications of Reduced Petroleum Use on U.S. Imports
In 2008, U.S. petroleum import expenditures represented 21% of
total U.S. imports of all goods and services.\345\ In 2008, the U.S.
imported 66% of the petroleum it consumed, and the transportation
sector accounted for 70% of total U.S. petroleum consumption. This
compares to approximately 37% of petroleum from imports and 55%
consumption of petroleum in the transportation sector in 1975.\346\ It
is clear that petroleum imports have a significant impact on the U.S.
economy. Requiring the wider use of renewable fuels in the U.S. is
expected to lower U.S. petroleum imports.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\345\ Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, U.S.
International Transactions Accounts Data, as shown on June 24, 2009.
\346\ Source: U.S. Department of Energy, Annual Energy Review
2008, Report No. DOE/EIA-0384(2008), Tables 5.1 and 5.13c, June 26,
2009.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For this final rule, EPA estimated the reductions in U.S. petroleum
imports using a modified version of the National Energy Modeling System
(EPA-NEMS). EPA-NEMS is an energy-economy modeling system of U.S.
energy markets through the 2030 time period. EPA-NEMS projects U.S.
production, imports, conversion, consumption, and prices of energy;
subject to assumptions on world energy markets, resource availability
and costs, behavioral and technological choice criteria, cost and
performance characteristics of energy technologies, and demographics.
For this analysis, the 2009 NEMS model was modified to use the 2007
(pre-EISA) Annual Energy Outlook (AEO) levels of biofuels in the
Reference Case. These results were compared to our Control Case, which
assumes the renewable fuel volumes required by EISA will be met by
2022. The reductions in U.S. oil imports projected by EPA-NEMS as a
result of the RFS2 is approximately 0.9 million barrels per day, which
amounts to about $41.5 billion in lower crude oil and refined product
import payments in 2022.
2. Energy Security Implications
In order to understand the energy security implications of the
increased use of renewable fuels, EPA used the Oil
[[Page 14840]]
Security Metrics Model 347 348 (OSMM), developed and
maintained by Oak Ridge National Laboratory. This model examines the
future economic costs of oil imports and oil supply disruptions to the
U.S., grouping costs into (1) the higher costs for oil imports
resulting from the effect of U.S. import demand on the world oil price
and OPEC market power (i.e., the ``import demand'' or ``monopsony''
costs); and (2) the expected cost of reductions in U.S. economic output
and disruption of the U.S. economy caused by sudden disruptions in the
supply of imported oil to the U.S. (i.e., macroeconomic disruption/
adjustment costs). Beginning with Reference projections for the oil and
liquid fuel markets from the EIA's 2009 AEO, the OSMM compares costs
under those futures with selected cases under differing energy policies
and technology mixes. It provides measures of expected costs and risk
by probabilistic simulation through 2022. Uncertainty is inherent in
energy security analysis, and it is explicitly represented for long-run
future oil market conditions, disruption events, and key parameters.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\347\ The OSMM methods are consistent with the recommended
methodologies of the National Resource Council's (NRC's) (2005)
Committee on Prospective Benefits of DOE's Energy Efficiency and
Fossil Energy R&D Programs. The OSMM defines and implements a method
that makes use of the NRC's typology of prospective benefits and
methodological framework, satisfies the NRC's criteria for
prospective benefits evaluation, and permits measurement of
prospective energy security benefits for policies and technologies
related to oil. It has been used to estimate the prospective oil
security benefits of Department of Energy's Energy Efficiency and
Renewable Energy R&D programs, and is also applicable to other
strategies and policies aimed at changing the level and composition
of U.S. petroleum demand. To evaluate the RFS2, the OSMM was
modified to include supplies and demand of biofuels (principally
ethanol) as well as petroleum.
\348\ Leiby, P.N., Energy Security Impacts of Renewable Fuel Use
Under the RFS2 Rule--Methodology, Oak Ridge National Laboratory,
January 19, 2010.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
An important aspect of the OSMM is that it explicitly addresses the
energy security implications of the wider use of biofuels as
transportation fuels in the U.S. Increased use of biofuels not only
results in changes in the levels of U.S. oil imports and consumption,
but also can alter key supply and demand oil elasticities. The
elasticities are significant for energy security since they measure the
potential for substitution away from oil, in the long and short-run,
depending on how oil prices evolve and whether oil supply disruptions
occur. Also, the OSMM accounts for the potential of supply disruptions
from biofuels. For example, there could be a drought in the U.S. that
could cause a reduction in the supply of key agricultural feedstocks
(i.e., corn) that are used to make ethanol. To the extent that supply
disruptions in feedstocks used to make biofuels are correlated with oil
supply disruptions, the energy security benefits of biofuels may be
lessened, by substituting one fuel with supply disruptions for another.
For this analysis, the energy security implications of the wider use of
biofuels in the U.S. are broken down between biofuels produced
domestically (e.g., ethanol made from corn/switchgrass, soy-based
biodiesel) and imported biofuels (e.g., ethanol made from sugarcane).
For the proposed RFS2 rule, EPA worked with Oak Ridge National
Laboratory (ORNL), which has developed approaches for evaluating the
social costs and energy security implications of oil use. In the study
entitled ``The Energy Security Benefits of Reduced Oil Use, 2006-
2015,'' completed in March, 2008, ORNL updated and applied the
analytical approach used in the 1997 Report ``Oil Imports: An
Assessment of Benefits and Costs.'' 349 350 This study is
included as part of the record in this rulemaking.\351\ This study
underwent a Peer Review, sponsored by the Agency.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\349\ Leiby, Paul N., Donald W. Jones, T. Randall Curlee, and
Russell Lee, Oil Imports: An Assessment of Benefits and Costs, ORNL-
6851, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, November, 1997.
\350\ The 1997 ORNL paper was cited and its results used in DOT/
NHTSA's rules establishing CAFE standards for 2008 through 2011
model year light trucks. See DOT/NHTSA, Final Regulatory Impacts
Analysis: Corporate Average Fuel Economy and CAFE Reform MY 2008-
2011, March 2006.
\351\ Leiby, Paul N. ``Estimating the Energy Security Benefits
of Reduced U.S. Oil Imports,'' Oak Ridge National Laboratory, ORNL/
TM-2007/028, Final Report, 2008.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The prior approach that ORNL has developed estimates the
incremental benefits to society, in dollars per barrel, of reducing
U.S. oil imports, called the ``oil import premium''. With OSMM, ORNL
uses a consistent approach, estimating the incremental cost to the U.S.
of the increased use of renewable fuels required by EISA, and reporting
that cost in dollars per barrel of biofuel. In this case, these
increased volumes alter both the U.S. oil import and consumption
levels, while introducing a substitute fuel and altering demand
responsiveness. As before, OSMM considers the economic cost of
importing petroleum into the U.S. The economic cost of importing
petroleum into the U.S. was defined as (1) the higher costs for oil
imports resulting from the effect of U.S. import demand on the world
oil price and OPEC market power (i.e., ``monopsony'' costs); and (2)
the risk of reductions in U.S. economic output and disruption of the
U.S. economy caused by sudden disruptions in the supply of imported oil
to the U.S. (i.e., macroeconomic disruption/adjustment costs).
Maintaining a U.S. military presence to help secure stable oil supply
from potentially vulnerable regions of the world is also a measure of
energy security, but has been excluded from this analysis because its
attribution to particular military missions or activities is difficult.
a. Effect of Oil Use on Long-Run Oil Price, U.S. Import Costs, and
Economic Output
The first component of the economic costs of importing petroleum
into the U.S. follows from the effect of U.S. import demand on the
world oil price over the long-run. Because the U.S. is a sufficiently
large purchaser of foreign oil supplies, its purchases can affect the
world oil price. This monopsony power means that increases in U.S.
petroleum demand can cause the world price of crude oil to rise, and
conversely, that reduced U.S. petroleum demand can reduce the world
price of crude oil. Thus, one benefit of decreasing U.S. oil purchases
is the potential decrease in the crude oil price paid for all crude oil
purchased.
In the case of the RFS2, increasing U.S. demand for biofuels
partially offsets the U.S. oil market import cost reduction. The offset
is because the RFS2 results in a modest increases in biofuels imported
to the U.S. (1.6 billion gallons in 2022), and a modest increase in the
world ethanol price (from $1.48/gallon to $1.61/gallon, a $0.13/gallon
increase in 2022). Thus, the biofuels that the U.S. had imported would
be higher priced, partially offsetting the reduction in U.S. oil import
costs. The ORNL estimates this monopsony component of the energy
security benefit (oil market and biofuel market impacts combined) is
$7.86/barrel of biofuel (2007$) for the year 2022, as shown in Table
VIII.B.2-1. Based upon the 90 percent confidence interval, the
monopsony portion of the energy security benefit ranges from $5.37 to
$10.71/barrel of biofuel in the year 2022.
b. Short-Run Disruption Premium From Expected Costs of Sudden Supply
Disruptions
The second component of the external economic costs resulting from
U.S. oil imports arises from the vulnerability of the U.S. economy to
oil shocks. The cost of shocks depends on their likelihood, size, and
length; the capabilities of the market and U.S. Strategic Petroleum
[[Page 14841]]
Reserve (SPR) to respond; and the sensitivity of the U.S. economy to
sudden price increases. The total vulnerability of the U.S. economy to
oil price shocks depends on the levels of both U.S. petroleum
consumption and imports. Variation in oil consumption levels can change
the sensitivity of the economy to oil price shocks, and variation in
import levels or demand flexibility can affect the magnitude of
potential increases in oil price due to supply disruptions
A major strength of the OSMM is that it addresses risk-shifting
that might occur as the U.S. reduces its dependency on petroleum and
increases its use of biofuels, which the other ``oil premium model''
could not. The prior ``oil premium'' analysis focused only on the
potential for biofuels to reduce U.S. oil imports, and the resulting
implications of lower U.S. oil imports for energy security. As the U.S.
relies more heavily on biofuels, such as corn-based ethanol, there
could be adverse consequences from a supply-disruption perspective
associated with, for example, a long-term drought. Alternatively, a
supply disruption of petroleum will more likely be caused by
geopolitical factors rather than extreme weather conditions. Hence, the
causal factors of a supply-disruption from imported petroleum and,
alternatively, biofuels, are likely to be unrelated. Thus, diversifying
the sources of U.S. transportation fuel is expected to provide energy
security benefits. Biofuel supply disruptions are represented based on
the historical volatility of yields for biofuel feedstocks or similar
crops. The ORNL estimates this macroeconomic/disruption component of
the energy security benefit (oil market and biofuel market impacts
combined) is $6.56/barrel (2007$) for the year 2022, as shown in Table
VIII.B.2-1. Based upon the 90 percent confidence interval, the
macroeconomic/disruption component of the energy security benefit
ranges from $0.94 to $12.23/barrel of biofuel in the year 2022.
Table VIII.B.2-1--Energy Security Benefits of The Volumes Required by
RFS2 in 2022
[2007$ per barrel of biofuel]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Component Estimate
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Monopsony............................................. 7.86
(5.37-10.71)
Macroeconomic Disruption.............................. 6.56
(0.94-12.23)
-----------------
Total............................................... 14.42
(6.31-22.95)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
c. Costs of Existing U.S. Energy Security Policies
Another often-identified component of the full economic costs of
U.S. oil imports is the costs to the U.S. taxpayers of existing U.S.
energy security policies. The two primary examples are maintaining a
military presence to help secure stable oil supply from potentially
vulnerable regions of the world and maintaining the SPR to provide
buffer supplies and help protect the U.S. economy from the consequences
of global oil supply disruptions.
U.S. military costs are excluded from the analysis performed by
ORNL because their attribution to particular missions or activities is
difficult. Most military forces serve a broad range of security and
foreign policy objectives. Attempts to attribute some share of U.S.
military costs to oil imports are further challenged by the need to
estimate how those costs might vary with incremental variations in U.S.
oil imports. In the peer review of the energy security analysis that
the Agency commissioned, a majority of peer reviewers believed that
U.S. military costs should be excluded absence a widely agreed
methodology for estimating this component of U.S. energy security.
Similarly, while the costs for building and maintaining the SPR are
more clearly related to U.S. oil use and imports, historically these
costs have not varied in response to changes in U.S. oil import levels.
Thus, while SPR is factored into the ORNL analysis, the cost of
maintaining the SPR is excluded.
Some commenters felt that the Agency should attempt to monetize
U.S. military costs and include these costs in the energy security
analysis, while other commenters agreed with the Agency that these
costs should be excluded. The Agency did not receive any new analysis
or methodological approach from commenters which could be used to
monetize U.S. military costs in a meaningful or credible manner. Since
U.S. military impacts are not factored into the energy security
analysis, they are also excluded from the lifecycle GHG analysis.
3. Combining Energy Security and Other Benefits
The literature on the energy security for the last two decades has
routinely combined the monopsony and the macroeconomic disruption
components when calculating the total value of the energy security
premium. However, in the context of using a global value for the Social
Cost of Carbon (SCC) the question arises: how should the energy
security premium be used when some benefits from the increased use of
renewable fuels, such as the benefits of reducing greenhouse gas
emissions, are calculated at a global level? Monopsony benefits
represent avoided payments by the U.S. to oil producers in foreign
countries that result from a decrease in the world oil price as the
U.S. decreases its consumption of imported oil (net of increased
imported biofuel payments by the U.S.). Although there is clearly a
benefit to the U.S. when considered from the domestic perspective, the
decrease in price due to decreased demand in the U.S. also represents a
loss to other countries. Given the redistributive nature of this
effect, do the negative effects on other countries ``net out'' the
positive impacts to the U.S.? If this is the case, then, the monopsony
portion of the energy security premium should be excluded from the net
benefits calculation. Based on this reasoning, EPA's estimates of net
benefits for the increased use of renewable fuels required by EISA
exclude the portion of energy security benefits stemming from the U.S.
exercising its monopsony power in oil markets. Thus, EPA only includes
the macroeconomic disruption/adjustment cost portion of the energy
security premium.
However, even when the global value for greenhouse gas reduction
benefits is used, a strong argument can be made that the monopsony
benefits should be included in net benefits calculation. Maintaining
the earth's climate is a global public good and as such requires that a
global perspective be taken on the benefits of GHG mitigation by all
nations, including the U.S. The global SCC is used in these
calculations, not because the global net benefits of the increased use
of renewable fuels are being computed (they are not), but rather
because in the context of a global public good, the global marginal
benefit is the correct benefit against which domestic costs are to be
compared. In other words, using the global SCC does not transform the
calculation from a domestic (i.e., U.S.) to a global one. Rather, the
domestic perspective is maintained while recognizing that the impacts
from domestic GHG emissions are truly global in nature.
Energy security, on the other hand, is broadly defined as
protecting the U.S. economy against circumstances that threaten
significant short- and long-term increases in energy costs. Energy
security is inherently a domestic benefit. However, the use of the
domestic monopsony benefit is not necessarily in conflict with the use
of the global SCC, because the global SCC represents the benefits
against which
[[Page 14842]]
the costs associated with our (i.e., the U.S.'s) domestic mitigation
efforts should be judged. In addition, the U.S. values both maintaining
the earth's climate and providing for its own energy security. If this
reasoning holds, the two benefits--the global benefits of reducing
greenhouse gas emissions and the full energy security premium,
including the monopsony benefits--should be counted in the net benefits
estimates. In the final analysis, the Agency determined that the first
argument is more compelling and therefore has determined that using
only the macroeconomic disruption component of the energy security
benefit is the appropriate metric for this rule.
4. Total Energy Security Benefits
In 2022, total annual energy security benefits are estimated for
the difference between the renewable fuel volumes in the Primary
Control Case (30.50 billion gallons) and the AEO2007 Reference Case
(13.56 billion gallons). Total annual energy security benefits are
calculated by multiplying the change in renewable fuel volumes (16.94
billion gallons or 403 million barrels) and the macroeconomic
disruption/adjustment portion of the energy security premium ($6.56/
barrel of renewable fuels). The estimated total energy security benefit
is $2.6 billion (2007$) for the year 2022. The estimated total energy
security benefit using the macroeconomic disruption/adjustment portion
of the energy security benefit in 2022 ranges from $379 million to $4.9
billion based upon the 90 percent confidence intervals.
C. Benefits of Reducing GHG Emissions
1. Introduction
This section presents estimates of the economic benefits that could
be monetized for the reductions in GHG emissions projected to occur
through the increased use of renewable fuels required by EISA. The
total benefit estimates were calculated by multiplying a marginal
dollar value (i.e., cost per ton) of carbon emissions, also referred to
as ``social cost of carbon'' (SCC), by the anticipated level of
emissions reductions in tons.
The SCC values underlying the benefits estimates for this rule
represent U.S. government-wide interim values for SCC. As discussed
below, federal agencies will use these interim values to assess some of
the economic benefits of GHG reductions while an interagency workgroup
develops SCC values for use in the long-term. The interim values should
not be viewed as an expectation about the results of the longer-term
process. Although these values were not used in the NPRM, some
commenters raised issues with these values and the methodology used to
develop them in response to their publication elsewhere. Many of these
issues are being examined by the interagency workgroup.
The rest of this Preamble section will provide the basis for the
interim SCC values, and the estimates of the total climate-related
benefits of the increased use of renewable fuels that follow from these
interim values. As discussed below, the interim dollar estimates of the
SCC represent a partial accounting of climate change impacts.
In addition to the quantitative account presented in this section,
a qualitative appraisal of climate-related impacts is published in
Section V of today's rule and in other recent climate change analyses.
For example, EPA's Endangerment and Cause or Contribute Findings for
Greenhouse Gases under Section 202(a) of the Clean Air Act and the
accompanying Technical Support Document (TSD) presents a summary of
impacts and risks of climate change projected in the absence of actions
to mitigate GHG emissions.\352\ The TSD synthesizes major findings from
the best available scientific assessments of the scientific literature
that have gone through rigorous and transparent peer review, including
the major assessment reports of both the Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change (IPCC) and the U.S. Climate Change Science Program
(CCSP).
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\352\ See Federal Register/Vol. 74, No. 2398/Wednesday, December
16, 2009/Rules and Regulations at http://frwebgate4.access.gpo.gov/cgi-bin/PDFgate.cgi?WAISdocID=969788398047+0+2+0&WAISaction=retrieve
or http://epa.gov/climatechange/endangerment.html.
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2. Derivation of Interim Social Cost of Carbon Values
The ``social cost of carbon'' (SCC) is intended to be a monetary
measure of the incremental damage resulting from carbon dioxide
(CO2) emissions, including (but not limited to) net
agricultural productivity loss, human health effects, property damages
from sea level rise, and changes in ecosystem services. Any effort to
quantify and to monetize the consequences associated with climate
change will raise serious questions of science, economics, and ethics.
But with full regard for the limits of both quantification and
monetization of impacts, the SCC can be used to provide an estimate of
the social benefits of reductions in GHG emissions.
For at least three reasons, any particular figure will be
contestable. First, scientific and economic knowledge about the impacts
of climate change continues to grow. With new and better information
about relevant questions, including the cost, burdens, and possibility
of adaptation, current estimates will inevitably change over time.
Second, some of the likely and potential damages from climate change--
for example, the loss of endangered species--are generally not included
in current SCC estimates. These omissions may turn out to be
significant in the sense that they may mean that the best current
estimates are too low. As noted by the IPCC Fourth Assessment Report,
``It is very likely that globally aggregated figures underestimate the
damage costs because they cannot include many non-quantifiable
impacts.'' Third, when economic efficiency criteria, under specific
assumptions, are juxtaposed with ethical considerations, the outcome
may be controversial. These ethical considerations, including those
involving the treatment of future generations, should and will also
play a role in judgments about the SCC (see in particular the
discussion of the discount rate, below).
To date, SCC estimates presented in recent regulatory documents
have varied within and among agencies, including DOT, DOE, and EPA. For
example, a regulation proposed by DOT in 2008 assumed a value of $7 per
metric tonne CO2 \353\ (2006$) for 2011 emission reductions
(with a range of $0-14 for sensitivity analysis). One of the
regulations proposed by DOE in 2009 used a range of $0-$20 (2007$).
Both of these ranges were designed to reflect the value of damages to
the United States resulting from carbon emissions, or the ``domestic''
SCC. In the final MY2011 CAFE EIS, DOT used both a domestic SCC value
of $2/t-CO2 and a global SCC value of $33/t-CO2
(with sensitivity analysis at $80/t-CO2) (in 2006 dollars
for 2007 emissions), increasing at 2.4% per year thereafter. The final
MY2011 CAFE rule also presented a range from $2 to $80/t-
CO2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\353\ For the purposes of this discussion, we present all values
of the SCC as the cost per metric tonne of CO2 emissions.
Some discussions of the SCC in the literature use an alternative
presentation of a dollar per metric ton of carbon. The standard
adjustment factor is 3.67, which means, for example, that a SCC of
$10 per ton of CO2 would be equivalent to a cost of
$36.70 for a ton of carbon emitted. Unless otherwise indicated, a
``ton'' refers to a metric ton.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the May 2009 proposal leading to today's final rule, EPA
identified preliminary SCC estimates that spanned three orders of
magnitude. EPA's May
[[Page 14843]]
2009 proposal also presented preliminary global SCC estimates developed
from a survey analysis of the peer reviewed literature (i.e., meta
analysis). The global mean values from the meta analysis were $68 and
$40/t-CO2 for discount rates of 2% and 3% respectively (in
2006 real dollars for 2007 emissions).\354\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\354\ 74 FR 25094 (May 26, 2009).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Since publication of the May 2009 proposal, a federal interagency
working group has established a methodology for selecting a range of
interim SCC estimates for use in regulatory analyses. Today's final
rule uses the five values for the SCC that are the outcome of this
process. A complete description of the methodology used to generate
this interim set of SCC estimates can be found in the RIA for this rule
and in multiple other published rules, including a proposal to limit
vehicle greenhouse gas emissions that requests public comment on the
estimates and underlying methodology.\355\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\355\ Federal Register 40 CFR Parts 86 and 600, September 28,
2009 ``Proposed Rulemaking To Establish Light-Duty Vehicle
Greenhouse Gas Emission Standards and Corporate Average Fuel Economy
Standards; Proposed Rule''.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
It should be emphasized that the analysis here is preliminary.
These interim estimates are being used for the short-term while an
interagency group develops a more comprehensive characterization of the
distribution of SCC values for future economic and regulatory analyses.
The interim values should not be viewed as an expectation about the
results of the longer-term process.
This process will allow the workgroup to explore questions raised
in the May 2009 proposal as they are relevant to the development of SCC
values for use in the long-term. The workgroup may evaluate factors not
currently captured in today's estimates due to time constraints, such
as the quantification of additional impact categories where possible
and an uncertainty analysis. The Administration will seek comment on
all of the scientific, economic, and ethical issues before establishing
improved estimates for use in future rulemakings.
The outcomes of the Administration's process to develop interim
values are judgments in favor of a) global rather than domestic values,
b) an annual growth rate of 3%, and c) interim global SCC estimates for
2007 (in 2007 dollars) of $56, $34, $20, $10, and $5 per metric ton of
CO2. As noted, this is an emphatically interim SCC value.
The judgments herein will be subject to further scrutiny and
exploration.
3. Application of Interim SCC Estimates to GHG Emissions Reductions
While no single rule or action can independently achieve the deep
worldwide emissions reductions necessary to halt and reverse the growth
of GHGs, the combined effects of multiple strategies to reduce GHG
emissions domestically and abroad could make a major difference in the
climate change impacts experienced by future generations.\356\ The
projected net GHG emissions reductions associated with the increased
use of renewable fuels reflect an incremental change to projected total
global emissions. Given that the climate response is projected to be a
marginal change relative to the baseline climate, we estimate the
marginal value of changes in climate change impacts over time and use
this value to measure the monetized marginal benefits of the GHG
emissions reductions projected for the increased renewable fuel volumes
required by EISA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\356\ The Supreme Court recognized in Massachusetts v. EPA that
a single action will not on its own achieve all needed GHG
reductions, noting that ``[a]gencies, like legislatures, do not
generally resolve massive problems in one fell regulatory swoop.''
See Massachusetts v. EPA, 549 U.S. at 524 (2007).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Accordingly, EPA has used the set of interim, global SCC values
described above to estimate the benefits of the increased use of
renewable fuels. The interim SCC values for emissions in 2007, which
reflect the Administration's interim interpretation of the current
literature, are $5, $10, $20, $34, and $56, in 2007 dollars, and are
based on a CO2 emissions change of 1 metric ton in 2007.
Table VIII.C.3-1 presents the interim SCC values for both the years
2007 and 2022 in 2007 dollars.
Table VIII.C.3-1--Interim SCC Schedule (2007$ per metric tonne of CO2)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
5% (Newell- Average SCC from 3% (Newell-
Year 5% Pizer)* 3% and 5% 3% Pizer)*
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2007..................................................... $5 $10 $20 $34 $56
2022..................................................... 8 16 30 53 88
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note: The SCC values are dollar-year and emissions-year specific. These values are presented in 2007$, for individual year of emissions. To determine
values for other years not presented in the table, use a 3% per year growth rate. SCC values represent only a partial accounting for climate impacts.
* SCC values are adjusted based on Newell and Pizer (2003) to account to future uncertainty in discount rates.
Table VIII.C.3-2 provides, for the low, base, and high cases, the
average annual GHG emissions reductions in 2022. The annualized
emissions reductions are multiplied by the SCC estimates for 2022 from
Table VIII.C.3-1 to produce the average annual monetized benefit from
the emissions reductions for CO2-equivalent GHGs. This is
equivalent to taking the time stream of emissions from the increase in
renewable fuel volumes, multiplying them by the SCC (which is
increasing at a rate of 3 percent per year), and then discounting the
stream of benefits by 3 percent.
Table VIII.C.3-2--Average Annual Emissions Reduction (Million Metric Tonnes CO2-e) and Monetized Benefits
(Million 2007$) in 2022
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Low case Base case High case
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Emissions Reductions............................................ 136.104 138.411 140.291
5%.............................................................. $1,089 $1,107 $1,122
5% (Newell-Pizer)............................................... $2,178 $2,215 $2,245
Average SCC from 3% and 5%...................................... $4,138 $4,208 $4,265
3%.............................................................. $7,186 $7,308 $7,407
[[Page 14844]]
3% (Newell-Pizer)............................................... $11,976 $12,179 $12,344
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table VIII.C.3-3 provides, for the high, base, and low cases, the
monetized benefits from the emissions reductions from the increase in
renewable fuel volumes for CO2-equivalent GHGs in 2022. The
SCC estimates for 2022 increase at a rate of 3 percent per year, and
are then multiplied by the stream of emissions for each respective year
for 30 years. The monetized benefits in table VIII.C.3-3 represent the
net present value of these emissions for 30 years using a discount rate
of 7 percent.
Table VIII.C.3-3--Monetized Benefits (Million 2007$) of RFS-2 Volumes in 2022 Using a 7% Discount Rate
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
High Base Low
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
5%.............................................................. $606 $620 $631
5% (Newell-Pizer)............................................... 1,212 1,239 1,262
Average SCC from 3% and 5%...................................... 2,302 2,355 2,397
3%.............................................................. 3,999 4,089 4,163
3% (Newell-Pizer)............................................... 6,665 6,816 6,939
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
D. Criteria Pollutant Health and Environmental Impacts
1. Overview
This section describes EPA's analysis of the co-pollutant health
and environmental impacts that can be expected to occur as a result of
the increase in renewable fuel use throughout the period from initial
implementation of the RFS2 rule through 2022. Although the purpose of
this final rule is to implement the renewable fuel requirements
established by the Energy Independence and Security Act (EISA) of 2007,
the increased use of renewable fuels will also impact emissions of
criteria and air toxic pollutants and their resultant ambient
concentrations. The fuels changes detailed in Section 3.1 of the RIA
will influence emissions of VOCs, PM, NOX, and
SOX and air toxics and affect exhaust and evaporative
emissions of these pollutants from vehicles and equipment. They will
also affect emissions from upstream sources such as fuel production,
storage, distribution and agricultural emissions. Any decrease or
increase in ambient ozone, PM2.5, and air toxics associated
with the increased use of renewable fuels will impact human health in
the form of a decrease or increase in the risk of incurring premature
death and other serious human health effects, as well as other
important public health and welfare effects.
This analysis reflects the impact of the 2022 mandated renewable
fuel volumes (the ``RFS2 control case'') compared with two different
reference scenarios that include the use of renewable fuels: a 2022
baseline projection based on the RFS1-mandated volume of 7.1 billion
gallons of renewable fuels, and a 2022 baseline projection based on the
AEO 2007 volume of roughly 13.6 billion gallons of renewable
fuels.\357\ Thus, the results represent the impact of an incremental
increase in ethanol and other renewable fuels. We note that the air
quality modeling results presented in this final rule do not constitute
the ``anti-backsliding'' analysis required by Clean Air Act section
211(v). EPA will be analyzing air quality and health impacts of
increased renewable fuel use through that study and will promulgate
appropriate mitigation measures under section 211(v), separate from
this final action.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\357\ The 2022 modeled scenarios assume the following: RFS1
reference case assumes 6.7 Bgal/yr ethanol and 0.38 Bgal/yr
biodiesel; AEO2007 reference case assumes 13.18 Bgal/yr ethanol and
0.38 Bgal/yr biodiesel; RFS2 control case assumes 34.14 Bgal/yr
ethanol, 0.81 Bgal/yr biodiesel, and 0.38 Bgal/yr renewable diesel.
Please refer to Chapter 3.3 and Table 3.3-1 for more information
about the renewable fuel volumes assumed in the modeled analyses and
the corresponding emissions inventories.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As can be seen in Section VI.D of this preamble, as well as in
Section 3.4 of the RIA that accompanies this preamble, there are both
increased and decreased concentrations of ambient criteria pollutants
and air toxics. Overall, we estimate that the required renewable fuel
volumes will lead to a net increase in criteria pollutant-related
health impacts. By 2022, the final RFS2 volumes relative to both
reference case scenarios (RFS1 and AEO2007), are projected to adversely
impact PM2.5 air quality over parts of the U.S., while some
areas will experience decreases in ambient PM2.5. As
described in Section VI, ambient PM2.5 is likely to increase
as a result of emissions at biofuel production plants and from biofuel
transport, both of which are more prevalent in the Midwest. PM
concentrations are also likely to decrease in some areas. While the PM-
related air quality impacts are relatively small, the increase in
population-weighted national average PM2.5 exposure results
in a net increase in adverse PM-related human health impacts. (the
increase in national population weighted annual average
PM2.5 is 0.006 [mu]g/m3 and 0.002 [mu]g/m3 relative to the
RFS1 and AEO2007 reference cases, respectively).
The required renewable fuel volumes, relative to both reference
scenarios, are also projected to adversely impact ozone air quality
over much of the U.S., especially in the Midwest, Northeast and
Southeast. These adverse impacts are likely due to increased upstream
emissions of NOX in many areas that are NOX-
limited (acting as a precursor to ozone formation). There are, however,
ozone air quality improvements in some highly-populated areas that
currently have poor air quality. This is likely due to VOC emission
reductions at the tailpipe in urban areas that are VOC-limited
(reducing VOC's role as a precursor to ozone formation). Relative to
the RFS1 mandate reference case, the RFS2 volumes result in an increase
in national ozone-related health impacts (population weighted maximum
8-hour average ozone increases by 0.177 ppb). Relative to the AEO2007
reference case, the RFS2 volumes result in an increase in national
ozone-related health impacts
[[Page 14845]]
(population weighted maximum 8-hour average ozone increases by 0.116
ppb).
The analysis of national-level PM2.5- and ozone-related
health and environmental impacts associated with the required renewable
fuel volumes is based on peer-reviewed studies of air quality and human
health effects (see US EPA, 2006 and US EPA, 2008).358 359
We are also consistent with the benefits analysis methods that
supported the recently proposed Portland Cement National Emissions
Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants (NESHAP) RIA (U.S. EPA,
2009a),\360\ the proposed NO2 primary NAAQS RIA (U.S. EPA,
2009b),\361\ and the proposed Category 3 Marine Diesel Engines RIA
(U.S. EPA, 2009c).\362\ These methods are described in more detail in
the RIA that accompanies this preamble. To model the ozone and PM air
quality impacts of the required renewable fuel volumes, we used the
Community Multiscale Air Quality (CMAQ) model (see Section VI.D). The
modeled ambient air quality data serves as an input to the
Environmental Benefits Mapping and Analysis Program (BenMAP).\363\
BenMAP is a computer program developed by the U.S. EPA that integrates
a number of the modeling elements used in previous analyses (e.g.,
interpolation functions, population projections, health impact
functions, valuation functions, analysis and pooling methods) to
translate modeled air concentration estimates into health effects
incidence estimates and monetized benefits estimates.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\358\ U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. (2006). Final
Regulatory Impact Analysis (RIA) for the Proposed National Ambient
Air Quality Standards for Particulate Matter. Prepared by: Office of
Air and Radiation. Retrieved March, 26, 2009 at http://www.epa.gov/ttn/ecas/ria.html.
\359\ U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. (2008). Final Ozone
NAAQS Regulatory Impact Analysis. Prepared by: Office of Air and
Radiation, Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards. Retrieved
March, 26, 2009 at http://www.epa.gov/ttn/ecas/ria.html.
\360\ U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (U.S. EPA). 2009a.
Regulatory Impact Analysis: National Emission Standards for
Hazardous Air Pollutants from the Portland Cement Manufacturing
Industry. Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards, Research
Triangle Park, NC. April. Available on the Internet at http://www.epa.gov/ttn/ecas/regdata/RIAs/portlandcementria_4-20-09.pdf.
\361\ U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (U.S. EPA). 2009b.
Proposed NO2 NAAQS Regulatory Impact Analysis (RIA). Office of Air
Quality Planning and Standards, Research Triangle Park, NC. April.
Available on the Internet at http://www.epa.gov/ttn/ecas/regdata/RIAs/proposedno2ria.pdf. Note: The revised NO2 NAAQS may be final by
the publication of this action.
\362\ U.S. Environmnetal Protection Agency (U.S. EPA). 2009c.
Draft Regulatory Impact Analysis: Control of Emissions of Air
Pollution from Category 3 Marine Diesel Engines. Office of
Transportation and Air Quality, June. Available on the Internet at
http://www.epa.gov/otaq/regs/nonroad/420d09002.htm. Note: The C3
rule may be final by the publication of this action.
\363\ Information on BenMAP, including downloads of the
software, can be found at http://www.epa.gov/ttn/ecas/benmodels.html.
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The range of total national-level ozone- and PM-related monetized
impacts associated with the required renewable fuel volumes is
presented in Table VIII.D.1-1.\364\ We present total monetized impacts
based on the PM- and ozone-related premature mortality function used.
Total monetized impacts therefore reflect the addition of each estimate
of ozone-related premature mortality (each with its own row in Table
VIII.D.1-1) to estimates of PM-related premature mortality. These
estimates represent EPA's preferred approach to characterizing the best
estimate of monetized impacts associated with the required renewable
fuel volumes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\364\ Note that these impacts reflect the national total of PM-
related benefits and disbenefits and ozone-related benefits and
disbenefits. The sum of total of benefits and disbenefits yields a
net negative benefit, or disbenefit. See Tables VIII.D.2-1 and
VIII.D.2-2 for pollutant- and endpoint-specific incidence estimates
and Table VIII.D.3-1 for pollutant- and endpoint specific monetized
values.
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Emissions and air quality modeling decisions were made early in the
analytical process and as a result, there are a number of important
limitations and uncertainties associated with the air quality modeling
analysis that must be kept in mind when considering the results. A key
limitation of the analysis is that it employed interim emission
inventories, which were enhanced compared to what was described in the
proposal, but did not include some of the later enhancements and
corrections of the final emission inventories presented in this FRM
(see Section VI.A through VI.C of this preamble). Most significantly,
our modeling of the air quality impacts of RFS2 relied upon interim
inventories that assumed that ethanol will make up 34 of the 36 billion
gallon renewable fuel mandate, that approximately 20 billion gallons of
this ethanol will be in the form of E85, and that the use of E85
results in fewer emissions of direct PM2.5 from vehicles.
The emission impacts, air quality results and benefits analysis would
be different if, instead of E85, more non-ethanol biofuels are used or
mid-level ethanol blends are approved and utilized.
In fact, as explained earlier in this preamble, our more recent
analyses indicate that ethanol and E85 volumes are likely to be
significantly lower than what we assumed in the interim inventories.
Furthermore, the final emission inventories do not include vehicle-
related PM reductions associated with E85 use, as discussed in Section
VI.A through VI.C. There are additional, important limitations and
uncertainties associated with the interim inventories that must be kept
in mind when considering the results, which are described in more
detail in Section VI. While it is difficult to describe the overall
impact of these limitations and uncertainties on the quantified and
monetized health impacts of the increased renewable fuel volumes
without updating the air quality modeling analysis, we believe the
results are still useful for describing potential national-level health
impacts.
Additionally, after the air quality modeling was completed, we
discovered an error in the way that PM2.5 emissions from
locomotive engines were allocated to counties in the inventory. The
mismatched allocations between the reference and control scenarios
resulted in PM2.5 emission changes that were too high in
some counties and too low in others, by varying degrees. As a result,
we did not present the modeling results for specific localized
PM2.5 impacts in Section VI.D. However, because the error
was random and offsetting, there was very little impact on national-
level PM2.5 emissions. An analysis of the error's impact on
the national emission inventories found that direct PM2.5
emissions were inflated by 8% relative to the AEO reference case and by
0.6% relative to the RFS1 reference case, leading to a small
overestimation of national PM-related adverse health impacts. Note that
this error did not impact other PM precursor inventories such as
NOX and SO2. As a result, we have concluded that
PM2.5 modeling results are still informative for national-
level benefits assessment, particularly given that other uncertainties
in the PM2.5 inventory (such as E85 usage, discussed below)
have a more important (and offsetting) effect.
[[Page 14846]]
Table VIII.D.1-1--Estimated 2022 Monetized PM- and Ozone-Related Health Impacts from the Mandated Renewable Fuel
Volumes a
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total benefits
Premature ozone mortality Reference (billions, 2007$, 3% Total benefits (billions, 2007$,
function discount rate) b,c 7% discount rate) b,c
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2022 Total Ozone and PM Benefits, RFS2 Control Case Compared to RFS1 Reference Case \a\
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Multi-city analyses............. Bell et al., 2004. Total: -$1.4 to -$2.8.. Total: -$1.4 to -$2.6.
PM: -$0.92 to -$2.3.... PM: -$0.84 to -$2.0.
Ozone: -$0.52.......... Ozone: -$0.52.
Huang et al., 2005 Total: -$1.8 to -$3.1.. Total: -$1.7 to -$2.9.
PM: -$0.92 to -$2.3.... PM: -$0.84 to -$2.0.
Ozone: -$0.83.......... Ozone: -$0.83.
Schwartz, 2005.... Total: -$1.7 to -$3.0.. Total: -$1.6 to -$2.8.
PM: -$0.92 to -$2.3.... PM: -$0.84 to -$2.0.
Ozone: -$0.77.......... Ozone: -$0.77.
Meta-analyses................... Bell et al., 2005. Total: -$2.5 to -$3.8.. Total: -$2.4 to -$3.6.
PM: -$0.92 to -$2.3.... PM: -$0.84 to -$2.0.
Ozone: -$1.6........... Ozone: -$1.6.
Ito et al., 2005.. Total: -$3.1 to -$4.5.. Total: -$3.0 to -$4.2.
PM: -$0.92 to -$2.3.... PM: -$0.84 to -$2.0.
Ozone: -$2.2........... Ozone: -$2.2.
Levy et al., 2005. Total: -$3.1 to -$4.5.. Total: -$3.1 to -$4.3.
PM: -$0.92 to -$2.3.... PM: -$0.84 to -$2.0.
Ozone: -$2.2........... Ozone: -$2.2.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2022 Total Ozone and PM Benefits, RFS2 Control Case Compared to AEO Reference Case \a\
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Multi-city analyses............. Bell et al., 2004. Total: -$0.63 to -$1.0. Total: -$0.60 to -$0.98.
PM: -$0.29 to -$0.70... PM: -$0.26 to -$0.63.
Ozone: -$0.34.......... Ozone: -$0.34.
Huang et al., 2005 Total: -$0.84 to -$1.3. Total: -$0.81 to -$1.2.
PM: -$0.29 to -$0.70... PM: -$0.26 to -$0.63.
Ozone: -$0.55.......... Ozone: -$0.55.
Schwartz, 2005.... Total: -$0.80 to -$1.2. Total: -$0.77 to -$1.1.
PM: -$0.29 to -$0.70... PM: -$0.26 to -$0.63.
Ozone: -$0.51.......... Ozone: -$0.51.
Meta-analyses................... Bell et al., 2005. Total: -$1.3 to -$1.8.. Total: -$1.3 to -$1.7.
PM: -$0.29 to -$0.70... PM: -$0.26 to -$0.63.
Ozone: -$1.0........... Ozone: -$1.0.
Ito et al., 2005.. Total: -$1.7 to -$2.2.. Total: -$1.7 to -$2.1.
PM: -$0.29 to -$0.70... PM: -$0.26 to -$0.63.
Ozone: -$1.5........... Ozone: -$1.5.
Levy et al., 2005. Total: -$1.8 to -$2.2.. Total: -$1.7 to -$2.1.
PM: -$0.29 to -$0.70... PM: -$0.26 to -$0.63.
Ozone: -$1.5........... Ozone: -$1.5.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Notes:
\a\ Total includes premature mortality-related and morbidity-related ozone and PM 2.5 benefits. Range was
developed by adding the estimate from the ozone premature mortality function to the estimate of PM 2.5-
related premature mortality derived from either the ACS study (Pope et al., 2002) or the Six-Cities study
(Laden et al., 2006).
\b\ Note that total benefits presented here do not include a number of unquantified benefits categories. A
detailed listing of unquantified health and welfare effects is provided in Table VIII.D.1-2.
\c\ Results reflect the use of both a 3 and 7 percent discount rate, as recommended by EPA's Guidelines for
Preparing Economic Analyses and OMB Circular A-4. Results are rounded to two significant digits for ease of
presentation and computation.
The monetized estimates in Table VIII.D.1-1 include all of the
human health impacts we are able to quantify and monetize at this time.
However, the full complement of human health and welfare effects
associated with PM and ozone remain unquantified because of current
limitations in methods or available data. We have not quantified a
number of known or suspected health effects linked with ozone and PM
for which appropriate health impact functions are not available or
which do not provide easily interpretable outcomes (i.e., changes in
heart rate variability). Additionally, we are unable to quantify a
number of known welfare effects, including acid and particulate
deposition damage to cultural monuments and other materials, and
environmental impacts of eutrophication in coastal areas. These are
listed in Table VIII.D.1-2.
Table VIII.D.1-2--Unquantified and Non-Monetized Potential Effects From
the Mandated Renewable Fuel Volumes
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Effects not included in
Pollutant/effects analysis--changes in:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ozone Health\a\........................ Chronic respiratory damage\b\.
[[Page 14847]]
Premature aging of the
lungs\b\.
Non-asthma respiratory
emergency room visits.
Exposure to UVb (+/-)\e\.
Ozone Welfare.......................... Yields for.
--commercial forests.
--some fruits and vegetables.
--non-commercial crops.
Damage to urban ornamental
plants.
Impacts on recreational demand
from damaged forest
aesthetics.
Ecosystem functions.
Exposure to UVb (+/-)\e\.
PM Health\c\........................... Premature mortality--short term
exposures\d\.
Low birth weight.
Pulmonary function.
Chronic respiratory diseases
other than chronic bronchitis.
Non-asthma respiratory
emergency room visits.
Exposure to UVb (+/-)\e\.
PM Welfare............................. Residential and recreational
visibility in non-Class I
areas.
Soiling and materials damage.
Damage to ecosystem functions.
Exposure to UVb (+/-)\e\.
Nitrogen and Sulfate Deposition Welfare Commercial forests due to
acidic sulfate and nitrate
deposition.
Commercial freshwater fishing
due to acidic deposition.
Recreation in terrestrial
ecosystems due to acidic
deposition.
Existence values for currently
healthy ecosystems.
Commercial fishing,
agriculture, and forests due
to nitrogen deposition.
Recreation in estuarine
ecosystems due to nitrogen
deposition.
Ecosystem functions.
Passive fertilization.
CO Health.............................. Behavioral effects.
HC/Toxics Health\f\.................... Cancer (benzene, 1,3-butadiene,
formaldehyde, acetaldehyde).
Anemia (benzene).
Disruption of production of
blood components (benzene).
Reduction in the number of
blood platelets (benzene).
Excessive bone marrow formation
(benzene).
Depression of lymphocyte counts
(benzene).
Reproductive and developmental
effects (1,3-butadiene).
Irritation of eyes and mucus
membranes (formaldehyde).
Respiratory irritation
(formaldehyde).
Asthma attacks in asthmatics
(formaldehyde).
Asthma-like symptoms in non-
asthmatics (formaldehyde).
Irritation of the eyes, skin,
and respiratory tract
(acetaldehyde).
Upper respiratory tract
irritation and congestion
(acrolein).
HC/Toxics Welfare...................... Direct toxic effects to
animals.
Bioaccumulation in the food
chain.
Damage to ecosystem function.
Odor.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Notes:
\a\ The public health impact of biological responses such as increased
airway responsiveness to stimuli, inflammation in the lung, acute
inflammation and respiratory cell damage, and increased susceptibility
to respiratory infection are likely partially represented by our
quantified endpoints.
\b\ The public health impact of effects such as chronic respiratory
damage and premature aging of the lungs may be partially represented
by quantified endpoints such as hospital admissions or premature
mortality, but a number of other related health impacts, such as
doctor visits and decreased athletic performance, remain unquantified.
\c\ In addition to primary economic endpoints, there are a number of
biological responses that have been associated with PM health effects
including morphological changes and altered host defense mechanisms.
The public health impact of these biological responses may be partly
represented by our quantified endpoints.
\d\ While some of the effects of short-term exposures are likely to be
captured in the estimates, there may be premature mortality due to
short-term exposure to PM not captured in the cohort studies used in
this analysis. However, the PM mortality results derived from the
expert elicitation do take into account premature mortality effects of
short term exposures.
\e\ May result in benefits or adverse health impacts.
\f\ Many of the key hydrocarbons related to this rule are also hazardous
air pollutants listed in the Clean Air Act.
While there will be impacts associated with air toxic pollutant
emission changes that result from the increased use of renewable fuels,
we do not attempt to monetize those impacts. This is primarily because
currently available tools and methods to assess air toxics risk from
mobile sources at the national scale are not adequate for extrapolation
to incidence estimations or benefits assessment. The best suite of
tools and methods currently available for assessment at the national
scale are those used in the National-Scale Air Toxics Assessment
(NATA). The EPA Science Advisory Board specifically commented in their
review of the 1996 NATA that these tools were not yet
[[Page 14848]]
ready for use in a national-scale benefits analysis, because they did
not consider the full distribution of exposure and risk, or address
sub-chronic health effects.\365\ While EPA has since improved the
tools, there remain critical limitations for estimating incidence and
assessing benefits of reducing mobile source air toxics. EPA continues
to work to address these limitations; however, we did not have the
methods and tools available for national-scale application in time for
the analysis of the final rule.\366\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\365\ Science Advisory Board. 2001. NATA--Evaluating the
National-Scale Air Toxics Assessment for 1996--an SAB Advisory.
http://www.epa.gov/ttn/atw/sab/sabrev.html.
\366\ In April, 2009, EPA hosted a workshop on estimating the
benefits or reducing hazardous air pollutants. This workshop built
upon the work accomplished in the June 2000 Science Advisory Board/
EPA Workshop on the Benefits of Reductions in Exposure to Hazardous
Air Pollutants, which generated thoughtful discussion on approaches
to estimating human health benefits from reductions in air toxics
exposure, but no consensus was reached on methods that could be
implemented in the near term for a broad selection of air toxics.
Please visit http://epa.gov/air/toxicair/2009workshop.html for more
information about the workshop and its associated materials.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Quantified Human Health Impacts
Tables VIII.D.2-1 and VIII.D.2-2 present the annual
PM2.5 and ozone health impacts in the 48 contiguous U.S.
states associated with the required renewable fuel volumes relative to
both the RFS1 and AEO reference cases for 2022. For each endpoint
presented in Tables VIII.D.2-1 and VIII.D.2-2, we provide both the mean
estimate and the 90% confidence interval.
Using EPA's preferred estimates, based on the ACS and Six-Cities
studies and no threshold assumption in the model of mortality, we
estimate that the required renewable fuel volumes will result in
between 110 and 270 cases of PM2.5-related premature deaths
annually in 2022 when compared to the RFS1 reference case. When
compared to the AEO reference scenario, we estimate that the required
renewable fuel volumes will result in between 33 and 85 cases of
PM2.5-related premature deaths annually in 2022. For ozone-
related premature mortality, we estimate that national changes in
ambient ozone will contribute to between 54 to 250 additional premature
mortalities in 2022 as a result of the required renewable fuel volumes
relative to the RFS1 scenario. When compared to the AEO reference
scenario, we estimate that the required renewable fuel volumes will
contribute to between 36 to 160 additional ozone-related premature
mortalities in 2022.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\367\ Woodruff, T.J., J. Grillo, and K.C. Schoendorf. 1997.
``The Relationship Between Selected Causes of Postneonatal Infant
Mortality and Particulate Air Pollution in the United States.''
Environmental Health Perspectives 105(6): 608-612.
Table VIII.D.2-1--Estimated PM2.5-Related Health Impacts Associated With the Mandated Renewable Fuel Volumes a
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2022 RFS2 Control case 2022 RFS2 Control case
compared to RFS1 compared to AEO
Health effect reference case (5th%- reference case (5th%-
95th%ile) 95th%ile)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Premature Mortality--Derived from Epidemiology Literature \b\
Adult, age 30+, ACS Cohort Study (Pope et al., 2002).......... -110 -33
(-42 - -170) (-13 - -53)
Adult, age 25+, Six-Cities Study (Laden et al., 2006)......... -270 -85
(-150 - -400) (-46 - -120)
Infant, age <1 year (Woodruff et al., 1997)................... 0 0
(0 - -1) (0 - -1)
Chronic bronchitis (adult, age 26 and over)................... -65 -19
(-26 - -110) (-4 - -18)
Non-fatal myocardial infarction (adult, age 18 and over)...... -180 -51
(-65 - -290) (-19 - -84)
Hospital admissions--respiratory (all ages) \c\............... -26 -7
(-25 - -26) (-5 - -8)
Hospital admissions--cardiovascular (adults, age >18) \d\..... -55 -12
(-44 - -70) (-9 - -16)
Emergency room visits for asthma (age 18 years and younger)... -180 -99
(-110 - -260) (-58 - -140)
Acute bronchitis, (children, age 8-12)........................ -160 -50
(-0 - -330) (-0 - -100)
Lower respiratory symptoms (children, age 7-14)............... -1,900 -600
(-910 - -2,900) (-290 - -910)
Upper respiratory symptoms (asthmatic children, age 9-18)..... -1,400 -450
(-450 - -2,400) (-140 - -750)
Asthma exacerbation (asthmatic children, age 6-18)............ -1,700 -540
(-190 - -4,800) (-60 - -1,500)
Work loss days................................................ -11,000 -3,200
(-10,000 - -13,000) (-2,800 - -3,700)
Minor restricted activity days (adults age 18-65)............. -68,000 -19,000
(-57,000 - -78,000) (-16,000 - -22.000)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Notes:
\a\ Note that negative incidence expressed in this table reflects disbenefits; in other words, an increase in
total aggregated national-level PM-related health impacts. Incidence is rounded to two significant digits.
Estimates represent incidence within the 48 contiguous United States.
\b\ PM-related adult mortality based upon the American Cancer Society (ACS) Cohort Study (Pope et al., 2002) and
the Six-Cities Study (Laden et al., 2006). Note that these are two alternative estimates of adult mortality
and should not be summed. PM-related infant mortality based upon a study by Woodruff, Grillo, and Schoendorf,
(1997).\367\
\c\ Respiratory hospital admissions for PM include admissions for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD),
pneumonia and asthma.
\d\ Cardiovascular hospital admissions for PM include total cardiovascular and subcategories for ischemic heart
disease, dysrhythmias, and heart failure.
[[Page 14849]]
Table VIII.D.2-2--Estimated Ozone-Related Health Impacts Associated With the Mandated Renewable Fuel Volumes a
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2022 RFS2 Control case 2022 RFS2 Control case
compared to RFS1 compared to AEO
Health effect reference case (5th%- reference case (5th%-
95th%ile) 95th%ile)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Premature Mortality, All ages \b\
Multi-City Analyses
Bell et al. (2004)--Non-accidental........................ -54 -36
(-17 - -92) (-10 - -62)
Huang et al. (2005)--Cardiopulmonary...................... -90 -59
(-31 - -149) (-18 - -100)
Schwartz (2005)--Non-accidental........................... -83 -55
(-24 - -140) (-13 - -97)
Meta-analyses:
Bell et al. (2005)--All cause............................. -180 -120
(-80 - -270) (-49 - -180)
Ito et al. (2005)--Non-accidental......................... -240 -160
(-140 - -350) (-90 - -230)
Levy et al. (2005)--All cause............................. -250 -160
(-170 - -330) (-110 - -220)
Hospital admissions--respiratory causes (adult, 65 and older) -470 -310
\c\.......................................................... (-20 - -860) (-5 - -580)
Hospital admissions--respiratory causes (children, under 2)... -83 -190
(-24 - -140) (-52 - -330)
Emergency room visit for asthma (all ages).................... -260 -180
(0 - -740) (0 - -510)
Minor restricted activity days (adults, age 18-65)............ -300,000 -200,000
(-110,000 - -500,000) (-59,000 - -340,000)
School absence days........................................... -110,000 -75,000
(-35,000 - -180,000) (-19,000 - -120,000)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Notes:
\a\ Note that negative incidence expressed in this table reflects disbenefits; in other words, an increase in
total aggregated national-level ozone-related health impacts. Incidence is rounded to two significant digits.
Estimates represent incidence within the 48 contiguous United States. Note that negative incidence estimates
represent additional cases of an endpoint related to pollution increases associated with the increased use of
renewable fuels.
\b\ Estimates of ozone-related premature mortality are based upon incidence estimates derived from several
alternative studies: Bell et al. (2004); Huang et al. (2005); Schwartz (2005) ; Bell et al. (2005); Ito et al.
(2005); Levy et al. (2005). The estimates of ozone-related premature mortality should therefore not be summed.
\c\ Respiratory hospital admissions for ozone include admissions for all respiratory causes and subcategories
for COPD and pneumonia.
3. Monetized Impacts
Table VIII.D.3-1 presents the estimated monetary value of the
increase in ozone and PM2.5-related health effects incidence
associated with the required renewable fuel volumes relative to both
the RFS1 and AEO reference cases for 2022. All monetized estimates are
stated in 2007$. These estimates account for growth in real gross
domestic product (GDP) per capita between the present and the year
2022. As the table indicates, total adverse health impacts are driven
primarily by the increase in PM2.5- and ozone-related
premature fatalities.
Our estimate of monetized adverse health impacts in 2022 for the
required renewable fuel volumes relative to the RFS1 reference case,
using the ACS and Six-Cities PM mortality studies and the range of
ozone mortality assumptions, are between $1.4 billion and $4.5 billion,
assuming a 3 percent discount rate, or between $1.4 billion and $4.3
billion, assuming a 7 percent discount rate. The total monetized
adverse health impacts in 2022 for the required renewable fuel volumes
relative to the AEO reference case are between $0.63 billion and $2.2
billion assuming a 3 percent discount rate, and between $0.60 billion
and $2.1 billion assuming a 7 percent discount rate. We are unable to
quantify a number of health and environmental impact categories (see
Table VIII.D.1-2). These unquantified impacts may be substantial,
although their magnitude is highly uncertain.
Table VIII.D.3-1--Estimated Monetary Value of Health and Welfare Effect Incidence
[In millions of 2007$] \a\ \b\
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2022 RFS2 Control 2022 RFS2 Control
case compared to RFS1 case compared to AEO
reference case reference case
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PM2.5-Related Health Effect Estimated Mean Value of Reductions
(5th and 95th %ile)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Premature Mortality--Derived from Epidemiology Studies \c\ \d\
Adult, age 30+ --ACS study (Pope et al., 2002):
3% discount rate.......................................... -$860 -$270
(-$100--$2,300) (-$32--$700)
7% discount rate.......................................... -$770 -$240
(-$91--$2,000) (-$28--$630)
[[Page 14850]]
Adult, age 25+ --Six-cities study (Laden et al., 2006):
3% discount rate.......................................... -$2,200 -$680
(-$29--$5,500) (-$90--$1,700)
7% discount rate.......................................... -$2,000 -$620
(-$26--$5,000) (-$81--$1,600)
Infant Mortality, <1 year--(Woodruff et al. 1997)............. -$4.0 -$1.7
(-$3.0--$15) (-$1.3--$6.7)
Chronic bronchitis (adults, 26 and over).......................... -$32 -$9.4
(-$2.5--$110) (-$0.72--$33)
Non-fatal acute myocardial infarctions:
3% discount rate.............................................. -$23 -$6.6
(-$4.1--$58) (-$1.0--$17)
7% discount rate.............................................. -$23 -$6.4
(-$3.8--$58) (-$0.95--$16)
Hospital admissions for respiratory causes........................ -$0.39 -$0.11
(-$0.19--$0.57 (-$0.06--$0.17)
Hospital admissions for cardiovascular causes..................... -$1.5 -$0.33
(-$0.96--$2.1) (-$0.20--$0.45)
Emergency room visits for asthma.................................. -$0.07 -$0.04
(-$0.04--$0.10) (-$0.02--$0.06)
Acute bronchitis (children, age 8-12)............................. -$0.01 -$0.004
($0--$0.03) ($0--$0.01)
Lower respiratory symptoms (children, 7-14)....................... -$0.04 -$0.01
(-$0.01--$0.07) (-$0.004--$0.02)
Upper respiratory symptoms (asthma, 9-11)......................... -$0.04 -$0.01
(-$0.01--$0.10) (-$0.004--$0.03)
Asthma exacerbations.............................................. -$0.09 -$0.03
(-$0.009--$0.28) (-$0.003--$0.09)
Work loss days.................................................... -$1.7 -$0.49
(-$1.5--$1.9) (-$0.42--$0.55)
Minor restricted-activity days (MRADs)............................ -$4.3 -$1.2
(-$2.5--$6.2) (-$0.69--$1.7)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ozone-related Health Effect
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Premature Mortality, All ages--Derived from Multi-city analyses:
Bell et al., 2004............................................. $480 -$320
(-$51--$1,300) (-$32--$880)
Huang et al., 2005............................................ -$800 -$530
(-$90--$2,200) (-$56--$1,400)
Schwartz, 2005................................................ -$740 -$490
(-$76--$2,000) (-$48--$1,300)
Premature Mortality, All ages--Derived from Meta-analyses:
Bell et al., 2005............................................. -$1,600 -$1,000
(-$200--$4,000) (-$130--$,700)
Ito et al., 2005.............................................. -$2,200 -$1,400
(-$290--$5,400) (-$190--$3,600)
Levy et al., 2005............................................. -$2,200 -$1,400
(-$300--$5,300) (-$200--$3,500)
Hospital admissions--respiratory causes (adult, 65 and older)..... -$11 -$7.4
(-$0.49--$20) (-$0.13--$14)
Hospital admissions--respiratory causes (children, under 2)....... -$3.0 -$1.9
(-$1.0--$4,9) (-$0.52--$3.3)
Emergency room visit for asthma (all ages)........................ -$0.10 -$0.07
(-$0.009--$0.26) (-$0.008--$0.18)
Minor restricted activity days (adults, age 18-65)................ -$19 -$13
(-$6.4--$35) (-$3.6--$24)
School absence days............................................... -$10 -$6.7
(-$3.1--$16) (-$1.7--$11)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Notes:
\a\ Negatives indicate a disbenefit, or an increase in health effect incidence. Monetary impacts are rounded to
two significant digits for ease of presentation and computation. PM and ozone impacts are nationwide.
\b\ Monetary impacts adjusted to account for growth in real GDP per capita between 1990 and the analysis year
(2022).
\c\ Valuation assumes discounting over the SAB recommended 20 year segmented lag structure. Results reflect the
use of 3 percent and 7 percent discount rates consistent with EPA and OMB guidelines for preparing economic
analyses.
[[Page 14851]]
4. What Are the Limitations of the Health Impacts Analysis?
Every benefit-cost analysis examining the potential effects of a
change in environmental protection requirements is limited to some
extent by data gaps, limitations in model capabilities (such as
geographic coverage), and uncertainties in the underlying scientific
and economic studies used to configure the benefit and cost models.
Limitations of the scientific literature often result in the inability
to estimate quantitative changes in health and environmental effects,
such as premature mortality associated with exposure to carbon
monoxide. Deficiencies in the economics literature often result in the
inability to assign economic values even to those health and
environmental outcomes which can be quantified. These general
uncertainties in the underlying scientific and economics literature,
which can lead to valuations that are higher or lower, are discussed in
detail in the RIA and its supporting references. Key uncertainties that
have a bearing on the results of the benefit-cost analysis of the
coordinated strategy include the following:
The exclusion of potentially significant and unquantified
benefit categories (such as health, odor, and ecological benefits of
reduction in air toxics, ozone, and PM);
Errors in measurement and projection for variables such as
population growth;
Uncertainties in the estimation of future year emissions
inventories and air quality;
Uncertainty in the estimated relationships of health and
welfare effects to changes in pollutant concentrations including the
shape of the C-R function, the size of the effect estimates, and the
relative toxicity of the many components of the PM mixture;
Uncertainties in exposure estimation; and
Uncertainties associated with the effect of potential
future actions to limit emissions.
As Table VIII.D.3-1 indicates, total impacts are driven primarily
by the additional premature mortalities estimated to occur each year.
Some key assumptions underlying the premature mortality estimates
include the following, which may also contribute to uncertainty:
Inhalation of fine particles is causally associated with
premature death at concentrations near those experienced by most
Americans on a daily basis. Although biological mechanisms for this
effect have not yet been completely established, the weight of the
available epidemiological, toxicological, and experimental evidence
supports an assumption of causality. The impacts of including a
probabilistic representation of causality were explored in the expert
elicitation-based results of the PM NAAQS RIA.
All fine particles, regardless of their chemical
composition, are equally potent in causing premature mortality. This is
an important assumption, because PM related to fuel use in mobile
sources may differ significantly from PM precursors released from
electric generating units and other industrial sources. However, no
clear scientific grounds exist for supporting differential effects
estimates by particle type.
The C-R function for fine particles is approximately
linear within the range of ambient concentrations under consideration.
Thus, the estimates include health benefits from reducing fine
particles in areas with varied concentrations of PM, including both
regions that may be in attainment with PM2.5 standards and
those that are at risk of not meeting the standards.
There is uncertainty in the magnitude of the association
between ozone and premature mortality. The range of ozone impacts
associated with the increased use of renewable fuels is estimated based
on the risk of several sources of ozone-related mortality effect
estimates. In a recent report on the estimation of ozone-related
premature mortality published by the National Research Council, a panel
of experts and reviewers concluded that short-term exposure to ambient
ozone is likely to contribute to premature deaths and that ozone-
related mortality should be included in estimates of the health impacts
of reducing ozone exposure.\368\ EPA has requested advice from the
National Academy of Sciences on how best to quantify uncertainty in the
relationship between ozone exposure and premature mortality in the
context of quantifying health impacts.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\368\ National Research Council (NRC), 2008. Estimating
Mortality Risk Reduction and Economic Benefits from Controlling
Ozone Air Pollution. The National Academies Press: Washington, DC.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Acknowledging the omission of a range of health and environmental
impacts, and the uncertainties mentioned above, we present a best
estimate of the total monetized impacts based on our interpretation of
the best available scientific literature and methods supported by EPA's
technical peer review panel, the Science Advisory Board's Health
Effects Subcommittee (SAB-HES). The National Academies of Science (NRC,
2002) has also reviewed EPA's methodology for analyzing air pollution-
related health and environmental impacts. EPA addressed many of these
comments in the analysis of the final PM NAAQS.369 370 This
analysis incorporates this most recent work to the extent possible.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\369\ National Research Council (NRC). 2002. Estimating the
Public Health Benefits of Proposed Air Pollution Regulations. The
National Academies Press: Washington, DC.
\370\ U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. October 2006. Final
Regulatory Impact Analysis (RIA) for the Proposed National Ambient
Air Quality Standards for Particulate Matter. Prepared by: Office of
Air and Radiation. Available at http://www.epa.gov/ttn/ecas/ria.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
E. Summary of Costs and Benefits
Presented in this section are a summary of costs, benefits, and net
benefits of the renewable fuel volumes required by final RFS2 program.
Table VIII.E-1 shows the estimated annual societal costs and benefits
of the increased use of renewable fuels in 2022. The table also
presents estimated annual net benefits for 2022. In this table, fuel
savings are presented as negative costs associated with the increased
use of renewable fuels (rather than positive savings). Note that all
costs and benefits are presented in annual terms; we were unable to
estimate a stream of costs and benefits for many of the cost-benefit
categories and were therefore unable to estimate net present value.
Table VIII.E-1 presents the benefits of reduced GHG emissions--and
consequently the annual quantified benefits (i.e., total benefits) and
quantified net benefits--for each of five interim SCC values considered
by EPA. As discussed in Section VIII.C, there is a very high
probability (very likely according to the IPCC) that the benefit
estimates from GHG reductions are underestimates because, in part,
models used to calculate SCC values do not include information about
impacts that have not been quantified.
Table VIII.E-1--Quantified Costs and Benefits of the Volumes Required by
RFS2 Relative to the AEO Reference Case in 2022
[Billions of 2007 dollars] \371\
------------------------------------------------------------------------
2022
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Quantified Annual Costs
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Overall Fuel Cost \a\.................. -$11.8.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Quantified Annual Benefits
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Reduced GHG Emissions (by SCC):
SCC 5%............................... $0.6 to $1.1.
[[Page 14852]]
SCC 5% Newell-Pizer.................. $1.2 to $2.2.
SCC from 3% and 5%................... $2.4 to $4.2.
SCC 3%............................... $4.1 to $7.3.
SCC 3% Newell-Pizer.................. $6.8 to $12.2.
PM2.5- and Ozone-Related Benefits b, c. -$0.63 to -$2.2.
Energy Security Impacts................ $2.6.
Total Benefits (by SCC):
SCC 5%............................... $1 to $3.1.
SCC 5% Newell-Pizer.................. $1.6 to $4.2.
SCC from 3% and 5%................... $2.8 to $6.2.
SCC 3%............................... $4.5 to $9.3.
SCC 3% Newell-Pizer.................. $7.2 to $14.2.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Quantified Net Benefits
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net Benefits (by SCC):
SCC 5%............................... $13 to $15.
SCC 5% Newell-Pizer.................. $13 to $16.
SCC from 3% and 5%................... $15 to $18.
SCC 3%............................... $16 to $21.
SCC 3% Newell-Pizer.................. $19 to $26.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\a\ Negative costs represent fuel savings from decreased gasoline and
diesel consumption.
\b\ Negative benefits indicate a disbenefit, or an increase in monetized
health impacts. Total includes premature mortality-related and
morbidity-related ozone and PM2.5 impacts. Range was developed by
adding the estimate from the ozone premature mortality function to the
estimate of PM2.5-related premature mortality derived from either the
ACS study (Pope et al., 2002) or the Six-Cities study (Laden et al.,
2006).
\c\ The PM2.5-related impacts presented in this table assume a 3%
discount rate in the valuation of premature mortality to account for a
twenty-year segmented cessation lag. If a 7% discount rate had been
used, the values would be approximately 9% lower.
IX. Impacts on Water
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\371\ In this table, we have included only the estimates from
the sector models as they provided a more detailed breakdown of
costs and benefits. We have excluded estimates of the agricultural
sector impacts of the RFS2 in Table VIII F-1 since these impacts are
considered economic rents.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A. Background
As the production of biofuels increases as required by this rule,
there may be adverse impacts on both water quality and water quantity
affecting drinking water sources and ecological habitats. The impacts
could come from several different pathways: Growing crops for the
biofuel feedstock as well as production, storage, and distribution of
the biofuels. Increased production of biofuel crops may lead to changes
in the management of cropland and the use of fertilizer and pesticides
that could lead to greater loadings of nutrients, pesticides, and
sediment to our water resources. While there are methods to minimize
and mitigate the effects on water resources, there is still a potential
to impact both human health and the environment. Since both the
irrigation of corn and ethanol production use large quantities of
water, the supply of water could also be significantly affected in some
locations.
1. Agriculture and Water Quality
There are three major pathways for contaminants to reach water from
agricultural lands: Run off from the land's surface, man-made ditches
or subsurface tile drains, and leaching to ground water. Many factors
influence the potential for contaminants such as fertilizers, sediment,
and pesticides to reach water from agricultural lands, including: Soil
type, slope, climate, crop type, and management. Management of
agricultural lands can take many forms, but key factors include
nutrient and pesticide application rates and application methods,
tillage, use of conservation practices and crop rotations by farmers,
and acreage and intensity of artificially drained lands.
To examine the potential water-related impacts of growing crops for
biofuels, EPA focused its analysis on corn production for several
reasons. First, corn acres have increased dramatically, 20% from 2006
to 2007. Although corn acres have since declined somewhat, total corn
acres in 2009 remained the second highest since 1946.\372\ Second, corn
kernels are currently the predominant and most economically viable
feedstock for significant ethanol production. In addition, corn stover
(stalks, leaves) will likely be the predominant feedstock for
cellulosic ethanol production in the Upper Mississippi River Basin
where we modeled water quality impacts. And third, corn production can
contribute significantly to water pollution. Corn has the highest
fertilizer and pesticide use per acre and accounts for the largest
share of nitrogen fertilizer use among all crops.\373\ Corn generally
utilizes only 40 to 60 percent of the applied nitrogen fertilizer or
the residual organic nitrogen from sources such as manure or soybeans.
The remaining nitrogen is available to leave the field and run off to
surface waters, leach into ground water, or volatilize to the air where
it can return to water through depositional processes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\372\ U.S. Department of Agriculture, National Agricultural
Statistics Service, ``Crop Production'', August 12, 2009, available
online at: http://usda.mannlib.cornell.edu/usda/current/CropProd/CropProd-08-12-2009.pdf.
\373\ Committee on Water Implications of Biofuels Production in
the United States, National Research Council, 2008, Water
implications of biofuels production in the United States, The
National Academies Press, Washington, DC, 88 pp.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Over the past 20 years, corn has been increasingly grown in
rotation with other crops, especially soybeans. As corn prices increase
relative to prices for other crops, more farmers choose to grow corn
every year (continuous corn). Continuous corn production results in
significantly greater nitrogen losses annually than a corn-soybean
rotation and lower yields per acre. In response, farmers may add higher
rates of nitrogen fertilizer to try to match yields of corn grown in
rotation. Growing continuous corn also increases the viability of pests
such as corn rootworm. Farmers may increase the use of pesticides to
control these pests. As corn acres increase, use of the common
herbicides like atrazine and glyphosate (e.g. Roundup) may also
increase.
High corn prices may encourage farmers to grow corn on lands that
are marginal for row crop production such as hay land or pasture.
Typically, agricultural producers apply far less fertilizers and
pesticides on pasture land than land in row crops. Corn yield on these
marginal lands will be lower and may require higher fertilizer rates.
Disturbances of these soils can release nitrogen that has been stored
in the soil. Since nitrogen fertilizer prices are tied to oil prices,
fertilizer costs have fluctuated. How agricultural producers have
responded to these changes in both corn and fertilizer prices is
unclear.
Artificial drainage is another important factor in determining the
losses of nutrients from cropland. Artificial drainage consists either
of subsurface tiles/pipes or man-made ditches that move water from wet
soils to surface waters so crops can be planted. In a few areas, drains
move water to wells and then groundwater instead of to surface water.
Artificial drainage has transformed large expanses of historic wetland
soils into productive agriculture lands. However, the artificial drains
or ditches also move nutrients and pesticides more quickly to surface
waters without any of the attenuation that would occur if these
contaminants moved through soils or wetlands. The highest proportion of
tile drainage occurs in the Upper Mississippi and the Ohio-Tennessee
River basins in areas of intensive corn production.\374\ Manmade
[[Page 14853]]
ditches predominate in areas like the Eastern Shore of the Chesapeake
Bay.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\374\ U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, EPA Science Advisory
Board, Hypoxia in the northern Gulf of Mexico, EPA-SAB-08-003, 275
p., available online at: http://yosemite.epa.gov/sab/sabproduct.nsf/
C3D2F27094E03F90852573B800601D93/$File/EPA-SAB-08-
003complete.unsigned.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The increase in corn production and prices may also have
significant impacts on voluntary conservation programs funded by the
U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). Conservation programs provide
important funding to help agricultural producers implement practices to
protect water quality and other resources. As land values increase due
to higher crop prices, USDA payments may not keep up with the need for
farmers and tenant farmers, to make an adequate return. For example,
the cost of farmland in Iowa increased an average of 18% in 2007 from
2006 prices.
Both land retirement programs, like the Conservation Reserve
Program (CRP), and working land programs, like the Environmental
Quality Incentives Program (EQIP), can be affected. Under CRP, USDA
contracts with farmers to take land out of crop production to plant
grasses or trees. Generally farmers put land into CRP because it is
less productive and has other characteristics that make the cropland
more environmentally sensitive, such as high erosion rates. CRP
provides valuable environmental benefits both for water quality and for
wildlife habitat. Midwestern states, where much of U.S. corn is grown,
tend to have lower CRP reenrollment rates than the national average.
Under EQIP, USDA makes cost-share payments to farmers to implement
conservation practices. Some of the most cost-effective practices
implemented through these conservation programs include: Riparian
buffers; crop rotation; appropriate rate, timing, and method of
fertilizer application; cover crops; and, on tile-drained lands,
treatment wetlands and controlled drainage. If producers believe that
participation in conservation programs may reduce their profits, they
may be less willing to participate and/or require higher payments to
offset perceived losses.
The water quality impacts of agricultural cellulosic feedstocks
such as corn stover and switchgrass are unknown, since cellulosic
ethanol is not currently produced commercially. Corn stover appears to
be one of the most viable feedstock for cellulosic ethanol, especially
in the Corn Belt states. When left in the field, corn stover maintains
the soil organic carbon which has many benefits as a source of
nutrients, preventing erosion by wind and water, and increasing soil
aeration and water infiltration. If corn stover is overharvested, there
may be impacts to both soil quality and water quality. Unlike corn,
switchgrass is a native, perennial crop that does not require high
inputs of fertilizers or pesticides. As a perennial crop, there is
limited sediment runoff compared to annual crops. There is very minimal
acreage of switchgrass grown at the present time, so it is difficult to
predict what inputs farmers will use to cultivate it as a commercial
crop. Some concern has been expressed about farmers increasing
fertilizer application rates and irrigation on switchgrass to increase
yields.
2. Ecological Impacts
Nitrogen and phosphorus enrichment due to human activities is one
of the leading problems facing our nation's lakes, reservoirs, and
estuaries. Nutrient enrichment also has negative impacts on aquatic
life in streams; adverse health effects on humans and domestic animals;
and impairs aesthetic and recreational use. Excess nutrients can lead
to excessive growth of algae in rivers and streams, and aquatic plants
in all waters. For example, declines in invertebrate community
structure have been correlated directly with increases in phosphorus
concentration. High concentrations of nitrogen in the form of ammonia
are toxic to aquatic animals. Excessive levels of algae have also been
shown to be damaging to invertebrates. Finally, fish and invertebrates
will experience growth problems and can die if either oxygen is
depleted or pH increases are severe. Both of these conditions are
symptoms of eutrophication. As a biologic system becomes more enriched
by nutrients, different species of algae may spread and species
composition can shift.
Nutrient pollution is widespread. Although the most widely known
examples of significant nutrient impacts are in the Gulf of Mexico and
the Chesapeake Bay, there are known impacts in over 80 estuaries/bays,
and thousands of rivers, streams, and lakes. Waterbodies in virtually
every state and territory in the U.S. are impacted by nutrient-related
degradation. Reducing nutrient pollution is a priority for EPA.
3. Impacts to the Gulf of Mexico
According to the National Research Council, nutrients and sediment
are the two primary water quality problems in the Mississippi River
Basin and the Gulf of Mexico.\375\ Production of corn for ethanol may
exacerbate these existing serious water quality problems. Nitrogen
fertilizer applications to corn are already the major source of total
nitrogen loadings to the Mississippi River. A large area of low oxygen,
or hypoxia, forms in the Gulf of Mexico every year, often called the
``dead zone.'' The primary cause of the hypoxia is excess nutrients
(nitrogen and phosphorus) from the Upper Midwest flowing into the
Mississippi River to the Gulf. These nutrients trigger excessive algal
growth (or eutrophication) resulting in reduced sunlight, loss of
aquatic habitat, and a decrease in oxygen dissolved in the water.
Hypoxia threatens commercial and recreational fisheries in the Gulf
because fish, shrimp, and other aquatic species cannot live in the low
oxygen waters.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\375\ Committee on the Mississippi River and the Clean Water
Act, National Research Council, 2008, Mississippi River Water
Quality and the Clean Water Act: Progress, Challenges, and
Opportunities, The National Academies Press, Washington, DC, 252 pp.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The 2008 hypoxic zone was measured at 8,000 square miles, the
second largest since measurements began in 1985.\376\ In 2009 models
predicted an even larger hypoxic zone, but it was measured at only
3,000 square miles. A combination of below average high flows on the
Mississippi River and winds that mixed Gulf waters are the likely
causes of the reduced size of the 2009 zone. The Mississippi River/Gulf
of Mexico Watershed Nutrient Task Force's ``Gulf Hypoxia Action Plan
2008'' calls for a 45% reduction in both nitrogen and phosphorus
reaching the Gulf to reduce the size of the zone.\377\ The Action Plan
states that an additional reduction in nitrogen and phosphorus beyond
the 45% would be necessary to account for increased corn production for
ethanol and climate change impacts.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\376\ Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium, 2009, `Gulf of
Mexico Dead Zone Surprising Small, but Severe, available online at:
http://www.gulfhypoxia.net/Research/Shelfwide%20Cruises/2009/Files/Press_Release.pdf.
\377\ Mississippi River/Gulf of Mexico Watershed Nutrient Task
Force, 2008, Gulf hypoxia action plan 2008 for reducing, mitigating,
and controlling hypoxia in the northern Gulf of Mexico and improving
water quality in the Mississippi River basin, 61 p., Washington, DC,
available online at: http://www.epa.gov/msbasin/actionplan.htm.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alexander, et al.\378\ modeled the sources of nutrient loadings to
the Gulf of Mexico using the USGS SPARROW model. They estimated that
agricultural sources contribute more than 70% of the delivered nitrogen
and phosphorus. Corn and soybean production accounted for 52% of
nitrogen delivery and 25% of the phosphorus delivery.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\378\ Alexander, R.B., Smith, R.A., Schwarz, G.E., Boyer, E.W.,
Nolan, J.V., and Brakebill, J.W., 2008, Differences in phosphorus
and nitrogen delivery to the Gulf of Mexico from the Mississippi
River basin, Environmental Science and Technology, v. 42, no. 3, p.
822-830, available online at: http://pubs.acs.org/cgi-bin/abstract.cgi/esthag/2008/42/i03/abs/es0716103.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Several recent scientific reports have estimated the impact of
increasing ethanol feedstock acres in the Gulf of
[[Page 14854]]
Mexico watershed. Donner and Kucharik's \379\ study showed increases in
nitrogen export to the Gulf as a result of increasing corn ethanol
production from 2007 levels to 15 billion gallons in 2022. They
concluded that the expansion of corn-based ethanol production could
make it almost impossible to meet the Gulf of Mexico nitrogen reduction
goals without a ``radical shift'' in feed production, livestock diet,
and management of agricultural lands. The study estimated a mean
dissolved inorganic nitrogen load increase of 10% to 18% from 2007 to
2022 to meet the 15 billion gallon corn ethanol goal. EPA's Science
Advisory Board report to the Mississippi River/Gulf of Mexico Watershed
Task Force estimated that corn grown for ethanol will result in an
additional national annual loading of almost 300 million pounds of
nitrogen. An estimated 80% of that nitrogen loading or 238 million
pounds will occur in the Mississippi-Atchafalaya River Basin and
contribute nitrogen to the hypoxia in the Gulf of Mexico. The results
of a study by Costello, et al. indicate that moving from corn to
switchgrass and corn stover to produce ethanol will result in a 20%
decrease in the nitrate outputs from the Mississippi-Atchafalaya River
Basin. This decrease is not enough to meet the EPA target for reduction
of the hypoxic zone reduction.\380\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\379\ Donner, S.D. and Kucharik, C.J., 2008, Corn-based ethanol
production compromises goal of reducing nitrogen export by the
Mississippi River, PNAS, v. 105, no. 11, p. 4513-4518, available
online at: http://www.pnas.org/content/105/11/4513.full.
\380\ Costello, C.; Griffin, W.M.; Landis, A.E.; Matthew, H.S.,
2009, Impact of biofuel crop production on the formation of hypoxia
in the Gulf of Mexico, Environmental Science and Technology, 43
(20), pp. 7985-7991.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Upper Mississippi River Basin Analysis
To provide a quantitative estimate of the impact of the increased
use of renewable fuels and production of corn ethanol generally on
water quality, EPA conducted an analysis that modeled the changes in
loadings of nitrogen, phosphorus, and sediment from agricultural
production in the Upper Mississippi River Basin (UMRB). The UMRB drains
approximately 189,000 square miles, including large parts of the states
of Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota, Missouri, and Wisconsin. Small portions
of Indiana, Michigan, and South Dakota also lie within the basin. EPA
selected the UMRB because it is representative of the many potential
issues associated with ethanol production, including its connection to
major water quality concerns such as Gulf of Mexico hypoxia, large corn
production, and numerous ethanol production plants.
On average the UMRB contributes about 39% of the total nitrogen
loads and 26% of the total phosphorus loads to the Gulf of Mexico. The
high percentage of nitrogen from the UMRB is primarily due to the large
inputs of fertilizer for agriculture and the 60% of cropland that is
artificially drained by tiles. Since the mid 1990s, the annual nitrate-
nitrogen flux has steadily decreased. The Science Advisory Board report
attributes this decline to higher amount of nitrogen removed during
harvest, due to higher crop yields. For the same time period,
phosphorus inputs increased 12%.
1. SWAT Model
EPA selected the SWAT (Soil and Water Assessment Tool) model to
assess nutrient and sediment loads from changes in agricultural
production in the UMRB. SWAT is a physical process model developed to
quantify the impact of land management practices in large, complex
watersheds.\381\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\381\ Gassman, P.W., Reyes, M.R., Green, C.H., Arnold, J.G.,
2007, The soil and water assessment tool: Historical development,
applications, and future research directions. Transactions of the
American Society of Agricultural and Biological Engineers, v. 50,
no. 4, p. 1211-1240. http://www.card.iastate.edu/environment/items/asabe_swat.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. AEO 2007 Reference Case
In order to assess alternative potential future conditions within
the UMRB, EPA developed a SWAT model of a reference case scenario of
current conditions against which to analyze the future impact of
increased corn production. For the NPRM, we used a 2005 baseline. For
the final rule, we revised the baseline to correspond with the
agricultural analysis described in Section VIII.A. Therefore we used
the corn ethanol production baseline from the Annual Energy Outlook
(AEO) 2007 report\382\ as our reference case. We assumed that 33% of
the corn produced in the UMRB was converted to corn ethanol, based on
estimates from USDA.\383\ This baseline does not include corn ethanol
produced at the volumes required by this rulemaking. The analysis
assumes that no cellulosic ethanol, including ethanol produced from
corn stover, would be produced in the reference case since the AEO
report did not include cellulosic ethanol production in its estimates.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\382\ U. S. Department of Energy, Energy Information
Administration, Annual Energy Outlook 2007 With Projections to 2030,
February 2007, available on-line at: http://tonto.eia.doe.gov/ftproot/forecasting/0383(2007).pdf.
\383\ U.S. Department of Agriculture, USDA Agricultural
Projections to 2018, February 2009, available on-line at: http://www.ers.usda.gov/Publications/OCE091/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The SWAT model was applied (i.e., calibrated) to the UMRB using
1960 to 2001 weather data and flow and water quality data from 13 USGS
gages on the main stem of the Mississippi River. The 42-year SWAT model
runs were performed and the results analyzed to establish runoff,
sediment, nitrogen, and phosphorous loadings from each of the 131 8-
digit HUC subwatersheds and the larger 4-digit subbasins, along with
the total outflow from the UMRB and at the various USGS gage sites
along the Mississippi River. These results provided the Reference
Scenario model values to which the future alternatives are compared.
Physical structures that disconnect fertile floodplains with
seasonal fluctuation of stream and river levels also affect water
quantity and quality by altering the ability of these soils to serve as
a sink for nutrient rich waters. In lieu of data on where these
structures are or may be constructed, these effects were not modeled.
3. Reference Cases and RFS2 Control Case
To assess the impacts of the increased use of corn ethanol, we
modeled an RFS2 Control Case and compared it to both the AEO 2007
Reference Case and the RFS1 Mandate Reference Case for the years 2010,
2015, 2020, and 2022. The RFS2 national corn ethanol volumes of 11.24
billion gallons a year (BGY) for 2010, and 15 BGY for 2016 to 2022 were
adjusted for the UMRB. Annual increases in corn yield of 1.23% were
built into the future scenarios. National average corn yields have been
increasing primarily due to favorable weather conditions and
improvement in practices to reduce stress on the corn plants from
excess water, drought, and pests. Fewer corn acres were needed to meet
ethanol production goals in the Control Case scenario after 2015 due to
those yield increases. Corn acres increased 9% in 2022 between the AEO
2007 Reference Case and the RFS2 (No Stover) Control Case. We were not
able to model the impacts of corn stover removal at this time, so the
analysis only reflects the impacts of increased use of corn grain for
renewable fuel use.
Tables IX.B.3-1 through IX.B.3-3 compare the model outputs for
nitrogen, phosphorus, and sediment between the AEO 2007 Reference Case
and the RFS2 (No Stover) Control Case scenarios for the years 2010,
2015, 2020, and 2022. Land load is the total amount of nitrogen or
phosphorus that reaches a
[[Page 14855]]
stream within the UMRB. The total outflow is the nitrogen, phosphorus,
or sediment measured at the outlet of the UMRB at Grafton, Illinois
after accounting for in-stream loses due to uptake or assimilation.
These results only estimate loadings from the Upper Mississippi River
basin, not the entire Mississippi River watershed. As noted earlier,
the UMRB contributes about 39% of the total nitrogen loads and 26% of
total phosphorus loads to the Gulf of Mexico. The decreasing nutrient
load over time is likely attributable to the increased average corn
yield per acre, resulting in greater plant uptake of nitrogen and fewer
corn acres planted to reach the ethanol production requirements of this
rule.
Table IX.B.3-1--Average Annual Nitrogen Loads: Comparison of AEO 2007 Reference Case to the 2022 RFS2 (No
Stover) Control Case
[% difference in parentheses]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
AEO 2007 reference case 2022 RFS2 (No Stover) Control case
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Model run Total land load, Total outflow, Total land load, Total outflow,
million lbs million lbs million lbs million lbs
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2010................................ 1948 1470 1944 (-0.21) 1467 (-0.20)
2015................................ 1911 1441 1946 (1.83) 1469 (1.94)
2020................................ 1887 1421 1912 (1.32) 1442 (1.48)
2022................................ 1877 1413 1897 (1.07) 1430 (1.20)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
About 24 to 26% of the nitrogen and phosphorus leaving agricultural
fields was assimilated (taken by aquatic plants or volatilized) before
reaching the outlet of the UMRB. The assimilated nitrogen is not
necessarily eliminated as an environmental concern. Five percent or
more of the nitrogen can be converted to nitrous gas, a powerful
greenhouse gas that has 300 times the climate warming potential of
carbon dioxide, the major greenhouse. Thus, a water pollutant becomes
an air pollutant until it is either captured through biological
sequestration or converted fully to elemental nitrogen.
Table IX.B.3-2--Average Annual Phosphorus Loads: Comparison of AEO 2007 Reference Case to the 2022 RFS2 (No
Stover) Control Case
[% difference in parentheses]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
AEO 2007 Reference case 2022 RFS2 (No Stover) control case
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Model run Total land load, Total outflow, Total land load, Total outflow,
million lbs million lbs million lbs million lbs
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2010................................ 180.0 133.8 179.9 (-0.06) 133.7 (-0.07)
2015................................ 178.2 132.3 179.6 (0.79) 133.6 (0.98)
2020................................ 177.0 131.3 178.2 (0.68) 132.4 (0.84)
2022................................ 176.5 130.9 177.6 (0.62) 131.8 (0.69)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total sediment outflow showed very little change over all
scenarios. This result is primarily due to corn stover remaining on the
field following harvest and therefore reducing sediment transport to
water.
Table IX.B.3-3--Average Annual Sediment Loads: Comparison of AEO 2007
Reference Case to the 2022 RFS2 Control Case
[% difference in parentheses]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
2007 AEO 2022 Control
---------------- volume case
Model run ---------------
Total outflow, Total outflow,
million tons million tons
------------------------------------------------------------------------
2010.................................... 6.231 6.232 (0.02)
2015.................................... 6.221 6.233 (0.19)
2020.................................... 6.214 6.224 (0.16)
2022.................................... 6.211 6.220 (0.14)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The relationship between the number of acres of corn needed to
produce ethanol and the crop yield is a complex relationship. Increased
demand for corn based ethanol will not always result in increases in
corn acres. Our modeling demonstrated that in less than a decade,
increasing corn yields may counter the need for increased corn
production resulting in the number of acres of corn stabilizing and
additional nutrient and sediment loadings decreasing from the earlier
peaks.
At this time, we are not able to assess the impact of these
additional loadings on the size of the Gulf of Mexico hypoxia zone or
water quality within the UMRB. For more details on the analysis,
including comparisons with the RFS1, see Chapter 6 in the RIA.
4. Case Study
To evaluate local water quality impacts that are impossible to
ascertain at the scale of the UMRB, we also modeled the Raccoon River
watershed in central Iowa. The criteria for choosing this watershed
included: Percentage of corn area representative of the UMRB, stream
segments included in EPA's 303(d) list of impaired waters due to high
nutrient levels, biorefinery plants, drinking water intakes, and
observed streamflow and water quality data. Nearly 88% of the watershed
is in agriculture. 75% of the watershed produces corn and soybeans,
mostly in rotation. Hay and other row crops are produced on the
remaining agriculture land. The city of Des Moines makes up about 8% of
the watershed. The state of Iowa has listed numerous stream segments of
the Raccoon River as impaired.
The case study used the same assumptions and scenarios as those
used for the UMRB analysis. SWAT-simulated streamflow and water quality
(total nitrogen and phosphorus, and sediment loadings) were calibrated
against observed data at both monthly and yearly time steps.
[[Page 14856]]
As in the UMRB study, nitrogen loads to water increased for the
future scenarios, though at a greater rate. Future phosphorus loads
decreased in the Raccoon River model, where they had shown minor
increases in the UMRB model. For the Raccoon River, there was a greater
decrease in sediment load, which is the likely cause for the decrease
in phosphorus loadings.
5. Sensitivity Analysis
Using the existing UMRB SWAT model, a sensitivity analysis was
conducted on a number of important meteorological and management
related factors. The goal was to further understand the model
characteristics and sensitivities to parameters and input forcing
functions that control the model response for the key environmental
indicators of concern. Scenarios were constructed using four factors:
fertilization application threshold, corn residue removal, daily air
temperature, and daily precipitation. The results of the analysis
showed that rainfall and temperature are the most influential factors
for all model outputs: water yield, total nitrogen and phosphorus
loadings, and sediment loadings. These results underscored the
importance of representing these two driving factors accurately in
hydrologic modeling. Corn residue removal noticeably reduced nutrient
loading into streams while increasing sediment loads. However, since
corn residue is the main source of organic nitrogen and phosphorus, the
removal of the residue leads to the need for higher nutrient inputs in
the growing season. The fertilization application threshold scenario
did not tangibly impact water yield and sediment loading. The findings
from this study indicated that future climate change could greatly
influence water availability and pollution from corn cropland.
C. Additional Water Issues
The full water quality and water quantity impacts resulting from
corn ethanol production go beyond the ability of our model. For
example, the model does not account for fresh water constraints in
irrigated agriculture in corn producing areas or predict future
increases in drainage of agricultural lands. The following issues are
summarized to provide additional context about the broader range of
potential impacts. See Chapter 6 in the RIA for more discussion of
these issues.
1. Chesapeake Bay Watershed
In May 2009, President Obama issued Executive Order 13508 on
Chesapeake Bay Restoration and Protection. The order established a
Federal Leadership Committee, chaired by EPA, and with senior
representatives from the departments of Agriculture, Commerce, Defense,
Homeland Security, Interior, and Transportation. In November 2009,
these federal agencies released a draft strategy which contains a range
of approaches for accelerating cleanup of the nation's largest estuary
and its vast watershed.\384\ The draft strategy calls for increased
accountability and performance from pollution control, habitat
protection and land conservation programs at all levels of government,
including an expanded use of regulatory authorities to address
pollution control and additional voluntary and market-based solutions--
particularly when it comes to habitat protection and land conservation
programs. The proposed actions are in response to overwhelming
scientific evidence that the health of the Chesapeake Bay remains
exceptionally poor, despite the concerted restoration efforts of the
past 25 years.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\384\ Federal Leadership Committee for the Chesapeake Bay,
November 9, 2009, Executive Order 13508: Draft Strategy for
Protecting and Restoring the Chesapeake Bay, available on-line at:
http://executiveorder.chesapeakebay.net/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Agricultural lands contribute more nutrients to the Chesapeake Bay
than any other land use. To estimate the increase in nutrient loads to
the Bay from changes to agricultural crop production from 2005 to 2008,
the Chesapeake Bay Program Watershed Model Phase 4.3 and Vortex models
were utilized. Total nitrogen loads increased by almost 2.4 million
pounds from an increase of almost 66,000 corn acres. As agriculture
land use shifts from hay and pasture to more intensively fertilized row
crops, this analysis estimates that nitrogen loads increase by 8.8
million pounds.
2. Ethanol Production and Distribution
a. Production
There are three principal sources of discharges to water from
ethanol plants: reject water from water purification, cooling water
blowdown, and off-batch ethanol. Most ethanol facilities use onsite
wells to produce the process water for the ethanol process. Groundwater
sources are generally not suitable for process water because of their
mineral content. Therefore, the water must be treated, commonly by
reverse osmosis. For every two gallons of pure water produced, about a
gallon of brine is discharged as reject water from this process. Most
estimates of water consumption in ethanol production are based on the
use of clean process water and neglect the water discharged as reject
water.
The largest source of wastewater discharge is reverse osmosis
reject water from process water purification. The reverse osmosis
process concentrates groundwater minerals to levels where they can have
water quality impacts. There is really no means of ``treating'' these
ions to reduce toxicity, other than further concentration and disposal,
or use of in-stream dilution. Some facilities have had to construct
long pipelines to get access to dilution so they can meet water quality
standards. Ethanol plants also discharge cooling water blowdown, where
some water is discharged to avoid the buildup of minerals in the
cooling system. These brines are similar to the reject water described
above. In addition, if off-batch ethanol product or process water is
discharged, the waste stream can have high Biochemical Oxygen Demand
(BOD) levels. BOD directly affects the amount of dissolved oxygen in
rivers and streams. The greater the BOD, the more rapidly oxygen is
depleted in the stream. The consequences of high BOD are the same as
those for low dissolved oxygen: aquatic organisms become stressed,
suffocate, and die.
Older generation production facilities used four to six gallons of
process water to produce a gallon of ethanol, but newer facilities use
less than three gallons of water in the production process. Most of
this water savings is gained through improved recycling of water and
heat in the process. Water supply is a local issue, and there have been
concerns with water consumption as new plants go online. Some
facilities are tapping into deeper aquifers as a source of water. These
deeper water resources tend to contain higher levels of minerals and
this can further increase the concentration of minerals in reverse
osmosis reject water. Geographic impacts of water use vary. A typical
plant producing 50 million gallons of ethanol per year uses a minimum
of 175 million gallons of water annually. In Iowa, water consumption
from ethanol refining accounts for about seven percent of all
industrial water use, and is projected to be 14% by 2012--or about 50
million gallons per day.
b. Distillers Grain with Solubles
Distillers grain with solubles (DGS) is an important co-product of
ethanol production. About one-third of the corn processed into ethanol
is converted into DGS. DGS has become an increasingly important feed
component for confined livestock. DGS are higher in crude protein
(nitrogen) and three to four times higher in phosphorus relative to
[[Page 14857]]
traditional feeds. When nitrogen and phosphorus are fed in excess of
the animal's needs, these nutrients are excreted in the manure. When
manure is applied to crops at rates above their nutrient needs or at
times the crop cannot use the nutrients, the nutrients can run off to
surface waters or leach into ground waters.
Livestock producers can limit the potential pollution from manure
applications to crops by implementing comprehensive nutrient
management. Due to the substantially higher phosphorus content of
manure from livestock fed DGS, producers will potentially need
significantly more acres to apply the manure so that phosphorus will
not be applied at rates above the needs of the crops. This is a
particularly important concern in areas where concentrated livestock
production already produces more phosphorus in the manure than can be
taken up by crops or pasture land in the vicinity.
Several recent studies have indicated that DGS may have an impact
on food safety. Cattle fed DGS have a higher prevalence of a major
food-borne pathogen, E. coli O157, than cattle without DGS in their
diets.\385\ More research is needed to confirm these studies and devise
methods to eliminate the potential risks.
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\385\ Jacob, M. D., Fox, J. T., Drouillard, J. S., Renter, D.
G., Nagaraja, T. G., 2008, Effects of dried distillers' grain on
fecal prevalence and growth of Escherichia coli O157 in batch
culture fermentations from cattle, Applied and Environmental
Microbiology, v. 74, no. 1, p. 38-43, available online at: http://aem.asm.org/cgi/content/abstract/74/1/38.
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c. Ethanol Leaks and Spills from Fueling Stations
The potential for exposure to fuel components and/or additives can
occur when underground fuel storage tanks leak fuel into ground water
that is used for drinking water supplies or when spills occur from
aboveground tanks or distribution systems that contaminate surface
drinking water supplies, or surface waters. Additionally, in surface
waters, rapid biodegradation of ethanol can result in depletion of
dissolved oxygen with potential mortality to aquatic life.
Regarding leaks or spills and drinking water impacts, ethanol
biodegrades quickly and is not necessarily the pollutant of greatest
concern in these situations. Instead, ethanol's high biodegradability
shifts the subsurface geochemistry, which can cause the reduced
biodegradation of benzene, toluene, and xylene (up to 50% for toluene
and 95% for benzene).\386\ The plume of BTEX compounds from a fuel
spill (benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene and xylenes) can extend as much
as 70% farther in ground water and can persist longer, thereby
increasing potential exposures to these compounds.\387\
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\386\ Mackay, D.M., de Sieyes, N. R., Einarson, M.D., Feris,
K.P., Pappas, A.A., Wood, I.A., Jacobson, L., Justice, L.G., Noske,
M.N., Scow, K.M., and Wilson, J.T., 2006, Impact of ethanol on the
natural attenuation of benzene, toluene, and o-Xylene in a normally
sulfate-reducing aquifer, Environmental Science & Technology, v. 40,
p. 6123-6130.
\387\ Ruiz-Aguilar, G. M. L.; O'Reilly, K.; Alvarez, P. J. J.,
2003, Forum: A comparison of benzene and toluene plume lengths for
sites contaminated with regular vs. ethanol-amended gasoline, Ground
Water Monitoring and Remediation, v. 23, p. 48-53.
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Ethanol leak and spills from the approximately 600,000 gas stations
in the U.S, could have a significant impact on water quality and
drinking water supplies. Urban areas, that rely on ground water for
drinking water would be affected most, especially where are existing
water shortages.
With the increasing use of ethanol in the fuel supply nationwide,
it is important to understand the impact of ethanol on the existing
tank infrastructure. Federal regulations require that underground
storage tank (UST) systems be compatible with the fuel stored. Because
much of the current underground storage tank equipment was designed and
tested for use with petroleum fuels, there may be many UST systems
currently in use that contain materials that are incompatible with
ethanol blends greater than 10%. Combined with the fact that ethanol is
more corrosive than petroleum, there is concern regarding the increased
potential for leaks from existing distribution systems, terminals and
gas stations and subsequent impacts on water supplies. Given the
practical challenges of determining the age and materials of
underground storage equipment at approximately 233,000 federally
regulated facilities, it may be difficult or impossible to confirm the
compatibility of current underground storage tanks and other tank-
related hardware with ethanol blends. Further discussion of challenges
in retail distribution are discussed in Section 1.6 of the RIA.
In 2008, there were 7,400 reported releases from underground
storage tanks. Therefore, EPA is undertaking analyses designed to
assess the potential impacts of ethanol blends on tank infrastructure
and leak detection systems and determine the resulting water quality
impacts.
3. Biodiesel Plants
Biodiesel plants use much less water than ethanol plants. Water is
used for washing impurities from the finished product. Water use is
variable, but is usually less than one gallon of water for each gallon
of biodiesel produced. Larger well-designed plants use water more
sparingly, while smaller producers use more water. Some facilities
recycle washwater, which reduces water consumption. The levels of BOD
(biological oxygen demand) in process wastewater from biodiesel plants
is highly variable. Most production processes produce washwater that
has very high BOD levels. The high BOD levels of these wastes can
overload and disrupt municipal treatment plants.
Crude glycerin is an important side product from the biodiesel
process and is about 10% of the final product. Although there is a
commercial market for glycerin, the rapid development of the biodiesel
industry has caused a glut of glycerin production and many facilities
dispose of their glycerin. Poor handling of crude glycerin has resulted
in disruptions at sewage treatment plants and fish kills.
4. Water Quantity
Water demand for crop production for ethanol could potentially be
much larger than biorefinery demand. According to the National Research
Council, the demand for water to irrigate crops for biofuels will not
have an impact on national water use, but it is likely to have
significant local and regional impacts. The impact is crop and region
specific, but could be especially great in areas where new acres are
irrigated.
5. Drinking Water
Increased corn production will result in the increased use of
fertilizers and herbicides which can drain to surface water or ground
water sources used by public water systems and individual home owners
on private wells. This may increase the occurrence of nitrate, nitrite,
and the herbicide Atrazine in sources of drinking water. The U.S.
Geological Survey evaluated the fate and transport of herbicides in
surface water, ground water, and in precipitation in the Midwest during
the 1990s. The results of these studies showed the occurrence and
temporal distribution of herbicides and their associated degradation
products in reservoir outflows.\388\
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\388\ Scribner, E.A., Thurman, E.M., Goolsby, D.A., Meyer, M.T.,
Battaglin, W.A., and Kolpin, D.W., 2005, Summary of significant
results from studies of triazine herbicides and their degradation
products in surface water, ground water, and precipitation in the
Midwestern United States during the 1990s: U.S. Geological Survey
Scientific Investigations Report 2005-5094, 27 p.
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[[Page 14858]]
Under the Safe Drinking Water Act, EPA has established enforceable
standards for these contaminants that apply to public water systems.
Source water contamination by these chemicals may raise local water
system costs for treatment or for increased energy to pump water where
ethanol production is accelerating the long running depletion of
aquifers e.g., pumping extra water to grow the additional corn in
addition to pumping extra water to process the corn into ethanol. There
is also an (often concurrent) risk of exhausting local drinking water
supplies where aquifers have been severely depleted.
X. Public Participation
Many interested parties participated in the rulemaking process that
culminates with this final rule. This process provided opportunity for
submitting written public comments following the proposal that we
published on May 26, 2009 (74 FR 24904), and we considered these
comments in developing the final rule. In addition, we held a public
hearing on the proposed rulemaking on June 9, 2009, and we have
considered comments presented at the hearing.
Throughout the rulemaking process, EPA met with stakeholders
including representatives from the fuel and renewable fuels industries,
the agricultural sector, and others. The program we are finalizing
today was developed as a collaborative effort with these stakeholders.
We have prepared a detailed Summary and Analysis of Comments
document, which describes the comments we received on the proposal and
our response to each of these comments. The Summary and Analysis of
Comments is available in the docket for this rule at the Internet
address listed under ADDRESSES, as well as on the Office of
Transportation and Air Quality Web site (http://www.epa.gov/otaq/renewablefuels/index.htm). In addition, comments and responses for key
issues are included throughout this preamble.
XI. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory Planning and Review
Under section 3(f)(1) of Executive Order (EO) 12866 (58 FR 51735,
October 4, 1993), this action is an ``economically significant
regulatory action'' because it is likely to have an annual effect on
the economy of $100 million or more. Accordingly, EPA submitted this
action to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for review under EO
12866 and any changes made in response to OMB recommendations have been
documented in the docket for this action.
In addition, EPA prepared an analysis of the potential costs and
benefits associated with this action. This analysis is contained in the
Regulatory Impact Analysis, which is available in the docket for this
rulemaking and at the docket internet address listed under ADDRESSES in
the first part of this final rule.
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
The information collection requirements in this have been submitted
for approval to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) under the
Paperwork Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq. The information
collection requirements are not enforceable until OMB approves them.
Information to be collected under this rulemaking includes
compliance reports and reports regarding the generation and assignment
of, and transactions involving, RINs. This final rule involves
registration requirements, recordkeeping and reporting. Affected
parties include producers of renewable fuels, importers, domestic and
foreign refiners, exporters, domestic and foreign parties who own RINs,
and biofuel feedstock producers. Individual items of recordkeeping and
reporting are discussed in great detail in this preamble and in the
``Supporting Statement for the Renewable Fuels Standard (RFS2) Final
Rule,'' which has been placed in the public docket.
We estimate the annual recordkeeping and reporting burden for this
rule at 3.2 hours per response. We estimate a total of 1,060,026
respondents; 4,781,126 responses; 1,485,008 burden hours, and a total
cost associated with responding of $112,872,105. Burden is defined at 5
CFR 1320.3(b).
An agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required
to respond to, a collection of information unless it displays a
currently valid OMB control number. The OMB control numbers for EPA's
regulations in 40 CFR are listed in 40 CFR Part 9. In addition, EPA is
amending the table in 40 CFR part 9 of currently approved OMB control
numbers for various regulations to list the regulatory citations for
the information requirements contained in this final rule.
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act
1. Overview
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) generally requires an agency
to prepare a regulatory flexibility analysis of any rule subject to
notice and comment rulemaking requirements under the Administrative
Procedure Act or any other statute unless the agency certifies that the
rule will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. Small entities include small businesses,
small organizations, and small governmental jurisdictions.
For purposes of assessing the impacts of the renewable fuel volume
requirements of RFS2 on small entities, small entity is defined as: (1)
A small business as defined by the Small Business Administration's
(SBA) regulations at 13 CFR 121.201 (see table below); (2) a small
governmental jurisdiction that is a government of a city, county, town,
school district or special district with a population of less than
50,000; and (3) a small organization that is any not-for-profit
enterprise which is independently owned and operated and is not
dominant in its field.
The following table provides an overview of the primary SBA small
business categories potentially affected by this regulation:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Defined as small entity NAICS \a\
Industry \a\ by SBA if: codes
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Gasoline and diesel fuel refiners... <=1,500 employees...... 324110
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\a\ North American Industrial Classification System.
2. Background
Section 1501 of the Energy Policy Act of 2005 (EPAct) amended
section 211 of the Clean Air Act (CAA) by adding section 211(o) which
required the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to promulgate
regulations implementing a renewable fuel program. EPAct specified that
the regulations must ensure a specific volume of renewable fuel to be
used in gasoline sold in the U.S. each year, with the total volume
increasing over time. The goal of the program was to reduce dependence
on foreign sources of petroleum, increase domestic sources of energy,
and help transition to alternatives to petroleum in the transportation
sector.
The final Renewable Fuels Standard (RFS1) program rule was
published on May 1, 2007, and the program began on September 1, 2007.
Per EPAct, the RFS1 program created a specific annual level
[[Page 14859]]
for minimum renewable fuel use that increases over time--resulting in a
requirement that 7.5 billion gallons of renewable fuel be blended into
gasoline (for highway use only) by 2012. Under the RFS1 program,
compliance is based on meeting the required annual renewable fuel
volume percent standard (published annually in the Federal Register by
EPA) through the use of Renewable Identification Numbers, or RINs, 38-
digit serial numbers assigned to each batch of renewable fuel produced.
For obligated parties (those who must meet the annual volume percent
standard), RINs must be acquired to show compliance.
The Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007 (EISA) amended
section 211(o), and the RFS program, by requiring higher volumes of
renewable fuels, to result in 36 billion gallons of renewable fuel by
2022. EISA also expanded the purview of the RFS1 program by requiring
that these renewable fuels be blended into gasoline and diesel fuel
(both highway and nonroad). This expanded the pool of regulated
entities, so the obligated parties under the RFS program will now
include certain refiners, importers, and blenders of these fuels that
were not previously covered by the RFS1 program. In addition to the
total renewable fuel standard required by EPAct, EISA added standards
for three additional types of renewable fuels to the program (advanced
biofuel, cellulosic biofuel, and biomass-based diesel) and requires
compliance with all four standards.
As required by section 609(b) of the RFA, as amended by SBREFA, EPA
also conducted outreach to small entities and convened a Small Business
Advocacy Review Panel to obtain advice and recommendations of
representatives of the small entities that potentially would be subject
to the rule's requirements.
3. Summary of Potentially Affected Small Entities
The small entities that will potentially be subject to the RFS
program include: domestic refiners that produce gasoline and/or diesel
and importers of gasoline and/or diesel into the United States. Based
on 2007 data, EPA believes that there are about 95 refiners of gasoline
and diesel fuel. Of these, EPA believes that there are currently 17
refiners, owning 20 refineries, producing gasoline and/or diesel fuel
that meet the SBA small entity definition of having 1,500 employees or
less. Further, we believe that three of these refiners own refineries
that do not meet the Congressional ``small refinery'' definition.\389\
It should be noted that because of the dynamics in the refining
industry (i.e., mergers and acquisitions), the actual number of
refiners that ultimately qualify for small refiner status under the
RFS2 rule could be different than this estimate.
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\389\ EPAct defined a ``small refinery'' as a refinery with a
crude throughput of no more than 75,000 barrels of crude per day (at
CAA section 211(o)(1)(K)). This definition is based on facility size
and is different than SBA's small refiner definition (which is based
on company size). A small refinery could be owned by a larger
refiner that exceeds SBA's small entity standards. SBA's size
standards were established to set apart those businesses which are
most likely to be at an inherent economic disadvantage relative to
larger businesses.
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4. Reporting, Recordkeeping, and Compliance
Registration, reporting, and recordkeeping are necessary to track
compliance with the RFS standards and transactions involving RINs. As
discussed above in Sections II.J and III.A, the compliance requirements
under the RFS2 rule are in many ways similar to those required under
the RFS1 rule, with some modifications (e.g., those to account for the
new requirements of EISA). New provisions being finalized in today's
action include the new EPA Moderated Transaction System (EMTS) which
allows for ``real-time'' reporting of RIN generation transactions, and
the ability for small blenders to ``delegate'' their RIN-separation
responsibilities to the party directly upstream. Please see Sections II
and III of this preamble for more detailed information on these and
other registration, recordkeeping, reporting, and compliance
requirements of this final rule.
5. Related Federal Rules
We are aware of a few other current or proposed Federal rules that
are related to this rule. The primary related Federal rules are: the
first Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS1) rule (72 FR 23900, May 1, 2007),
the RFS1 Technical Amendment Direct Final Rulemaking (73 FR 57248,
October 2, 2008),\390\ and Control of Emissions from New Marine
Compression-Ignition Engines at or Above 30 Liters per Cylinder
(proposed rule: 74 FR 44442, August 28, 2009; final rule: Signed
December 22, 2009).
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\390\ This Direct Final Rule corrects minor typographical errors
and provides clarification on existing provisions in the RFS1
regulations.
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6. Steps Taken To Minimize the Significant Economic Impact on Small
Entities
a. Significant Panel Findings
We convened a Small Business Advocacy Review Panel (SBAR Panel, or
the Panel), which considered many regulatory options and flexibilities
that would help mitigate potential adverse effects on small businesses
as a result of the increased volumes of renewable fuel required by
RFS2. During the SBREFA Panel process, the Panel sought out and
received comments on the regulatory options and flexibilities that were
presented to Small Entity Representatives (SERs) and Panel members. The
major flexibilities and hardship relief provisions that were
recommended by the Panel were proposed and some are being finalized
today (for more information regarding the Panel process, see the SBREFA
Final Panel Report, which is available in the public docket for this
rule).
b. Outreach With Small Entities (and the Panel Process)
As required by section 609(b) of the RFA as amended by SBREFA, EPA
conducted outreach to small entities and convened a SBAR Panel prior to
proposing the RFS2 rule to obtain advice and recommendations of
representatives of the small entities that potentially would be subject
to the rule's requirements.
As part of the SBAR Panel process, we conducted outreach with
representatives from the various small entities that would be affected
by the rule. We met with these SERs to discuss the potential rulemaking
approaches and potential options to decrease the impact of the
rulemaking on their industries. The Panel received written comments
from the SERs, specifically on regulatory alternatives that could help
to minimize the rule's impact on small businesses. In general, SERs
stated that they believed that small refiners would face challenges in
meeting the new standards. More specifically, they voiced concerns with
respect to the RIN program itself, uncertainty (with the required
renewable fuel volumes, RIN availability, and cost), and the desire for
a RIN system review.
The Panel agreed that EPA should consider the issues raised by the
SERs (and discussions had by the Panel itself) and that EPA should
consider comments on flexibility alternatives that would help to
mitigate any negative impacts on small businesses. Alternatives
discussed throughout the Panel process included those offered in
previous or current EPA rulemakings, as well as alternatives suggested
by SERs and Panel members, and the Panel recommended that all be
considered in the development of the rule.
A summary of the Panel's recommendations, what the Agency proposed,
and what is being finalized
[[Page 14860]]
today is discussed below. A detailed discussion of the regulatory
alternatives and hardship provisions discussed and recommended by the
Panel can be found in the SBREFA Final Panel Report, and a discussion
of the provisions being finalized today is located in Section III.E of
this preamble.
c. Panel Recommendations, Proposed Provisions, and Provisions Being
Finalized
The purpose of the Panel process is to solicit information as well
as suggested flexibility options from the SERs, and the Panel
recommended that EPA continue to do so during the development of the
RFS2 rule. Recognizing the concerns about EPA's authority to provide
extensions to a subset of small refineries (i.e., those that are owned
by small refiners) different from that provided to small refineries in
section 211(o)(9), the Panel recommended that EPA continue to evaluate
this issue, and that EPA request comment on its authority and the
appropriateness of providing extensions beyond those authorized by
section 211(o)(9) for small refineries operated by a small refiner. The
Panel also recommended that EPA propose to provide the same extension
provision of 211(o)(9) to small refiners who do not own small
refineries as is provided for small refiners who do own small
refineries.
i. Delay in Standards
The RFS1 program regulations provide small refiners who operate
small refineries as well as small refiners who do not operate small
refineries with a temporary exemption from the standard through
December 31, 2010. Small refiner SERs suggested that an additional
temporary exemption for the RFS2 program would be beneficial to them in
meeting the RFS2 standards. EPA evaluated a temporary exemption for at
least some of the four required RFS2 standards for small refiners. The
Panel recommended that EPA propose a delay in the effective date of the
standards until 2014 for small entities, to the maximum extent allowed
by the statute. However, the Panel recognized that EPA has serious
concerns about its authority to provide an extension of the temporary
exemption for small refineries that is different from that provided in
CAA section 211(o)(9), since Congress specifically addressed an
extension for small refineries in that provision.
The Panel did recommend that EPA propose other avenues through
which small refineries and small refiners could receive extensions of
the temporary exemption. These avenues were a possible extension of the
temporary exemption for an additional two years following a study of
small refineries by the Department of Energy (DOE) and provisions for
case-by-case economic hardship relief.
We proposed and took comment on the recommendations of the Panel
and SERs above. As discussed in section III.E of this preamble, based
on our analysis and further review of the provisions and the DOE Small
Refinery Study, we have decided to finalize continuing the small
refinery and small refiner exemption finalized in RFS1 through December
31, 2010 for all small refiners.
ii. Phase-in
Small refiner SERs' suggested that a phase-in of the obligations
applicable to small refiners would be beneficial for compliance, such
that small refiners would comply by gradually meeting the standards on
an incremental basis over a period of time, after which point they
would comply fully with the RFS2 standards, EPA has serious concerns
about its authority to allow for such a phase-in of the standards. CAA
section 211(o)(3)(B) states that the renewable fuel obligation shall
``consist of a single applicable percentage that applies to all
categories of persons specified'' as obligated parties. This kind of
phase-in approach would result in different applicable percentages
being applied to different obligated parties. Further, as discussed
above, such a phase-in approach would provide more relief to small
refineries operated by small refiners than that provided under the
small refinery provision. Thus the Panel recommended that EPA should
invite comment on a phase-in, but not propose such a provision.
We took comment on this provision, however we are not finalizing
this provision, as we continue to believe that a phase-in of the
applicable standards would in fact result in different standards for
small refiners.
iii. RIN-Related Flexibilities
The small refiner SERs requested that the proposed rule contain
provisions for small refiners related to the RIN system, such as
flexibilities in the RIN rollover cap percentage and allowing all small
refiners to use RINs interchangeably. In the RFS1 program, EPA allows
for 20% of a previous year's RINs to be ``rolled over'' and used for
compliance in the following year. We noted during the Panel process
that a provision to allow for flexibilities in the rollover cap could
include a higher RIN rollover cap for small refiners for some period of
time or for at least some of the four standards. Further, we noted our
belief that since the concept of a rollover cap was not mandated by
section 211(o), EPA believes that there may be an opportunity to
provide appropriate flexibility in this area to small refiners under
the RFS2 program but only if it is determined in the DOE small refinery
study that there is a disproportionate effect warranting relief. The
Panel recommended that EPA request comment on increasing the RIN
rollover cap percentage for small refiners, and further that EPA should
request comment on an appropriate level of that percentage. The Panel
also recommended that EPA invite comment on allowing RINs to be used
interchangeably for small refiners, but not propose this concept
because under this approach small refiners would arguably be subject to
a different applicable percentage than other obligated parties.
We proposed a change to the RIN rollover cap, and took comment on
the concept of allowing RINs to be used interchangeably for small
refiners only. As noted above in section III of this preamble, we are
not finalizing RIN-related provisions in today's action. As highlighted
in the NPRM, we continue to believe that the concept of interchangeable
RINs for small refiners only fails to require the four different
standards mandated by Congress (e.g., conventional biofuel could not be
used instead of cellulosic biofuel or biomass-based diesel). Further,
given the findings from the DOE study, if small refineries and small
refiners do not face disproportionate economic hardship, then we do not
believe that we have the basis for granting such additional relief
beyond what Congress already provided. Thus, small refiners will be
held to the same RIN rollover cap as other obligated parties.
iv. Program Review
With regard to the suggested program review, EPA raised the concern
that this could lead to some redundancy since EPA is required to
publish a notice of the applicable RFS standards in the Federal
Register annually, and that this annual process will inevitably include
an evaluation of the projected availability of renewable fuels.
Nevertheless, the SBA and OMB Panel members stated that they believe
that a program review could be helpful to small entities in providing
them some insight to the RFS program's progress and alleviate some
uncertainty regarding the RIN system. As EPA will be publishing a
Federal Register notice annually, the Panel recommended that
[[Page 14861]]
EPA include an update of RIN system progress (e.g., RIN trading, RIN
availability, etc.) in this notice and that the results of this
evaluation be considered in any request for case-by-case hardship
relief.
We did propose that in the annual notice of the RFS standards that
EPA must publish in the Federal Register, we would also include
information to help inform industry about the RIN system. We also
proposed that information from the annual Production Outlook Reports
that producers and importers must submit to EPA, as well as information
required in EMTS reports, could be used in the annual Federal Register
notice to update RIN system progress. However, during the development
of the final rule, it became evident that there could be instances
where we would want to report out RIN system information on a more
frequent basis than just once a year. Thus we are finalizing that we
will report out elements of RIN system progress; but such information
will be reported via other means (e.g., the RFS Web site (www.epa.gov/otaq/renewablefuels/index.htm), EMTS homepage, etc.). Additionally, we
will also publish annual summaries of the Production Outlook Reports.
v. Extensions of the Temporary Exemption Based on a Study of Small
Refinery Impacts
The Panel recommended that EPA propose in the RFS2 program the
provision at 40 CFR 80.1141(e) extending the RFS1 temporary exemption
for at least two years for any small refinery that DOE determines would
be subject to disproportionate economic hardship if required to comply
with the RFS2 requirements.
Section 211(o)(9)(A)(ii) required that by December 31, 2008, DOE
was to perform a study of the economic impacts of the RFS requirements
on small refineries to assess and determine whether the RFS
requirements would impose a disproportionate economic hardship on small
refineries, and submit this study to EPA. Section 211(o)(9) also
provided that small refineries found to be in a disproportionate
economic hardship situation would receive an extension of the temporary
exemption for at least two years.
The Panel also recommended that EPA work with DOE in the
development of the small refinery study, specifically to communicate
the comments that SERs raised during the Panel process.
We did not propose and are not finalizing this hardship provision
given the outcome of the DOE small refinery study. In the small
refinery study, ``EPACT 2005 Section 1501 Small Refineries Exemption
Study'', DOE's finding was that there is no reason to believe that any
small refinery would be disproportionately harmed by inclusion in the
proposed RFS2 program. This finding was based on the fact that there
appeared to be no shortage of RINs available under RFS1, and EISA has
provided flexibility through waiver authority (per section 211(o)(7)).
Further, in the case of the cellulosic biofuel standard, cellulosic
biofuel allowances can be provided from EPA at prices established in
EISA (see regulation section 80.1455). DOE thus determined that no
small refinery would be subject to disproportionate economic hardship
under the proposed RFS2 program, and that the small refinery exemption
should not be extended beyond December 31, 2010. DOE noted in the study
that, if circumstances were to change and/or the RIN market were to
become non-competitive or illiquid, individual small refineries have
the ability to petition EPA for an extension of their small refinery
exemption (as stated in regulation section 80.1441).
As discussed in section III.E of this preamble, since the only
small refinery study available for us to use as a basis for whether or
not to grant small refineries an automatic two-year extension of the
exemption is the study that was performed in 2008, we had to use this
study to develop this final rule. EPAct directs EPA to consider the DOE
small refinery study in assessing the impacts to small refineries, and
we interpret this to mean that any extension past December 31, 2010 has
to be tied to the DOE Study. Further, since that study found that there
was no disproportionate economic impact on small refineries, we cannot
grant an automatic additional extension for small refineries or small
refiners (except on a case-by-case hardship basis). However, this does
not preclude small refiners from applying for case-by-case extensions
of the small refiner temporary exemption.
Note that if the revised DOE study (see Section III.E.3 of this
preamble) finds that there is a disproportionate economic impact, we
will revisit the extension of the temporary exemption at that point.
vi. Extensions of the Temporary Exemption Based on Disproportionate
Economic Hardship
While SERs did not specifically comment on the concept of hardship
provisions for the upcoming proposal, the Panel noted that under CAA
section 211(o)(9)(B) small refineries may petition EPA for case-by-case
extensions of the small refinery temporary exemption on the basis of
disproportionate economic hardship. Refiners may petition EPA for this
case-by-case hardship relief at any time.
The Panel recommended that EPA propose in the RFS2 program a case-
by-case hardship provision for small refineries similar to that
provided at 40 CFR 80.1141(e)(1). The Panel also recommended that EPA
propose a case-by-case hardship provision for small refiners that do
not operate small refineries that is comparable to that provided for
small refineries under section 211(o)(9)(B), using its discretion under
CAA section 211(o)(3)(B). This would apply if EPA does not adopt an
automatic extension for small refiners, and would allow those small
refiners that do not operate small refineries to apply for the same
kind of extension as a small refinery. The Panel recommended that EPA
take into consideration the results of the annual update of RIN system
progress and the DOE small refinery study in assessing such hardship
applications.
We believe that these avenues of relief can and should be fully
explored by small refiners who are covered by the small refinery
provision. In addition, we believe that it is appropriate to allow
petitions to EPA for an extension of the temporary exemption based on
disproportionate economic hardship for those small refiners who are not
covered by the small refinery provision (again, per our discretion
under section 211(o)(3)(B)); this would ensure that all small refiners
have the same relief available to them as small refineries do. Thus, we
are finalizing a hardship provision for small refineries in the RFS2
program, that any small refinery may apply for a case-by-case hardship
at any time on the basis of disproportionate economic hardship per CAA
section 211(o)(9)(B). We are also finalizing a case-by-case hardship
provision for those small refiners that do not operate small refineries
(section 80.1442(h)) using our discretion under CAA section
211(o)(3)(B). This provision will allow those small refiners that do
not operate small refineries to apply for the same kind of extension as
a small refinery. In evaluating applications for this hardship
provision EPA will take into consideration information gathered from
annual reports and RIN system progress updates, as recommended by the
SBAR Panel.
7. Conclusions
Pursuant to section 603 of the RFA, EPA prepared an initial
regulatory flexibility analysis (IRFA) for the
[[Page 14862]]
proposed rule and convened a Small Business Advocacy Review Panel to
obtain advice and recommendations of representatives of the regulated
small entities (see 74 FR 24904, May 26, 2009). A detailed discussion
of the Panel's advice and recommendations is found in the Panel Report,
located in the rulemaking docket. A summary of the Panel's
recommendations is presented at 74 FR 25106 (May 26, 2009).
As required by section 604 of the RFA, we also prepared a final
regulatory flexibility analysis (FRFA) for today's final rule. The FRFA
addresses the issues raised by public comments on the IRFA, which was
part of the proposal of this rule. The FRFA is available for review in
the docket and is summarized above.
Many aspects of the RFS2 rule, such as the required amounts of
annual renewable fuel volumes, are specified in EPAct and EISA. As
discussed above, small refiners and small refineries receive an
exemption from the RFS standards until January 1, 2011 and are not
required to make expensive capital improvements like those required
under other EPA fuels programs. Further, the DOE small refinery study
did not find that there was a disproportionate economic impact on small
refineries as a whole as a result of this rule (and the majority of the
refiners that meet the definition of a small refiner, also own
refineries that meet the Congressional small refinery definition).
A cost-to-sales ratio test, a ratio of the estimated annualized
compliance costs to the value of sales per company, was performed for
gasoline and/or diesel small refiners. From this cost-to-sales test, it
was estimated that all small entities have compliance costs that are
less than one percent of their sales (a complete discussion of the
costs to refiners as a result of the increased volumes of renewable
fuel required by EISA is located in Section VII of this preamble).
As required by section 212 of SBREFA, EPA also is preparing a Small
Entity Compliance Guide to help small entities comply with this rule.
This guide will be available on the RFS Web site (www.epa.gov/otaq/renewablefuels/index.htm), and will be available 60 days after the rule
is finalized.
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA), 2
U.S.C. 1531-1538, requires Federal agencies, unless otherwise
prohibited by law, to assess the effects of their regulatory actions on
State, local, and tribal governments and the private sector. Under
section 202 of the UMRA, EPA generally must prepare a written
statement, including a cost-benefit analysis, for proposed and final
rules with ``Federal mandates'' that may result in expenditures to
State, local, and tribal governments, in the aggregate, or to the
private sector, of $100 million or more in any one year.
This rule is not subject to the requirements of section 203 of UMRA
because it contains no regulatory requirements that might significantly
or uniquely affect small governments. EPA has determined that this rule
contains a Federal mandate that may result in expenditures of $100
million or more for the private sector in any one year, but the rule
imposes no enforceable duty on any State, local or tribal governments.
Nonetheless, EPA believes that today's action represents the least
costly, most cost-effective approach to achieve the statutory
requirements of the rule. The costs and benefits associated with the
increased use of renewable fuels are discussed above and in the
Regulatory Impact Analysis, as required by the UMRA.
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
Executive Order 13132, entitled ``Federalism'' (64 FR 43255, August
10, 1999), requires EPA to develop an accountable process to ensure
``meaningful and timely input by State and local officials in the
development of regulatory policies that have federalism implications.''
``Policies that have federalism implications'' is defined in the
Executive Order to include regulations that have ``substantial direct
effects on the States, on the relationship between the national
government and the States, or on the distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various levels of government.''
This final rule does not have federalism implications. It will not
have substantial direct effects on the States, on the relationship
between the national government and the States, or on the distribution
of power and responsibilities among the various levels of government,
as specified in Executive Order 13132. Thus, Executive Order 13132 does
not apply to this rule.
In the spirit of Executive Order 13132, and consistent with EPA
policy to promote communications between EPA and State and local
governments, EPA specifically solicited comment on the proposed rule
from State and local officials.
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation and Coordination With Indian
Tribal Governments
This action does not have tribal implications, as specified in
Executive Order 13175 (65 FR 67249, November 9, 2000). This rule will
be implemented at the Federal level and impose compliance costs only on
transportation fuel refiners, blenders, marketers, distributors,
importers, and exporters. Tribal governments would be affected only to
the extent they purchase and use regulated fuels. Thus, Executive Order
13175 does not apply to this action. EPA specifically solicited comment
on the proposed rule from tribal officials.
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of Children From Environmental
Health Risks and Safety Risks
EPA interprets EO 13045 (62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997) as applying
only to those regulatory actions that concern health or safety risks,
such that the analysis required under section 5-501 of the EO has the
potential to influence the regulation. This action is not subject to EO
13045 because it does not establish an environmental standard intended
to mitigate health or safety risks and because it implements specific
standards established by Congress in statutes.
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use
This rule is not subject to Executive Order 13211 (66 FR 28355 (May
22, 2001)), because it is not likely to have a significant adverse
effect on the supply, distribution, or use of energy. In fact, this
rule has a positive effect on energy supply and use. By promoting the
diversification of transportation fuels, the increased use of renewable
fuels enhances energy supply. Therefore, we have concluded that this
rule is not likely to have any adverse energy effects. Our energy
effects analysis is discussed in Section VIII.B.
I. National Technology Transfer Advancement Act
Section 12(d) of the National Technology Transfer and Advancement
Act of 1995 (``NTTAA''), Public Law 104-113, 12(d) (15 U.S.C. 272 note)
directs EPA to use voluntary consensus standards in its regulatory
activities unless to do so would be inconsistent with applicable law or
otherwise impractical. Voluntary consensus standards are technical
standards (e.g., materials specifications, test methods, sampling
procedures, and business practices) that are developed or adopted by
voluntary consensus standards bodies. NTTAA directs EPA to provide
Congress, through OMB, explanations when the Agency decides not to use
[[Page 14863]]
available and applicable voluntary consensus standards.
This rulemaking changes the Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS) program
at Title 40 of the Code of Federal Regulations, Subpart K which already
contains voluntary consensus standard ASTM D6751-06a ``Standard
Specification for Biodiesel Fuel Blend Stock (B100) for Middle
Distillate Fuels''. This rulemaking incorporates the most recent
version of that standard (ASTM D-6751-08) and adds several more
voluntary consensus standards: ASTM D-1250-08, ``Standard Guide for Use
of the Petroleum Measurement Tables''; ASTM D-4442, ``Standard Test
Methods for Direct Moisture Content Measurement of Wood and Wood-Base
Materials''; ASTM D-4444, ``Standard Test Method for Laboratory
Standardization and Calibration of Hand-Held Moisture Meters''; ASTM D-
6866-08 ``Standard Test Methods for Determining the Biobased Content of
Solid, Liquid, and Gaseous Samples Using Radiocarbon Analysis''; ASTM
E-711, ``Standard Test Method for Gross Calorific Value of Refuse-
Derived Fuel by the Bomb Calorimeter''; and ASTM E-870, ``Standard Test
Methods for Analysis of Wood Fuels''. Information about these standards
may be obtained through the ASTM Web site (http://www.astm.org) or by
calling ASTM at (610) 832-9585.
This rulemaking does not change these voluntary consensus
standards, and does not involve any other technical standards.
Therefore, EPA is not considering the use of any voluntary consensus
standards other than those described above.
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income Populations
Executive Order (EO) 12898 (59 FR 7629 (Feb. 16, 1994)) establishes
federal executive policy on environmental justice. Its main provision
directs federal agencies, to the greatest extent practicable and
permitted by law, to make environmental justice part of their mission
by identifying and addressing, as appropriate, disproportionately high
and adverse human health or environmental effects of their programs,
policies, and activities on minority populations and low-income
populations in the United States.
EPA lacks the discretionary authority to address environmental
justice in this rulemaking since the Agency is implementing specific
standards established by Congress in statutes. Although EPA lacks
authority to modify today's regulatory action on the basis of
environmental justice considerations, EPA nevertheless determined that
this rule does not have a disproportionately high and adverse human
health or environmental impact on minority or low-income populations.
K. Congressional Review Act
The Congressional Review Act, 5 U.S.C. 801 et seq., as added by the
Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996, generally
provides that before a rule may take effect, the agency promulgating
the rule must submit a rule report, which includes a copy of the rule,
to each House of the Congress and to the Comptroller General of the
United States. EPA will submit a report containing this rule and other
required information to the U.S. Senate, the U.S. House of
Representatives, and the Comptroller General of the United States prior
to publication of the rule in the Federal Register. A Major rule cannot
take effect until 60 days after it is published in the Federal
Register. This action is a ``major rule'' as defined by 5 U.S.C.
804(2). This rule will be effective July 1, 2010.
XII. Statutory Provisions and Legal Authority
Statutory authority for the rule finalized today can be found in
section 211 of the Clean Air Act, 42 U.S.C. 7545. Additional support
for the procedural and compliance related aspects of today's rule,
including the recordkeeping requirements, come from Sections 114, 208,
and 301(a) of the Clean Air Act, 42 U.S.C. 7414, 7542, and 7601(a).
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 80
Environmental protection, Administrative practice and procedure,
Agriculture, Air pollution control, Confidential business information,
Diesel Fuel, Energy, Forest and Forest Products, Fuel additives,
Gasoline, Imports, Incorporation by reference, Labeling, Motor vehicle
pollution, Penalties, Petroleum, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
Dated: February 3, 2010.
Lisa P. Jackson,
Administrator.
0
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, 40 CFR part 80 is amended as
follows:
PART 80--REGULATION OF FUELS AND FUEL ADDITIVES
0
1. The authority citation for part 80 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7414, 7542, 7545, and 7601(a).
0
2. A new Subpart M is added to part 80 to read as follows:
Subpart M--Renewable Fuel Standard
Sec.
80.1400 Applicability.
80.1401 Definitions.
80.1402 [Reserved]
80.1403 Which fuels are not subject to the 20% GHG thresholds?
80.1404 [Reserved]
80.1405 What are the Renewable Fuel Standards?
80.1406 Who is an obligated party under the RFS program?
80.1407 How are the Renewable Volume Obligations calculated?
80.1408-80.1414 [Reserved]
80.1415 How are equivalence values assigned to renewable fuel?
80.1416 Petition process for evaluation of new renewable fuels and
pathways.
80.1417-80.1424 [Reserved]
80.1425 Renewable Identification Numbers (RINs).
80.1426 How are RINs generated and assigned to batches of renewable
fuel by renewable fuel producers or importers?
80.1427 How are RINs used to demonstrate compliance?
80.1428 General requirements for RIN distribution.
80.1429 Requirements for separating RINs from volumes of renewable
fuel.
80.1430 Requirements for exporters of renewable fuels.
80.1431 Treatment of invalid RINs.
80.1432 Reported spillage or disposal of renewable fuel.
80.1433-80.1439 [Reserved]
80.1440 What are the provisions for blenders who handle and blend
less than 125,000 gallons of renewable fuel per year?
80.1441 Small refinery exemption.
80.1442 What are the provisions for small refiners under the RFS
program?
80.1443 What are the opt-in provisions for noncontiguous states and
territories?
80.1444-80.1448 [Reserved]
80.1449 What are the Production Outlook Report requirements?
80.1450 What are the registration requirements under the RFS
program?
80.1451 What are the reporting requirements under the RFS program?
80.1452 What are the requirements related to the EPA Moderated
Transaction System (EMTS)?
80.1453 What are the product transfer document (PTD) requirements
for the RFS program?
80.1454 What are the recordkeeping requirements under the RFS
program?
80.1455 What are the small volume provisions for renewable fuel
production facilities and importers?
80.1456 What are the provisions for cellulosic biofuel waiver
credits?
80.1457-80.1459 [Reserved]
80.1460 What acts are prohibited under the RFS program?
80.1461 Who is liable for violations under the RFS program?
80.1462 [Reserved]
80.1463 What penalties apply under the RFS program?
[[Page 14864]]
80.1464 What are the attest engagement requirements under the RFS
program?
80.1465 What are the additional requirements under this subpart for
foreign small refiners, foreign small refineries, and importers of
RFS-FRFUEL?
80.1466 What are the additional requirements under this subpart for
RIN-generating foreign producers and importers of renewable fuels
for which RINs have been generated by the foreign producer?
80.1467 What are the additional requirements under this subpart for
a foreign RIN owner?
80.1468 Incorporation by reference.
Subpart M--Renewable Fuel Standard
Sec. 80.1400 Applicability.
The provisions of this Subpart M shall apply for all renewable fuel
produced on or after July 1, 2010, for all RINs generated on or after
July 1, 2010, and for all renewable volume obligations and compliance
periods starting with January 1, 2010. Except as provided otherwise in
this Subpart M, the provisions of Subpart K of this Part 80 shall not
apply for such renewable fuel, RINs, renewable volume obligations, or
compliance periods.
Sec. 80.1401 Definitions.
The definitions of Sec. 80.2 and of this section apply for the
purposes of this Subpart M. The definitions of this section do not
apply to other subparts unless otherwise noted. Note that many terms
defined here are common terms that have specific meanings under this
subpart M. The definitions follow:
Advanced biofuel means renewable fuel, other than ethanol derived
from cornstarch, has lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions that are at
least 50 percent less than baseline lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions.
Annual cover crop means an annual crop, planted as a rotation
between primary planted crops, or between trees and vines in orchards
and vineyards, typically to protect soil from erosion and to improve
the soil between periods of regular crops.
Areas at risk of wildfire are those areas in the ``wildland-urban
interface'', where humans and their development meet or intermix with
wildland fuel. Note that, for guidance, the SILVIS laboratory at the
University of Wisconsin maintains a Web site that provides a detailed
map of areas meeting this criteria at: http://www.silvis.forest.wisc.edu/projects/US_WUI_2000.asp. The SILVIS
laboratory is located at 1630 Linden Drive, Madison, Wisconsin 53706
and can be contacted at (608) 263-4349.
Baseline lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions means the average
lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions for gasoline or diesel (whichever is
being replaced by the renewable fuel) sold or distributed as
transportation fuel in 2005.
Biodiesel means a mono-alkyl ester that meets ASTM D 6751
(incorporated by reference, see Sec. 80.1468).
Biogas means a mixture of hydrocarbons that is a gas at 60 degrees
Fahrenheit and 1 atmosphere of pressure that is produced through the
conversion of organic matter. Biogas that is used to generate RINs must
be renewable fuel. Biogas includes propane, and landfill gas, manure
digester gas, and sewage waste treatment gas.
Biomass-based diesel means a renewable fuel that has lifecycle
greenhouse gas emissions that are at least 50 percent less than
baseline lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions and meets all of the
requirements of paragraph (1) of this definition:
(1)(i) Is a transportation fuel, transportation fuel additive,
heating oil, or jet fuel.
(ii) Meets the definition of either biodiesel or non-ester
renewable diesel.
(iii) Is registered as a motor vehicle fuel or fuel additive under
40 CFR part 79, if the fuel or fuel additive is intended for use in a
motor vehicle.
(2) Renewable fuel that is co-processed with petroleum is not
biomass-based diesel.
Cellulosic biofuel means renewable fuel derived from any cellulose,
hemi-cellulose, or lignin that has lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions
that are at least 60 percent less than the baseline lifecycle
greenhouse gas emissions.
Cellulosic diesel is any renewable fuel which meets both the
definitions of cellulosic biofuel and biomass-based diesel, as defined
in this section 80.1401. Cellulosic diesel includes heating oil and jet
fuel made from cellulosic feedstocks.
Combined heat and power (CHP), also known as cogeneration, refers
to industrial processes in which byproduct heat that would otherwise be
released into the environment is used for process heating and/or
electricity production.
Co-processed means that renewable biomass was simultaneously
processed with fossil fuels or other non-renewable feedstock in the
same unit or units to produce a fuel that is partially derived from
renewable biomass.
Corn oil extraction means the recovery of corn oil from the thin
stillage and/or the DGS produced by a dry mill corn ethanol plant, most
often by mechanical separation.
Crop residue is the biomass left over from the harvesting or
processing of planted crops from existing agricultural land and any
biomass removed from existing agricultural land that facilitates crop
management (including biomass removed from such lands in relation to
invasive species control or fire management), whether or not the
biomass includes any portion of a crop or crop plant.
Cropland is land used for production of crops for harvest and
includes cultivated cropland, such as for row crops or close-grown
crops, and non-cultivated cropland, such as for horticultural or
aquatic crops.
Diesel, for the purposes of this subpart, refers to any and all of
the products specified at Sec. 80.1407(e).
Ecologically sensitive forestland means forestland that meets
either of the following criteria:
(1) An ecological community with a global or state ranking of
critically imperiled, imperiled or rare pursuant to a State Natural
Heritage Program. For examples of such ecological communities, see
``Listing of Forest Ecological Communities Pursuant to 40 CFR 80.1401;
S1-S3 communities,'' which is number EPA-HQ-OAR-2005-0161-1034.1 in the
public docket, and ``Listing of Forest Ecological Communities Pursuant
to 40 CFR 80.1401; G1-G2 communities,'' which is number EPA-HQ-OAR-
2005-0161-2906.1 in the public docket. This material is available for
inspection at the EPA Docket Center, EPA/DC, EPA West, Room 3334, 1301
Constitution Ave., NW., Washington DC. The telephone number for the Air
Docket is (202) 566-1742.
(2) Old growth or late successional, characterized by trees at
least 200 years in age.
EPA Moderated Transaction System, or EMTS, means a closed, EPA
moderated system that provides a mechanism for screening and tracking
Renewable Identification Numbers (RINs) as per Sec. 80.1452.
Existing agricultural land is cropland, pastureland, and land
enrolled in the Conservation Reserve Program (administered by the U.S.
Department of Agriculture's Farm Service Agency) that was cleared or
cultivated prior to December 19, 2007, and that, on December 19, 2007,
was:
(1) Nonforested; and
(2) Actively managed as agricultural land or fallow, as evidenced
by records which must be traceable to the land in question, which must
include one of the following:
(i) Records of sales of planted crops, crop residue, or livestock,
or records of
[[Page 14865]]
purchases for land treatments such as fertilizer, weed control, or
seeding.
(ii) A written management plan for agricultural purposes.
(iii) Documented participation in an agricultural management
program administered by a Federal, state, or local government agency.
(iv) Documented management in accordance with a certification
program for agricultural products.
Exporter of renewable fuel means:
(1) A person that transfers any renewable fuel to a location
outside the contiguous 48 states and Hawaii; and
(2) A person that transfers any renewable fuel from a location in
the contiguous 48 states or Hawaii to Alaska or a United States
territory, unless that state or territory has received an approval from
the Administrator to opt-in to the renewable fuel program pursuant to
Sec. 80.1443.
Facility means all of the activities and equipment associated with
the production of renewable fuel starting from the point of delivery of
feedstock material to the point of final storage of the end product,
which are located on one property, and are under the control of the
same person (or persons under common control).
Fallow means cropland, pastureland, or land enrolled in the
Conservation Reserve Program (administered by the U.S. Department of
Agriculture's Farm Service Agency) that is intentionally left idle to
regenerate for future agricultural purposes with no seeding or
planting, harvesting, mowing, or treatment during the fallow period.
Forestland is generally undeveloped land covering a minimum area of
1 acre upon which the primary vegetative species are trees, including
land that formerly had such tree cover and that will be regenerated and
tree plantations. Tree covered areas in intensive agricultural crop
production settings, such as fruit orchards or tree-covered areas in
urban settings such as city parks, are not considered forestland.
Fractionation of feedstocks means a process whereby seeds are
divided in various components and oils are removed prior to
fermentation for the production of ethanol.
Fuel for use in an ocean-going vessel means, for this subpart only:
(1) Any marine residual fuel (whether burned in ocean waters, Great
Lakes, or other internal waters);
(2) Emission Control Area (ECA) marine fuel, pursuant to Sec. Sec.
80.2(ttt) and 80.510(k) (whether burned in ocean waters, Great Lakes,
or other internal waters); and
(3) Any other fuel intended for use only in ocean-going vessels.
Gasoline, for the purposes of this subpart, refers to any and all
of the products specified at Sec. 80.1407(c).
Heating oil has the meaning given in Sec. 80.2(ccc).
Importers. For the purposes of this subpart, an importer of
transportation fuel or renewable fuel is any U.S. domestic person who:
(1) Brings transportation fuel or renewable fuel into the 48
contiguous states of the United States or Hawaii, from a foreign
country or from an area that has not opted in to the program
requirements of this subpart pursuant to Sec. 80.1443; or
(2) Brings transportation fuel or renewable fuel into an area that
has opted in to the program requirements of this subpart pursuant to
Sec. 80.1443 from a foreign country or from an area that has not opted
in to the program requirements of this subpart.
Motor vehicle has the meaning given in Section 216(2) of the Clean
Air Act (42 U.S.C. 7550(2)).
Naphtha means a renewable fuel or fuel blending component falling
within the boiling range of gasoline.
Neat renewable fuel is a renewable fuel to which 1% or less of
gasoline (as defined in this section) or diesel fuel has been added.
Non-ester renewable diesel means renewable fuel which is all of the
following:
(1) Registered as a motor vehicle fuel or fuel additive under 40
CFR Part 79, if the fuel or fuel additive is intended for use in a
motor vehicle.
(2) Not a mono-alkyl ester.
Nonforested land means land that is not forestland.
Nonroad vehicle has the meaning given in Section 216(11) of the
Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. 7550(11)).
Pastureland is land managed for the production of indigenous or
introduced forage plants for livestock grazing or hay production, and
to prevent succession to other plant types.
Planted crops are all annual or perennial agricultural crops from
existing agricultural land that may be used as feedstocks for renewable
fuel, such as grains, oilseeds, sugarcane, switchgrass, prairie grass,
duckweed, and other species (but not including algae species or planted
trees), providing that they were intentionally applied by humans to the
ground, a growth medium, a pond or tank, either by direct application
as seed or plant, or through intentional natural seeding or vegetative
propagation by mature plants introduced or left undisturbed for that
purpose.
Planted trees are trees harvested from a tree plantation.
Pre-commercial thinnings are trees, including unhealthy or diseased
trees, primarily removed to reduce stocking to concentrate growth on
more desirable, healthy trees, or other vegetative material that is
removed to promote tree growth.
Renewable biomass means each of the following (including any
incidental, de minimis contaminants that are impractical to remove and
are related to customary feedstock production and transport):
(1) Planted crops and crop residue harvested from existing
agricultural land cleared or cultivated prior to December 19, 2007 and
that was nonforested and either actively managed or fallow on December
19, 2007.
(2) Planted trees and tree residue from a tree plantation located
on non-federal land (including land belonging to an Indian tribe or an
Indian individual that is held in trust by the U.S. or subject to a
restriction against alienation imposed by the U.S.) that was cleared at
any time prior to December 19, 2007 and actively managed on December
19, 2007.
(3) Animal waste material and animal byproducts.
(4) Slash and pre-commercial thinnings from non-federal forestland
(including forestland belonging to an Indian tribe or an Indian
individual, that are held in trust by the United States or subject to a
restriction against alienation imposed by the United States) that is
not ecologically sensitive forestland.
(5) Biomass (organic matter that is available on a renewable or
recurring basis) obtained from the immediate vicinity of buildings and
other areas regularly occupied by people, or of public infrastructure,
in an area at risk of wildfire.
(6) Algae.
(7) Separated yard waste or food waste, including recycled cooking
and trap grease, and materials described in Sec. 80.1426(f)(5)(i).
Renewable fuel means a fuel which meets all of the requirements of
paragraph (1) of this definition:
(1)(i) Fuel that is produced from renewable biomass.
(ii) Fuel that is used to replace or reduce the quantity of fossil
fuel present in a transportation fuel, heating oil, or jet fuel.
(iii) Has lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions that are at least 20
percent less than baseline lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions, unless
the fuel is exempt from this requirement pursuant to Sec. 80.1403.
(2) Ethanol covered by this definition shall be denatured as
required and defined in 27 CFR parts 19 through 21.
[[Page 14866]]
Any volume of denaturant added to the undenatured ethanol by a producer
or importer in excess of 2 volume percent shall not be included in the
volume of ethanol for purposes of determining compliance with the
requirements under this subpart.
Renewable Identification Number (RIN), is a unique number generated
to represent a volume of renewable fuel pursuant to Sec. Sec. 80.1425
and 80.1426.
(1) Gallon-RIN is a RIN that represents an individual gallon of
renewable fuel; and
(2) Batch-RIN is a RIN that represents multiple gallon-RINs.
Slash is the residue, including treetops, branches, and bark, left
on the ground after logging or accumulating as a result of a storm,
fire, delimbing, or other similar disturbance.
Small refinery, for this subpart only, means a refinery for which
the average aggregate daily crude oil throughput for calendar year 2006
(as determined by dividing the aggregate throughput for the calendar
year by the number of days in the calendar year) does not exceed 75,000
barrels.
Transportation fuel means fuel for use in motor vehicles, motor
vehicle engines, nonroad vehicles, or nonroad engines (except for
ocean-going vessels).
Tree plantation is a stand of no less than 1 acre composed
primarily of trees established by hand- or machine-planting of a seed
or sapling, or by coppice growth from the stump or root of a tree that
was hand- or machine-planted. Tree plantations must have been cleared
prior to December 19, 2007 and must have been actively managed on
December 19, 2007, as evidenced by records which must be traceable to
the land in question, which must include:
(1) Sales records for planted trees or tree residue together with
other written documentation connecting the land in question to these
purchases;
(2) Purchasing records for seeds, seedlings, or other nursery stock
together with other written documentation connecting the land in
question to these purchases;
(3) A written management plan for silvicultural purposes;
(4) Documentation of participation in a silvicultural program
sponsored by a Federal, state or local government agency;
(5) Documentation of land management in accordance with an
agricultural or silvicultural product certification program;
(6) An agreement for land management consultation with a
professional forester that identifies the land in question; or
(7) Evidence of the existence and ongoing maintenance of a road
system or other physical infrastructure designed and maintained for
logging use, together with one of the above-mentioned documents.
Tree residue is slash and any woody residue generated during the
processing of planted trees from tree plantations for use in lumber,
paper, furniture or other applications, provided that such woody
residue is not mixed with similar residue from trees that do not
originate in tree plantations.
Yard waste is leaves, sticks, pine needles, grass and hedge
clippings, and similar waste from residential, commercial, or
industrial areas (but not from forestlands or tree plantations).
Sec. 80.1402 [Reserved]
Sec. 80.1403 Which fuels are not subject to the 20% GHG thresholds?
(a) For purposes of this section, the following definitions apply:
(1) Baseline volume means the permitted capacity or, if permitted
capacity cannot be determined, the actual peak capacity of a specific
renewable fuel production facility on a calendar year basis.
(2) Permitted capacity means 105% of the maximum permissible volume
output of renewable fuel that is allowed under operating conditions
specified in the most restrictive of all applicable preconstruction,
construction and operating permits issued by regulatory authorities
(including local, regional, state or a foreign equivalent of a state,
and federal permits, or permits issued by foreign governmental
agencies) that govern the construction and/or operation of the
renewable fuel facility, reported as:
(i) Annual volume output on a calendar year basis; or
(ii) If the permit specifies maximum rated volume output on an
hourly basis, then multiplying the hourly output by 8,322 hours per
year to obtain the annual output.
(3) Actual peak capacity means 105% of the maximum annual volume of
renewable fuels produced from a specific renewable fuel production
facility on a calendar year basis.
(i) For facilities that commenced construction prior to December
19, 2007 the actual peak capacity is based on the last five calendar
years prior to 2008, unless no such production exists, in which case
actual peak capacity is determined pursuant to paragraph (a)(3)(ii) of
this section.
(ii) For facilities that commenced construction after December 19,
2007, and are fired with natural gas, biomass, or a combination
thereof, the actual peak capacity is based on any calendar year after
startup during the first three years of operation.
(4) Commence construction, as applied to facilities that produce
renewable fuel, means that:
(i) The owner or operator has all necessary preconstruction
approvals or permits (as defined at 40 CFR 52.21(b)(10)), and has
satisfied either of the following:
(A) Begun, or caused to begin, a continuous program of actual
construction on-site (as defined in 40 CFR 52.21(b)(11)).
(B) Entered into binding agreements or contractual obligations,
which cannot be cancelled or modified without substantial loss to the
owner or operator, to undertake a program of actual construction of the
facility.
(ii) For multi-phased projects, the commencement of construction of
one phase does not constitute commencement of construction of any later
phase, unless each phase is mutually dependent for physical and
chemical reasons only.
(b) The lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions from renewable fuels
must be at least 20 percent less than baseline lifecycle greenhouse gas
emissions, with the exception of the baseline volumes of renewable fuel
produced from facilities described in paragraphs (c) and (d) of this
section.
(c) The baseline volume of renewable fuel that is produced from
facilities and any expansions, all of which commenced construction on
or before December 19, 2007, shall not be subject to the requirement
that lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions be at least 20 percent less
than baseline lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions if the owner or
operator:
(1) Did not discontinue construction for a period of 18 months
after commencement of construction; and
(2) Completed construction within 36 months of commencement of
construction.
(d) The baseline volume of ethanol that is produced from facilities
and any expansions all of which commenced construction after December
19, 2007 and on or before December 31, 2009, shall not be subject to
the requirement that lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions be at least 20
percent less than baseline lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions if such
facilities are fired with natural gas, biomass, or a combination
thereof at all times the facility operated between December 19, 2007
and December 31, 2009 and if:
(1) The owner or operator did not discontinue construction for a
period of
[[Page 14867]]
18 months after commencement of construction;
(2) The owner or operator completed construction within 36 months
of commencement of construction; and
(3) The baseline volume continues to be produced through processes
fired with natural gas, biomass, or any combination thereof.
(e) The annual volume of renewable fuel during a calendar year from
facilities described in paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section that
exceeds the baseline volume shall be subject to the requirement that
lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions be at least 20 percent less than
baseline lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions.
(f) If there are any changes in the mix of renewable fuels produced
by those facilities described in paragraph (d) of this section, only
the ethanol volume (to the extent it is less than or equal to baseline
volume) will not be subject to the requirement that lifecycle
greenhouse gas emissions be at least 20 percent less than baseline
lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions. Any party that changes the fuel mix
must update their registration as specified in Sec. 80.1450(d).
Sec. 80.1404 [Reserved]
Sec. 80.1405 What are the Renewable Fuel Standards?
(a) Renewable Fuel Standards for 2010.
(1) The value of the cellulosic biofuel standard for 2010 shall be
0.004 percent.
(2) The value of the biomass-based diesel standard for 2010 shall
be 1.10 percent.
(3) The value of the advanced biofuel standard for 2010 shall be
0.61 percent.
(4) The value of the renewable fuel standard for 2010 shall be 8.25
percent.
(b) Beginning with the 2011 compliance period, EPA will calculate
the value of the annual standards and publish these values in the
Federal Register by November 30 of the year preceding the compliance
period.
(c) EPA will calculate the annual renewable fuel percentage
standards using the following equations:
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR26MR10.429
Where:
StdCB,i = The cellulosic biofuel standard for year i, in
percent.
StdBBD,i = The biomass-based diesel standard for year i,
in percent.
StdAB,i = The advanced biofuel standard for year i, in
percent.
StdRF,i = The renewable fuel standard for year i, in
percent.
RFVCB,i = Annual volume of cellulosic biofuel required by
section 211(o)(2)(B) of the Clean Air Act for year i, in gallons.
RFVBBD,i = Annual volume of biomass-based diesel required
by section 211(o)(2)(B) of the Clean Air Act for year i, in gallons.
RFVAB,i = Annual volume of advanced biofuel required by
section 211(o)(2)(B) of the Clean Air Act for year i, in gallons.
RFVRF,i = Annual volume of renewable fuel required by
section 211(o)(2)(B) of the Clean Air Act for year i, in gallons.
Gi = Amount of gasoline projected to be used in the 48
contiguous states and Hawaii, in year i, in gallons.
Di = Amount of diesel projected to be used in the 48
contiguous states and Hawaii, in year i, in gallons.
RGi = Amount of renewable fuel blended into gasoline that
is projected to be consumed in the 48 contiguous states and Hawaii,
in year i, in gallons.
RDi = Amount of renewable fuel blended into diesel that
is projected to be consumed in the 48 contiguous states and Hawaii,
in year i, in gallons.
GSi = Amount of gasoline projected to be used in Alaska
or a U.S. territory, in year i, if the state or territory has opted-
in or opts-in, in gallons.
RGSi = Amount of renewable fuel blended into gasoline
that is projected to be consumed in Alaska or a U.S. territory, in
year i, if the state or territory opts-in, in gallons.
DSi = Amount of diesel projected to be used in Alaska or
a U.S. territory, in year i, if the state or territory has opted-in
or opts-in, in gallons.
RDSi = Amount of renewable fuel blended into diesel that
is projected to be consumed in Alaska or a U.S. territory, in year
i, if the state or territory opts-in, in gallons.
GEi = The amount of gasoline projected to be produced by
exempt small refineries and small refiners, in year i, in gallons in
any year they are exempt per Sec. Sec. 80.1441 and 80.1442,
respectively. Assumed to equal 0.119*(Gi-RGi).
DEi = The amount of diesel fuel projected to be produced
by exempt small refineries and small refiners in year i, in gallons,
in any year they are exempt per Sec. Sec. 80.1441 and 80.1442,
respectively. Assumed to equal 0.152*(Di-RDi).
(d) The 2010 price for cellulosic biofuel waiver credits is $1.56
per waiver credit.
Sec. 80.1406 Who is an obligated party under the RFS program?
(a)(1) An obligated party is any refiner that produces gasoline or
diesel fuel within the 48 contiguous states or Hawaii, or any importer
that imports gasoline or diesel fuel into the 48 contiguous states or
Hawaii during a compliance period. A party that simply blends renewable
fuel into gasoline or diesel fuel, as defined in Sec. 80.1407(c) or
(e), is not an obligated party.
(2) If the Administrator approves a petition of Alaska or a United
States territory to opt-in to the renewable fuel program under the
provisions in Sec. 80.1443, then ``obligated party'' shall also
include any refiner that produces gasoline or diesel fuel within that
state or territory, or any importer that imports gasoline or diesel
fuel into that state or territory.
[[Page 14868]]
(b) For each compliance period starting with 2010, an obligated
party is required to demonstrate, pursuant to Sec. 80.1427, that it
has satisfied the Renewable Volume Obligations for that compliance
period, as specified in Sec. 80.1407(a).
(c) Aggregation of facilities.
(1) Except as provided in paragraph (c)(2) of this section, an
obligated party may comply with the requirements of paragraph (b) of
this section for all of its refineries in the aggregate, or for each
refinery individually.
(2) An obligated party that carries a deficit into year i+1 must
use the same approach to aggregation of facilities in year i+1 as it
did in year i.
(d) An obligated party must comply with the requirements of
paragraph (b) of this section for all of its imported gasoline or
diesel fuel in the aggregate.
(e) An obligated party that is both a refiner and importer must
comply with the requirements of paragraph (b) of this section for its
imported gasoline or diesel fuel separately from gasoline or diesel
fuel produced by its domestic refinery or refineries.
(f) Where a refinery or import facility is jointly owned by two or
more parties, the requirements of paragraph (b) of this section may be
met by one of the joint owners for all of the gasoline or diesel fuel
produced/imported at the facility, or each party may meet the
requirements of paragraph (b) of this section for the portion of the
gasoline or diesel fuel that it produces or imports, as long as all of
the gasoline or diesel fuel produced/imported at the facility is
accounted for in determining the Renewable Volume Obligations under
Sec. 80.1407.
(g) The requirements in paragraph (b) of this section apply to the
following compliance periods: Beginning in 2010, and every year
thereafter, the compliance period is January 1 through December 31.
Sec. 80.1407 How are the Renewable Volume Obligations calculated?
(a) The Renewable Volume Obligations for an obligated party are
determined according to the following formulas:
(1) Cellulosic biofuel.
RVOCB,i = (RFStdCB,i * (GVi +
DVi)) + DCB,i-1
Where:
RVOCB,i = The Renewable Volume Obligation for cellulosic
biofuel for an obligated party for calendar year i, in gallons.
RFStdCB,i = The standard for cellulosic biofuel for
calendar year i, determined by EPA pursuant to Sec. 80.1405, in
percent.
GVi = The non-renewable gasoline volume, determined in
accordance with paragraphs (b), (c), and (f) of this section, which
is produced in or imported into the 48 contiguous states or Hawaii
by an obligated party in calendar year i, in gallons.
DVi = The non-renewable diesel volume, determined in
accordance with paragraphs (d), (e), and (f) of this section,
produced in or imported into the 48 contiguous states or Hawaii by
an obligated party in calendar year i, in gallons.
DCB,i-1 = Deficit carryover from the previous year for
cellulosic biofuel, in gallons.
(2) Biomass-based diesel.
RVOBBD,i = (RFStdBBD,i * (GVi +
DVi)) + DBBD,i-1
Where:
RVOBBD,i = The Renewable Volume Obligation for biomass-
based diesel for an obligated party for calendar year i, in gallons.
RFStdBBD,i = The standard for biomass-based diesel for
calendar year i, determined by EPA pursuant to Sec. 80.1405, in
percent.
GVi = The non-renewable gasoline volume, determined in
accordance with paragraphs (b), (c), and (f) of this section, which
is produced in or imported into the 48 contiguous states or Hawaii
by an obligated party in calendar year i, in gallons.
DVi = The non-renewable diesel volume, determined in
accordance with paragraphs (d), (e), and (f) of this section,
produced in or imported into the 48 contiguous states or Hawaii by
an obligated party in calendar year i, in gallons.
DBBD,i-1 = Deficit carryover from the previous year for
biomass-based diesel, in gallons.
(3) Advanced biofuel.
RVOAB,i = (RFStdAB,i * (GVi +
DVi)) + DAB,i-1
Where:
RVOAB,i = The Renewable Volume Obligation for advanced
biofuel for an obligated party for calendar year i, in gallons.
RFStdAB,i = The standard for advanced biofuel for
calendar year i, determined by EPA pursuant to Sec. 80.1405, in
percent.
GVi = The non-renewable gasoline volume, determined in
accordance with paragraphs (b), (c), and (f) of this section, which
is produced in or imported into the 48 contiguous states or Hawaii
by an obligated party in calendar year i, in gallons.
DVi = The non-renewable diesel volume, determined in
accordance with paragraphs (d), (e), and (f) of this section,
produced in or imported into the 48 contiguous states or Hawaii by
an obligated party in calendar year i, in gallons.
DAB,i-1 = Deficit carryover from the previous year for
advanced biofuel, in gallons.
(4) Renewable fuel.
RVORF,i = (RFStdRF,i * (GVi +
DVi)) + DRF,i-1
Where:
RVORF,i = The Renewable Volume Obligation for renewable
fuel for an obligated party for calendar year i, in gallons.
RFStdRF,i = The standard for renewable fuel for calendar
year i, determined by EPA pursuant to Sec. 80.1405, in percent.
GVi = The non-renewable gasoline volume, determined in
accordance with paragraphs (b), (c), and (f) of this section, which
is produced in or imported into the 48 contiguous states or Hawaii
by an obligated party in calendar year i, in gallons.
DVi = The non-renewable diesel volume, determined in
accordance with paragraphs (d), (e), and (f) of this section,
produced in or imported into the 48 contiguous states or Hawaii by
an obligated party in calendar year i, in gallons.
DRF,i-1 = Deficit carryover from the previous year for
renewable fuel, in gallons.
(b) The non-renewable gasoline volume, GVi, for an
obligated party for a given year as specified in paragraph (a) of this
section is calculated as follows:
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR26MR10.430
Where:
x = Individual batch of gasoline produced or imported in calendar
year i.
n = Total number of batches of gasoline produced or imported in
calendar year i.
Gx = Volume of batch x of gasoline produced or imported,
as defined in paragraph (c) of this section, in gallons.
y = Individual batch of renewable fuel blended into gasoline in
calendar year i.
m = Total number of batches of renewable fuel blended into gasoline
in calendar year i.
RBGy = Volume of batch y of renewable fuel blended into
gasoline, in gallons.
(c) Except as specified in paragraph (f) of this section, all of
the following products that are produced or imported during a
compliance period, collectively called ``gasoline'' for the purposes of
this section (unless otherwise specified), are to be included (but not
double-counted) in the volume used to calculate a party's Renewable
Volume Obligations under paragraph (a) of this section, except as
provided in paragraph (f) of this section:
(1) Reformulated gasoline, whether or not renewable fuel is later
added to it.
(2) Conventional gasoline, whether or not renewable fuel is later
added to it.
(3) Reformulated gasoline blendstock that becomes finished
reformulated gasoline upon the addition of oxygenate (RBOB).
(4) Conventional gasoline blendstock that becomes finished
conventional gasoline upon the addition of oxygenate (CBOB).
(5) Blendstock (including butane and gasoline treated as blendstock
(GTAB))
[[Page 14869]]
that has been combined with other blendstock and/or finished gasoline
to produce gasoline.
(6) Any gasoline, or any unfinished gasoline that becomes finished
gasoline upon the addition of oxygenate, that is produced or imported
to comply with a state or local fuels program.
(d) The diesel non-renewable volume, DVi, for an
obligated party for a given year as specified in paragraph (a) of this
section is calculated as follows:
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR26MR10.431
Where:
x = Individual batch of diesel produced or imported in calendar year
i.
n = Total number of batches of diesel produced or imported in
calendar year i.
Dx = Volume of batch x of diesel produced or imported, as
defined in paragraph (e) of this section, in gallons.
y = Individual batch of renewable fuel blended into diesel in
calendar year i.
m = Total number of batches of renewable fuel blended into diesel in
calendar year i.
RBDy = Volume of batch y of renewable fuel blended into
diesel, in gallons.
(e) Except as specified in paragraph (f) of this section, all
products meeting the definition of MVNRLM diesel fuel at Sec.
80.2(qqq) that are produced or imported during a compliance period,
collectively called ``diesel fuel'' for the purposes of this section
(unless otherwise specified), are to be included (but not double-
counted) in the volume used to calculate a party's Renewable Volume
Obligations under paragraph (a) of this section.
(f) The following products are not included in the volume of
gasoline or diesel fuel produced or imported used to calculate a
party's Renewable Volume Obligations according to paragraph (a) of this
section:
(1) Any renewable fuel as defined in Sec. 80.1401.
(2) Blendstock that has not been combined with other blendstock,
finished gasoline, or diesel to produce gasoline or diesel.
(3) Gasoline or diesel fuel produced or imported for use in Alaska,
the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam,
American Samoa, and the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianas, unless
the area has opted into the RFS program under Sec. 80.1443.
(4) Gasoline or diesel fuel produced by a small refinery that has
an exemption under Sec. 80.1441 or an approved small refiner that has
an exemption under Sec. 80.1442.
(5) Gasoline or diesel fuel exported for use outside the 48 United
States and Hawaii, and gasoline or diesel fuel exported for use outside
Alaska, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam,
American Samoa, and the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianas, if the
area has opted into the RFS program under Sec. 80.1443.
(6) For blenders, the volume of finished gasoline, finished diesel
fuel, RBOB, or CBOB to which a blender adds blendstocks.
(7) The gasoline or diesel fuel portion of transmix produced by a
transmix processor, or the transmix blended into gasoline or diesel
fuel by a transmix blender, under Sec. 80.84.
(8) Any gasoline or diesel fuel that is not transportation fuel.
Sec. Sec. 80.1408-80.1414 [Reserved]
Sec. 80.1415 How are equivalence values assigned to renewable fuel?
(a)(1) Each gallon of a renewable fuel, or gallon equivalent
pursuant to paragraph (c) of this section, shall be assigned an
equivalence value by the producer or importer pursuant to paragraph (b)
or (c) of this section.
(2) The equivalence value is a number that is used to determine how
many gallon-RINs can be generated for a batch of renewable fuel
according to Sec. 80.1426.
(b) Equivalence values shall be assigned for certain renewable
fuels as follows:
(1) Ethanol which is denatured shall have an equivalence value of
1.0.
(2) Biodiesel (mono-alkyl ester) shall have an equivalence value of
1.5.
(3) Butanol shall have an equivalence value of 1.3.
(4) Non-ester renewable diesel with a lower heating value of at
least 123,500 Btu/gal shall have an equivalence value of 1.7.
(5) A gallon of renewable fuel represents 77,000 Btu (lower heating
value) of biogas, and biogas shall have an equivalence value of 1.0.
(6) A gallon of renewable fuel represents 22.6 kW-hr of
electricity, and electricity shall have an equivalence value of 1.0.
(7) For all other renewable fuels, a producer or importer shall
submit an application to the Agency for an equivalence value following
the provisions of paragraph (c) of this section. A producer or importer
may also submit an application for an alternative equivalence value
pursuant to paragraph (c) if the renewable fuel is listed in this
paragraph (b), but the producer or importer has reason to believe that
a different equivalence value than that listed in this paragraph (b) is
warranted.
(c) Calculation of new equivalence values.
(1) The equivalence value for renewable fuels described in
paragraph (b)(7) of this section shall be calculated using the
following formula:
EV = (R/0.972) * (EC/77,000)
Where:
EV = Equivalence Value for the renewable fuel, rounded to the
nearest tenth.
R = Renewable content of the renewable fuel. This is a measure of
the portion of a renewable fuel that came from a renewable source,
expressed as a percent, on an energy basis.
EC = Energy content of the renewable fuel, in Btu per gallon (lower
heating value).
(2) The application for an equivalence value shall include a
technical justification that includes a description of the renewable
fuel, feedstock(s) used to make it, and the production process.
(3) The Agency will review the technical justification and assign
an appropriate equivalence value to the renewable fuel based on the
procedure in this paragraph (c).
(4) Applications for equivalence values must be sent to one of the
following addresses:
(i) For U.S. Mail: U.S. EPA, Attn: RFS2 Program Equivalence Value
Application, 6406J, 1200 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW., Washington, DC
20460.
(ii) For overnight or courier services: U.S. EPA, Attn: RFS2
Program Equivalence Value Application, 6406J, 1310 L Street, NW., 6th
floor, Washington, DC 20005. (202) 343-9038.
(5) All applications required under this section shall be submitted
on forms and following procedures prescribed by the Administrator.
Sec. 80.1416 Petition process for evaluation of new renewable fuels
pathways.
(a)(1) A party may petition EPA to assign a D code for a new
renewable fuel pathway that has not been evaluated by EPA to determine
if it qualifies for a D code as defined in Sec. 80.1426(f), pursuant
to this section. A D code must be approved prior to the generation of
RINs for the fuel in question.
(2) For renewable fuel pathways that have been determined by EPA
not to qualify for a D code as defined in Sec. 80.1426(f), parties who
can document significant differences between the fuel production
processes considered in this rule and their fuel pathway production
processes may petition EPA to use a D code pursuant to this section.
(3) Parties may petition EPA to qualify their renewable fuel
pathway for a different D code than the D code assigned to the fuel
pathway as defined in Sec. 80.1426(f) if the parties can document
significant differences
[[Page 14870]]
between the fuel production processes considered in this rule and their
fuel pathway production processes, pursuant to this section.
(b)(1) Any petition under paragraph (a) of this section shall
include all the following:
(i) The information specified under Sec. 80.76.
(ii) A technical justification that includes a description of the
renewable fuel, feedstock(s) used to make it, and the production
process. The justification must include process modeling flow charts.
(iii) A mass balance for the pathway, including feedstocks, fuels
produced, co-products, and waste materials production.
(iv) Information on co-products, including their expected use and
market value.
(v) An energy balance for the pathway, including a list of any
energy and process heat inputs and outputs used in the pathway,
including such sources produced off site or by another entity.
(vi) Any other relevant information, including information
pertaining to energy saving technologies or other process improvements.
(vii) The Administrator may ask for additional information to
complete the lifecycle greenhouse gas assessment of the new fuel or
pathway.
(2) For those companies who use a feedstock not previously
evaluated by EPA under this subpart, the petition must include all the
following in addition to the requirements in paragraph (b)(1) of this
section:
(i) Type of feedstock and description of how it meets the
definition of renewable biomass.
(ii) Market value of the feedstock.
(iii) List of other uses for the feedstock.
(iv) List of chemical inputs needed to produce the renewable
biomass source of the feedstock and prepare the renewable biomass for
processing into feedstock.
(v) Identify energy needed to obtain the feedstock and deliver it
to the facility. If applicable, identify energy needed to plant and
harvest the renewable biomass source of the feedstock and modify the
source to create the feedstock.
(vi) Current and projected yields of the feedstock that will be
used to produce the fuels.
(vii) The Administrator may ask for additional information to
complete the lifecycle Greenhouse Gas assessment of the new fuel or
pathway.
(c)(1) A company may only submit one petition per pathway. If EPA
determines the petition to be incomplete, then the company may
resubmit.
(2) The petition must be signed and certified as meeting all the
applicable requirements of this subpart by the responsible corporate
officer of the applicant organization.
(3) If EPA determines that the petition is incomplete then EPA will
notify the applicant in writing that the petition is incomplete and
will not be reviewed further. However, an amended petition that
corrects the omission may be re-submitted for EPA review.
(4) If the fuel or pathway described in the petition does not meet
the definitions in Sec. 80.1401 of renewable fuel, advanced biofuel,
cellulosic biofuel, or biomass-based diesel, then EPA will notify the
applicant in writing that the petition is denied and will not be
reviewed further.
(d) The petition under this section shall be submitted on forms and
following procedures as prescribed by EPA.
Sec. Sec. 80.1417-80.1424 [Reserved]
Sec. 80.1425 Renewable Identification Numbers (RINs).
Each RIN is a 38-character numeric code of the following form:
KYYYYCCCCFFFFFBBBBBRRDSSSSSSSSEEEEEEEE
(a) K is a number identifying the type of RIN as follows:
(1) K has the value of 1 when the RIN is assigned to a volume of
renewable fuel pursuant to Sec. 80.1426(e) and Sec. 80.1428(a).
(2) K has the value of 2 when the RIN has been separated from a
volume of renewable fuel pursuant to Sec. 80.1429.
(b) YYYY is the calendar year in which the RIN was generated.
(c) CCCC is the registration number assigned, according to Sec.
80.1450, to the producer or importer of the batch of renewable fuel.
(d) FFFFF is the registration number assigned, according to Sec.
80.1450, to the facility at which the batch of renewable fuel was
produced or imported.
(e) BBBBB is a serial number assigned to the batch which is chosen
by the producer or importer of the batch such that no two batches have
the same value in a given calendar year.
(f) RR is a number representing 10 times the equivalence value of
the renewable fuel as specified in Sec. 80.1415.
(g) D is a number determined according to Sec. 80.1426(f) and
identifying the type of renewable fuel, as follows:
(1) D has the value of 3 to denote fuel categorized as cellulosic
biofuel.
(2) D has the value of 4 to denote fuel categorized as biomass-
based diesel.
(3) D has the value of 5 to denote fuel categorized as advanced
biofuel.
(4) D has the value of 6 to denote fuel categorized as renewable
fuel.
(5) D has the value of 7 to denote fuel categorized as cellulosic
diesel.
(h) SSSSSSSS is a number representing the first gallon-RIN
associated with a batch of renewable fuel.
(i) EEEEEEEE is a number representing the last gallon-RIN
associated with a batch of renewable fuel. EEEEEEEE will be identical
to SSSSSSSS if the batch-RIN represents a single gallon-RIN. Assign the
value of EEEEEEEE as described in Sec. 80.1426.
Sec. 80.1426 How are RINs generated and assigned to batches of
renewable fuel by renewable fuel producers or importers?
(a) General requirements.
(1) To the extent permitted under paragraphs (b) and (c) of this
section, producers and importers of renewable fuel must generate RINs
to represent that fuel if the fuel:
(i) Qualifies for a D code pursuant to Sec. 80.1426(f), or EPA has
approved a petition for use of a D code pursuant to Sec. 80.1416; and
(ii) Is demonstrated to be produced from renewable biomass pursuant
to the reporting requirements of Sec. 80.1451 and the recordkeeping
requirements of Sec. 80.1454.
(A) Feedstocks meeting the requirements of renewable biomass
through the aggregate compliance provision at Sec. 80.1454(g) are
deemed to be renewable biomass.
(B) [Reserved]
(2) To generate RINs for imported renewable fuel, including any
renewable fuel contained in imported transportation fuel, importers
must obtain information from a foreign producer that is registered
pursuant to Sec. 80.1450 sufficient to make the appropriate
determination regarding the applicable D code and compliance with the
renewable biomass definition for each imported batch for which RINs are
generated.
(3) A party generating a RIN shall specify the appropriate
numerical values for each component of the RIN in accordance with the
provisions of Sec. 80.1425(a) and paragraph (f) of this section.
(b) Regional applicability.
(1) Except as provided in paragraph (c) of this section, a RIN must
be generated by a renewable fuel producer or importer for a batch of
renewable fuel that satisfies the requirements of paragraph (a)(1) of
this section if it is produced or imported for use as transportation
fuel, heating oil, or jet
[[Page 14871]]
fuel in the 48 contiguous states or Hawaii.
(2) If the Administrator approves a petition of Alaska or a United
States territory to opt-in to the renewable fuel program under the
provisions in Sec. 80.1443, then the requirements of paragraph (b)(1)
of this section shall also apply to renewable fuel produced or imported
for use as transportation fuel, heating oil, or jet fuel in that state
or territory beginning in the next calendar year.
(c) Cases in which RINs are not generated.
(1) Fuel producers and importers may not generate RINs for fuel
that is not designated or intended for use as transportation fuel,
heating oil, or jet fuel.
(2) Small producer/importer threshold. Pursuant to Sec. 80.1455(a)
and (b), renewable fuel producers that produce less than 10,000 gallons
a year of renewable fuel, and importers that import less than 10,000
gallons a year of renewable fuel, are not required to generate and
assign RINs to batches of renewable fuel that that satisfy the
requirements of paragraph (a)(1) of this section that they produce or
import.
(3) Temporary new producer threshold. Pursuant to Sec. 80.1455(c)
and (d), renewable fuel producers that produce less than 125,000
gallons a year of renewable fuel are not required to generate and
assign RINs to batches of renewable fuel that satisfy the requirements
of paragraph (a)(1) of this section and that are produced from a new
facility, for a maximum of three years beginning with the calendar year
in which the production facility produces its first gallon of renewable
fuel.
(4) Importers shall not generate RINs for fuel imported from a
foreign producer that is not registered with EPA as required in Sec.
80.1450.
(5) Importers shall not generate RINs for renewable fuel that has
already been assigned RINs by a registered foreign producer.
(6) A party is prohibited from generating RINs for a volume of fuel
that it produces if:
(i) The fuel does not meet the requirements of paragraph (a)(1) of
this section; or
(ii) The fuel has been produced from a chemical conversion process
that uses another renewable fuel as a feedstock, the renewable fuel
used as a feedstock was produced by another party, and RINs with a K
code of 1 were received with the renewable fuel.
(A) Parties who produce renewable fuel made from a feedstock which
itself was a renewable fuel received with RINs, shall assign the
original RINs to the new renewable fuel.
(B) [Reserved]
(d)(1) Definition of batch. For the purposes of this section and
Sec. 80.1425, a ``batch of renewable fuel'' is a volume of renewable
fuel that has been assigned a unique identifier within a calendar year
by the producer or importer of the renewable fuel in accordance with
the provisions of this section and Sec. 80.1425.
(i) The number of gallon-RINs generated for a batch of renewable
fuel may not exceed 99,999,999.
(ii) A batch of renewable fuel cannot represent renewable fuel
produced or imported in excess of one calendar month.
(2) Multiple gallon-RINs generated to represent a given volume of
renewable fuel can be represented by a single batch-RIN through the
appropriate designation of the RIN volume codes SSSSSSSS and EEEEEEEE.
(i) The value of SSSSSSSS in the batch-RIN shall be 00000001 to
represent the first gallon-RIN associated with the volume of renewable
fuel.
(ii) The value of EEEEEEEE in the batch-RIN shall represent the
last gallon-RIN associated with the volume of renewable fuel, based on
the RIN volume determined pursuant to paragraph (f) of this section.
(iii) Under Sec. 80.1452, RIN volumes will be managed by EMTS. RIN
codes SSSSSSSS and EEEEEEEE do not have a role in EMTS.
(e) Assignment of RINs to batches.
(1) The producer or importer of renewable fuel must assign all RINs
generated to volumes of renewable fuel.
(2) A RIN is assigned to a volume of renewable fuel when ownership
of the RIN is transferred along with the transfer of ownership of the
volume of renewable fuel, pursuant to Sec. 80.1428(a).
(3) All assigned RINs shall have a K code value of 1.
(f) Generation of RINs.
(1) Applicable pathways. D codes shall be used in RINs generated by
producers or importers of renewable fuel according to the pathways
listed in Table 1 to this section, or as approved by the Administrator.
In choosing an appropriate D code, producers and importers may
disregard any incidental, de minimis feedstock contaminants that are
impractical to remove and are related to customary feedstock production
and transport.
Table 1 to Sec. 80.1426 Applicable D Codes for Each Fuel Pathway for Use in Generating RINs
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Production process
Fuel type Feedstock requirements D-Code
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ethanol............................... Corn starch................... All of the following:........ 6
Drymill process, using
natural gas, biomass, or
biogas for process energy
and at least two advanced
technologies from Table 2 to
this section.
Ethanol............................... Corn starch................... All of the following:........ 6
Dry mill process, using
natural gas, biomass, or
biogas for process energy
and at least one of the
advanced technologies from
Table 2 to this section plus
drying no more than 65% of
the distillers grains with
solubles it markets annually.
Ethanol............................... Corn starch................... All of the following:........ 6
Dry mill process, using
natural gas, biomass, or
biogas for process energy
and drying no more than 50%
of the distillers grains
with solubles it markets
annually.
Ethanol............................... Corn starch................... Wet mill process using 6
biomass or biogas for
process energy.
Ethanol............................... Starches from agricultural Fermentation using natural 6
residues and annual gas, biomass, or biogas for
covercrops. process energy.
[[Page 14872]]
Biodiesel, and renewable diesel....... Soy bean oil; One of the following: 4
Oil from annual covercrops;... Trans-Esterification.........
Algal oil;.................... Hydrotreating................
Biogenic waste oils/fats/ Excluding processes that co-
greases;. process renewable biomass
Non-food grade corn oil....... and petroleum..
Biodiesel, and renewable diesel....... Soy bean oil; One of the following: 5
Oil from annual covercrops;... Trans-Esterification.........
Algal oil;.................... Hydrotreating................
Biogenic waste oils/fats/ Includes only processes that
greases;. co-process renewable biomass
Non-food grade corn oil....... and petroleum..
Ethanol............................... Sugarcane..................... Fermentation................. 5
Ethanol............................... Cellulosic Biomass from Any.......................... 3
agricultural residues, slash,
forest thinnings and forest
product residues, annual
covercrops; switchgrass, and
miscanthus; cellulosic
components of separated yard
wastes; cellulosic components
of separated food wastes; and
cellulosic components of
separated MSW.
Cellulosic Diesel, Jet Fuel and Cellulosic Biomass from Any.......................... 7
Heating Oil. agricultural residues, slash,
forest thinnings and forest
product residues, annual
covercrops, switchgrass, and
miscanthus; cellulosic
components of separated yard
wastes; cellulosic components
of separated food wastes; and
cellulosic components of
separated MSW.
Butanol.............................. Corn starch................... Fermentation; dry mill using 6
natural gas, biomass, or
biogas for process energy.
Cellulosic Naphtha.................... Cellulosic Biomass from Fischer-Tropsch process...... 3
agricultural residues, slash,
forest thinnings and forest
product residues, annual
covercrops, switchgrass, and
miscanthus; cellulosic
components of separated yard
wastes; cellulosic components
of separated food wastes; and
cellulosic components of
separated MSW.
Ethanol, renewable diesel, jet fuel, The non-cellulosic portions of Any.......................... 5
heating oil, and naphtha. separated food wastes.
Biogas................................ Landfills, sewage and waste Any.......................... 5
treatment plants, manure
digesters.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 2 to Sec. 80.1426--Advanced Technologies
------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Corn oil fractionation.
Corn oil extraction.
Membrane separation.
Raw starch hydrolysis.
Combined heat and power.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(2) Renewable fuel that can be described by a single pathway.
(i) The number of gallon-RINs that shall be generated for a batch
of renewable fuel by a producer or importer for renewable fuel that can
be described by a single pathway shall be equal to a volume calculated
according to the following formula:
VRIN = EV * Vs
Where:
VRIN = RIN volume, in gallons, for use in determining the
number of gallon-RINs that shall be generated for the batch.
EV = Equivalence value for the batch of renewable fuel per Sec.
80.1415.
Vs = Standardized volume of the batch of renewable fuel
at 60 [deg]F, in gallons, calculated in accordance with paragraph
(f)(8) of this section.
(ii) The D code that shall be used in the RINs generated shall be
the D code specified in Table 1 to this section, or a D code as
approved by the Administrator, which corresponds to the pathway that
describes the producer's operations.
(3) Renewable fuel that can be described by two or more pathways.
(i) The D codes that shall be used in the RINs generated by a
producer or importer whose renewable fuel can be described by two or
more pathways shall be the D codes specified in Table 1 to this
section, or D codes as approved by the Administrator, which correspond
to the pathways that describe the renewable fuel throughout that
calendar year.
(ii) If all the pathways describing the producer's operations have
the same D code and each batch is of a single fuel type, then that D
code shall be used in all the RINs generated and the number of gallon-
RINs that shall be generated for a batch of renewable fuel shall be
equal to a volume calculated according to the following formula:
VRIN = EV * Vs
Where:
VRIN = RIN volume, in gallons, for use in determining the
number of gallon-RINs that shall be generated for the batch.
EV = Equivalence value for the batch of renewable fuel per Sec.
80.1415.
Vs = Standardized volume of the batch of renewable fuel
at 60 [deg]F, in gallons, calculated in accordance with paragraph
(f)(8) of this section.
(iii) If all the pathways describing the producer's operations have
the same D code but individual batches are comprised of a mixture of
fuel types with different equivalence values, then that D code shall be
used in all the RINs generated and the number of gallon-RINs that shall
be generated for a batch of renewable fuel shall be equal to a volume
calculated according to the following formula:
VRIN = [Sigma](EVi * Vs,i)
Where:
[[Page 14873]]
VRIN = RIN volume, in gallons, for use in determining the
number of gallon-RINs that shall be generated for the batch.
EVi = Equivalence value for fuel type i in the batch of
renewable fuel per Sec. 80.1415.
Vs,i = Standardized volume of fuel type i in the
batch of renewable fuel at 60 [deg]F, in gallons, calculated in
accordance with paragraph (f)(8) of this section.
(iv) If the pathway applicable to a producer changes on a specific
date, such that one pathway applies before the date and another pathway
applies on and after the date, and each batch is of a single fuel type,
then the applicable D code and batch identifier used in generating RINs
must change on the date that the change in pathway occurs and the
number of gallon-RINs that shall be generated for a batch of renewable
fuel shall be equal to a volume calculated according to the following
formula:
VRIN = EV * Vs
Where:
VRIN = RIN volume, in gallons, for use in determining the
number of gallon-RINs that shall be generated for a batch with a
single applicable D code.
EV = Equivalence value for the batch of renewable fuel per Sec.
80.1415.
Vs = Standardized volume of the batch of renewable fuel
at 60 [deg]F, in gallons, calculated in accordance with paragraph
(f)(8) of this section.
(v) If a producer produces batches that are comprised of a mixture
of fuel types with different equivalence values and different
applicable D codes, then separate values for VRIN shall be
calculated for each category of renewable fuel according to formulas in
Table 3 to this section. All batch-RINs thus generated shall be
assigned to unique batch identifiers for each portion of the batch with
a different D code.
Table 3 to Sec. 80.1426--Number of Gallon-RINs To Assign to Batch-RINs
With D Codes Dependent on Fuel Type
------------------------------------------------------------------------
D code to use in batch-RIN Number of gallon-RINs
------------------------------------------------------------------------
D = 3..................................... VRIN, CB = EVCB * Vs,CB
D = 4..................................... VRIN, BBD = EVBBD * Vs,BBD
D = 5..................................... VRIN, AB = EVAB * Vs,AB
D = 6..................................... VRIN, RF = EVRF * Vs,RF
D = 7..................................... VRIN, CD = EVCD * Vs,CD
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Where:
VRIN,CB = RIN volume, in gallons, for use in determining
the number of gallon-RINs that shall be generated for the cellulosic
biofuel portion of the batch with a D code of 3.
VRIN,BBD = RIN volume, in gallons, for use in determining
the number of gallon-RINs that shall be generated for the biomass-
based diesel portion of the batch with a D code of 4.
VRIN,AB = RIN volume, in gallons, for use in determining
the number of gallon-RINs that shall be generated for the advanced
biofuel potion of the batch with a D code of 5.
VRIN,RF = RIN volume, in gallons, for use in determining
the number of gallon-RINs that shall be generated for the renewable
fuel potion of the batch with a D code of 6.
VRIN,CD = RIN volume, in gallons, for use in determining
the number of gallon-RINs that shall be generated for the cellulosic
diesel portion of the batch with a D code of 7.
EVCB = Equivalence value for the cellulosic biofuel
portion of the batch per Sec. 80.1415.
EVBBD = Equivalence value for the biomass-based diesel
portion of the batch per Sec. 80.1415.
EVAB = Equivalence value for the advanced biofuel portion
of the batch per Sec. 80.1415.
EVRF = Equivalence value for the renewable fuel portion
of the batch per Sec. 80.1415.
EVCD = Equivalence value for the cellulosic diesel
portion of the batch per Sec. 80.1415.
Vs,CB = Standardized volume at 60 [deg]F of the portion
of the batch that must be assigned a D code of 3, in gallons,
calculated in accordance with paragraph (f)(8) of this section.
Vs,BBD = Standardized volume at 60 [deg]F of the portion
of the batch that must be assigned a D code of 4, in gallons,
calculated in accordance with paragraph (f)(8) of this section.
Vs,AB = Standardized volume at 60 [deg]F of the portion
of the batch that must be assigned a D code of 5, in gallons,
calculated in accordance with paragraph (f)(8) of this section.
Vs,RF = Standardized volume at 60 [deg]F of the portion
of the batch that must be assigned a D code of 6, in gallons,
calculated in accordance with paragraph (f)(8) of this section.
Vs,CD = Standardized volume at 60 [deg]F of the portion
of the batch that must be assigned a D code of 7, in gallons,
calculated in accordance with paragraph (f)(8) of this section.
(vi) If a producer produces a single type of renewable fuel using
two or more different feedstocks which are processed simultaneously,
and each batch is comprised of a single type of fuel, then the number
of gallon-RINs that shall be generated for a batch of renewable fuel
and assigned a particular D code shall be determined according to the
formulas in Table 4 to this section.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR26MR10.432
[[Page 14874]]
Where:
VRIN,CB = RIN volume, in gallons, for use in determining
the number of gallon-RINs that shall be generated for a batch of
cellulosic biofuel with a D code of 3.
VRIN,BBD = RIN volume, in gallons, for use in determining
the number of gallon-RINs that shall be generated for a batch of
biomass-based diesel with a D code of 4.
VRIN,AB = RIN volume, in gallons, for use in determining
the number of gallon-RINs that shall be generated for a batch of
advanced biofuel with a D code of 5.
VRIN,RF = RIN volume, in gallons, for use in determining
the number of gallon-RINs that shall be generated for a batch of
renewable fuel with a D code of 6.
VRIN,CD = RIN volume, in gallons, for use in determining
the number of gallon-RINs that shall be generated for a batch of
cellulosic diesel with a D code of 7.
EV = Equivalence value for the renewable fuel per Sec. 80.1415.
Vs = Standardized volume of the batch of renewable fuel
at 60 [deg]F, in gallons, calculated in accordance with paragraph
(f)(8) of this section.
FE3 = Feedstock energy from all feedstocks whose pathways
have been assigned a D code of 3 under Table 1 to this section, or a
D code of 3 as approved by the Administrator, in Btu.
FE4 = Feedstock energy from all feedstocks whose pathways
have been assigned a D code of 4 under Table 1 to this section, or a
D code of 4 as approved by the Administrator, in Btu.
FE5 = Feedstock energy from all feedstocks whose pathways
have been assigned a D code of 5 under Table 1 to this section, or a
D code of 5 as approved by the Administrator, in Btu.
FE6 = Feedstock energy from all feedstocks whose pathways
have been assigned a D code of 6 under Table 1 to this section, or a
D code of 6 as approved by the Administrator, in Btu.
FE7 = Feedstock energy from all feedstocks whose pathways
have been assigned a D code of 7 under Table 1 to this section, or a
D code of 7 as approved by the Administrator, in Btu.
Feedstock energy values, FE, shall be calculated according to the
following formula:
FE = M * (1 - m) * CF * E
Where:
FE = Feedstock energy, in Btu.
M = Mass of feedstock, in pounds, measured on a daily or per-batch
basis.
m = Average moisture content of the feedstock, in mass percent.
CF = Converted Fraction in annual average mass percent, representing
that portion of the feedstock that is converted into renewable fuel
by the producer.
E = Energy content of the components of the feedstock that are
converted to renewable fuel, in annual average Btu/lb, determined
according to paragraph (f)(7) of this section.
(4) Renewable fuel that is produced by co-processing renewable
biomass and non-renewable feedstocks simultaneously to produce a
transportation fuel that is partially renewable.
(i) The number of gallon-RINs that shall be generated for a batch
of partially renewable transportation fuel shall be equal to a volume
VRIN calculated according to Method A or Method B.
(A) Method A.
(1) VRIN shall be calculated according to the following
formula:
VRIN = EV * Vs * FER/(FER +
FENR)
Where:
VRIN = RIN volume, in gallons, for use in determining the
number of gallon-RINs that shall be generated for the batch.
EV = Equivalence value for the batch of renewable fuel per Sec.
80.1415.
Vs = Standardized volume of the batch of renewable fuel
at 60 [deg]F, in gallons, calculated in accordance with paragraph
(f)(8) of this section.
FER = Feedstock energy from renewable biomass used to
make the transportation fuel, in Btu.
FENR = Feedstock energy from non-renewable feedstocks
used to make the transportation fuel, in Btu.
(2) The value of FE for use in paragraph (f)(4)(i)(A)(1) of this
section shall be calculated from the following formula:
FE = M * (1 - m) * CF * E
Where:FE = Feedstock energy, in Btu.
M = Mass of feedstock, in pounds, measured on a daily or per-batch
basis.
m = Average moisture content of the feedstock, in mass percent.
CF = Converted fraction in annual average mass percent, representing
that portion of the feedstock that is converted into transportation
fuel by the producer.
E = Energy content of the components of the feedstock that are
converted to fuel, in annual average Btu/lb, determined according to
paragraph (f)(7) of this section.
(B) Method B. VRIN shall be calculated according to the
following formula:
VRIN = EV * Vs * R
Where:
VRIN = RIN volume, in gallons, for use in determining the
number of gallon-RINs that shall be generated for the batch.
EV = Equivalence value for the batch of renewable fuel per Sec.
80.1415.
Vs = Standardized volume of the batch of renewable fuel
at 60 [deg]F, in gallons, calculated in accordance with paragraph
(f)(8) of this section.
R = The renewable fraction of the fuel as measured by a carbon-14
dating test method as provided in paragraph (f)(9) of this section.
(ii) The D code that shall be used in the RINs generated to
represent partially renewable transportation fuel shall be the D code
specified in Table 1 to this section, or a D code as approved by the
Administrator, which corresponds to the pathway that describes a
producer's operations. In determining the appropriate pathway, the
contribution of fossil fuel feedstocks to the production of partially
renewable fuel shall be ignored.
(5) Renewable fuel produced from separated yard and food waste.
(i) Separated yard waste and food waste means, for the purposes of
this section, waste that is one of the following:
(A) Separated yard wastes, which are feedstock streams consisting
of yard waste kept separate since generation from other waste
materials. Separated yard wastes are deemed to be composed entirely of
cellulosic materials.
(B) Separated food wastes, which are feedstock streams consisting
of food wastes kept separate since generation from other waste
materials, and which include food and beverage production wastes and
post-consumer food and beverage wastes. Separated food wastes are
deemed to be composed entirely of non-cellulosic materials, unless a
party demonstrates that a portion of the feedstock is cellulosic
through approval of their facility registration.
(C) Separated municipal solid waste (MSW), which is material
remaining after separation actions have been taken to remove recyclable
paper, cardboard, plastics, rubber, textiles, metals, and glass from
municipal solid waste, and which is composed of both cellulosic and
non-cellulosic materials.
(ii)(A) A feedstock qualifies under paragraph (f)(5)(i)(A) or
(f)(5)(i)(B) of this section only if it is collected according to a
plan submitted to and approved by U.S. EPA under the registration
procedures specified in Sec. 80.1450(b)(1)(vii).
(B) A feedstock qualifies under paragraph (f)(5)(i)(C) of this
section only if it is collected according to a plan submitted to and
approved by U.S. EPA under the registration procedures specified in
Sec. 80.1450(b)(1)(viii).
(iii) Separation and recycling actions specified in paragraph
(f)(5)(i)(C) of this section are considered to occur if:
(A) Recyclable paper, cardboard, plastics, rubber, textiles,
metals, and glass that can be recycled are separated and removed from
the municipal solid waste stream to the extent reasonably practicable
according to a plan submitted to and approved by U.S. EPA under the
registration procedures specified in Sec. 80.1450(b)(1)(viii); and
(B) The fuel producer has evidence of all contractual arrangements
for paper, cardboard, plastics, rubber, textiles, metals, and glass
that are recycled.
[[Page 14875]]
(iv)(A) The number of gallon-RINs that shall be generated for a
batch of renewable fuel derived from separated yard waste as defined in
paragraph (f)(5)(i)(A) of this section shall be equal to a volume
VRIN and is calculated according to the following formula:
VRIN = EV * Vs
Where:
VRIN = RIN volume, in gallons, for use in determining the
number of cellulosic biofuel gallon-RINs that shall be generated for
the batch.
EV = Equivalence value for the batch of renewable fuel per Sec.
80.1415.
Vs = Standardized volume of the batch of renewable fuel
at 60 [deg]F, in gallons, calculated in accordance with paragraph
(f)(8) of this section.
(B) The number of gallon-RINs that shall be generated for a batch
of renewable fuel derived from separated food waste as defined in
paragraph (f)(5)(i)(B) of this section shall be equal to a volume
VRIN and is calculated according to the following formula:
VRIN = EV \*\ Vs
Where:
VRIN = RIN volume, in gallons, for use in determining the
number of cellulosic or advanced biofuel gallon-RINs that shall be
generated for the batch.
EV = Equivalence value for the batch of renewable fuel per Sec.
80.1415.
Vs = Standardized volume of the batch of renewable fuel
at 60 [deg]F, in gallons, calculated in accordance with paragraph
(f)(8) of this section.
(v) The number of cellulosic biofuel gallon-RINs that shall be
generated for the cellulosic portion of a batch of renewable fuel
derived from separated MSW as defined in paragraph (f)(5)(i)(C) of this
section shall be determined according to the following formula:
VRIN = EV \*\ Vs \*\ R
Where:
VRIN = RIN volume, in gallons, for use in determining the
number of cellulosic biofuel gallon-RINs that shall be generated for
the batch.
EV = Equivalence value for the batch of renewable fuel per Sec.
80.1415.
Vs = Standardized volume of the batch of renewable fuel
at 60 [deg]F, in gallons, calculated in accordance with paragraph
(f)(8) of this section.
R = The calculated non-fossil fraction of the fuel as measured by a
carbon-14 dating test method as provided in paragraph (f)(9) of this
section.
(vi) The D code that shall be used in the RINs generated to
represent separated yard waste, food waste, and MSW shall be the D code
specified in Table 1 to this section, or a D code as approved by the
Administrator, which corresponds to the pathway that describes the
producer's operations and feedstocks.
(6) Renewable fuel neither covered by the pathways in Table 1 to
this section, nor given an approval by the Administrator for use of a
specific D code.
If none of the pathways described in Table 1 to this section apply
to a producer's operations, and the producer has not received approval
for the use of a specific D code by the Administrator, the party may
generate RINs if the fuel from its facility is made from renewable
biomass and qualifies for an exemption under Sec. 80.1403 from the
requirement that renewable fuel achieve at least a 20 percent reduction
in lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions compared to baseline lifecycle
greenhouse gas emissions.
(i) The number of gallon-RINs that shall be generated for a batch
of renewable fuel that qualifies for an exemption from the 20 percent
GHG reduction requirements under Sec. 80.1403 shall be equal to a
volume calculated according to the following formula:
VRIN = EV \*\ Vs
Where:
VRIN = RIN volume, in gallons, for use in determining the
number of gallon-RINs that shall be generated for the batch.
EV = Equivalence value for the batch of renewable fuel per Sec.
80.1415.
Vs = Standardized volume of the batch of renewable fuel
at 60 [deg]F, in gallons, calculated in accordance with paragraph
(f)(8) of this section.
(ii) A D code of 6 shall be used in the RINs generated under this
paragraph (f)(6).
(7) Determination of feedstock energy content factors.
(i) For purposes of paragraphs (f)(3)(vi) and (f)(4)(i)(A)(2) of
this section, producers must specify the value for E, the energy
content of the components of the feedstock that are converted to
renewable fuel, used in the calculation of the feedstock energy value
FE.
(ii) The value for E shall represent the higher or gross calorific
heating value for a feedstock on a zero moisture basis.
(iii) Producers must specify the value for E for each type of
feedstock at least once per calendar year.
(iv) A producer must use default values for E as provided in
paragraph (f)(7)(vi) of this section, or must determine alternative
values for its own feedstocks according to paragraph (f)(7)(v) of this
section.
(v) Producers that do not use a default value for E must use the
following test methods, or alternative test methods as approved by EPA,
to determine the value of E. The value of E shall be based upon the
test results of a sample of feedstock that, based upon good engineering
judgment, is representative of the feedstocks used to produce renewable
fuel:
(A) ASTM E 870 or ASTM E 711 for gross calorific value (both
incorporated by reference, see Sec. 80.1468).
(B) ASTM D 4442 or ASTM D 4444 for moisture content (both
incorporated by reference, see Sec. 80.1468).
(vi) Default values for E.
(A) Starch: 7,600 Btu/lb.
(B) Sugar: 7,300 Btu/lb.
(C) Vegetable oil: 17,000 Btu/lb.
(D) Waste cooking oil or trap grease: 16,600 Btu/lb.
(E) Tallow or fat: 16,200 Btu/lb.
(F) Manure: 6,900 Btu/lb.
(G) Woody biomass: 8,400 Btu/lb.
(H) Herbaceous biomass: 7,300 Btu/lb.
(I) Yard wastes: 2,900 Btu/lb.
(J) Biogas: 11,000 Btu/lb.
(K) Food waste: 2,000 Btu/lb.
(L) Paper: 7,200 Btu/lb.
(M) Crude oil: 19,100 Btu/lb.
(N) Coal--bituminous: 12,200 Btu/lb.
(O) Coal--anthracite: 13,300 Btu/lb.
(P) Coal--lignite or sub-bituminous: 7,900 Btu/lb.
(Q) Natural gas: 19,700 Btu/lb.
(R) Tires or rubber: 16,000 Btu/lb.
(S) Plastic: 19,000 Btu/lb.
(8) Standardization of volumes. In determining the standardized
volume of a batch of renewable fuel for purposes of generating RINs
under this paragraph (f), the batch volumes shall be adjusted to a
standard temperature of 60 [deg]F.
(i) For ethanol, the following formula shall be used:
Vs,e = Va,e \*\ (-0.0006301 \*\ T + 1.0378)
Where:
Vs,e = Standardized volume of ethanol at 60 [deg]F, in
gallons.
Va,e = Actual volume of ethanol, in gallons.
T = Actual temperature of the batch, in [deg]F.
(ii) For biodiesel (mono-alkyl esters), one of the following two
methods for biodiesel temperature standardization to 60 [deg]Fahrenheit
([deg]F ) shall be used:
(A) Vs,b = Va.b \*\ (-0.00045767 \*\ T +
1.02746025)
Where:
Vs,b = Standardized volume of biodiesel at 60 [deg]F, in
gallons.
Va,b = Actual volume of biodiesel, in gallons.
T = Actual temperature of the batch, in [deg]F.
(B) The standardized volume of biodiesel at 60 [deg]F, in gallons,
as calculated from the use of the American Petroleum Institute Refined
Products Table 6B, as referenced in ASTM D 1250 (incorporated by
reference, see Sec. 80.1468).
(iii) For other renewable fuels, an appropriate formula commonly
[[Page 14876]]
accepted by the industry shall be used to standardize the actual volume
to 60 [deg]F. Formulas used must be reported to EPA, and may be
determined to be inappropriate.
(9) Use of radiocarbon dating test methods.
(i) Parties may use a radiocarbon dating test method for
determination of the renewable fraction of a fuel R used to determine
VRIN as provided in paragraphs (f)(4) and (f)(5) of this
section.
(ii) Parties must use Method B or Method C of ASTM D 6866
(incorporated by reference, see Sec. 80.1468), or an alternative test
method as approved by EPA.
(iii) For each batch of fuel, the value of R must be based on:
(A) A radiocarbon dating test of the batch of fuel produced; or
(B) A radiocarbon dating test of a composite sample of previously
produced fuel, if all of the following conditions are met:
(1) Based upon good engineering judgment, the renewable fraction of
the composite sample must be representative of the batch of fuel
produced.
(2) The composite sample is comprised of a volume weighted
combination of samples from every batch of partially renewable
transportation fuel produced by the party over a period not to exceed
one calendar month, or more frequently if necessary to ensure that the
test results are representative of the renewable fraction of the
partially renewable fuel.
(3) The composite sample must be well mixed prior to testing.
(4) A volume of each composite sample must be retained for a
minimum of two years, and be of sufficient volume to permit two
additional tests to be conducted.
(iv) If the party is using the composite sampling approach
according to paragraph (f)(9)(iii)(B) of this section, the party may
estimate the value of R for use in generating RINs in the first month
if all of the following conditions are met:
(A) The estimate of R for the first month is based on information
on the composition of the feedstock;
(B) The party calculates R in the second month based on the
application of a radiocarbon dating test on a composite sample pursuant
to (f)(9)(iii)(B) of this section; and
(C) The party adjusts the value of R used to generate RINs in the
second month using the following formula:
Ri+1,adj = 2 x Ri+1,calc-Ri,est
Where:
Ri+1,adj = Adjusted value of R for use in generating RINs
in month the second month i+1.
Ri+1,calc = Calculated value of R in second month i+1 by
applying a radiocarbon dating test method to a composite sample of
fuel.
Ri,est = Estimate of R for the first month i.
(10)(i) For purposes of this section, electricity and biogas used
as transportation fuel is considered renewable fuel and the producer
may generate RINs if all of the following apply:
(A) The fuel is produced from renewable biomass and qualifies for a
D code in Table 1 to this section or has received approval for use of a
D code by the Administrator;
(B) The renewable electricity, or biogas, is not placed in a
commercial distribution system along with fuels derived from
nonrenewable feedstocks; and
(C) The fuel producer has entered into a written contract for the
sale and use as transportation fuel of a specific quantity of
electricity or biogas.
(ii) Electricity that is generated by co-firing a combination of
renewable biomass and fossil fuel may generate RINs only for the
portion attributable to the renewable biomass portion, using the
procedure described in paragraph (f)(4) of this section.
(11)(i) For purposes of this section, electricity and biogas that
is introduced into a commercial distribution system may be considered
renewable fuel and may qualify for RINs if:
(A) The fuel is produced from renewable biomass and qualifies for a
D code in Table 1 of this section or has received approval for use of a
D code by the Administrator;
(B) The fuel producer has entered into a written contract for the
sale of a specific quantity of fuel derived from renewable biomass
sources with a party that uses fuel taken from a commercial
distribution system for transportation purposes, and such fuel has been
introduced into that commercial distribution system (e.g., pipeline,
transmission line); and
(C) The quantity of biogas or electricity for which RINs were
generated was sold to the transportation fueling facility and to no
other facility.
(ii) Biogas that is introduced into a commercial distribution
system may qualify for RINs only for the volume of biogas that has been
gathered, processed, and injected into a common carrier pipeline:
(A) The gas that is ultimately withdrawn from that pipeline for
transportation purposes is withdrawn in a manner and at a time
consistent with the transport of fuel between the injection and
withdrawal points; and
(B) The volume and heat content of biogas injected into the
pipeline and the volume of gas used as transportation fuel are measured
by continuous metering.
(iii) The fuel used for transportation purposes is considered
produced from renewable biomass only to the extent that:
(A) The amount of fuel used at the transportation fueling facility
matches the amount of fuel derived from renewable biomass that the
producer contracted to have placed into the commercial distribution
system; and
(B) No other party relied upon the contracted volume of biogas for
the creation of RINs.
(iv) Electricity that is generated by co-firing a combination of
renewable biomass and fossil fuel may qualify for RINs only for the
portion attributable to the renewable biomass, using the procedure
described in paragraph (f)(4) of this section.
(12)(i) For purposes of Table 1 to this section, process heat
produced from combustion of gas at a renewable fuel facility is
considered derived from biomass if the gas used for process heat is
biogas, and is generated at the facility or directly transported to the
facility and meets all of the following conditions:
(A) The producer has entered into a written contract for the
procurement of a specific volume of biogas with a specific heat
content.
(B) The volume of biogas was sold to the renewable fuel production
facility, and to no other facility.
(C) The volume of biogas has been gathered, processed and injected
into a common carrier pipeline and the gas that is ultimately withdrawn
from that pipeline is withdrawn in a manner and at a time consistent
with the transport of fuel between the injection and withdrawal points.
(D) The volume and heat content of biogas injected into the
pipeline and the volume of gas used as process heat are measured by
continuous metering.
(E) The common carrier pipeline into which the biogas is placed
ultimately serves the producer's renewable fuel facility.
(ii) The process heat produced from combustion of gas at a
renewable fuel facility described in (f)(12)(i) of this section shall
not be considered derived from biomass if any other party relied upon
the contracted volume of biogas for the creation of RINs.
Sec. 80.1427 How are RINs used to demonstrate compliance?
(a) Renewable Volume Obligations.
[[Page 14877]]
(1) Except as specified in paragraph (b) of this section or Sec.
80.1456, each party that is an obligated party under Sec. 80.1406 and
is obligated to meet the Renewable Volume Obligations under Sec.
80.1407, or is an exporter of renewable fuels that is obligated to meet
Renewable Volume Obligations under Sec. 80.1430, must demonstrate
pursuant to Sec. 80.1451(a)(1) that it is retiring for compliance
purposes a sufficient number of RINs to satisfy the following
equations:
(i) Cellulosic biofuel.
([Sigma]RINNUM)CB,i + ([Sigma]RINNUM)CB,i-1 =
RVOCB,i
Where:
([Sigma]RINNUM)CB,i = Sum of all owned gallon-RINs that
are valid for use in complying with the cellulosic biofuel RVO, were
generated in year i, and are being applied towards the
RVOCB,i, in gallons.
([Sigma]RINNUM)CB,i-1 = Sum of all owned gallon-RINs that
are valid for use in complying with the cellulosic biofuel RVO, were
generated in year i-1, and are being applied towards the
RVOCB,i, in gallons.
RVOCB,i = The Renewable Volume Obligation for cellulosic
biofuel for the obligated party or renewable fuel exporter for
calendar year i, in gallons, pursuant to Sec. 80.1407 or Sec.
80.1430.
(ii) Biomass-based diesel. Use the equation in this paragraph,
except as provided in paragraph (a)(7) of this section.
([Sigma]RINNUM)BBD,i + ([Sigma]RINNUM)BBD,i-1 =
RVOBBD,i
Where:
([Sigma]RINNUM)BBD,i = Sum of all owned gallon-RINs that
are valid for use in complying with the biomass-based diesel RVO,
were generated in year i, and are being applied towards the
RVOBBD,i, in gallons.
([Sigma]RINNUM)BBD,i-1 = Sum of all owned gallon-RINs
that are valid for use in complying with the biomass-based diesel
RVO, were generated in year i-1, and are being applied towards the
RVOBBD,i, in gallons.
RVOBBD,i = The Renewable Volume Obligation for biomass-
based diesel for the obligated party or renewable fuel exporter for
calendar year i after 2010, in gallons, pursuant to Sec. 80.1407 or
Sec. 80.1430.
(iii) Advanced biofuel.
([Sigma]RINNUM)AB,i + ([Sigma]RINNUM)AB,i-1 =
RVOAB,i
Where:
([Sigma]RINNUM)AB,i = Sum of all owned gallon-RINs that
are valid for use in complying with the advanced biofuel RVO, were
generated in year i, and are being applied towards the
RVOAB,i, in gallons.
([Sigma]RINNUM)AB,i-1 = Sum of all owned gallon-RINs that
are valid for use in complying with the advanced biofuel RVO, were
generated in year i-1, and are being applied towards the
RVOAB,i, in gallons.
RVOAB,i = The Renewable Volume Obligation for advanced
biofuel for the obligated party or renewable fuel exporter for
calendar year i, in gallons, pursuant to Sec. 80.1407 or Sec.
80.1430.
(iv) Renewable fuel.
([Sigma]RINNUM)RF,i + ([Sigma]RINNUM)RF,i-1 =
RVORF,i
Where:
([Sigma]RINNUM)RF,i = Sum of all owned gallon-RINs that
are valid for use in complying with the renewable fuel RVO, were
generated in year i, and are being applied towards the
RVORF,i, in gallons.
([Sigma]RINNUM)RF,i-1 = Sum of all owned gallon-RINs that
are valid for use in complying with the renewable fuel RVO, were
generated in year i-1, and are being applied towards the
RVORF,i, in gallons.
RVORF,i = The Renewable Volume Obligation for renewable
fuel for the obligated party or renewable fuel exporter for calendar
year i, in gallons, pursuant to Sec. 80.1407 or Sec. 80.1430.
(2) Except as described in paragraph (a)(4) of this section, RINs
that are valid for use in complying with each Renewable Volume
Obligation are determined by their D codes.
(i) RINs with a D code of 3 or 7 are valid for compliance with the
cellulosic biofuel RVO.
(ii) RINs with a D code of 4 or 7 are valid for compliance with the
biomass-based diesel RVO.
(iii) RINs with a D code of 3, 4, 5, or 7 are valid for compliance
with the advanced biofuel RVO.
(iv) RINs with a D code of 3, 4, 5, 6, or 7 are valid for
compliance with the renewable fuel RVO.
(3)(i) Except as provided in paragraph (a)(3)(ii) of this section,
a party may use the same RIN to demonstrate compliance with more than
one RVO so long as it is valid for compliance with all RVOs to which it
is applied.
(ii) A cellulosic diesel RIN with a D code of 7 cannot be used to
demonstrate compliance with both a cellulosic biofuel RVO and a
biomass-based diesel RVO.
(4) Notwithstanding the requirements of Sec. 80.1428(c) or
paragraph (a)(6)(i) of this section, for purposes of demonstrating
compliance for calendar years 2010 or 2011, RINs generated pursuant to
Sec. 80.1126 that have not been used for compliance purposes may be
used for compliance in 2010 or 2011, as follows, insofar as permissible
pursuant to paragraphs (a)(5) and (a)(7)(iii) of this section:
(i) A RIN generated pursuant to Sec. 80.1126 with a D code of 2
and an RR code of 15 or 17 is deemed equivalent to a RIN generated
pursuant to Sec. 80.1426 having a D code of 4.
(ii) A RIN generated pursuant to Sec. 80.1126 with a D code of 1
is deemed equivalent to a RIN generated pursuant to Sec. 80.1426
having a D code of 3.
(iii) All other RINs generated pursuant to Sec. 80.1126 are deemed
equivalent to RINs generated pursuant to Sec. 80.1426 having D codes
of 6.
(iv) A RIN generated pursuant to Sec. 80.1126 that was retired
pursuant to Sec. 80.1129(e) because the associated volume of fuel was
not used as motor vehicle fuel may be reinstated for use in complying
with a 2010 RVO pursuant to Sec. 80.1429(g).
(5) The value of ([Sigma]RINNUM)i-1 may not exceed
values determined by the following inequalities except as provided in
paragraph (a)(7)(iii) of this section and Sec. 80.1442(d):
([Sigma]RINNUM)CB,i-1 <= 0.20 * RVOCB,i
([Sigma]RINNUM)BBD,i-1 <= 0.20 * RVOBBD,i
([Sigma]RINNUM)AB,i-1 <= 0.20 * RVOAB,i
([Sigma]RINNUM)RF,i-1 <= 0.20 * RVORF,i
(6) Except as provided in paragraph (a)(7) of this section:
(i) RINs may only be used to demonstrate compliance with the RVOs
for the calendar year in which they were generated or the following
calendar year.
(ii) RINs used to demonstrate compliance in one year cannot be used
to demonstrate compliance in any other year.
(7) Biomass-based diesel in 2010.
(i) Prior to determining compliance with the 2010 biomass-based
diesel RVO, obligated parties may reduce the value of
RVOBBD,2010 by an amount equal to the sum of all 2008 and
2009 RINs that they used for compliance purposes for calendar year 2009
which have a D code of 2 and an RR code of 15 or 17.
(ii) For calendar year 2010 only, the following equation shall be
used to determine compliance with the biomass-based diesel RVO instead
of the equation in paragraph (a)(1)(ii) of this section:
([Sigma]RINNUM)BBD,2010 + ([Sigma]RINNUM)BBD,2009
+ ([Sigma]RINNUM)BBD,2008 = RVOBBD,2010
Where:
([Sigma]RINNUM)BBD,2010 = Sum of all owned gallon-RINs
that are valid for use in complying with the biomass-based diesel
RVO, were generated in year 2010, and are being applied towards the
RVOBBD,2010, in gallons.
([Sigma]RINNUM)BBD,2009 = Sum of all owned gallon-RINs
that are valid for use in complying with the biomass-based diesel
RVO, were generated in year 2009, have not previously been used for
compliance purposes, and are being applied towards the
RVOBBD,2010, in gallons.
([Sigma]RINNUM)BBD,2008 = Sum of all owned gallon-RINs
that are valid for use in complying with the biomass-based diesel
RVO, were generated in year 2008, have not previously been used for
compliance
[[Page 14878]]
purposes, and are being applied towards the RVOBBD,2010,
in gallons.
RVOBBD,2010 = The Renewable Volume Obligation for
biomass-based diesel for the obligated party for calendar year 2010,
in gallons, pursuant to Sec. 80.1407 or Sec. 80.1430, as adjusted
by paragraph (a)(7)(i) of this section.
(iii) The values of ([Sigma]RINNUM)2008 and
([Sigma]RINNUM)2009 may not exceed values determined by both
of the following inequalities:
([Sigma]RINNUM)BBD,2008 <= 0.087 * RVOBBD,2010
([Sigma]RINNUM)BBD,2008 + ([Sigma]RINNUM)BBD,2009
<= 0.20 * RVOBBD,2010
(8) A party may only use a RIN for purposes of meeting the
requirements of paragraph (a)(1) or (a)(7) of this section if that RIN
is a separated RIN with a K code of 2 obtained in accordance with
Sec. Sec. 80.1428 and 80.1429.
(9) The number of gallon-RINs associated with a given batch-RIN
that can be used for compliance with the RVOs shall be calculated from
the following formula:
RINNUM = EEEEEEEE - SSSSSSSS + 1
Where:
RINNUM = Number of gallon-RINs associated with a batch-RIN, where
each gallon-RIN represents one gallon of renewable fuel for
compliance purposes.
EEEEEEEE = Batch-RIN component identifying the last gallon-RIN
associated with the batch-RIN.
SSSSSSSS = Batch-RIN component identifying the first gallon-RIN
associated with the batch-RIN.
(b) Deficit carryovers.
(1) An obligated party or an exporter of renewable fuel that fails
to meet the requirements of paragraph (a)(1) or (a)(7) of this section
for calendar year i is permitted to carry a deficit into year i+1 under
the following conditions:
(i) The party did not carry a deficit into calendar year i from
calendar year i-1 for the same RVO.
(ii) The party subsequently meets the requirements of paragraph
(a)(1) of this section for calendar year i+1 and carries no deficit
into year i+2 for the same RVO.
(iii) For compliance with the biomass-based diesel RVO in calendar
year 2011, the deficit which is carried over from 2010 is no larger
than 57% of the party's 2010 biomass-based diesel RVO as determined
prior to any adjustment applied pursuant to paragraph (a)(7)(i) of this
section.
(iv) The party uses the same compliance approach in year i+1 as it
did in year i, as provided in Sec. 80.1406(c)(2).
(2) A deficit is calculated according to the following formula:
Di = RVOi - [([Sigma]RINNUM)i +
([Sigma]RINNUM)i-1]
Where:
Di = The deficit, in gallons, generated in calendar year
i that must be carried over to year i+1 if allowed pursuant to
paragraph (b)(1) of this section.
RVOi = The Renewable Volume Obligation for the obligated
party or renewable fuel exporter for calendar year i, in gallons.
([Sigma]RINNUM)i = Sum of all acquired gallon-RINs that
were generated in year i and are being applied towards the
RVOi, in gallons.
([Sigma]RINNUM)i-1 = Sum of all acquired gallon-RINs that
were generated in year i-1 and are being applied towards the
RVOi, in gallons.
Sec. 80.1428 General requirements for RIN distribution.
(a) RINs assigned to volumes of renewable fuel.
(1) Assigned RIN, for the purposes of this subpart, means a RIN
assigned to a volume of renewable fuel pursuant to Sec. 80.1426(e)
with a K code of 1.
(2) Except as provided in Sec. 80.1429, no person can separate a
RIN that has been assigned to a batch pursuant to Sec. 80.1426(e).
(3) An assigned RIN cannot be transferred to another person without
simultaneously transferring a volume of renewable fuel to that same
person.
(4) No more than 2.5 assigned gallon-RINs with a K code of 1 can be
transferred to another person with every gallon of renewable fuel
transferred to that same person.
(5)(i) On each of the dates listed in paragraph (a)(5)(ii) of this
section in any calendar year, the following equation must be satisfied
for assigned RINs and volumes of renewable fuel owned by a person:
[Sigma](RIN)D <= [Sigma](Vsi * 2.5)D
Where:
D = Applicable date.
[Sigma](RIN)D = Sum of all assigned gallon-RINs with a K
code of 1 that are owned on date D.
(Vsi)D = Volume i of renewable fuel owned on
date D, standardized to 60 [deg]F, in gallons.
(ii) The applicable dates are March 31, June 30, September 30, and
December 31.
(6) Any transfer of ownership of assigned RINs must be documented
on product transfer documents generated pursuant to Sec. 80.1453.
(i) The RIN must be recorded on the product transfer document used
to transfer ownership of the volume of renewable fuel to another
person; or
(ii) The RIN must be recorded on a separate product transfer
document transferred to the same person on the same day as the product
transfer document used to transfer ownership of the volume of renewable
fuel.
(b) RINs separated from volumes of renewable fuel.
(1) Separated RIN, for the purposes of this subpart, means a RIN
with a K code of 2 that has been separated from a volume of renewable
fuel pursuant to Sec. 80.1429.
(2) Any person that has registered pursuant to Sec. 80.1450 can
own a separated RIN.
(3) Separated RINs can be transferred any number of times.
(c) RIN expiration. Except as provided in Sec. 80.1427(a)(7), a
RIN is valid for compliance during the calendar year in which it was
generated, or the following calendar year. Any RIN that is not used for
compliance purposes for the calendar year in which it was generated, or
for the following calendar year, will be considered an expired RIN.
Pursuant to Sec. 80.1431(a), an expired RIN that is used for
compliance will be considered an invalid RIN.
(d) Any batch-RIN can be divided into multiple batch-RINs, each
representing a smaller number of gallon-RINs, if all of the following
conditions are met:
(1) All RIN components other than SSSSSSSS and EEEEEEEE are
identical for the original parent and newly formed daughter RINs.
(2) The sum of the gallon-RINs associated with the multiple
daughter batch-RINs is equal to the gallon-RINs associated with the
parent batch-RIN.
Sec. 80.1429 Requirements for separating RINs from volumes of
renewable fuel.
(a)(1) Separation of a RIN from a volume of renewable fuel means
termination of the assignment of the RIN to a volume of renewable fuel.
(2) RINs that have been separated from volumes of renewable fuel
become separated RINs subject to the provisions of Sec. 80.1428(b).
(b) A RIN that is assigned to a volume of renewable fuel can be
separated from that volume only under one of the following conditions:
(1) Except as provided in paragraphs (b)(7) and (b)(9) of this
section, a party that is an obligated party according to Sec. 80.1406
must separate any RINs that have been assigned to a volume of renewable
fuel if that party owns that volume.
(2) Except as provided in paragraph (b)(6) of this section, any
party that owns a volume of renewable fuel must separate any RINs that
have been assigned to that volume once the volume is blended with
gasoline or diesel to produce a transportation fuel, heating oil, or
jet fuel. A party may separate up to 2.5 RINs per gallon of blended
renewable fuel.
[[Page 14879]]
(3) Any party that exports a volume of renewable fuel must separate
any RINs that have been assigned to the exported volume. A party may
separate up to 2.5 RINs per gallon of exported renewable fuel.
(4) Any party that produces, imports, owns, sells, or uses a volume
of neat renewable fuel, or a blend of renewable fuel and diesel fuel,
must separate any RINs that have been assigned to that volume of neat
renewable fuel or that blend if:
(i) The party designates the neat renewable fuel or blend as
transportation fuel, heating oil, or jet fuel; and
(ii) The neat renewable fuel or blend is used without further
blending, in the designated form, as transportation fuel, heating oil,
or jet fuel.
(5) Any party that produces, imports, owns, sells, or uses a volume
of electricity or biogas for which RINs have been generated in
accordance with Sec. 80.1426(f) must separate any RINs that have been
assigned to that volume of renewable electricity or biogas if:
(i) The party designates the electricity or biogas as
transportation fuel; and
(ii) The electricity or biogas is used as transportation fuel.
(6) RINs assigned to a volume of biodiesel (mono-alkyl ester) can
only be separated from that volume pursuant to paragraph (b)(2) of this
section if such biodiesel is blended into diesel fuel at a
concentration of 80 volume percent biodiesel (mono-alkyl ester) or
less.
(i) This paragraph (b)(6) shall not apply to biodiesel owned by
obligated parties or to exported volumes of biodiesel.
(ii) This paragraph (b)(6) shall not apply to parties meeting the
requirements of paragraph (b)(4) of this section.
(7) For RINs that an obligated party generates for renewable fuel
that has not been blended into gasoline or diesel to produce a
transportation fuel, heating oil, or jet fuel, the obligated party can
only separate such RINs from volumes of renewable fuel if the number of
gallon-RINs separated in a calendar year are less than or equal to a
limit set as follows:
(i) For RINs with a D code of 3, the limit shall be equal to
RVOCB.
(ii) For RINs with a D code of 4, the limit shall be equal to
RVOBBD.
(iii) For RINs with a D code of 7, the limit shall be equal to the
larger of RVOBBD or RVOCB.
(iv) For RINs with a D code of 5, the limit shall be equal to
RVOAB-RVOCB-RVOBBD.
(v) For RINs with a D code of 6, the limit shall be equal to
RVORF-RVOAB.
(8) Small refiners and small refineries may only separate RINs that
have been assigned to volumes of renewable fuel that the party blends
into gasoline or diesel to produce transportation fuel, heating oil, or
jet fuel, or that the party used as transportation fuel, heating oil,
or jet fuel. This paragraph (b)(8) shall apply only under the following
conditions:
(i) During the calendar year in which the party has received a
small refinery exemption under Sec. 80.1441 or a small refiner
exemption under Sec. 80.1442; and
(ii) The party is not otherwise an obligated party during the
period of time that the small refinery or small refiner exemption is in
effect.
(9) Except as provided in paragraphs (b)(2) through (b)(5) and
(b)(8) of this section, RINs owned by obligated parties whose non-
export renewable volume obligations are solely related to the addition
of blendstocks into a volume of finished gasoline, finished diesel
fuel, RBOB, or CBOB, can only be separated from volumes of renewable
fuel if the number of gallon-RINs separated in a calendar year are less
than or equal to a limit set as follows:
(i) For RINs with a D code of 3, the limit shall be equal to
RVOCB.
(ii) For RINs with a D code of 4, the limit shall be equal to
RVOBBD.
(iii) For RINs with a D code of 7, the limit shall be equal to the
larger of RVOBBD or RVOCB.
(iv) For RINs with a D code of 5, the limit shall be equal to
RVOAB-RVOCB-RVOBBD.
(v) For RINs with a D code of 6, the limit shall be equal to
RVORF-RVOAB.
(c) The party responsible for separating a RIN from a volume of
renewable fuel shall change the K code in the RIN from a value of 1 to
a value of 2 prior to transferring the RIN to any other party.
(d) Upon and after separation of a RIN from its associated volume
of renewable fuel, the separated RIN must be accompanied by
documentation when transferred to another party pursuant to Sec.
80.1453.
(e) Upon and after separation of a RIN from its associated volume
of renewable fuel, product transfer documents used to transfer
ownership of the volume must meet the requirements of Sec. 80.1453.
(f) Any party that uses a renewable fuel in any application that is
not transportation fuel, heating oil, or jet fuel, or designates a
renewable fuel for use as something other than transportation fuel,
heating oil, or jet fuel, must retire any RINs received with that
renewable fuel and report the retired RINs in the applicable reports
under Sec. 80.1451.
(g) Any 2009 RINs retired pursuant to Sec. 80.1129 because
renewable fuel was used in a non-motor vehicle application, heating
oil, or jet fuel may be reinstated by the retiring party for sale or
use to demonstrate compliance with a 2010 RVO.
Sec. 80.1430 Requirements for exporters of renewable fuels.
(a) Any party that owns any amount of renewable fuel, whether in
its neat form or blended with gasoline or diesel, that is exported from
any of the regions described in Sec. 80.1426(b) shall acquire
sufficient RINs to comply with all applicable Renewable Volume
Obligations under paragraph (b) of this section representing the
exported renewable fuel.
(b) Renewable Volume Obligations. An exporter of renewable fuel
shall determine its Renewable Volume Obligations from the volumes of
the renewable fuel exported.
(1) Cellulosic biofuel.
RVOCB,i = [Sigma](VOLk *
EVk)i + DCB,i-1
Where:
RVOCB,i = The Renewable Volume Obligation for cellulosic
biofuel for the exporter for calendar year i, in gallons.
k = A discrete volume of exported renewable fuel.
VOLk = The standardized volume of discrete volume k of
exported renewable fuel that the exporter knows or has reason to
know is cellulosic biofuel, in gallons, calculated in accordance
with Sec. 80.1426(f)(8).
EVk = The equivalence value associated with discrete
volume k.
[Sigma] = Sum involving all volumes of cellulosic biofuel exported.
DCB,i-1 = Deficit carryover from the previous year
for cellulosic biofuel, in gallons.
(2) Biomass-based diesel.
RVOBBD,i = [Sigma](VOLk *
EVk)i + DBBD,i-1
Where:
RVOBBD,i = The Renewable Volume Obligation for biomass-
based diesel for the exporter for calendar year i, in gallons.
k = A discrete volume of exported renewable fuel.
VOLk = The standardized volume of discrete volume k of
exported renewable fuel that is biodiesel or renewable diesel, or
that the exporter knows or has reason to know is biomass-based
diesel, in gallons, calculated in accordance with Sec.
80.1426(f)(8).
EVk = The equivalence value associated with discrete
volume k.
[Sigma] = Sum involving all volumes of biomass-based diesel
exported.
DBBD,i-1 = Deficit carryover from the previous year for
biomass-based diesel, in gallons.
(3) Advanced biofuel.
RVOAB,i = [Sigma](VOLk *
EVk)i + DAB,i-1
[[Page 14880]]
Where:
RVOAB,i = The Renewable Volume Obligation for advanced
biofuel for the exporter for calendar year i, in gallons.
k = A discrete volume of exported renewable fuel.
VOLk = The standardized volume of discrete volume k of
exported renewable fuel that is biodiesel or renewable diesel, or
that the exporter knows or has reason to know is biomass-based
diesel, cellulosic biofuel, or advanced biofuel, in gallons,
calculated in accordance with Sec. 80.1426(f)(8).
EVk = The equivalence value associated with discrete
volume k.
[Sigma] = Sum involving all volumes of advanced biofuel exported.
DAB,i-1 = Deficit carryover from the previous year for
advanced biofuel, in gallons.
(4) Renewable fuel.
RVORF,i = [Sigma](VOLk *
EVk)i + DRF,i-1
Where:
RVORF,i = The Renewable Volume Obligation for renewable
fuel for the exporter for calendar year i, in gallons.
k = A discrete volume of exported renewable fuel.
VOLk = The standardized volume of discrete volume k of
any exported renewable fuel, in gallons, calculated in accordance
with Sec. 80.1426(f)(8).
EVk = The equivalence value associated with discrete
volume k.
[Sigma] = Sum involving all volumes of renewable fuel exported.
DRF,i-1 = Deficit carryover from the previous year for
renewable fuel, in gallons.
(c) If the exporter knows or has reason to know that a volume of
exported renewable fuel is cellulosic diesel, he must treat the
exported volume as either cellulosic biofuel or biomass-based diesel
when determining his Renewable Volume Obligations pursuant to paragraph
(b) of this section.
(d) For the purposes of calculating the Renewable Volume
Obligations:
(1) If the equivalence value for a volume of exported renewable
fuel can be determined pursuant to Sec. 80.1415 based on its
composition, then the appropriate equivalence value shall be used in
the calculation of the exporter's Renewable Volume Obligations under
paragraph (b) of this section.
(2) If the category of the exported renewable fuel is known to be
biomass-based diesel but the composition is unknown, the value of
EVk shall be 1.5.
(3) If neither the category nor composition of a volume of exported
renewable fuel can be determined, the value of EVk shall be
1.0.
(e) For renewable fuels that are in the form of a blend with
gasoline or diesel at the time of export, the exporter shall determine
the volume of exported renewable fuel based on one of the following:
(1) Information from the supplier of the blend of the concentration
of renewable fuel in the blend.
(2) Determination of the renewable portion of the blend using
Method B or Method C of ASTM D 6866 (incorporated by reference, see
Sec. 80.1468), or an alternative test method as approved by the EPA.
(3) Assuming the maximum concentration of the renewable fuel in the
blend as allowed by law and/or regulation.
(f) Each exporter of renewable fuel must demonstrate compliance
with its RVOs pursuant to Sec. 80.1427.
Sec. 80.1431 Treatment of invalid RINs.
(a) Invalid RINs.
(1) An invalid RIN is a RIN that is any of the following:
(i) A duplicate of a valid RIN.
(ii) Was based on incorrect volumes or volumes that have not been
standardized to 60 [deg]F.
(iii) Has expired, as provided in Sec. 80.1428(c).
(iv) Was based on an incorrect equivalence value.
(v) Deemed invalid under Sec. 80.1467(g).
(vi) Does not represent renewable fuel as defined in Sec. 80.1401.
(vii) Was assigned an incorrect ``D'' code value under Sec.
80.1426(f) for the associated volume of fuel.
(viii) Was improperly separated pursuant to Sec. 80.1429.
(ix) Was otherwise improperly generated.
(2) In the event that the same RIN is transferred to two or more
parties, all such RINs are deemed invalid, unless EPA in its sole
discretion determines that some portion of these RINs is valid.
(b) In the case of RINs that are invalid, the following provisions
apply:
(1) Upon determination by any party that RINs owned are invalid,
the party must keep copies and adjust its records, reports, and
compliance calculations in which the invalid RINs were used. The party
must retire the invalid RINs in the applicable RIN transaction reports
under Sec. 80.1451(c)(2) for the quarter in which the RINs were
determined to be invalid.
(2) Invalid RINs cannot be used to achieve compliance with the
Renewable Volume Obligations of an obligated party or exporter,
regardless of the party's good faith belief that the RINs were valid at
the time they were acquired.
(3) Any valid RINs remaining after invalid RINs are retired must
first be applied to correct the transfer of invalid RINs to another
party before applying the valid RINs to meet the party's Renewable
Volume Obligations at the end of the compliance year.
Sec. 80.1432 Reported spillage or disposal of renewable fuel.
(a) A reported spillage or disposal under this subpart means a
spillage or disposal of renewable fuel associated with a requirement by
a federal, state, or local authority to report the spillage or
disposal.
(b) Except as provided in paragraph (c) of this section, in the
event of a reported spillage or disposal of any volume of renewable
fuel, the owner of the renewable fuel must retire a number of RINs
corresponding to the volume of spilled or disposed of renewable fuel
multiplied by its equivalence value.
(1) If the equivalence value for the spilled or disposed of volume
may be determined pursuant to Sec. 80.1415 based on its composition,
then the appropriate equivalence value shall be used.
(2) If the equivalence value for a spilled or disposed of volume of
renewable fuel cannot be determined, the equivalence value shall be
1.0.
(c) If the owner of a volume of renewable fuel that is spilled or
disposed of and reported establishes that no RINs were generated to
represent the volume, then no RINs shall be retired.
(d) A RIN that is retired under paragraph (b) of this section:
(1) Must be reported as a retired RIN in the applicable reports
under Sec. 80.1451.
(2) May not be transferred to another person or used by any
obligated party to demonstrate compliance with the party's Renewable
Volume Obligations.
Sec. Sec. 80.1433-80.1439 [Reserved]
Sec. 80.1440 What are the provisions for blenders who handle and
blend less than 125,000 gallons of renewable fuel per year?
(a) Renewable fuel blenders who handle and blend less than 125,000
gallons of renewable fuel per year, and who do not have Renewable
Volume Obligations, are permitted to delegate their RIN-related
responsibilities to the party directly upstream of them who supplied
the renewable fuel for blending.
(b) The RIN-related responsibilities that may be delegated directly
upstream include all of the following:
(1) The RIN separation requirements of Sec. 80.1429.
(2) The reporting requirements of Sec. 80.1451.
(3) The recordkeeping requirements of Sec. 80.1454.
(4) The attest engagement requirements of Sec. 80.1464.
(c) For upstream delegation of RIN-related responsibilities, both
parties
[[Page 14881]]
must agree on the delegation, and a quarterly written statement signed
by both parties must be included with the reporting party's reports
under Sec. 80.1451.
(1) Both parties must keep copies of the signed quarterly written
statement agreeing to the upward delegation for 5 years.
(2) Parties delegating their RIN responsibilities upward shall keep
copies of their registration forms as submitted to EPA.
(3) If EPA finds that a renewable fuel blender improperly delegated
its RIN-related responsibilities under this subpart M, the blender will
be held accountable for any RINs separated and will be subject to all
RIN-related responsibilities under this subpart.
(d) Renewable fuel blenders who handle and blend less than 125,000
gallons of renewable fuel per year and delegate their RIN-related
responsibilities under paragraph (b) of this section must register
pursuant to Sec. 80.1450(e).
(e) Renewable fuel blenders who handle and blend less than 125,000
gallons of renewable fuel per year and who do not opt to delegate their
RIN-related responsibilities will be subject to all requirements stated
in paragraph (b) of this section, and all other applicable requirements
of this subpart M.
Sec. 80.1441 Small refinery exemption.
(a)(1) Transportation fuel produced at a refinery by a refiner, or
foreign refiner (as defined at Sec. 80.1465(a)), is exempt from
January 1, 2010 through December 31, 2010 from the renewable fuel
standards of Sec. 80.1405, and the owner or operator of the refinery,
or foreign refinery, is exempt from the requirements that apply to
obligated parties under this subpart M for fuel produced at the
refinery if the refinery meets the definition of a small refinery under
Sec. 80.1401 for calendar year 2006.
(2) The exemption of paragraph (a)(1) of this section shall apply
unless a refiner chooses to waive this exemption (as described in
paragraph (f) of this section), or the exemption is extended (as
described in paragraph (e) of this section).
(3) For the purposes of this section, the term ``refiner'' shall
include foreign refiners.
(4) This exemption shall only apply to refineries that process
crude oil through refinery processing units.
(5) The small refinery exemption is effective immediately, except
as specified in paragraph (b)(3) of this section.
(6) Refiners who own refineries that qualified as small under 40
CFR 80.1141 do not need to resubmit a small refinery verification
letter under this subpart M. This paragraph (a) does not supersede
Sec. 80.1141.
(b)(1) A refiner owning a small refinery must submit a verification
letter to EPA containing all of the following information:
(i) The annual average aggregate daily crude oil throughput for the
period January 1, 2006 through December 31, 2006 (as determined by
dividing the aggregate throughput for the calendar year by the number
365).
(ii) A letter signed by the president, chief operating or chief
executive officer of the company, or his/her designee, stating that the
information contained in the letter is true to the best of his/her
knowledge, and that the refinery was small as of December 31, 2006.
(iii) Name, address, phone number, facsimile number, and e-mail
address of a corporate contact person.
(2) Verification letters must be submitted by July 1, 2010 to one
of the addresses listed in paragraph (h) of this section.
(3) For foreign refiners the small refinery exemption shall be
effective upon approval, by EPA, of a small refinery application. The
application must contain all of the elements required for small
refinery verification letters (as specified in paragraph (b)(1) of this
section), must satisfy the provisions of Sec. 80.1465(f) through (i)
and (o), and must be submitted by July 1, 2010 to one of the addresses
listed in paragraph (h) of this section.
(4) Small refinery verification letters are not required for those
refiners who have already submitted a complete verification letter
under subpart K of this part 80. Verification letters submitted under
subpart K prior to July 1, 2010 that satisfy the requirements of
subpart K shall be deemed to satisfy the requirements for verification
letters under this subpart M.
(c) If EPA finds that a refiner provided false or inaccurate
information regarding a refinery's crude throughput (pursuant to
paragraph (b)(1)(i) of this section) in its small refinery verification
letter, the exemption will be void as of the effective date of these
regulations.
(d) If a refiner is complying on an aggregate basis for multiple
refineries, any such refiner may exclude from the calculation of its
Renewable Volume Obligations (under Sec. 80.1407) transportation fuel
from any refinery receiving the small refinery exemption under
paragraph (a) of this section.
(e)(1) The exemption period in paragraph (a) of this section shall
be extended by the Administrator for a period of not less than two
additional years if a study by the Secretary of Energy determines that
compliance with the requirements of this subpart would impose a
disproportionate economic hardship on a small refinery.
(2) A refiner may petition the Administrator for an extension of
its small refinery exemption, based on disproportionate economic
hardship, at any time.
(i) A petition for an extension of the small refinery exemption
must specify the factors that demonstrate a disproportionate economic
hardship and must provide a detailed discussion regarding the hardship
the refinery would face in producing transportation fuel meeting the
requirements of Sec. 80.1405 and the date the refiner anticipates that
compliance with the requirements can reasonably be achieved at the
small refinery.
(ii) The Administrator shall act on such a petition not later than
90 days after the date of receipt of the petition.
(f) At any time, a refiner with a small refinery exemption under
paragraph (a) of this section may waive that exemption upon
notification to EPA.
(1) A refiner's notice to EPA that it intends to waive its small
refinery exemption must be received by November 1 to be effective in
the next compliance year.
(2) The waiver will be effective beginning on January 1 of the
following calendar year, at which point the transportation fuel
produced at that refinery will be subject to the renewable fuels
standard of Sec. 80.1405 and the owner or operator of the refinery
shall be subject to all other requirements that apply to obligated
parties under this Subpart M.
(3) The waiver notice must be sent to EPA at one of the addresses
listed in paragraph (h) of this section.
(g) A refiner that acquires a refinery from either an approved
small refiner (as defined under Sec. 80.1442(a)) or another refiner
with an approved small refinery exemption under paragraph (a) of this
section shall notify EPA in writing no later than 20 days following the
acquisition.
(h) Verification letters under paragraph (b) of this section,
petitions for small refinery hardship extensions under paragraph (e) of
this section, and small refinery exemption waiver notices under
paragraph (f) of this section shall be sent to one of the following
addresses:
(1) For US mail: U.S. EPA, Attn: RFS Program, 6406J, 1200
Pennsylvania Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20460.
(2) For overnight or courier services: U.S. EPA, Attn: RFS Program,
6406J,
[[Page 14882]]
1310 L Street, NW., 6th floor, Washington, DC 20005. (202) 343-9038.
Sec. 80.1442 What are the provisions for small refiners under the RFS
program?
(a)(1) To qualify as a small refiner under this section, a refiner
must meet all of the following criteria:
(i) The refiner produced transportation fuel at its refineries by
processing crude oil through refinery processing units from January 1,
2006 through December 31, 2006.
(ii) The refiner employed an average of no more than 1,500 people,
based on the average number of employees for all pay periods for
calendar year 2006 for all subsidiary companies, all parent companies,
all subsidiaries of the parent companies, and all joint venture
partners.
(iii) The refiner had a corporate-average crude oil capacity less
than or equal to 155,000 barrels per calendar day (bpcd) for 2006.
(2) For the purposes of this section, the term ``refiner'' shall
include foreign refiners.
(3) Refiners who qualified as small under 40 CFR 80.1142 do not
need to reapply for small refiner status under this subpart M. This
paragraph (a) does not supersede Sec. 80.1142.
(b)(1) The small refiner exemption is effective immediately, except
as provided in paragraph (b)(5) of this section.
(2) Refiners who qualify for the small refiner exemption under
paragraph (a) of this section must submit a verification letter (and
any other relevant information) to EPA by July 1, 2010. The small
refiner verification letter must include all of the following
information for the refiner and for all subsidiary companies, all
parent companies, all subsidiaries of the parent companies, and all
joint venture partners:
(i) A listing of the name and address of each company location
where any employee worked for the period January 1, 2006 through
December 31, 2006.
(ii) The average number of employees at each location based on the
number of employees for each pay period for the period January 1, 2006
through December 31, 2006.
(iii) The type of business activities carried out at each location.
(iv) For joint ventures, the total number of employees includes the
combined employee count of all corporate entities in the venture.
(v) For government-owned refiners, the total employee count
includes all government employees.
(vi) The total corporate crude oil capacity of each refinery as
reported to the Energy Information Administration (EIA) of the U.S.
Department of Energy (DOE), for the period January 1, 2006 through
December 31, 2006. The information submitted to EIA is presumed to be
correct. In cases where a company disagrees with this information, the
company may petition EPA with appropriate data to correct the record
when the company submits its application.
(vii) The verification letter must be signed by the president,
chief operating or chief executive officer of the company, or his/her
designee, stating that the information is true to the best of his/her
knowledge, and that the company owned the refinery as of December 31,
2006.
(viii) Name, address, phone number, facsimile number, and e-mail
address of a corporate contact person.
(3) In the case of a refiner who acquires or reactivates a refinery
that was shutdown or non-operational between January 1, 2005 and
January 1, 2006, the information required in paragraph (b)(2) of this
section must be provided for the time period since the refiner acquired
or reactivated the refinery.
(4) EPA will notify a refiner of its approval or disapproval of the
application for small refiner status by letter.
(5) For foreign refiners the small refiner exemption shall be
effective upon approval, by EPA, of a small refiner application. The
application must contain all of the elements required for small refiner
verification letters (as specified in paragraph (b)(2) of this
section), must satisfy the provisions of Sec. 80.1465(f) through (h)
and (o), must demonstrate compliance with the crude oil capacity
criterion of paragraph (a)(1)(iii) of this section, and must be
submitted by July 1, 2010 to one of the addresses listed in paragraph
(i) of this section.
(6) Small refiner verification letters submitted under subpart K
(Sec. 80.1142) prior to July 1, 2010 that satisfy the requirements of
subpart K shall be deemed to satisfy the requirements for small refiner
verification letters under this subpart M.
(c) Small refiner temporary exemption.
(1) Transportation fuel produced by an approved small refiner, or
foreign small refiner (as defined at Sec. 80.1465(a)), is exempt from
January 1, 2010 through December 31, 2010 from the renewable fuel
standards of Sec. 80.1405 and the requirements that apply to obligated
parties under this subpart if the refiner or foreign refiner meets all
the criteria of paragraph (a)(1) of this section.
(2) The small refiner exemption shall apply to an approved small
refiner unless that refiner chooses to waive this exemption (as
described in paragraph (d) of this section).
(d)(1) A refiner with approved small refiner status may, at any
time, waive the small refiner exemption under paragraph (c) of this
section upon notification to EPA.
(2) A refiner's notice to EPA that it intends to waive the small
refiner exemption must be received by November 1 of a given year in
order for the waiver to be effective for the following calendar year.
The waiver will be effective beginning on January 1 of the following
calendar year, at which point the refiner will be subject to the
renewable fuel standards of Sec. 80.1405 and the requirements that
apply to obligated parties under this subpart.
(3) The waiver must be sent to EPA at one of the addresses listed
in paragraph (i) of this section.
(e) Refiners who qualify as small refiners under this section and
subsequently fail to meet all of the qualifying criteria as set out in
paragraph (a) of this section are disqualified as small refiners of
January 1 of the next calendar year, except as provided under
paragraphs (d) and (e)(2) of this section.
(1) In the event such disqualification occurs, the refiner shall
notify EPA in writing no later than 20 days following the disqualifying
event.
(2) Disqualification under this paragraph (e) shall not apply in
the case of a merger between two approved small refiners.
(f) If EPA finds that a refiner provided false or inaccurate
information in its small refiner status verification letter under this
subpart M, the refiner will be disqualified as a small refiner as of
the effective date of this subpart.
(g) Any refiner that acquires a refinery from another refiner with
approved small refiner status under paragraph (a) of this section shall
notify EPA in writing no later than 20 days following the acquisition.
(h) Extensions of the small refiner temporary exemption.
(1) A small refiner may apply for an extension of the temporary
exemption of paragraph (c)(1) of this section based on a showing of all
the following:
(i) Circumstances exist that impose disproportionate economic
hardship on the refiner and significantly affects the refiner's ability
to comply with the RFS standards.
(ii) The refiner has made best efforts to comply with the
requirements of this subpart.
[[Page 14883]]
(2) A refiner must apply, and be approved, for small refiner status
under this section.
(3) A small refiner's hardship application must include all the
following information:
(i) A plan demonstrating how the refiner will comply with the
requirements of Sec. 80.1405 (and all other requirements of this
subpart applicable to obligated parties), as expeditiously as possible.
(ii) A detailed description of the refinery configuration and
operations including, at a minimum, all the following information:
(A) The refinery's total crude capacity.
(B) Total crude capacity of any other refineries owned by the same
entity.
(C) Total volume of gasoline and diesel produced at the refinery.
(D) Detailed descriptions of efforts to comply.
(E) Bond rating of the entity that owns the refinery.
(F) Estimated investment needed to comply with the requirements of
this subpart M.
(4) A small refiner shall notify EPA in writing of any changes to
its situation between approval of the extension application and the end
of its approved extension period.
(5) EPA may impose reasonable conditions on extensions of the
temporary exemption, including reducing the length of such an
extension, if conditions or situations change between approval of the
application and the end of the approved extension period.
(i) Small refiner status verification letters, small refiner
exemption waivers, or applications for extensions of the small refiner
temporary exemption under this section must be sent to one of the
following addresses:
(1) For US Mail: U.S. EPA, Attn: RFS Program, 6406J, 1200
Pennsylvania Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20460.
(2) For overnight or courier services: U.S. EPA, Attn: RFS Program,
6406J, 1310 L Street, NW., 6th floor, Washington, DC 20005. (202) 343-
9038.
Sec. 80.1443 What are the opt-in provisions for noncontiguous states
and territories?
(a) Alaska or a United States territory may petition the
Administrator to opt-in to the program requirements of this subpart.
(b) The Administrator will approve the petition if it meets the
provisions of paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section.
(c) The petition must be signed by the Governor of the state or his
authorized representative (or the equivalent official of the
territory).
(d)(1) A petition submitted under this section must be received by
EPA by November 1 for the state or territory to be included in the RFS
program in the next calendar year.
(2) A petition submitted under this section should be sent to
either of the following addresses:
(i) For US Mail: U.S. EPA, Attn: RFS Program, 6406J, 1200
Pennsylvania Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20460.
(ii) For overnight or courier services: U.S. EPA, Attn: RFS
Program, 6406J, 1310 L Street, NW., 6th floor, Washington, DC 20005.
(202) 343-9038.
(e) Upon approval of the petition by the Administrator:
(1) EPA shall calculate the standards for the following year,
including the total gasoline and diesel fuel volume for the state or
territory in question.
(2) Beginning on January 1 of the next calendar year, all gasoline
and diesel fuel refiners and importers in the state or territory for
which a petition has been approved shall be obligated parties as
defined in Sec. 80.1406.
(3) Beginning on January 1 of the next calendar year, all renewable
fuel producers in the state or territory for which a petition has been
approved shall, pursuant to Sec. 80.1426(a)(2), be required to
generate RINs and comply with other requirements of this subpart M that
are applicable to producers of renewable fuel.
Sec. Sec. 80.1444-80.1448 [Reserved]
Sec. 80.1449 What are the Production Outlook Report requirements?
(a) A registered renewable fuel producer or importer, for each of
its facilities, must submit all of the following information, as
applicable, to EPA by March 31 of each year (September 1 for the report
due in 2010):
(1) The type, or types, of renewable fuel expected to be produced
or imported at each facility owned by the renewable fuel producer or
importer.
(2) The volume of each type of renewable fuel expected to be
produced or imported at each facility.
(3) The number of RINs expected to be generated by the renewable
fuel producer or importer for each type of renewable fuel.
(4) Information about all the following:
(i) Existing and planned production capacity.
(ii) Long-range plans for expansion of production capacity at
existing facilities or construction of new facilities.
(iii) Feedstocks and production processes to be used at each
production facility.
(iv) Changes to the facility that would raise or lower emissions of
any greenhouse gases from the facility.
(5) For expanded production capacity that is planned or underway at
each existing facility, or new production facilities that are planned
or underway, information on all the following, as available:
(i) Strategic planning.
(ii) Planning and front-end engineering.
(iii) Detailed engineering and permitting.
(iv) Procurement and construction.
(v) Commissioning and startup.
(6) Whether capital commitments have been made or are projected to
be made.
(b) The information listed in paragraph (a) of this section shall
include the reporting party's best estimates for the five following
calendar years.
(c) Production outlook reports must provide an update of the
progress in each of the areas listed in paragraph (a) of this section
in comparison to information provided in previous year production
outlook reports.
(d) Production outlook reports shall be sent to one of the
following addresses:
(1) For U.S. Mail: U.S. EPA, Attn: RFS Program--Production Outlook
Reports, 6406J, 1200 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20460.
(2) For overnight or courier services: U.S. EPA, Attn: RFS
Program--Production Outlook Reports, 6406J, 1310 L Street, NW., 6th
floor, Washington, DC 20005; (202) 343-9038.
(e) All production outlook reports required under this section
shall be submitted on forms and following procedures prescribed by the
Administrator.
Sec. 80.1450 What are the registration requirements under the RFS
program?
(a) Obligated Parties and Exporters. Any obligated party described
in Sec. 80.1406, and any exporter of renewable fuel described in Sec.
80.1430, must provide EPA with the information specified for
registration under Sec. 80.76, if such information has not already
been provided under the provisions of this part. An obligated party or
an exporter of renewable fuel must receive EPA-issued identification
numbers prior to engaging in any transaction involving RINs.
Registration information may be submitted to EPA at any time after
publication of this rule in the Federal Register, but must be submitted
and accepted by EPA by July 1, 2010, or 60 days prior to RIN ownership,
whichever date comes later.
[[Page 14884]]
(b) Producers. Any RIN-generating foreign or domestic producer of
renewable fuel or any foreign producer that sells renewable fuel for
RIN generation by a United States importer must provide EPA the
information specified under Sec. 80.76 if such information has not
already been provided under the provisions of this part, and must
receive EPA-issued company and facility identification numbers prior to
the generation of any RINs for their fuel. All the following
registration information may be submitted to EPA at any time after
promulgation of this rule in the Federal Register, but must be
submitted and accepted by EPA by July 1, 2010, or 60 days prior to the
generation of RINs, whichever date comes later, subject to this
subpart:
(1) A description of the types of renewable fuels that the producer
intends to produce at the facility and that the facility is capable of
producing without significant modifications to the existing facility.
For each type of renewable fuel, the renewable fuel producer shall also
provide all the following:
(i) A list of all the feedstocks the facility is capable of
utilizing without significant modification to the existing facility.
(ii) A description of the facility's renewable fuel production
processes.
(iii) The type of co-products produced with each type of renewable
fuel.
(iv) A list of the facility's process energy fuel types and
locations from which the fuel was produced or extracted.
(v) For facilities described in Sec. 80.1403(c) and (d):
(A) The facility's baseline volume as defined in Sec.
80.1403(a)(1).
(B) The facility's renewable fuel production capacity as specified
in applicable air permits issued by the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, state, local air pollution control agencies, or foreign
governmental agencies and that govern the construction and/or operation
of the renewable fuel facility:
(1) Issued or revised no later than December 19, 2007 for
facilities described in Sec. 80.1403(c).
(2) Issued or revised no later than December 31, 2009 for
facilities described in Sec. 80.1403(d).
(C) Copies of applicable air permits issued by the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, state, local air pollution control
agencies, or foreign governmental agencies, that provide evidence that
such permits were issued prior to December 19, 2007 for facilities
described in Sec. 80.1403(c), and prior to December 31, 2009 for
facilities described in Sec. 80.1403(d).
(D) Copies of documents demonstrating the facility's actual peak
capacity as defined in Sec. 80.1401(a)(3) if the maximum rated annual
volume output of renewable fuel is not specified in any applicable air
permits issued by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, state,
local air pollution control agencies, or foreign governmental agencies.
(E) The date that construction commences, along with evidence
demonstrating that construction commenced as defined in Sec.
80.1403(a)(4) including, but not limited to, contracts with
construction and other companies.
(vi) Records relevant to generation of RINs from:
(A) Producers providing biogas, or renewable electricity to
transportation fueling facilities as described in Sec. 80.1426(f)(10);
(B) Producers providing biogas, or renewable electricity to
transportation fueling facilities via commercial distribution systems
as described in Sec. 80.1426(f)(11); and
(C) Producers using biogas for process heat in the production of
renewable fuel as described in Sec. 80.1426(f)(12).
(vii)(A) For a producer of renewable fuel made from separated yard
waste per Sec. 80.1426(f)(5)(i)(A):
(1) The location of any municipal waste facility or other facility
from which the waste stream consisting solely of separated yard waste
is collected; and
(2) A plan documenting how the waste will be collected and for
ongoing verification that such waste consists only of yard waste and
kept separate since generation from other waste materials, and
incidental other components (e.g., paper and plastics).
(B) For a producer of renewable fuel made from separated food waste
per Sec. 80.1426(f)(5)(i)(B):
(1) The location of any municipal waste facility or other facility
from which the waste stream consisting solely of separated food waste
is collected; and
(2) A plan documenting how the waste will be collected, how the
cellulosic and non-cellulosic portions of the waste will be quantified,
and for ongoing verification that such waste consists only of food
waste kept separate since generation from other waste materials,
containing only incidental other components (e.g., paper and plastics).
(viii) For a producer of renewable fuel made from separated
municipal solid waste per Sec. 80.1426(f)(5)(i)(C):
(A) The location of the municipal waste facility from which the
separated food and yard waste is collected.
(B) A plan providing ongoing verification that there is separation
of recyclable paper, cardboard, plastics, rubber, textiles, metals, and
glass wastes to the extent reasonably practicable and which documents
the following:
(1) Extent and nature of recycling that occurred prior to receipt
of the waste material by the renewable fuel producer;
(2) Identification of available recycling technology and practices
that are appropriate for removing recycling materials from the waste
stream; and
(3) Identification of the technology or practices selected
including an explanation for such selection, and reasons why other
technologies or practices were not.
(C) Contracts relevant to materials recycled from municipal waste
streams as described in Sec. 80.1426(f)(5)(iii).
(D) Certification by the producer that recycling is conducted in a
manner consistent with goals and requirements of applicable State and
local laws relating to recycling and waste management.
(2) An independent third party engineering review and written
report and verification of the information provided pursuant to
paragraph (b)(1) of this section. The report and verification shall be
based upon a site visit and review of relevant documents and shall
separately identify each item required by paragraph (b)(1) of this
section, describe how the independent third party evaluated the
accuracy of the information provided, state whether the independent
third party agrees with the information provided, and identify any
exceptions between the independent third party's findings and the
information provided.
(i) The verifications required under this section must be conducted
by:
(A) A Professional Chemical Engineer who is based in the United
States and is licensed by an appropriate state agency for a domestic
production facility.
(B) An independent third party who is a licensed professional
engineer or foreign equivalent who works in the chemical engineering
field for a foreign production facility.
(ii) To be considered an independent third party under this
paragraph (b)(2):
(A) The third party shall not be operated by the renewable fuel
producer or any subsidiary or employee of the renewable fuel producer.
(B) The third party shall be free from any interest in the
renewable fuel producer's business.
[[Page 14885]]
(C) The renewable fuel producer shall be free from any interest in
the third party's business.
(D) Use of a third party that is debarred, suspended, or proposed
for debarment pursuant to the Government-wide Debarment and Suspension
regulations, 40 CFR part 32, or the Debarment, Suspension and
Ineligibility provisions of the Federal Acquisition Regulations, 48
CFR, part 9, subpart 9.4, shall be deemed noncompliance with the
requirements of this section.
(E) The third party must provide to EPA documentation of his or her
qualifications as part of the engineering review, including proof of
appropriate professional license or foreign equivalent.
(iii) The independent third party shall retain all records
pertaining to the verification required under this section for a period
of five years from the date of creation and shall deliver such records
to the Administrator upon request.
(iv) The renewable fuel producer must retain records of the review
and verification, as required in Sec. 80.1454(b)(6).
(3) A Fuel Supply Plan that includes all the following information:
(i) Name of source of each and every fuel that the renewable fuel
producer intends to be co-fired or used in a fuel blend.
(ii) Anticipated proportion of each fuel in the mix or in the fuel
blend.
(iii) Anticipated net heat content of each, including any expected
seasonal variations, such as those due to moisture content or wood
species.
(iv) Seasonal variation, if any, of the fuel mix or blend.
(v) An affidavit from the biogas supplier stating its intent to
supply biogas to the renewable fuel producer, the quantity and energy
content of the biogas that it intends to provide to the renewable fuel
producer, and a statement that this volume of biogas will not be used
for the creation of a Renewable Energy Credit, or of any other type of
environmental or energy attribute or credit.
(c) Importers. Importers of renewable fuel must provide EPA the
information specified under Sec. 80.76, if such information has not
already been provided under the provisions of this part and must
receive an EPA-issued company identification number prior to generating
or owning RINs. Registration information may be submitted to EPA at any
time after promulgation of this rule in the Federal Register, but must
be submitted and accepted by EPA by July 1, 2010, or 60 days prior to
an importer importing any renewable fuel with assigned RINs or
generating any RINs for renewable fuel, whichever date comes later.
(d) Registration updates.
(1) Any producer of renewable fuel who makes changes to his
facility that will qualify his renewable fuel for a renewable fuel
category or D code as defined in Sec. 80.1425(g) that is not reflected
in the producer's registration information on file with EPA must update
his registration information and submit a copy of an updated
independent engineering review at least 60 days prior to producing the
new type of renewable fuel.
(2) Any producer of renewable fuel who makes any other changes to a
facility that do not affect the renewable fuel category for which the
producer is registered per paragraph (b) of this section must update
his registration information 7 days prior to the change.
(3) All producers of renewable fuel must update registration
information and submit a copy of an updated independent engineering
review every 3 years after initial registration. In addition to
conducting the engineering review and written report and verification
required by paragraph (b)(2) of this section, the updated independent
engineering review shall include a detailed review of the renewable
fuel producer's calculations used to determine VRIN of a
representative sample of batches of each type of renewable fuel
produced since the last registration. The representative sample shall
be selected in accordance with the sample size guidelines set forth at
Sec. 80.127.
(e) Any party who owns RINs, intends to own RINs, or intends to
allow another party to separate RINs as per Sec. 80.1440, but who is
not covered by paragraphs (a), (b), or (c) of this section, must
provide EPA the information specified under Sec. 80.76, if such
information has not already been provided under the provisions of this
part and must receive an EPA-issued company identification number prior
to owning any RINs. Registration information may be submitted to EPA at
any time after promulgation of this rule in the Federal Register, but
must be submitted at least 30 days prior to RIN ownership.
(f) To aid EPA in verifying claims that a facility qualifies for an
exemption described in Sec. 80.1403(c) or (d), registrations for such
facilities must be submitted by July 1, 2013. EPA may in its sole
discretion waive this requirement if it determines that the information
submitted in any later registration can be verified by EPA in the same
manner as would have been possible with a timely submission.
(g) Registration shall be on forms, and following policies,
established by the Administrator.
Sec. 80.1451 What are the reporting requirements under the RFS
program?
(a) Obligated parties and exporters. Any obligated party described
in Sec. 80.1406 or exporter of renewable fuel described in Sec.
80.1430 must submit to EPA reports according to the schedule, and
containing all the information, that is set forth in this paragraph
(a).
(1) Annual compliance reports for the previous compliance period
shall be submitted by February 28 of each year and shall include all of
the following information:
(i) The obligated party's or exporter's name.
(ii) The EPA company registration number.
(iii) Whether the domestic refiner, as defined in Sec. 80.1406, is
complying on a corporate (aggregate) or facility-by-facility basis.
(iv) The EPA facility registration number, if complying on a
facility-by-facility basis.
(v) The production volume and import volume of all of the products
listed in Sec. 80.1407(c) and (e) for the reporting year.
(vi) The RVOs, as defined in Sec. 80.1427(a) for obligated parties
and Sec. 80.1430(b) for exporters of renewable fuel, for the reporting
year.
(vii) Any deficit RVOs carried over from the previous year.
(viii) The total current-year RINs by category of renewable fuel,
as those fuels are defined in Sec. 80.1401 (i.e., cellulosic biofuel,
biomass-based diesel, advanced biofuel, renewable fuel, and cellulosic
diesel), retired for compliance.
(ix) The total prior-year RINs by renewable fuel category, as those
fuels are defined in Sec. 80.1401, retired for compliance.
(x) The total cellulosic biofuel waiver credits used to meet the
party's cellulosic biofuel RVO.
(xi) A list of all RINs retired for compliance in the reporting
year.
(A) RIN information provided by the EPA Moderated Transaction
System (EMTS) that is retired to meet compliance conveyed via the EMTS
as per Sec. 80.1452.
(B) [Reserved]
(xii) Any deficit RVO(s) carried into the subsequent year.
(xiii) Any additional information that the Administrator may
require.
(2) The RIN transaction reports required under paragraph (c)(1) of
this section.
[[Page 14886]]
(3) The quarterly RIN activity reports required under paragraph
(c)(2) of this section.
(4) Reports required under this paragraph (a) must be signed and
certified as meeting all the applicable requirements of this subpart by
the owner or a responsible corporate officer of the obligated party or
exporter.
(b) Renewable fuel producers (domestic and foreign) and importers.
Any domestic producer or importer of renewable fuel who generates RINs,
or foreign renewable fuel producer who generates RINs, must submit to
EPA reports according to the schedule, and containing all the
information, that is set forth in this paragraph (b).
(1)(i) For RINs generated beginning on July 1, 2010, RIN generation
reports for each facility owned by the renewable fuel producer or
importer shall be submitted according to the schedule specified in
paragraph (f)(2) of this section.
(ii) The RIN generation reports shall include all the following
information for each batch of renewable fuel produced or imported,
where ``batch'' means a discrete quantity of renewable fuel produced or
imported and assigned a unique batch-RIN per Sec. 80.1426(d):
(A) The RIN generator's name.
(B) The RIN generator's EPA company registration number.
(C) The renewable fuel producer EPA facility registration number.
(D) The importer EPA facility registration number and foreign
renewable producer company registration number, if applicable.
(E) The applicable reporting period.
(F) The quantity of RINs generated for each batch according to
Sec. 80.1426.
(G) The production date of each batch.
(H) The category of renewable fuel of each batch, as defined in
Sec. 80.1401.
(I) The volume of denaturant and applicable equivalence value of
each batch.
(J) The volume of each batch produced.
(K) The types and volumes of feedstocks used.
(L) The process(es) and feedstock(s) used and proportion of
renewable volume attributable to each process and feedstock.
(M) The type of co-products produced with each batch of renewable
fuel.
(N) The volume of co-products produced in each quarter.
(O) A list of the RINs generated and an affirmation that the
feedstock(s) used for each batch meets the definition of renewable
biomass as defined in Sec. 80.1401.
(P) Producers of renewable electricity and biogas used for
transportation as described in Sec. 80.1426(f)(10) and (11), and
producers of renewable fuel that use biogas for process heat as
described in Sec. 80.1426(f)(12), shall report the energy content
produced and supplied to the transportation fueling facility, in units
of energy (for example, MMBtu or MW) based on metering of gas volume or
electricity. And the name and EPA company registration number of the
transportation fueling facility.
(Q) Producers of renewable fuel that use biogas for process heat as
described in Sec. 80.1426(f)(12), shall identify the supplier of the
biogas and report the energy content produced and supplied to the
renewable fuel facility, in MMBtu based on metering of gas volume.
(R) Producers of renewable fuel made from municipal solid waste as
described in Sec. 80.1426(f)(5)(i)(C), shall report the amount of
paper, cardboard, plastics, rubber, textiles, metals, and glass
separated from municipal solid waste for recycling. Reporting shall be
in units of weight.
(S) Any additional information the Administrator may require.
(2) The RIN transaction reports required under paragraph (c)(1) of
this section.
(3) The RIN activity reports required under paragraph (c)(2) of
this section.
(4) Reports required under this paragraph (b) must be signed and
certified as meeting all the applicable requirements of this subpart by
the owner or a responsible corporate officer of the renewable fuel
producer or importer.
(c) All RIN-owning parties. Any party, including any party
specified in paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section, that owns RINs
during a reporting period, must submit reports to EPA according to the
schedule, and containing all the information, that is set forth in this
paragraph (c).
(1)(i) For RIN transactions beginning on July 1, 2010, RIN
transaction reports listing each RIN transaction shall be submitted
according to the schedule in paragraph (f)(2) of this section.
(ii) As per Sec. 80.1452, RIN transaction information listing each
RIN transaction shall be submitted to the EMTS.
(iii) Each report required by paragraph (c)(1)(i) of this section
shall include all of the following information:
(A) The submitting party's name.
(B) The submitting party's EPA company registration number.
(C) The applicable reporting period.
(D) Transaction type (i.e., RIN buy, RIN sell, RIN separation, RIN
retire, reinstated 2009 RIN).
(E) Transaction date.
(F) For a RIN purchase or sale, the trading partner's name.
(G) For a RIN purchase or sale, the trading partner's EPA company
registration number. For all other transactions, the submitting party's
EPA company registration number.
(H) RIN subject to the transaction.
(I) For a RIN purchase or sale, the per gallon RIN price and/or the
per gallon price of renewable fuel price with RINs included.
(J) The reason code for retiring RINs, separating RINs, buying
RINs, or selling RINs.
(K) Any additional information that the Administrator may require.
(2) RIN activity reports shall be submitted to EPA according to the
schedule specified in paragraph (f)(2) of this section. Each report
shall summarize RIN activities for the reporting period, separately for
RINs separated from a renewable fuel volume and RINs assigned to a
renewable fuel volume. The quarterly RIN activity reports shall include
all of the following information:
(i) The submitting party's name.
(ii) The submitting party's EPA company registration number.
(iii) The number of current-year RINs owned at the start of the
quarter.
(iv) The number of prior-year RINs owned at the start of the
quarter.
(v) The total current-year RINs purchased.
(vi) The total prior-year RINs purchased.
(vii) The total current-year RINs sold.
(viii) The total prior-year RINs sold.
(ix) The total current-year RINs retired.
(x) The total prior-year RINs retired.
(xi) The number of current-year RINs owned at the end of the
quarter.
(xii) The number of prior-year RINs owned at the end of the
quarter.
(xiii) The number of RINs generated.
(xiv) The volume of renewable fuel (in gallons) owned at the end of
the quarter.
(xv) The total 2009 retired RINs reinstated.
(xvi) Any additional information that the Administrator may
require.
(3) All reports required under this paragraph (c) must be signed
and certified as meeting all the applicable requirements of this
subpart by the RIN owner or a responsible corporate officer of the RIN
owner.
(d) Except for those producers subject to the aggregate compliance
approach described in Sec. 80.1454(g), producers and RIN-generating
importers of renewable fuel made from feedstocks that are planted crops
and crop residue from existing agricultural land, planted trees or tree
residue from actively managed tree plantations, slash and pre-
commercial thinnings from forestlands
[[Page 14887]]
or biomass obtained from areas at risk of wildfire must submit
quarterly reports according to the schedule in paragraph (f)(2) of this
section that include all of the following:
(1) A summary of the types and volumes of feedstocks used in that
quarter.
(2) Electronic data identifying the land by coordinates of the
points defining the boundaries from which each type of feedstock listed
per paragraph (d)(1) of this section was harvested.
(3) If electronic data identifying a plot of land have been
submitted previously, producers and RIN-generating importers may submit
a cross-reference to that electronic data.
(e) If EPA finds that the 2007 baseline amount of agricultural land
has been exceeded in any year beginning in 2010, beginning on the first
day of July of the following calendar year any domestic producers of
renewable fuel as defined in Sec. 80.1401 who use planted crops and/or
crop residue from existing agricultural lands as feedstock must submit
quarterly reports according to the schedule in paragraph (f)(2) of this
section that include all of the following:
(1) A summary of the types and volumes of feedstocks used in that
quarter.
(2) Maps or electronic data identifying the land from which each
type of feedstock listed per paragraph (d)(1) above was harvested.
(i) If maps or electronic data identifying a plot of land have been
submitted previously, producers and RIN-generating importers may submit
a cross-reference to that map or electronic data.
(ii) [Reserved.]
(f) Quarterly report submission deadlines. The submission deadlines
for quarterly reports shall be as follows:
(1) [Reserved.]
(2) Quarterly reports shall be submitted to EPA by the last day of
the second month following the reporting period (i.e., the report
covering January-March would be due by May 31st, the report covering
April-June would be due by August 31st, the report covering July-
September would be due by November 30th and the report covering
October-December would be due by February 28th). Any reports generated
by EMTS must be reviewed, supplemented, and/or corrected if not
complete and accurate, and verified by the owner or responsible
corporate office prior to submittal.
(3) Reports required must be signed and certified as meeting all
the applicable requirements of this subpart by the owner or a
responsible corporate officer of the submitter.
(g) All reports required under this section shall be submitted on
forms and following procedures prescribed by the Administrator.
Sec. 80.1452 What are the requirements related to the EPA Moderated
Transaction System (EMTS)?
(a) Each party required to submit information under this section
must establish an account with the EPA Moderated Transaction System
(EMTS) at least 60 days prior to engaging in any RIN transactions, or
July 1, 2010, whichever is later.
(b) Starting July 1, 2010, each time a domestic producer or
importer of renewable fuel, or foreign renewable fuel producer who
generates RINs, produces or imports a batch of renewable fuel, all the
following information must be submitted to EPA via the submitting
party's EMTS account within five (5) business days:
(1) The renewable fuel producer's, foreign renewable fuel
producer's, or importer's name.
(2) The renewable fuel producer's or foreign renewable fuel
producer's EPA company registration number.
(3) The importer's EPA company registration number if applicable.
(4) The renewable fuel producer's or foreign renewable fuel
producer's EPA facility registration number.
(5) The importer's EPA facility registration number.
(6) The RIN type (i.e., D code) of the batch.
(7) The production process(es) used for the batch.
(8) The production date of the batch.
(9) The category of renewable fuel of the batch, as defined in
Sec. 80.1401.
(10) The volume of the batch.
(11) The volume of denaturant and applicable equivalence value of
each batch.
(12) Quantity of RINs generated for the batch.
(13) The type and volume of feedstock(s) used for the batch.
(14) An affirmation that the feedstock(s) used for each batch meets
the definition of renewable biomass as defined in Sec. 80.1401.
(15) The type of co-products produced with the batch of renewable
fuel.
(16) Any additional information the Administrator may require.
(c) Starting July 1, 2010, each time any party engages in a
transaction involving RINs, all the following information must be
submitted to EPA via the submitting party's EMTS account within five
(5) business days:
(1) The submitting party's name.
(2) The submitting party's EPA company registration number.
(3) The generation year of the RINs.
(4) The RIN assignment information (Assigned or Separated).
(5) The RIN type, or D code.
(6) Transaction type (i.e., RIN buy, RIN sell, RIN separation, RIN
retire).
(7) Transaction date as per Sec. 80.1453(a)(4).
(8) For a RIN purchase or sale, the trading partner's name.
(9) For a RIN purchase or sale, the trading partner's EPA company
registration number.
(10) For an assigned RIN purchase or sale, the renewable fuel
volume associated with the sale.
(11) Quantity of RINs involved in a transaction.
(12) The per gallon RIN price or the per-gallon price of renewable
fuel with RINs included.
(13) The reason for retiring RINs, separating RINs, buying RINs, or
selling RINs.
(14) Any additional information that the Administrator may require.
(d) All information required under this section shall be submitted
on forms and following procedures prescribed by the Administrator.
Sec. 80.1453 What are the product transfer document (PTD)
requirements for the RFS program?
(a) On each occasion when any party transfers ownership of
renewable fuels or separated RINs subject to this subpart, the
transferor must provide to the transferee documents identifying the
renewable fuel and any RINs (whether assigned or separated) which
include all of the following information, as applicable:
(1) The name and address of the transferor and transferee.
(2) The transferor's and transferee's EPA company registration
numbers.
(3) The volume of renewable fuel that is being transferred, if any.
(4) The date of the transfer.
(5) For assigned or separated RINs, the per gallon RIN price or the
per gallon renewable fuel price if the RIN price is included.
(6) The quantity of RINs being traded.
(7) The RIN type (i.e., D code).
(8) The Assignment Code (Assigned or Separated, or K code = 1 or
2).
(9) The RIN generation year.
(10) The associated reason for the sell or buy transaction.
(11) Whether any RINs are assigned to the volume, as follows:
(i) If the assigned RINs are being transferred on the same PTD used
to transfer ownership of the renewable fuel, then the assigned RINs
shall be listed on the PTD.
[[Page 14888]]
(ii) If the assigned RINs are being transferred on a separate PTD
from that which is used to transfer ownership of the renewable fuel,
then the PTD which is used to transfer ownership of the renewable fuel
shall state the number of gallon-RINs being transferred as well as a
unique reference to the PTD which is transferring the assigned RINs.
(iii) If no assigned RINs are being transferred with the renewable
fuel, the PTD which is used to transfer ownership of the renewable fuel
shall state ``No assigned RINs transferred.''
(iv) If RINs have been separated from the renewable fuel or blend
pursuant to Sec. 80.1429(b)(4), then all PTDs which are at any time
used to transfer ownership of the renewable fuel or blend shall state
``This volume of fuel must be used in the designated form, without
further blending.''
(b) Except for transfers to truck carriers, retailers, or wholesale
purchaser-consumers, product codes may be used to convey the
information required under paragraphs (a)(1) through (a)(11) of this
section if such codes are clearly understood by each transferee.
(c) For renewable fuel, other than ethanol, that is not registered
as motor vehicle fuel under 40 CFR Part 79, the PTD which is used to
transfer ownership of the renewable fuel shall state ``This volume of
renewable fuel may not be used as a motor vehicle fuel.''
Sec. 80.1454 What are the recordkeeping requirements under the RFS
program?
(a) Requirements for obligated parties and exporters. Beginning
July 1, 2010, any obligated party (as described at Sec. 80.1406) or
exporter of renewable fuel (as described at Sec. 80.1401) must keep
all of the following records:
(1) Product transfer documents consistent with Sec. 80.1453 and
associated with the obligated party's or exporter's activity, if any,
as transferor or transferee of renewable fuel or separated RINs.
(2) Copies of all reports submitted to EPA under Sec. Sec. 80.1449
and 80.1451(a), as applicable.
(3) Records related to each RIN transaction, including all of the
following:
(i) A list of the RINs owned, purchased, sold, separated, retired,
or reinstated.
(ii) The parties involved in each RIN transaction including the
transferor, transferee, and any broker or agent.
(iii) The date of the transfer of the RIN(s).
(iv) Additional information related to details of the RIN
transaction and its terms.
(4) Records related to the use of RINs (by facility, if applicable)
for compliance, including all of the following:
(i) Methods and variables used to calculate the Renewable Volume
Obligations pursuant to Sec. 80.1407 or Sec. 80.1430.
(ii) List of RINs used to demonstrate compliance.
(iii) Additional information related to details of RIN use for
compliance.
(5) Records related to the separation of assigned RINs from
renewable fuel volume.
(b) Requirements for all producers of renewable fuel. Beginning
July 1, 2010, any domestic or RIN-generating foreign producer of a
renewable fuel as defined in Sec. 80.1401 must keep all of the
following records in addition to those required under paragraphs (c) or
(d) of this section:
(1) Product transfer documents consistent with Sec. 80.1453 and
associated with the renewable fuel producer's activity, if any, as
transferor or transferee of renewable fuel or separated RINs.
(2) Copies of all reports submitted to EPA under Sec. Sec. 80.1449
and 80.1451(b).
(3) Records related to the generation and assignment of RINs for
each facility, including all of the following:
(i) Batch volume in gallons.
(ii) Batch number.
(iii) RIN as assigned under Sec. 80.1426, if applicable.
(iv) Identification of batches by renewable category.
(v) Type and quantity of co-products produced.
(vi) Type and quantity of feedstocks used.
(vii) Type and quantity of fuel used for process heat.
(viii) Feedstock energy calculations per Sec. 80.1426(f)(4).
(ix) Date of production.
(x) Results of any laboratory analysis of batch chemical
composition or physical properties.
(xi) All commercial documents and additional information related to
details of RIN generation.
(4) Records related to each RIN transaction, separately for each
transaction, including all of the following:
(i) A list of the RINs owned, purchased, sold, retired, or
reinstated.
(ii) The parties involved in each transaction including the
transferor, transferee, and any broker or agent.
(iii) The date of the transfer of the RIN(s).
(iv) Additional information related to details of the transaction
and its terms.
(5) Records related to the production, importation, ownership, sale
or use of any volume of renewable fuel for which RINs were generated or
blend of renewable fuel for which RINs were generated and gasoline or
diesel fuel that any party designates for use as transportation fuel,
jet fuel, or heating oil and the use of the fuel or blend as
transportation fuel, jet fuel, or heating oil without further blending,
in the designated form.
(6) Copies of registration documents required under Sec. 80.1450,
including information on fuels and products, feedstocks, facility
production processes, process changes, and capacity, energy sources,
and a copy of the independent third party engineering review submitted
to EPA per Sec. 80.1450(b)(2).
(c) Additional requirements for imports of renewable fuel.
(1) Beginning July 1, 2010, any RIN-generating foreign producer of
a renewable fuel or RIN-generating importer must keep records of
feedstock purchases and transfers associated with renewable fuel for
which RINs are generated, sufficient to verify that feedstocks used are
renewable biomass (as defined in Sec. 80.1401).
(i) RIN-generating foreign producers and importers of renewable
fuel made from feedstocks that are planted crops or crop residue from
existing agricultural land, planted trees or tree residue from actively
managed tree plantations, slash and pre-commercial thinnings from
forestlands or biomass obtained from wildland-urban interface must
maintain all of the following records to verify the location where
these feedstocks were produced:
(A) Maps or electronic data indentifying the boundaries of the land
where each type of feedstock was produced.
(B) Bills of lading, product transfer documents, or other
commercial documents showing the quantity of feedstock purchased from
each area identified in paragraph (c)(1)(i)(A) of this section, and
showing each transfer of custody of the feedstock from the location
where it was produced to the renewable fuel production facility.
(ii)(A) RIN-generating foreign producers and importers of renewable
fuel made from planted crops or crop residue from existing agricultural
land must keep records that serve as evidence that the land from which
the feedstock was obtained was cleared or cultivated prior to December
19, 2007 and actively managed or fallow, and nonforested on December
19, 2007. RIN-generating foreign producers or importers of renewable
fuel made from planted trees or tree residue from actively managed tree
plantations must
[[Page 14889]]
keep records that serve as evidence that the land from which the
feedstock was obtained was cleared prior to December 19, 2007 and
actively managed on December 19, 2007.
(B) The records must be provided by the feedstock producer,
traceable to the land in question, and consist of at least one of the
following documents:
(1) Sales records for planted crops or trees, crop or tree residue,
or livestock; purchasing records for fertilizer, weed control, or
reseeding, including seeds, seedlings, or other nursery stock.
(2) A written management plan for agricultural or silvicultural
purposes; documentation of participation in an agricultural or
silvicultural program sponsored by a Federal, state, or local
government agency.
(3) Documentation of land management in accordance with an
agricultural or silvicultural product certification program, an
agreement for land management consultation with a professional forester
that identifies the land in question.
(4) Evidence of the existence and ongoing maintenance of a road
system or other physical infrastructure designed and maintained for
logging use, together with one of the aforementioned documents in this
paragraph (c)(1)(ii)(B).
(iii) RIN-generating foreign producers and importers of renewable
fuel made from any other type of renewable biomass must have documents
from their feedstock supplier certifying that the feedstock qualifies
as renewable biomass as defined in Sec. 80.1401, describing the
feedstock and identifying the process that was used to generate the
feedstock.
(2) Beginning July 1, 2010, any RIN-generating importer of
renewable fuel (as defined in Sec. 80.1401) must keep all of the
following records:
(i) Product transfer documents consistent with Sec. 80.1453 and
associated with the renewable fuel importer's activity, if any, as
transferor or transferee of renewable fuel.
(ii) Copies of all reports submitted to EPA under Sec. Sec.
80.1449 and 80.1451(b); however, duplicate records are not required.
(iii) Records related to the generation and assignment of RINs for
each facility, including all of the following:
(A) Batch volume in gallons.
(B) Batch number.
(C) RIN as assigned under Sec. 80.1426.
(D) Identification of batches by renewable category.
(E) Type and quantity of feedstocks used.
(F) Type and quantity of fuel used for process heat.
(G) Date of import.
(H) Results of any laboratory analysis of batch chemical
composition or physical properties.
(I) The EPA registration number of the foreign renewable fuel
producers producing the fuel.
(J) Additional information related to details of RIN generation.
(iv) Records related to each RIN transaction, including all of the
following:
(A) A list of the RINs owned, purchased, sold, separated, retired,
or reinstated.
(B) The parties involved in each transaction including the
transferor, transferee, and any broker or agent.
(C) The date of the transfer of the RIN(s).
(D) Additional information related to details of the transaction
and its terms.
(v) Copies of registration documents required under Sec. 80.1450.
(vi) Records related to the import of any volume of renewable fuel
that the importer designates for use as transportation fuel, jet fuel,
or heating oil.
(d) Additional requirements for domestic producers of renewable
fuel. Except as provided in paragraphs (g) and (h) of this section,
beginning July 1, 2010, any domestic producer of renewable fuel as
defined in Sec. 80.1401 that generates RINs for such fuel must keep
documents associated with feedstock purchases and transfers that
identify where the feedstocks were produced and are sufficient to
verify that feedstocks used are renewable biomass (as defined in Sec.
80.1401) if RINs are generated.
(1) Domestic producers of renewable fuel made from feedstocks that
are planted trees or tree residue from actively managed tree
plantations, slash and pre-commercial thinnings from forestlands or
biomass obtained from areas at risk of wildfire must maintain all the
following records to verify the location where these feedstocks were
produced:
(i) Maps or electronic data identifying the boundaries of the land
where each type of feedstock was produced.
(ii) Bills of lading, product transfer documents or other
commercial documents showing the quantity of feedstock purchased from
each area identified in paragraph (d)(1)(i) of this section, and
showing each transfer of custody of the feedstock from the location
where it was produced to the renewable fuel production facility.
(2) Domestic producers of renewable fuel made from planted trees or
tree residue from actively managed tree plantations must keep records
that serve as evidence that the land from which the feedstock was
obtained was cleared prior to December 19, 2007 and actively managed on
December 19, 2007. The records must be provided by the feedstock
producer and must include at least one of the following documents,
which must be traceable to the land in question:
(i) Sales records for planted trees or tree residue.
(ii) Purchasing records for fertilizer, weed control, or reseeding,
including seeds, seedlings, or other nursery stock.
(iii) A written management plan for silvicultural purposes.
(iv) Documentation of participation in a silvicultural program
sponsored by a Federal, state, or local government agency.
(v) Documentation of land management in accordance with a
silvicultural product certification program, an agreement for land
management consultation with a professional forester.
(vi) Evidence of the existence and ongoing maintenance of a road
system or other physical infrastructure designed and maintained for
logging use, together with one of the aforementioned documents.
(3) Domestic producers of renewable fuel made from any other type
of renewable biomass must have documents from their feedstock supplier
certifying that the feedstock qualifies as renewable biomass as defined
in Sec. 80.1401, describing the feedstock and identifying the process
that was used to generate the feedstock.
(e) Additional requirements for producers of fuel exempt from the
20% GHG reduction requirement. Beginning July 1, 2010, any production
facility with a baseline volume of fuel that is not subject to the 20%
GHG threshold, pursuant to Sec. 80.1403(c) and (d), must keep all of
the following:
(1) Detailed engineering plans for the facility.
(2) Federal, State, and local (or foreign governmental)
preconstruction approvals and permitting.
(3) Procurement and construction contracts and agreements.
(f) Requirements for other parties that own RINs. Beginning July 1,
2010, any party, other than those parties covered in paragraphs (a) and
(b) of this section, that owns RINs must keep all of the following
records:
(1) Product transfer documents consistent with Sec. 80.1453 and
associated with the party's activity, if any, as transferor or
transferee of renewable fuel or separated RINs.
(2) Copies of all reports submitted to EPA under Sec. 80.1451(c).
[[Page 14890]]
(3) Records related to each RIN transaction by renewable fuel
category, including all of the following:
(i) A list of the RINs owned, purchased, sold, retired, or
reinstated.
(ii) The parties involved in each RIN transaction including the
transferor, transferee, and any broker or agent.
(iii) The date of the transfer of the RIN(s).
(iv) Additional information related to details of the transaction
and its terms.
(4) Records related to any volume of renewable fuel that the party
designated for use as transportation fuel, jet fuel, or heating oil and
from which RINs were separated pursuant to Sec. 80.1429(b)(4).
(g) Aggregate compliance with renewable biomass requirement. Any
domestic producer of renewable fuel made from planted crops or crop
residue from existing agricultural land as defined in Sec. 80.1401 is
subject to the aggregate compliance approach and is not required to
maintain feedstock records unless EPA publishes a finding that the 2007
baseline amount of agricultural land has been exceeded.
(1) EPA will make a finding concerning whether the 2007 baseline
amount of agricultural land has been exceeded and will publish this
finding in the Federal Register by November 30 of the year preceding
the compliance period.
(2) If EPA finds that the 2007 baseline amount of agricultural land
has been exceeded, beginning on the first day of July of the compliance
period in question any domestic producer of renewable fuel made from
planted crops and/or crop residue from agricultural lands as feedstock
for renewable fuel for which RINs are generated must keep all the
following records:
(i) Records that serve as evidence that the land from which the
feedstock was obtained was cleared or cultivated prior to December 19,
2007 and actively managed or fallow, and nonforested on December 19,
2007. The records must be provided by the feedstock producer and must
include at least one of the following documents, which must be
traceable to the land in question:
(A) Sales records for planted crops, crop residue or livestock.
(B) Purchasing records for fertilizer, weed control, seeds,
seedlings, or other nursery stock.
(C) A written management plan for agricultural purposes.
(D) Documentation of participation in an agricultural program
sponsored by a Federal, state, or local government agency.
(E) Documentation of land management in accordance with an
agricultural product certification program.
(ii) Records to verify the location where the feedstocks were
produced:
(A) Maps or electronic data indentifying the boundaries of the land
where each type of feedstock was produced; and
(B) Bills of lading, product transfer documents or other commercial
documents showing the quantity of feedstock purchased from each area
identified in paragraph (c)(1)(i)(A) of this section, and showing each
transfer of custody of the feedstock from the location where it was
produced to the renewable fuel facility.
(h) Alternative renewable biomass tracking requirement. Any foreign
or domestic renewable fuel producer or importer as defined in Sec.
80.1401 may comply with the following alternative renewable biomass
tracking requirement instead of the recordkeeping requirements in
paragraphs (c)(1), (d), and (g) of this section:
(1) To comply with the alternative renewable biomass tracking
requirement under this paragraph (h), a renewable fuel producer or
importer must either arrange to have an independent third party conduct
a comprehensive program of annual compliance surveys, or participate in
the funding of an organization which arranged to have an independent
third party conduct a comprehensive program of annual compliance
surveys, to be carried out in accordance with a survey plan which has
been approved by EPA.
(2) The annual compliance surveys under this paragraph (h) must be
all the following:
(i) Planned and conducted by an independent surveyor that meets the
requirements in Sec. 80.68(c)(13)(i).
(ii) Conducted at renewable fuel production and import facilities
and their feedstock suppliers.
(iii) Representative of all renewable fuel producers and importers
in the survey area and representative of their feedstock suppliers.
(iv) Designed to achieve at least the same level of quality
assurance required in paragraphs (c)(1), (d) and (g) of this section.
(3) The compliance survey program shall require the independent
surveyor conducting the surveys to do all the following:
(i) Conduct feedstock audits of renewable fuel production and
import facilities in accordance with the survey plan approved under
this paragraph (h), or immediately notify EPA of any refusal of these
facilities to allow an audit to be conducted.
(ii) Obtain the records and product transfer documents associated
with the feedstocks being audited.
(iii) Determine the feedstock supplier(s) that supplied the
feedstocks to the renewable fuel producer.
(iv) Confirm that feedstocks used to produce RIN-generating
renewable fuels meet the definition of renewable biomass as defined in
Sec. 80.1401.
(v) Immediately notify EPA of any case where the feedstocks do not
meet the definition of renewable biomass as defined in Sec. 80.1401.
(vi) Immediately notify EPA of any instances where a renewable fuel
producer, importer or feedstock supplier subject to review under the
approved plan fails to cooperate in the manner described in this
section.
(vii) Submit to EPA a report of each survey, within thirty days
following the completion of each survey, such report to include all the
following information:
(A) The identification of the person who conducted the survey.
(B) An attestation by the officer of the surveyor company that the
survey was conducted in accordance with the survey plan and the survey
results are accurate.
(C) Identification of the parties for whom the survey was
conducted.
(D) Identification of the covered area surveyed.
(E) The dates on which the survey was conducted.
(F) The address of each facility at which the survey audit was
conducted and the date of the audit.
(G) A description of the methodology used to select the locations
for survey audits and the number of audits conducted.
(viii) Maintain all records relating to the survey audits conducted
under this section (h) for a period of at least 5 years.
(ix) At any time permit any representative of EPA to monitor the
conduct of the surveys, including observing audits, reviewing records,
and analysis of the audit results.
(4) A survey plan under this paragraph (h) must include all the
following:
(i) Identification of the parties for whom the survey is to be
conducted.
(ii) Identification of the independent surveyor.
(iii) A methodology for determining all the following:
(A) When the audits will be conducted.
(B) The audit locations.
(C) The number of audits to be conducted during the annual
compliance period.
(iv) Any other elements determined by EPA to be necessary to
achieve the
[[Page 14891]]
level of quality assurance required under paragraphs (c)(1), (d), and
(g) of this section.
(5)(i) Each renewable fuel producer and importer who participates
in the alternative renewable biomass tracking under this paragraph (h)
must take all reasonable steps to ensure that each feedstock producer,
aggregator, distributor, or supplier cooperates with this program by
allowing the independent surveyor to audit their facility and by
providing to the independent surveyor and/or EPA, upon request, copies
of management plans, product transfer documents, and other records or
information regarding the source of any feedstocks received.
(ii) Reasonable steps under paragraph (h)(5)(i) of this section
must include, but typically should not be limited to: Contractual
agreements with feedstock producers, aggregators, distributors, and
suppliers, which require them to cooperate with the independent
surveyor and/or EPA in the manner described in paragraph (h)(5)(i) of
this section.
(6) The procedure for obtaining EPA approval of a survey plan under
this paragraph (h), and for revocation of any such approval, are as
follows:
(i) A detailed survey plan which complies with the requirements of
this paragraph (h) must be submitted to EPA, no later than September 1
of the year preceding the calendar year in which the surveys will be
conducted.
(ii) The survey plan must be signed by a responsible corporate
officer of the renewable fuel producer or importer, or responsible
officer of the organization which arranges to have an independent
surveyor conduct a program of renewable biomass compliance surveys, as
applicable.
(iii) The survey plan must be sent to the following address:
Director, Compliance and Innovative Strategies Division, U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania Ave., NW. (6406J),
Washington, DC 20460.
(iv) EPA will send a letter to the party submitting a survey plan
under this section, either approving or disapproving the survey plan.
(v) EPA may revoke any approval of a survey plan under this section
for cause, including an EPA determination that the approved survey plan
had proved inadequate in practice or that it was not diligently
implemented.
(vi) The approving official for an alternative quality assurance
program under this section is the Director of the Compliance and
Innovative Strategies Division, Office of Transportation and Air
Quality.
(vii) Any notifications required under this paragraph (h) must be
directed to the officer designated in paragraph (h)(6)(vi) of this
section.
(7)(i) No later than December 1 of the year preceding the year in
which the surveys will be conducted, the contract with the independent
surveyor shall be in effect, and an amount of money necessary to carry
out the entire survey plan shall be paid to the independent surveyor or
placed into an escrow account with instructions to the escrow agent to
pay the money to the independent surveyor during the course of the
conduct of the survey plan.
(ii) No later than December 15 of the year preceding the year in
which the surveys will be conducted, EPA must receive a copy of the
contract with the independent surveyor, proof that the money necessary
to carry out the survey plan has either been paid to the independent
surveyor or placed into an escrow account, and, if placed into an
escrow account, a copy of the escrow agreement, to be sent to the
official designated in paragraph (h)(6)(iii) of this section.
(8) A failure of any renewable fuel producers or importer to
fulfill or cause to be fulfilled any of the requirements of this
paragraph (h) will cause the option for such party to use the
alternative quality assurance requirements under this paragraph (h) to
be void ab initio.
(i) Beginning July 1, 2010, all parties must keep transaction
information sent to EMTS in addition to other records required under
this section.
(j) A renewable fuel producer that produces fuel from separated
yard and food waste as described in Sec. 80.1426(f)(5)(i)(A) and (B)
and separated municipal waste as described in Sec. 80.1426(f)(5)(i)(C)
shall keep all the following additional records:
(1) For separated yard and food waste as described in Sec.
80.1426(f)(5)(i)(A) and (B):
(i) Documents demonstrating the amounts, by weight, purchased of
separated yard and food waste for use as a feedstock in producing
renewable fuel.
(ii) Such other records as may be requested by the Administrator.
(2) For separated municipal solid waste as described in Sec.
80.1426(f)(5)(i)(C):
(i) Contracts and documents memorializing the sale of paper,
cardboard, plastics, rubber, textiles, metals, and glass separated from
municipal solid waste for recycling.
(ii) Documents demonstrating the amounts by weight purchased of
post-recycled separated yard and food waste for use as a feedstock in
producing renewable fuel.
(iii) Such other records as may be requested by the Administrator.
(k) A renewable fuel producer that generates RINs for biogas or
electricity produced from renewable biomass (renewable electricity) for
fuels that are used for transportation pursuant to Sec. 80.1426(f)(10)
and (11), or that uses process heat from biogas to generate RINs for
renewable fuel pursuant to Sec. 80.1426(f)(12) shall keep all of the
following additional records:
(1) Contracts and documents memorializing the sale of biogas or
renewable electricity for use as transportation fuel relied upon in
Sec. 80.1426(f)(10), Sec. 80.1426(f)(11), or for use of biogas for
use as process heat to make renewable fuel as relied upon in Sec.
80.1426(f)(12), and the transfer of title of the biogas or renewable
electricity and all associated environmental attributes from the point
of generation to the transportation fueling facility.
(2) Documents demonstrating the volume and energy content of
biogas, or energy content of renewable electricity relied upon under
Sec. 80.1426(f)(10) that was delivered to the transportation fueling
facility.
(3) Documents demonstrating the volume and energy content of
biogas, or energy content of renewable electricity relied upon under
Sec. 80.1426(f)(11) or biogas relied upon under Sec. 80.1426(f)(12)
that was placed into the common carrier pipeline (for biogas) or
transmission line (for renewable electricity).
(4) Documents demonstrating the volume and energy content of
biogas, or energy content of renewable electricity relied upon under
Sec. 80.1426(f)(12) at the point of distribution.
(5) Affidavits from the biogas, or renewable electricity producer
and all parties that held title to the biogas or renewable electricity
confirming that title and environmental attributes of the biogas or
renewable electricity relied upon under Sec. 80.1426(f)(10) and (11)
or biogas relied upon under Sec. 80.1426(f)(12) were delivered to the
transportation fueling facility and only to the transportation fueling
facility. The renewable fuel producer shall create and/or obtain these
affidavits at least once per calendar quarter.
(6) The biogas or renewable electricity producer's Compliance
Certification required under Title V of the Clean Air Act.
(7) Such other records as may be requested by the Administrator.
(l) The records required under paragraphs (a) through (d) and (f)
through (k) of this section and under
[[Page 14892]]
Sec. 80.1453 shall be kept for five years from the date they were
created, except that records related to transactions involving RINs
shall be kept for five years from the date of the RIN transaction.
(m) The records required under paragraph (e) of this section shall
be kept through calendar year 2022.
(n) On request by EPA, the records required under this section and
under Sec. 80.1453 must be made available to the Administrator or the
Administrator's authorized representative. For records that are
electronically generated or maintained, the equipment or software
necessary to read the records shall be made available; or, if requested
by EPA, electronic records shall be converted to paper documents.
(o) The records required in paragraphs (b)(3) and (c)(1) of this
section must be transferred with any renewable fuel sent to the
importer of that renewable fuel by any foreign producer not generating
RINs for his renewable fuel.
(p) Copies of all reports required under Sec. 80.1464.
Sec. 80.1455 What are the small volume provisions for renewable fuel
production facilities and importers?
(a) Standard volume threshold. Renewable fuel production facilities
located within the United States that produce less than 10,000 gallons
of renewable fuel each year, and importers who import less than 10,000
gallons of renewable fuel each year, are not subject to the
requirements of Sec. 80.1426(a) and (e) related to the generation and
assignment of RINs or to batches of renewable fuel. Except as stated in
paragraph (b) of this section, such production facilities and importers
that do not generate and/or assign RINs to batches of renewable fuel
are also exempt from all the following requirements of this subpart:
(1) The registration requirements of Sec. 80.1450.
(2) The reporting requirements of Sec. 80.1451.
(3) The EMTS requirements of Sec. 80.1452.
(4) The recordkeeping requirements of Sec. 80.1454.
(5) The attest engagement requirements of Sec. 80.1464.
(6) The production outlook report requirements of Sec. 80.1449.
(b)(1) Renewable fuel production facilities and importers who
produce or import less than 10,000 gallons of renewable fuel each year
and that generate and/or assign RINs to batches of renewable fuel are
subject to the provisions of Sec. Sec. 80.1426, 80.1449 through
80.1452, 80.1454, and 80.1464.
(2) Renewable fuel production facilities and importers who produce
or import less than 10,000 gallons of renewable fuel each year but wish
to own RINs will be subject to all requirements stated in paragraphs
(a)(1) through (a)(6) and (b)(1) of this section, and all other
applicable requirements of this subpart M.
(c) Temporary volume threshold. Renewable fuel production
facilities located within the United States that produce less than
125,000 gallons of renewable fuel each year are not subject to the
requirements of Sec. 80.1426(a) and (e) related to the generation and
assignment of RINs to batches of renewable fuel for up to three years,
beginning with the calendar year in which the production facility
produces its first gallon of renewable fuel. Except as stated in
paragraph (d) of this section, such production facilities that do not
generate and/or assign RINs to batches of renewable fuel are also
exempt from all the following requirements of this subpart for a
maximum of three years:
(1) The registration requirements of Sec. 80.1450.
(2) The reporting requirements of Sec. 80.1451.
(3) The EMTS requirements of Sec. 80.1452.
(4) The recordkeeping requirements of Sec. 80.1454.
(5) The attest engagement requirements of Sec. 80.1464.
(6) The production outlook report requirements of Sec. 80.1449.
(d)(1) Renewable fuel production facilities who produce less than
125,000 gallons of renewable fuel each year and that generate and/or
assign RINs to batches of renewable fuel are subject to the provisions
of Sec. Sec. 80.1426, 80.1449 through 80.1452, 80.1454, and 80.1464.
(2) Renewable fuel production facilities who produce less than
125,000 gallons of renewable fuel each year but wish to own RINs will
be subject to all requirements stated in paragraphs (c)(1) through
(c)(6) and (d)(1) of this section, and all other applicable
requirements of this subpart M.
Sec. 80.1456 What are the provisions for cellulosic biofuel waiver
credits?
(a) If EPA reduces the applicable volume of cellulosic biofuel
pursuant to section 211(o)(7)(D)(i) of the Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C.
7545(o)(7)(D)(i)) for any given compliance year, then EPA will provide
cellulosic biofuel waiver credits for purchase for that compliance
year.
(1) The price of these cellulosic biofuel waiver credits will be
set by EPA on an annual basis in accordance with paragraph (d) of this
section.
(2) The total cellulosic biofuel waiver credits available will be
equal to the reduced cellulosic biofuel volume established by EPA for
the compliance year.
(b) Use of cellulosic biofuel waiver credits.
(1) Cellulosic biofuel waiver credits are only valid for use in the
compliance year that they are made available.
(2) Cellulosic biofuel waiver credits are nonrefundable.
(3) Cellulosic biofuel waiver credits are nontransferable.
(4) Cellulosic biofuel waiver credits may only be used for an
obligated party's current year cellulosic biofuel RVO and not towards
any prior year deficit cellulosic biofuel volume obligations.
(c) Purchase of cellulosic biofuel waiver credits.
(1) Only parties with an RVO for cellulosic biofuel may purchase
cellulosic biofuel waiver credits.
(2) Cellulosic biofuel waiver credits shall be purchased from EPA
at the time that a party submits its annual compliance report to EPA
pursuant to Sec. 80.1451(a)(1).
(3) Parties may not purchase more cellulosic biofuel waiver credits
than their current year cellulosic biofuel RVO minus cellulosic biofuel
RINs with a D code of 3 that they own.
(4) Cellulosic biofuel waiver credits may only be used to meet an
obligated party's cellulosic biofuel RVO.
(d) Setting the price of cellulosic biofuel waiver credits.
(1) The price for cellulosic biofuel waiver credits shall be set
equal to the greater of:
(i) $0.25 per cellulosic biofuel waiver credit, adjusted for
inflation in comparison to calendar year 2008; or
(ii) $3.00 less the wholesale price of gasoline per cellulosic
biofuel waiver credit, adjusted for inflation in comparison to calendar
year 2008.
(2) The wholesale price of gasoline will be calculated by averaging
the most recent twelve monthly values for U.S. Total Gasoline Bulk
Sales (Price) by Refiners as provided by the Energy Information
Administration that are available as of September 30 of the year
preceding the compliance period.
(3) The inflation adjustment will be calculated by comparing the
most recent Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (CPI-U) for
All Items expenditure category as provided by the Bureau of Labor
Statistics that is available at the time EPA sets the cellulosic
biofuel standard to the most recent comparable value reported after
December 31, 2008. When EPA must set the price of cellulosic biofuel
waiver credits for a compliance year, EPA will calculate the new
amounts for
[[Page 14893]]
paragraphs (d)(1)(i) and (ii) of this section for each year after 2008
and every month where data is available for the year preceding the
compliance period at the time EPA sets the cellulosic biofuel standard.
(e) Cellulosic biofuel waiver credits under this section will only
be able to be purchased on forms and following procedures prescribed by
EPA.
Sec. Sec. 80.1457-80.1459 [Reserved]
Sec. 80.1460 What acts are prohibited under the RFS program?
(a) Renewable fuels producer or importer violation. Except as
provided in Sec. 80.1455, no person shall produce or import a
renewable fuel without complying with the requirements of Sec. 80.1426
regarding the generation and assignment of RINs.
(b) RIN generation and transfer violations. No person shall do any
of the following:
(1) Generate a RIN for a fuel that is not a renewable fuel, or for
which the applicable renewable fuel volume was not produced.
(2) Create or transfer to any person a RIN that is invalid under
Sec. 80.1431.
(3) Transfer to any person a RIN that is not properly identified as
required under Sec. 80.1425.
(4) Transfer to any person a RIN with a K code of 1 without
transferring an appropriate volume of renewable fuel to the same person
on the same day.
(5) Introduce into commerce any renewable fuel produced from a
feedstock or through a process that is not described in the person's
registration information.
(c) RIN use violations. No person shall do any of the following:
(1) Fail to acquire sufficient RINs, or use invalid RINs, to meet
the person's RVOs under Sec. 80.1427.
(2) Fail to acquire sufficient RINs to meet the person's RVOs under
Sec. 80.1430.
(3) Use a validly generated RIN to meet the person's RVOs under
Sec. 80.1427, or separate and transfer a validly generated RIN, where
the person ultimately uses the renewable fuel volume associated with
the RIN in an application other than for use as transportation fuel,
jet fuel, or heating oil (as defined in Sec. 80.1401).
(d) RIN retention violation. No person shall retain RINs in
violation of the requirements in Sec. 80.1428(a)(5).
(e) Causing a violation. No person shall cause another person to
commit an act in violation of any prohibited act under this section.
(f) Failure to meet a requirement. No person shall fail to meet any
requirement that applies to that person under this subpart.
Sec. 80.1461 Who is liable for violations under the RFS program?
(a) Liability for violations of prohibited acts.
(1) Any person who violates a prohibition under Sec. 80.1460(a)
through (d) is liable for the violation of that prohibition.
(2) Any person who causes another person to violate a prohibition
under Sec. 80.1460(a) through (d) is liable for a violation of Sec.
80.1460(e).
(b) Liability for failure to meet other provisions of this subpart.
(1) Any person who fails to meet a requirement of any provision of
this subpart is liable for a violation of that provision.
(2) Any person who causes another person to fail to meet a
requirement of any provision of this subpart is liable for causing a
violation of that provision.
(c) Parent corporation liability. Any parent corporation is liable
for any violation of this subpart that is committed by any of its
subsidiaries.
(d) Joint venture liability. Each partner to a joint venture is
jointly and severally liable for any violation of this subpart that is
committed by the joint venture operation.
Sec. 80.1462 [Reserved]
Sec. 80.1463 What penalties apply under the RFS program?
(a) Any person who is liable for a violation under Sec. 80.1461 is
subject a to civil penalty as specified in sections 205 and 211(d) of
the Clean Air Act, for every day of each such violation and the amount
of economic benefit or savings resulting from each violation.
(b) Any person liable under Sec. 80.1461(a) for a violation of
Sec. 80.1460(c) for failure to meet its RVOs, or Sec. 80.1460(e) for
causing another person to fail to meet their RVOs, during any averaging
period, is subject to a separate day of violation for each day in the
averaging period.
(c) Any person liable under Sec. 80.1461(b) for failure to meet,
or causing a failure to meet, a requirement of any provision of this
subpart is liable for a separate day of violation for each day such a
requirement remains unfulfilled.
Sec. 80.1464 What are the attest engagement requirements under the
RFS program?
The requirements regarding annual attest engagements in Sec. Sec.
80.125 through 80.127, and 80.130, also apply to any attest engagement
procedures required under this subpart M. In addition to any other
applicable attest engagement procedures, such as the requirements in
Sec. Sec. 80.1465 and 80.1466, the following annual attest engagement
procedures are required under this subpart.
(a) Obligated parties and exporters. The following attest
procedures shall be completed for any obligated party as stated in
Sec. 80.1406(a) or exporter of renewable fuel:
(1) Annual compliance demonstration report.
(i) Obtain and read a copy of the annual compliance demonstration
report required under Sec. 80.1451(a)(1) which contains information
regarding all the following:
(A) The obligated party's volume of all products listed in Sec.
80.1407(c) and (e), or the exporter's volume of each category of
exported renewable fuel identified in Sec. 80.1430 (b)(1)(i),
(b)(1)(ii), (b)(2)(i), and (b)(2)(ii).
(B) RVOs.
(C) RINs used for compliance.
(ii) Obtain documentation of any volumes of renewable fuel used in
products listed in Sec. 80.1407(c) and (e) at the refinery or import
facility or exported during the reporting year; compute and report as a
finding the total volumes of renewable fuel represented in these
documents.
(iii) For obligated parties, compare the volumes of products listed
in Sec. 80.1407(c) and (e) reported to EPA in the report required
under Sec. 80.1451(a)(1) with the volumes, excluding any renewable
fuel volumes, contained in the inventory reconciliation analysis under
Sec. 80.133 and the volume of non-renewable diesel produced or
imported. Verify that the volumes reported to EPA agree with the
volumes in the inventory reconciliation analysis and the volumes of
non-renewable diesel produced or imported, and report as a finding any
exception.
(iv) For exporters, perform all of the following:
(A) Obtain the database, spreadsheet, or other documentation that
the exporter maintains for purposes for all exported renewable fuel.
(B) Compare the volume of products identified in these documents
with the volumes reported to EPA.
(C) Verify that the volumes reported to EPA agree with the volumes
identified in the database, spreadsheet, or other documentation, and
report as a finding any exception.
(v) Compute and report as a finding the obligated party's or
exporter's RVOs, and any deficit RVOs carried over from the previous
year or carried into the subsequent year, and verify that the values
agree with the values reported to EPA.
[[Page 14894]]
(vi) Obtain the database, spreadsheet, or other documentation for
all RINs by type of renewable fuel used for compliance during the year
being reviewed; calculate the total number of RINs associated with each
type of renewable fuel used for compliance by year of generation
represented in these documents; state whether this information agrees
with the report to EPA and report as a finding any exceptions.
(vii) For exporters, perform all the following:
(A) Select sample batches in accordance with the guidelines in
Sec. 80.127 from each separate category of renewable fuel exported and
identified in Sec. 80.1451(a).
(B) Obtain invoices, bills of lading and other documentation for
the representative samples. Calculate the RVO for the exported fuel,
state whether this information agrees with the report to EPA and report
as a finding any exception.
(C) State whether any of these documents refer to the exported fuel
as advanced biofuel or cellulosic biofuel, and report as a finding
whether or not the exporter calculated an advanced biofuel or
cellulosic biofuel RVO for these fuels pursuant to Sec.
80.1430(b)(2)(i) or (ii).
(2) RIN transaction reports.
(i) Obtain and read copies of a representative sample, selected in
accordance with the guidelines in Sec. 80.127, of each RIN transaction
type (RINs purchased, RINs sold, RINs retired, RINs reinstated)
included in the RIN transaction reports required under Sec.
80.1451(a)(2) for the compliance year.
(ii) Obtain contracts, invoices, or other documentation for the
representative samples of RIN transactions; compute the transaction
types, transaction dates, and RINs traded; state whether the
information agrees with the party's reports to EPA and report as a
finding any exceptions.
(3) RIN activity reports.
(i) Obtain and read copies of all quarterly RIN activity reports
required under Sec. 80.1451(a)(3) for the compliance year.
(ii) Obtain the database, spreadsheet, or other documentation used
to generate the information in the RIN activity reports; compare the
RIN transaction samples reviewed under paragraph (a)(2) of this section
with the corresponding entries in the database or spreadsheet and
report as a finding any discrepancies; compute the total number of
current-year and prior-year RINs owned at the start and end of each
quarter, purchased, sold, retired and reinstated, and for parties that
reported RIN activity for RINs assigned to a volume of renewable fuel,
the volume and type of renewable fuel (as defined in Sec. 80.1401) of
renewable fuel owned at the end of each quarter; as represented in
these documents; and state whether this information agrees with the
party's reports to EPA.
(b) Renewable fuel producers and RIN-generating importers. The
following attest procedures shall be completed for any RIN-generating
renewable fuel producer or importer:
(1) RIN generation reports.
(i) Obtain and read copies of the reports required under Sec.
80.1451(b)(1), (e), and (d) for the compliance year.
(ii) Obtain production data for each renewable fuel batch by type
of renewable fuel that was produced or imported during the year being
reviewed; compute the RIN numbers, production dates, types, volumes of
denaturant and applicable equivalence values, and production volumes
for each batch; report the total RINs generated during the year being
reviewed; and state whether this information agrees with the party's
reports to EPA. Report as a finding any exceptions.
(iii) Verify that the proper number of RINs were generated and
assigned pursuant to the requirements of Sec. 80.1426 for each batch
of renewable fuel produced or imported.
(iv) Obtain product transfer documents for a representative sample,
selected in accordance with the guidelines in Sec. 80.127, of
renewable fuel batches produced or imported during the year being
reviewed; verify that the product transfer documents contain the
applicable information required under Sec. 80.1453; verify the
accuracy of the information contained in the product transfer
documents; report as a finding any product transfer document that does
not contain the applicable information required under Sec. 80.1453.
(v)(A) Obtain documentation, as required under Sec. 80.1451(b),
(d), and (e) associated with feedstock purchases for a representative
sample, selected in accordance with the guidelines in Sec. 80.127, of
renewable fuel batches produced or imported during the year being
reviewed.
(B) Verify that feedstocks were properly identified in the reports
and met the definition of renewable biomass in Sec. 80.1401.
(2) RIN transaction reports.
(i) Obtain and read copies of a representative sample, selected in
accordance with the guidelines in Sec. 80.127, of each transaction
type (RINs purchased, RINs sold, RINs retired, RINs reinstated)
included in the RIN transaction reports required under Sec.
80.1451(b)(2) for the compliance year.
(ii) Obtain contracts, invoices, or other documentation for the
representative samples of RIN transactions; compute the transaction
types, transaction dates, and the RINs traded; state whether this
information agrees with the party's reports to EPA and report as a
finding any exceptions.
(3) RIN activity reports.
(i) Obtain and read copies of the quarterly RIN activity reports
required under Sec. 80.1451(b)(3) for the compliance year.
(ii) Obtain the database, spreadsheet, or other documentation used
to generate the information in the RIN activity reports; compare the
RIN transaction samples reviewed under paragraph (b)(2) of this section
with the corresponding entries in the database or spreadsheet and
report as a finding any discrepancies; report the total number of each
RIN generated during each quarter and compute and report the total
number of current-year and prior-year RINs owned at the start and end
of each quarter, purchased, sold, retired and reinstated, and for
parties that reported RIN activity for RINs assigned to a volume of
renewable fuel, the volume of renewable fuel owned at the end of each
quarter, as represented in these documents; and state whether this
information agrees with the party's reports to EPA.
(4) Independent Third Party Engineering Review.
(i) Obtain documentation of independent third party engineering
reviews required under Sec. 80.1450(b)(2).
(ii) Review and verify the written verification and records
generated as part of the independent third party engineering review.
(c) Other parties owning RINs. The following attest procedures
shall be completed for any party other than an obligated party or
renewable fuel producer or importer that owns any RINs during a
calendar year:
(1) RIN transaction reports.
(i) Obtain and read copies of a representative sample, selected in
accordance with the guidelines in Sec. 80.127, of each RIN transaction
type (RINs purchased, RINs sold, RINs retired, RINs separated, RINs
reinstated) included in the RIN transaction reports required under
Sec. 80.1451(c)(1) for the compliance year.
(ii) Obtain contracts, invoices, or other documentation for the
representative samples of RIN transactions; compute the transaction
types, transaction dates, and the RINs traded; state whether this
information
[[Page 14895]]
agrees with the party's reports to EPA and report as a finding any
exceptions.
(2) RIN activity reports.
(i) Obtain and read copies of the quarterly RIN activity reports
required under Sec. 80.1451(c)(2) for the compliance year.
(ii) Obtain the database, spreadsheet, or other documentation used
to generate the information in the RIN activity reports; compare the
RIN transaction samples reviewed under paragraph (c)(1) of this section
with the corresponding entries in the database or spreadsheet and
report as a finding any discrepancies; compute the total number of
current-year and prior-year RINs owned at the start and end of each
quarter, purchased, sold, retired, separated, and reinstated and for
parties that reported RIN activity for RINs assigned to a volume of
renewable fuel, the volume of renewable fuel owned at the end of each
quarter, as represented in these documents; and state whether this
information agrees with the party's reports to EPA.
(d) For each compliance year, each party subject to the attest
engagement requirements under this section shall cause the reports
required under this section to be submitted to EPA by May 31 of the
year following the compliance year.
(e) The party conducting the procedures under this section shall
obtain a written representation from a company representative that the
copies of the reports required under this section are complete and
accurate copies of the reports filed with EPA.
(f) The party conducting the procedures under this section shall
identify and report as a finding the commercial computer program used
by the party to track the data required by the regulations in this
subpart, if any.
Sec. 80.1465 What are the additional requirements under this subpart
for foreign small refiners, foreign small refineries, and importers of
RFS-FRFUEL?
(a) Definitions. The following additional definitions apply for
this subpart:
(1) Foreign refinery is a refinery that is located outside the
United States, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin
Islands, Guam, American Samoa, and the Commonwealth of the Northern
Mariana Islands (collectively referred to in this section as ``the
United States'').
(2) Foreign refiner is a person that meets the definition of
refiner under Sec. 80.2(i) for a foreign refinery.
(3) Foreign small refinery is a foreign refinery that has received
a small refinery exemption under Sec. 80.1441.
(4) Foreign small refiner is a foreign refiner that has received a
small refiner exemption under Sec. 80.1442.
(5) RFS-FRFUEL is transportation fuel produced at a foreign
refinery that has received a small refinery exemption under Sec.
80.1441 or by a foreign refiner with a small refiner exemption under
Sec. 80.1442.
(6) Non-RFS-FRFUEL is one of the following:
(i) Transportation fuel produced at a foreign refinery that has
received a small refinery exemption under Sec. 80.1441 or by a foreign
refiner with a small refiner exemption under Sec. 80.1442.
(ii) Transportation fuel produced at a foreign refinery that has
not received a small refinery exemption under Sec. 80.1441 or by a
foreign refiner that has not received a small refiner exemption under
Sec. 80.1442.
(b) General requirements for RFS-FRFUEL for foreign small
refineries and small refiners. A foreign refiner must do all the
following:
(1) Designate, at the time of production, each batch of
transportation fuel produced at the foreign refinery that is exported
for use in the United States as RFS-FRFUEL.
(2) Meet all requirements that apply to refiners who have received
a small refinery or small refiner exemption under this subpart.
(c) Designation, foreign small refiner certification, and product
transfer documents.
(1) Any foreign small refiner must designate each batch of RFS-
FRFUEL as such at the time the transportation fuel is produced.
(2) On each occasion when RFS-FRFUEL is loaded onto a vessel or
other transportation mode for transport to the United States, the
foreign small refiner shall prepare a certification for each batch of
RFS-FRFUEL that meets all the following requirements:
(i) The certification shall include the report of the independent
third party under paragraph (d) of this section, and all the following
additional information:
(A) The name and EPA registration number of the refinery that
produced the RFS-FRFUEL.
(B) [Reserved]
(ii) The identification of the transportation fuel as RFS-FRFUEL.
(iii) The volume of RFS-FRFUEL being transported, in gallons.
(3) On each occasion when any person transfers custody or title to
any RFS-FRFUEL prior to its being imported into the United States, it
must include all the following information as part of the product
transfer document information:
(i) Designation of the transportation fuel as RFS-FRFUEL.
(ii) The certification required under paragraph (c)(2) of this
section.
(d) Load port independent testing and refinery identification.
(1) On each occasion that RFS-FRFUEL is loaded onto a vessel for
transport to the United States the foreign small refiner shall have an
independent third party do all the following:
(i) Inspect the vessel prior to loading and determine the volume of
any tank bottoms.
(ii) Determine the temperature-corrected volume of RFS-FRFUEL
loaded onto the vessel (exclusive of any tank bottoms before loading).
(iii) Obtain the EPA-assigned registration number of the foreign
refinery.
(iv) Determine the name and country of registration of the vessel
used to transport the RFS-FRFUEL to the United States.
(v) Determine the date and time the vessel departs the port serving
the foreign refinery.
(vi) Review original documents that reflect movement and storage of
the RFS-FRFUEL from the foreign refinery to the load port, and from
this review determine:
(A) The refinery at which the RFS-FRFUEL was produced; and
(B) That the RFS-FRFUEL remained segregated from Non-RFS-FRFUEL and
other RFS-FRFUEL produced at a different refinery.
(2) The independent third party shall submit a report to all the
following:
(i) The foreign small refiner or owner of the foreign small
refinery, containing the information required under paragraph (d)(1) of
this section, to accompany the product transfer documents for the
vessel.
(ii) The Administrator, containing the information required under
paragraph (d)(1) of this section, within thirty days following the date
of the independent third party's inspection. This report shall include
a description of the method used to determine the identity of the
refinery at which the transportation fuel was produced, assurance that
the transportation fuel remained segregated as specified in paragraph
(j)(1) of this section, and a description of the transportation fuel's
movement and storage between production at the source refinery and
vessel loading.
(3) The independent third party must do all the following:
(i) Be approved in advance by EPA, based on a demonstration of
ability to perform the procedures required in this paragraph (d).
[[Page 14896]]
(ii) Be independent under the criteria specified in Sec.
80.65(f)(2)(iii).
(iii) Sign a commitment that contains the provisions specified in
paragraph (f) of this section with regard to activities, facilities,
and documents relevant to compliance with the requirements of this
paragraph (d).
(e) Comparison of load port and port of entry testing.
(1)(i) Any foreign small refiner or foreign small refinery and any
United States importer of RFS-FRFUEL shall compare the results from the
load port testing under paragraph (d) of this section, with the port of
entry testing as reported under paragraph (k) of this section, for the
volume of transportation fuel, except as specified in paragraph
(e)(1)(ii) of this section.
(ii) Where a vessel transporting RFS-FRFUEL offloads this
transportation fuel at more than one United States port of entry, the
requirements of paragraph (e)(1)(i) of this section do not apply at
subsequent ports of entry if the United States importer obtains a
certification from the vessel owner that the requirements of paragraph
(e)(1)(i) of this section were met and that the vessel has not loaded
any transportation fuel or blendstock between the first United States
port of entry and any subsequent port of entry.
(2) If the temperature-corrected volumes determined at the port of
entry and at the load port differ by more than one percent, the United
States importer and the foreign small refiner or foreign small refinery
shall not treat the transportation fuel as RFS-FRFUEL and the importer
shall include the volume of transportation fuel in the importer's RFS
compliance calculations.
(f) Foreign refiner commitments. Any foreign small refinery or
foreign small refiner shall commit to and comply with the provisions
contained in this paragraph (f) as a condition to being approved for a
small refinery or small refiner exemption under this subpart.
(1) Any United States Environmental Protection Agency inspector or
auditor must be given full, complete, and immediate access to conduct
inspections and audits of the foreign refinery.
(i) Inspections and audits may be either announced in advance by
EPA, or unannounced.
(ii) Access will be provided to any location where:
(A) Transportation fuel is produced;
(B) Documents related to refinery operations are kept; and
(C) RFS-FRFUEL is stored or transported between the foreign
refinery and the United States, including storage tanks, vessels, and
pipelines.
(iii) EPA inspectors and auditors may be EPA employees or
contractors to EPA.
(iv) Any documents requested that are related to matters covered by
inspections and audits must be provided to an EPA inspector or auditor
on request.
(v) Inspections and audits may include review and copying of any
documents related to all the following:
(A) The volume of RFS-FRFUEL.
(B) The proper classification of transportation fuel as being RFS-
FRFUEL or as not being RFS-FRFUEL.
(C) Transfers of title or custody to RFS-FRFUEL.
(D) Testing of RFS-FRFUEL.
(E) Work performed and reports prepared by independent third
parties and by independent auditors under the requirements of this
section, including work papers.
(vi) Inspections and audits may include interviewing employees.
(vii) Any employee of the foreign refiner must be made available
for interview by the EPA inspector or auditor, on request, within a
reasonable time period.
(viii) English language translations of any documents must be
provided to an EPA inspector or auditor, on request, within 10 working
days.
(ix) English language interpreters must be provided to accompany
EPA inspectors and auditors, on request.
(2) An agent for service of process located in the District of
Columbia shall be named, and service on this agent constitutes service
on the foreign refiner or any employee of the foreign refiner for any
action by EPA or otherwise by the United States related to the
requirements of this subpart.
(3) The forum for any civil or criminal enforcement action related
to the provisions of this section for violations of the Clean Air Act
or regulations promulgated thereunder shall be governed by the Clean
Air Act, including the EPA administrative forum where allowed under the
Clean Air Act.
(4) United States substantive and procedural laws shall apply to
any civil or criminal enforcement action against the foreign refiner or
any employee of the foreign refiner related to the provisions of this
section.
(5) Submitting an application for a small refinery or small refiner
exemption, or producing and exporting transportation fuel under such
exemption, and all other actions to comply with the requirements of
this subpart relating to such exemption constitute actions or
activities covered by and within the meaning of the provisions of 28
U.S.C. 1605(a)(2), but solely with respect to actions instituted
against the foreign refiner, its agents and employees in any court or
other tribunal in the United States for conduct that violates the
requirements applicable to the foreign refiner under this subpart,
including conduct that violates the False Statements Accountability Act
of 1996 (18 U.S.C. 1001) and section 113(c)(2) of the Clean Air Act (42
U.S.C. 7413).
(6) The foreign refiner, or its agents or employees, will not seek
to detain or to impose civil or criminal remedies against EPA
inspectors or auditors, whether EPA employees or EPA contractors, for
actions performed within the scope of EPA employment or contract
related to the provisions of this section.
(7) The commitment required by this paragraph (f) shall be signed
by the owner or president of the foreign refiner business.
(8) In any case where RFS-FRFUEL produced at a foreign refinery is
stored or transported by another company between the refinery and the
vessel that transports the RFS-FRFUEL to the United States, the foreign
refiner shall obtain from each such other company a commitment that
meets the requirements specified in paragraphs (f)(1) through (f)(7) of
this section, and these commitments shall be included in the foreign
refiner's application for a small refinery or small refiner exemption
under this subpart.
(g) Sovereign immunity. By submitting an application for a small
refinery or small refiner exemption under this subpart, or by producing
and exporting transportation fuel to the United States under such
exemption, the foreign refiner, and its agents and employees, without
exception, become subject to the full operation of the administrative
and judicial enforcement powers and provisions of the United States
without limitation based on sovereign immunity, with respect to actions
instituted against the foreign refiner, its agents and employees in any
court or other tribunal in the United States for conduct that violates
the requirements applicable to the foreign refiner under this subpart,
including conduct that violates the False Statements Accountability Act
of 1996 (18 U.S.C. 1001) and section 113(c)(2) of the Clean Air Act (42
U.S.C. 7413).
(h) Bond posting. Any foreign refiner shall meet the requirements
of this paragraph (h) as a condition to approval of a foreign small
refinery or foreign small refiner exemption under this subpart.
[[Page 14897]]
(1) The foreign refiner shall post a bond of the amount calculated
using the following equation:
Bond = G * $ 0.01
Where:
Bond = amount of the bond in United States dollars.
G = the largest volume of transportation fuel produced at the
foreign refinery and exported to the United States, in gallons,
during a single calendar year among the most recent of the following
calendar years, up to a maximum of five calendar years: the calendar
year immediately preceding the date the refinery's or refiner's
application is submitted, the calendar year the application is
submitted, and each succeeding calendar year.
(2) Bonds shall be posted by:
(i) Paying the amount of the bond to the Treasurer of the United
States;
(ii) Obtaining a bond in the proper amount from a third party
surety agent that is payable to satisfy United States administrative or
judicial judgments against the foreign refiner, provided EPA agrees in
advance as to the third party and the nature of the surety agreement;
or
(iii) An alternative commitment that results in assets of an
appropriate liquidity and value being readily available to the United
States, provided EPA agrees in advance as to the alternative
commitment.
(3) Bonds posted under this paragraph (h) shall:
(i) Be used to satisfy any judicial judgment that results from an
administrative or judicial enforcement action for conduct in violation
of this subpart, including where such conduct violates the False
Statements Accountability Act of 1996 (18 U.S.C. 1001) and section
113(c)(2) of the Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. 7413);
(ii) Be provided by a corporate surety that is listed in the United
States Department of Treasury Circular 570 ``Companies Holding
Certificates of Authority as Acceptable Sureties on Federal Bonds'';
and
(iii) Include a commitment that the bond will remain in effect for
at least five years following the end of latest annual reporting period
that the foreign refiner produces transportation fuel pursuant to the
requirements of this subpart.
(4) On any occasion a foreign refiner bond is used to satisfy any
judgment, the foreign refiner shall increase the bond to cover the
amount used within 90 days of the date the bond is used.
(5) If the bond amount for a foreign refiner increases, the foreign
refiner shall increase the bond to cover the shortfall within 90 days
of the date the bond amount changes. If the bond amount decreases, the
foreign refiner may reduce the amount of the bond beginning 90 days
after the date the bond amount changes.
(i) English language reports. Any document submitted to EPA by a
foreign refiner shall be in English, or shall include an English
language translation.
(j) Prohibitions.
(1) No person may combine RFS-FRFUEL with any Non-RFS-FRFUEL, and
no person may combine RFS-FRFUEL with any RFS-FRFUEL produced at a
different refinery, until the importer has met all the requirements of
paragraph (k) of this section.
(2) No foreign refiner or other person may cause another person to
commit an action prohibited in paragraph (j)(1) of this section, or
that otherwise violates the requirements of this section.
(k) United States importer requirements. Any United States importer
of RFS-FRFUEL shall meet the following requirements:
(1) Each batch of imported RFS-FRFUEL shall be classified by the
importer as being RFS-FRFUEL.
(2) Transportation fuel shall be classified as RFS-FRFUEL according
to the designation by the foreign refiner if this designation is
supported by product transfer documents prepared by the foreign refiner
as required in paragraph (c) of this section. Additionally, the
importer shall comply with all requirements of this subpart applicable
to importers.
(3) For each transportation fuel batch classified as RFS-FRFUEL,
any United States importer shall have an independent third party do all
the following:
(i) Determine the volume of transportation fuel in the vessel.
(ii) Use the foreign refiner's RFS-FRFUEL certification to
determine the name and EPA-assigned registration number of the foreign
refinery that produced the RFS-FRFUEL.
(iii) Determine the name and country of registration of the vessel
used to transport the RFS-FRFUEL to the United States.
(iv) Determine the date and time the vessel arrives at the United
States port of entry.
(4) Any importer shall submit reports within 30 days following the
date any vessel transporting RFS-FRFUEL arrives at the United States
port of entry to:
(i) The Administrator, containing the information determined under
paragraph (k)(3) of this section; and
(ii) The foreign refiner, containing the information determined
under paragraph (k)(3)(i) of this section, and including identification
of the port at which the product was off loaded.
(5) Any United States importer shall meet all other requirements of
this subpart for any imported transportation fuel that is not
classified as RFS-FRFUEL under paragraph (k)(2) of this section.
(l) Truck imports of RFS-FRFUEL produced at a foreign refinery.
(1) Any refiner whose RFS-FRFUEL is transported into the United
States by truck may petition EPA to use alternative procedures to meet
all the following requirements:
(i) Certification under paragraph (c)(2) of this section.
(ii) Load port and port of entry testing requirements under
paragraphs (d) and (e) of this section.
(iii) Importer testing requirements under paragraph (k)(3) of this
section.
(2) These alternative procedures must ensure RFS-FRFUEL remains
segregated from Non-RFS-FRFUEL until it is imported into the United
States. The petition will be evaluated based on whether it adequately
addresses all the following:
(i) Provisions for monitoring pipeline shipments, if applicable,
from the refinery, that ensure segregation of RFS-FRFUEL from that
refinery from all other transportation fuel.
(ii) Contracts with any terminals and/or pipelines that receive
and/or transport RFS-FRFUEL that prohibit the commingling of RFS-FRFUEL
with Non-RFS-FRFUEL or RFS-FRFUEL from other foreign refineries.
(iii) Attest procedures to be conducted annually by an independent
third party that review loading records and import documents based on
volume reconciliation, or other criteria, to confirm that all RFS-
FRFUEL remains segregated throughout the distribution system.
(3) The petition described in this section must be submitted to EPA
along with the application for a small refinery or small refiner
exemption under this subpart.
(m) Additional attest requirements for importers of RFS-FRFUEL. The
following additional procedures shall be carried out by any importer of
RFS-FRFUEL as part of the attest engagement required for importers
under this subpart M.
(1) Obtain listings of all tenders of RFS-FRFUEL. Agree the total
volume of tenders from the listings to the transportation fuel
inventory reconciliation analysis required in Sec. 80.133(b), and to
the volumes determined by the third party under paragraph (d) of this
section.
[[Page 14898]]
(2) For each tender under paragraph (m)(1) of this section, where
the transportation fuel is loaded onto a marine vessel, report as a
finding the name and country of registration of each vessel, and the
volumes of RFS-FRFUEL loaded onto each vessel.
(3) Select a sample from the list of vessels identified per
paragraph (m)(2) of this section used to transport RFS-FRFUEL, in
accordance with the guidelines in Sec. 80.127, and for each vessel
selected perform all the following:
(i) Obtain the report of the independent third party, under
paragraph (d) of this section.
(A) Agree the information in these reports with regard to vessel
identification and transportation fuel volume.
(B) Identify, and report as a finding, each occasion the load port
and port of entry volume results differ by more than the amount allowed
in paragraph (e)(2) of this section, and determine whether all of the
requirements of paragraph (e)(2) of this section have been met.
(ii) Obtain the documents used by the independent third party to
determine transportation and storage of the RFS-FRFUEL from the
refinery to the load port, under paragraph (d) of this section. Obtain
tank activity records for any storage tank where the RFS-FRFUEL is
stored, and pipeline activity records for any pipeline used to
transport the RFS-FRFUEL prior to being loaded onto the vessel. Use
these records to determine whether the RFS-FRFUEL was produced at the
refinery that is the subject of the attest engagement, and whether the
RFS-FRFUEL was mixed with any Non-RFS-FRFUEL or any RFS-FRFUEL produced
at a different refinery.
(4) Select a sample from the list of vessels identified per
paragraph (m)(2) of this section used to transport RFS-FRFUEL, in
accordance with the guidelines in Sec. 80.127, and for each vessel
selected perform all of the following:
(i) Obtain a commercial document of general circulation that lists
vessel arrivals and departures, and that includes the port and date of
departure of the vessel, and the port of entry and date of arrival of
the vessel.
(ii) Agree the vessel's departure and arrival locations and dates
from the independent third party and United States importer reports to
the information contained in the commercial document.
(5) Obtain separate listings of all tenders of RFS-FRFUEL, and
perform all the following:
(i) Agree the volume of tenders from the listings to the
transportation fuel inventory reconciliation analysis in Sec.
80.133(b).
(ii) Obtain a separate listing of the tenders under this paragraph
(m)(5) where the transportation fuel is loaded onto a marine vessel.
Select a sample from this listing in accordance with the guidelines in
Sec. 80.127, and obtain a commercial document of general circulation
that lists vessel arrivals and departures, and that includes the port
and date of departure and the ports and dates where the transportation
fuel was off loaded for the selected vessels. Determine and report as a
finding the country where the transportation fuel was off loaded for
each vessel selected.
(6) In order to complete the requirements of this paragraph (m), an
auditor shall do all the following:
(i) Be independent of the foreign refiner or importer.
(ii) Be licensed as a Certified Public Accountant in the United
States and a citizen of the United States, or be approved in advance by
EPA based on a demonstration of ability to perform the procedures
required in Sec. Sec. 80.125 through 80.127, 80.130, 80.1464, and this
paragraph (m).
(iii) Sign a commitment that contains the provisions specified in
paragraph (f) of this section with regard to activities and documents
relevant to compliance with the requirements of Sec. Sec. 80.125
through 80.127, 80.130, 80.1464, and this paragraph (m).
(n) Withdrawal or suspension of foreign small refiner or foreign
small refinery status. EPA may withdraw or suspend a foreign refiner's
small refinery or small refiner exemption where:
(1) A foreign refiner fails to meet any requirement of this
section;
(2) A foreign government fails to allow EPA inspections as provided
in paragraph (f)(1) of this section;
(3) A foreign refiner asserts a claim of, or a right to claim,
sovereign immunity in an action to enforce the requirements in this
subpart; or
(4) A foreign refiner fails to pay a civil or criminal penalty that
is not satisfied using the foreign refiner bond specified in paragraph
(h) of this section.
(o) Additional requirements for applications, reports and
certificates. Any application for a small refinery or small refiner
exemption, alternative procedures under paragraph (l) of this section,
any report, certification, or other submission required under this
section shall be:
(1) Submitted in accordance with procedures specified by the
Administrator, including use of any forms that may be specified by the
Administrator.
(2) Signed by the president or owner of the foreign refiner
company, or by that person's immediate designee, and shall contain the
following declaration: ``I hereby certify: (1) That I have actual
authority to sign on behalf of and to bind [insert name of foreign
refiner] with regard to all statements contained herein; (2) that I am
aware that the information contained herein is being Certified, or
submitted to the United States Environmental Protection Agency, under
the requirements of 40 CFR part 80, subpart M, and that the information
is material for determining compliance under these regulations; and (3)
that I have read and understand the information being Certified or
submitted, and this information is true, complete and correct to the
best of my knowledge and belief after I have taken reasonable and
appropriate steps to verify the accuracy thereof. I affirm that I have
read and understand the provisions of 40 CFR part 80, subpart M,
including 40 CFR 80.1465 apply to [INSERT NAME OF FOREIGN REFINER].
Pursuant to Clean Air Act section 113(c) and 18 U.S.C. 1001, the
penalty for furnishing false, incomplete or misleading information in
this certification or submission is a fine of up to $10,000 U.S., and/
or imprisonment for up to five years.''
Sec. 80.1466 What are the additional requirements under this subpart
for RIN- generating foreign producers and importers of renewable fuels
for which RINs have been generated by the foreign producer?
(a) Foreign producer of renewable fuel. For purposes of this
subpart, a foreign producer of renewable fuel is a person located
outside the United States, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Virgin
Islands, Guam, American Samoa, and the Commonwealth of the Northern
Mariana Islands (collectively referred to in this section as ``the
United States'') that has been approved by EPA to generate RINs for
renewable fuel it produces for export to the United States, hereinafter
referred to as a ``foreign producer'' under this section.
(b) General requirements. An approved foreign producer under this
section must meet all requirements that apply to renewable fuel
producers under this subpart.
(c) Designation, foreign producer certification, and product
transfer documents.
(1) Any approved foreign producer under this section that generates
RINs for renewable fuel must designate each batch of such renewable
fuel as ``RFS-
[[Page 14899]]
FRRF'' at the time the renewable fuel is produced.
(2) On each occasion when RFS-FRRF is transferred for transport to
a vessel or loaded onto a vessel or other transportation mode for
transport to the United States, the RIN-generating foreign producer
shall prepare a certification for each batch of RFS-FRRF; the
certification shall include the report of the independent third party
under paragraph (d) of this section, and all the following additional
information:
(i) The name and EPA registration number of the company that
produced the RFS-FRRF.
(ii) The identification of the renewable fuel as RFS-FRRF.
(iii) The identification of the renewable fuel by type, D code, and
number of RINs generated.
(iv) The volume of RFS-FRRF, standardized per Sec. 80.1426(f)(8),
being transported, in gallons.
(3) On each occasion when any person transfers custody or title to
any RFS-FRRF prior to its being imported into the United States, it
must include all the following information as part of the product
transfer document information:
(i) Designation of the renewable fuel as RFS-FRRF.
(ii) The certification required under paragraph (c)(2) of this
section.
(d) Load port independent testing and producer identification.
(1) On each occasion that RFS-FRRF is loaded onto a vessel for
transport to the United States the RIN-generating foreign producer
shall have an independent third party do all the following:
(i) Inspect the vessel prior to loading and determine the volume of
any tank bottoms.
(ii) Determine the volume of RFS-FRRF, standardized per Sec.
80.1426(f)(8), loaded onto the vessel (exclusive of any tank bottoms
before loading).
(iii) Obtain the EPA-assigned registration number of the foreign
producer.
(iv) Determine the name and country of registration of the vessel
used to transport the RFS-FRRF to the United States.
(v) Determine the date and time the vessel departs the port serving
the foreign producer.
(vi) Review original documents that reflect movement and storage of
the RFS-FRRF from the RIN-generating foreign producer to the load port,
and from this review determine all the following:
(A) The facility at which the RFS-FRRF was produced.
(B) That the RFS-FRRF remained segregated from Non-RFS-FRRF and
other RFS-FRRF produced by a different foreign producer.
(2) The independent third party shall submit a report to the
following:
(i) The RIN-generating foreign producer, containing the information
required under paragraph (d)(1) of this section, to accompany the
product transfer documents for the vessel.
(ii) The Administrator, containing the information required under
paragraph (d)(1) of this section, within thirty days following the date
of the independent third party's inspection. This report shall include
a description of the method used to determine the identity of the
foreign producer facility at which the renewable fuel was produced,
assurance that the renewable fuel remained segregated as specified in
paragraph (j)(1) of this section, and a description of the renewable
fuel's movement and storage between production at the source facility
and vessel loading.
(3) The independent third party must:
(i) Be approved in advance by EPA, based on a demonstration of
ability to perform the procedures required in this paragraph (d);
(ii) Be independent under the criteria specified in Sec.
80.65(e)(2)(iii); and
(iii) Sign a commitment that contains the provisions specified in
paragraph (f) of this section with regard to activities, facilities and
documents relevant to compliance with the requirements of this
paragraph (d).
(e) Comparison of load port and port of entry testing.
(1)(i) Any RIN-generating foreign producer and any United States
importer of RFS-FRRF shall compare the results from the load port
testing under paragraph (d) of this section, with the port of entry
testing as reported under paragraph (k) of this section, for the volume
of renewable fuel, standardized per Sec. 80.1426(f)(8), except as
specified in paragraph (e)(1)(ii) of this section.
(ii) Where a vessel transporting RFS-FRRF offloads the renewable
fuel at more than one United States port of entry, the requirements of
paragraph (e)(1)(i) of this section do not apply at subsequent ports of
entry if the United States importer obtains a certification from the
vessel owner that the requirements of paragraph (e)(1)(i) of this
section were met and that the vessel has not loaded any renewable fuel
between the first United States port of entry and the subsequent ports
of entry.
(2)(i) If the temperature-corrected volumes, after accounting for
tank bottoms, determined at the port of entry and at the load port
differ by more than one percent, the number of RINs associated with the
renewable fuel shall be calculated based on the lesser of the two
volumes in paragraph (e)(1)(i) of this section.
(ii) Where the port of entry volume is the lesser of the two
volumes in paragraph (e)(1)(i) of this section, the importer shall
calculate the difference between the number of RINs originally assigned
by the foreign producer and the number of RINs calculated under Sec.
80.1426 for the volume of renewable fuel as measured at the port of
entry, and acquire and retire that amount of RINs in accordance with
paragraph (k)(3) of this section.
(f) Foreign producer commitments. Any RIN-generating foreign
producer shall commit to and comply with the provisions contained in
this paragraph (f) as a condition to being approved as a foreign
producer under this subpart.
(1) Any United States Environmental Protection Agency inspector or
auditor must be given full, complete, and immediate access to conduct
inspections and audits of the foreign producer facility.
(i) Inspections and audits may be either announced in advance by
EPA, or unannounced.
(ii) Access will be provided to any location where:
(A) Renewable fuel is produced;
(B) Documents related to renewable fuel producer operations are
kept; and
(C) RFS-FRRF is stored or transported between the foreign producer
and the United States, including storage tanks, vessels and pipelines.
(iii) EPA inspectors and auditors may be EPA employees or
contractors to EPA.
(iv) Any documents requested that are related to matters covered by
inspections and audits must be provided to an EPA inspector or auditor
on request.
(v) Inspections and audits may include review and copying of any
documents related to the following:
(A) The volume of RFS-FRRF.
(B) The proper classification of renewable fuel as being RFS-FRRF.
(C) Transfers of title or custody to RFS-FRRF.
(D) Work performed and reports prepared by independent third
parties and by independent auditors under the requirements of this
section, including work papers.
(vi) Inspections and audits by EPA may include interviewing
employees.
(vii) Any employee of the foreign producer must be made available
for interview by the EPA inspector or auditor, on request, within a
reasonable time period.
(viii) English language translations of any documents must be
provided to an
[[Page 14900]]
EPA inspector or auditor, on request, within 10 working days.
(ix) English language interpreters must be provided to accompany
EPA inspectors and auditors, on request.
(2) An agent for service of process located in the District of
Columbia shall be named, and service on this agent constitutes service
on the foreign producer or any employee of the foreign producer for any
action by EPA or otherwise by the United States related to the
requirements of this subpart.
(3) The forum for any civil or criminal enforcement action related
to the provisions of this section for violations of the Clean Air Act
or regulations promulgated thereunder shall be governed by the Clean
Air Act, including the EPA administrative forum where allowed under the
Clean Air Act.
(4) United States substantive and procedural laws shall apply to
any civil or criminal enforcement action against the foreign producer
or any employee of the foreign producer related to the provisions of
this section.
(5) Applying to be an approved foreign producer under this section,
or producing or exporting renewable fuel under such approval, and all
other actions to comply with the requirements of this subpart relating
to such approval constitute actions or activities covered by and within
the meaning of the provisions of 28 U.S.C. 1605(a)(2), but solely with
respect to actions instituted against the foreign producer, its agents
and employees in any court or other tribunal in the United States for
conduct that violates the requirements applicable to the foreign
producer under this subpart, including conduct that violates the False
Statements Accountability Act of 1996 (18 U.S.C. 1001) and section
113(c)(2) of the Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. 7413).
(6) The foreign producer, or its agents or employees, will not seek
to detain or to impose civil or criminal remedies against EPA
inspectors or auditors for actions performed within the scope of EPA
employment or contract related to the provisions of this section.
(7) The commitment required by this paragraph (f) shall be signed
by the owner or president of the foreign producer company.
(8) In any case where RFS-FRRF produced at a foreign producer
facility is stored or transported by another company between the
production facility and the vessel that transports the RFS-FRRF to the
United States, the foreign producer shall obtain from each such other
company a commitment that meets the requirements specified in
paragraphs (f)(1) through (7) of this section, and these commitments
shall be included in the foreign producer's application to be an
approved foreign producer under this subpart.
(g) Sovereign immunity. By submitting an application to be an
approved foreign producer under this subpart, or by producing and
exporting renewable fuel to the United States under such approval, the
foreign producer, and its agents and employees, without exception,
become subject to the full operation of the administrative and judicial
enforcement powers and provisions of the United States without
limitation based on sovereign immunity, with respect to actions
instituted against the foreign producer, its agents and employees in
any court or other tribunal in the United States for conduct that
violates the requirements applicable to the foreign producer under this
subpart, including conduct that violates the False Statements
Accountability Act of 1996 (18 U.S.C. 1001) and section 113(c)(2) of
the Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. 7413).
(h) Bond posting. Any RIN-generating foreign producer shall meet
the requirements of this paragraph (h) as a condition to approval as a
foreign producer under this subpart.
(1) The RIN-generating foreign producer shall post a bond of the
amount calculated using the following equation:
Bond = G * $ 0.01
Where:
Bond = amount of the bond in U.S. dollars.
G = the greater of: the largest volume of renewable fuel produced by
the foreign producer and exported to the United States, in gallons,
during a single calendar year among the five preceding calendar
years, or the largest volume of renewable fuel that the foreign
producers expects to export to the Unites States during any calendar
year identified in the Production Outlook Report required by Sec.
80.1449. If the volume of renewable fuel exported to the United
States increases above the largest volume identified in the
Production Outlook Report during any calendar year, the foreign
producer shall increase the bond to cover the shortfall within 90
days.
(2) Bonds shall be posted by any of the following methods:
(i) Paying the amount of the bond to the Treasurer of the United
States.
(ii) Obtaining a bond in the proper amount from a third party
surety agent that is payable to satisfy United States administrative or
judicial judgments against the foreign producer, provided EPA agrees in
advance as to the third party and the nature of the surety agreement.
(iii) An alternative commitment that results in assets of an
appropriate liquidity and value being readily available to the United
States provided EPA agrees in advance as to the alternative commitment.
(3) Bonds posted under this paragraph (h) shall:
(i) Be used to satisfy any judicial judgment that results from an
administrative or judicial enforcement action for conduct in violation
of this subpart, including where such conduct violates the False
Statements Accountability Act of 1996 (18 U.S.C. 1001) and section
113(c)(2) of the Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. 7413);
(ii) Be provided by a corporate surety that is listed in the United
States Department of Treasury Circular 570 ``Companies Holding
Certificates of Authority as Acceptable Sureties on Federal Bonds'';
and
(iii) Include a commitment that the bond will remain in effect for
at least five years following the end of latest annual reporting period
that the foreign producer produces renewable fuel pursuant to the
requirements of this subpart.
(4) On any occasion a foreign producer bond is used to satisfy any
judgment, the foreign producer shall increase the bond to cover the
amount used within 90 days of the date the bond is used.
(i) English language reports. Any document submitted to EPA by a
foreign producer shall be in English, or shall include an English
language translation.
(j) Prohibitions.
(1) No person may combine RFS-FRRF with any Non-RFS-FRRF, and no
person may combine RFS-FRRF with any RFS-FRRF produced at a different
production facility, until the importer has met all the requirements of
paragraph (k) of this section.
(2) No foreign producer or other person may cause another person to
commit an action prohibited in paragraph (j)(1) of this section, or
that otherwise violates the requirements of this section.
(3) No foreign producer and importer may generate RINs for the same
volume of renewable fuel.
(4) A foreign producer of renewable fuel is prohibited from
generating RINs in excess of the number for which the bond requirements
of this section have been satisfied.
(k) Requirements for United States importers of RFS-FRRF. Any
United States importers of RFS-FRRF shall meet all the following
requirements:
(1) Renewable fuel shall be classified as RFS-FRRF according to the
designation by the foreign producer if this designation is supported by
product transfer documents prepared by the
[[Page 14901]]
foreign producer as required in paragraph (c) of this section.
(2) For each renewable fuel batch classified as RFS-FRRF, any
United States importer shall have an independent third party do all the
following:
(i) Determine the volume of renewable fuel, standardized per Sec.
80.1426(f)(8), in the vessel.
(ii) Use the foreign producer's RFS-FRRF certification to determine
the name and EPA-assigned registration number of the foreign producer
that produced the RFS-FRRF.
(iii) Determine the name and country of registration of the vessel
used to transport the RFS-FRRF to the United States.
(iv) Determine the date and time the vessel arrives at the United
States port of entry.
(3) Where the importer is required to retire RINs under paragraph
(e)(2) of this section, the importer must report the retired RINs in
the applicable reports under Sec. 80.1451.
(4) Any importer shall submit reports within 30 days following the
date any vessel transporting RFS-FRRF arrives at the United States port
of entry to all the following:
(i) The Administrator, containing the information determined under
paragraph (k)(2) of this section.
(ii) The foreign producer, containing the information determined
under paragraph (k)(2)(i) of this section, and including identification
of the port at which the product was offloaded, and any RINs retired
under paragraph (e)(2) of this section.
(5) Any United States importer shall meet all other requirements of
this subpart for any imported renewable fuel that is not classified as
RFS-FRRF under paragraph (k)(1) of this section.
(l) Truck imports of RFS-FRRF produced by a foreign producer.
(1) Any foreign producer whose RFS-FRRF is transported into the
United States by truck may petition EPA to use alternative procedures
to meet all the following requirements:
(i) Certification under paragraph (c)(2) of this section.
(ii) Load port and port of entry testing under paragraphs (d) and
(e) of this section.
(iii) Importer testing under paragraph (k)(2) of this section.
(2) These alternative procedures must ensure RFS-FRRF remains
segregated from Non-RFS-FRRF until it is imported into the United
States. The petition will be evaluated based on whether it adequately
addresses all of the following:
(i) Contracts with any facilities that receive and/or transport
RFS-FRRF that prohibit the commingling of RFS-FRRF with Non-RFS-FRRF or
RFS-FRRF from other foreign producers.
(ii) Attest procedures to be conducted annually by an independent
third party that review loading records and import documents based on
volume reconciliation to confirm that all RFS-FRRF remains segregated.
(3) The petition described in this section must be submitted to EPA
along with the application for approval as a foreign producer under
this subpart.
(m) Additional attest requirements for producers of RFS-FRRF. The
following additional procedures shall be carried out by any producer of
RFS-FRRF as part of the attest engagement required for renewable fuel
producers under this subpart M.
(1) Obtain listings of all tenders of RFS-FRRF. Agree the total
volume of tenders from the listings to the volumes determined by the
third party under paragraph (d) of this section.
(2) For each tender under paragraph (m)(1) of this section, where
the renewable fuel is loaded onto a marine vessel, report as a finding
the name and country of registration of each vessel, and the volumes of
RFS-FRRF loaded onto each vessel.
(3) Select a sample from the list of vessels identified in
paragraph (m)(2) of this section used to transport RFS-FRRF, in
accordance with the guidelines in Sec. 80.127, and for each vessel
selected perform all the following:
(i) Obtain the report of the independent third party, under
paragraph (d) of this section, and of the United States importer under
paragraph (k) of this section.
(A) Agree the information in these reports with regard to vessel
identification and renewable fuel volume.
(B) Identify, and report as a finding, each occasion the load port
and port of entry volume results differ by more than the amount allowed
in paragraph (e) of this section, and determine whether the importer
retired the appropriate amount of RINs as required under paragraph
(e)(2) of this section, and submitted the applicable reports under
Sec. 80.1451 in accordance with paragraph (k)(4) of this section.
(ii) Obtain the documents used by the independent third party to
determine transportation and storage of the RFS-FRRF from the foreign
producer's facility to the load port, under paragraph (d) of this
section. Obtain tank activity records for any storage tank where the
RFS-FRRF is stored, and activity records for any mode of transportation
used to transport the RFS-FRRF prior to being loaded onto the vessel.
Use these records to determine whether the RFS-FRRF was produced at the
foreign producer's facility that is the subject of the attest
engagement, and whether the RFS-FRRF was mixed with any Non-RFS-FRRF or
any RFS-FRRF produced at a different facility.
(4) Select a sample from the list of vessels identified in
paragraph (m)(2) of this section used to transport RFS-FRRF, in
accordance with the guidelines in Sec. 80.127, and for each vessel
selected perform the following:
(i) Obtain a commercial document of general circulation that lists
vessel arrivals and departures, and that includes the port and date of
departure of the vessel, and the port of entry and date of arrival of
the vessel.
(ii) Agree the vessel's departure and arrival locations and dates
from the independent third party and United States importer reports to
the information contained in the commercial document.
(5) Obtain a separate listing of the tenders under this paragraph
(m)(5) where the RFS-FRRF is loaded onto a marine vessel. Select a
sample from this listing in accordance with the guidelines in Sec.
80.127, and obtain a commercial document of general circulation that
lists vessel arrivals and departures, and that includes the port and
date of departure and the ports and dates where the renewable fuel was
offloaded for the selected vessels. Determine and report as a finding
the country where the renewable fuel was offloaded for each vessel
selected.
(6) In order to complete the requirements of this paragraph (m) an
auditor shall:
(i) Be independent of the foreign producer;
(ii) Be licensed as a Certified Public Accountant in the United
States and a citizen of the United States, or be approved in advance by
EPA based on a demonstration of ability to perform the procedures
required in Sec. Sec. 80.125 through 80.127, 80.130, 80.1464, and this
paragraph (m); and
(iii) Sign a commitment that contains the provisions specified in
paragraph (f) of this section with regard to activities and documents
relevant to compliance with the requirements of Sec. Sec. 80.125
through 80.127, 80.130, 80.1464, and this paragraph (m).
(n) Withdrawal or suspension of foreign producer approval. EPA may
withdraw or suspend a foreign producer's approval where any of the
following occur:
(1) A foreign producer fails to meet any requirement of this
section.
[[Page 14902]]
(2) A foreign government fails to allow EPA inspections or audits
as provided in paragraph (f)(1) of this section.
(3) A foreign producer asserts a claim of, or a right to claim,
sovereign immunity in an action to enforce the requirements in this
subpart.
(4) A foreign producer fails to pay a civil or criminal penalty
that is not satisfied using the foreign producer bond specified in
paragraph (h) of this section.
(o) Additional requirements for applications, reports and
certificates. Any application for approval as a foreign producer,
alternative procedures under paragraph (l) of this section, any report,
certification, or other submission required under this section shall
be:
(1) Submitted in accordance with procedures specified by the
Administrator, including use of any forms that may be specified by the
Administrator.
(2) Signed by the president or owner of the foreign producer
company, or by that person's immediate designee, and shall contain the
following declaration: ``I hereby certify: (1) That I have actual
authority to sign on behalf of and to bind [INSERT NAME OF FOREIGN
PRODUCER] with regard to all statements contained herein; (2) that I am
aware that the information contained herein is being Certified, or
submitted to the United States Environmental Protection Agency, under
the requirements of 40 CFR part 80, subpart M, and that the information
is material for determining compliance under these regulations; and (3)
that I have read and understand the information being Certified or
submitted, and this information is true, complete and correct to the
best of my knowledge and belief after I have taken reasonable and
appropriate steps to verify the accuracy thereof. I affirm that I have
read and understand the provisions of 40 CFR part 80, subpart M,
including 40 CFR 80.1465 apply to [INSERT NAME OF FOREIGN PRODUCER].
Pursuant to Clean Air Act section 113(c) and 18 U.S.C. 1001, the
penalty for furnishing false, incomplete or misleading information in
this certification or submission is a fine of up to $10,000 U.S., and/
or imprisonment for up to five years.''.
Sec. 80.1467 What are the additional requirements under this subpart
for a foreign RIN owner?
(a) Foreign RIN owner. For purposes of this subpart, a foreign RIN
owner is a person located outside the United States, the Commonwealth
of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa, and the
Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands (collectively referred to
in this section as ``the United States'') that has been approved by EPA
to own RINs.
(b) General Requirement. An approved foreign RIN owner must meet
all requirements that apply to parties who own RINs under this subpart.
(c) Foreign RIN owner commitments. Any person shall commit to and
comply with the provisions contained in this paragraph (c) as a
condition to being approved as a foreign RIN owner under this subpart.
(1) Any United States Environmental Protection Agency inspector or
auditor must be given full, complete, and immediate access to conduct
inspections and audits of the foreign RIN owner's place of business.
(i) Inspections and audits may be either announced in advance by
EPA, or unannounced.
(ii) Access will be provided to any location where documents
related to RINs the foreign RIN owner has obtained, sold, transferred
or held are kept.
(iii) Inspections and audits may be by EPA employees or contractors
to EPA.
(iv) Any documents requested that are related to matters covered by
inspections and audits must be provided to an EPA inspector or auditor
on request.
(v) Inspections and audits by EPA may include review and copying of
any documents related to the following:
(A) Transfers of title to RINs.
(B) Work performed and reports prepared by independent auditors
under the requirements of this section, including work papers.
(vi) Inspections and audits by EPA may include interviewing
employees.
(vii) Any employee of the foreign RIN owner must be made available
for interview by the EPA inspector or auditor, on request, within a
reasonable time period.
(viii) English language translations of any documents must be
provided to an EPA inspector or auditor, on request, within 10 working
days.
(ix) English language interpreters must be provided to accompany
EPA inspectors and auditors, on request.
(2) An agent for service of process located in the District of
Columbia shall be named, and service on this agent constitutes service
on the foreign RIN owner or any employee of the foreign RIN owner for
any action by EPA or otherwise by the United States related to the
requirements of this subpart.
(3) The forum for any civil or criminal enforcement action related
to the provisions of this section for violations of the Clean Air Act
or regulations promulgated thereunder shall be governed by the Clean
Air Act, including the EPA administrative forum where allowed under the
Clean Air Act.
(4) United States substantive and procedural laws shall apply to
any civil or criminal enforcement action against the foreign RIN owner
or any employee of the foreign RIN owner related to the provisions of
this section.
(5) Submitting an application to be a foreign RIN owner, and all
other actions to comply with the requirements of this subpart
constitute actions or activities covered by and within the meaning of
the provisions of 28 U.S.C. 1605(a)(2), but solely with respect to
actions instituted against the foreign RIN owner, its agents and
employees in any court or other tribunal in the United States for
conduct that violates the requirements applicable to the foreign RIN
owner under this subpart, including conduct that violates the False
Statements Accountability Act of 1996 (18 U.S.C. 1001) and section
113(c)(2) of the Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. 7413).
(6) The foreign RIN owner, or its agents or employees, will not
seek to detain or to impose civil or criminal remedies against EPA
inspectors or auditors, whether EPA employees or EPA contractors, for
actions performed within the scope of EPA employment related to the
provisions of this section.
(7) The commitment required by this paragraph (c) shall be signed
by the owner or president of the foreign RIN owner business.
(d) Sovereign immunity. By submitting an application to be a
foreign RIN owner under this subpart, the foreign entity, and its
agents and employees, without exception, become subject to the full
operation of the administrative and judicial enforcement powers and
provisions of the United States without limitation based on sovereign
immunity, with respect to actions instituted against the foreign RIN
owner, its agents and employees in any court or other tribunal in the
United States for conduct that violates the requirements applicable to
the foreign RIN owner under this subpart, including conduct that
violates the False Statements Accountability Act of 1996 (18 U.S.C.
1001) and section 113(c)(2) of the Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. 7413).
(e) Bond posting. Any foreign entity shall meet the requirements of
this paragraph (e) as a condition to approval as a foreign RIN owner
under this subpart.
(1) The foreign entity shall post a bond of the amount calculated
using the following equation:
Bond = G * $ 0.01
[[Page 14903]]
Where:
Bond = amount of the bond in U.S. dollars.
G = the total of the number of gallon-RINs the foreign entity
expects to sell or transfer during the first calendar year that the
foreign entity is a RIN owner, plus the number of gallon-RINs the
foreign entity expects to sell or transfer during the next four
calendar years. After the first calendar year, the bond amount shall
be based on the actual number of gallon-RINs sold or transferred
during the current calendar year and the number held at the
conclusion of the current averaging year, plus the number of gallon-
RINs sold or transferred during the four most recent calendar years
preceding the current calendar year. For any year for which there
were fewer than four preceding years in which the foreign entity
sold or transferred RINs, the bond shall be based on the total of
the number of gallon-RINs sold or transferred during the current
calendar year and the number held at the end of the current calendar
year, plus the number of gallon-RINs sold or transferred during any
calendar year preceding the current calendar year, plus the number
of gallon-RINs expected to be sold or transferred during subsequent
calendar years, the total number of years not to exceed four
calendar years in addition to the current calendar year.
(2) Bonds shall be posted by doing any of the following:
(i) Paying the amount of the bond to the Treasurer of the United
States.
(ii) Obtaining a bond in the proper amount from a third party
surety agent that is payable to satisfy United States administrative or
judicial judgments against the foreign RIN owner, provided EPA agrees
in advance as to the third party and the nature of the surety
agreement.
(iii) An alternative commitment that results in assets of an
appropriate liquidity and value being readily available to the United
States, provided EPA agrees in advance as to the alternative
commitment.
(3) All the following shall apply to bonds posted under this
paragraph (e); bonds shall:
(i) Be used to satisfy any judicial judgment that results from an
administrative or judicial enforcement action for conduct in violation
of this subpart, including where such conduct violates the False
Statements Accountability Act of 1996 (18 U.S.C. 1001) and section
113(c)(2) of the Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. 7413).
(ii) Be provided by a corporate surety that is listed in the United
States Department of Treasury Circular 570 ``Companies Holding
Certificates of Authority as Acceptable Sureties on Federal Bonds''.
(iii) Include a commitment that the bond will remain in effect for
at least five years following the end of latest reporting period in
which the foreign RIN owner obtains, sells, transfers, or holds RINs.
(4) On any occasion a foreign RIN owner bond is used to satisfy any
judgment, the foreign RIN owner shall increase the bond to cover the
amount used within 90 days of the date the bond is used.
(f) English language reports. Any document submitted to EPA by a
foreign RIN owner shall be in English, or shall include an English
language translation.
(g) Prohibitions.
(1) A foreign RIN owner is prohibited from obtaining, selling,
transferring, or holding any RIN that is in excess of the number for
which the bond requirements of this section have been satisfied.
(2) Any RIN that is sold, transferred, or held that is in excess of
the number for which the bond requirements of this section have been
satisfied is an invalid RIN under Sec. 80.1431.
(3) Any RIN that is obtained from a person located outside the
United States that is not an approved foreign RIN owner under this
section is an invalid RIN under Sec. 80.1431.
(4) No foreign RIN owner or other person may cause another person
to commit an action prohibited in this paragraph (g), or that otherwise
violates the requirements of this section.
(h) Additional attest requirements for foreign RIN owners. The
following additional requirements apply to any foreign RIN owner as
part of the attest engagement required for RIN owners under this
subpart M.
(1) The attest auditor must be independent of the foreign RIN
owner.
(2) The attest auditor must be licensed as a Certified Public
Accountant in the United States and a citizen of the United States, or
be approved in advance by EPA based on a demonstration of ability to
perform the procedures required in Sec. Sec. 80.125 through 80.127,
80.130, and 80.1464.
(3) The attest auditor must sign a commitment that contains the
provisions specified in paragraph (c) of this section with regard to
activities and documents relevant to compliance with the requirements
of Sec. Sec. 80.125 through 80.127, 80.130, and 80.1464.
(i) Withdrawal or suspension of foreign RIN owner status. EPA may
withdraw or suspend its approval of a foreign RIN owner where any of
the following occur:
(1) A foreign RIN owner fails to meet any requirement of this
section, including, but not limited to, the bond requirements.
(2) A foreign government fails to allow EPA inspections as provided
in paragraph (c)(1) of this section.
(3) A foreign RIN owner asserts a claim of, or a right to claim,
sovereign immunity in an action to enforce the requirements in this
subpart.
(4) A foreign RIN owner fails to pay a civil or criminal penalty
that is not satisfied using the foreign RIN owner bond specified in
paragraph (e) of this section.
(j) Additional requirements for applications, reports and
certificates. Any application for approval as a foreign RIN owner, any
report, certification, or other submission required under this section
shall be:
(1) Submitted in accordance with procedures specified by the
Administrator, including use of any forms that may be specified by the
Administrator.
(2) Signed by the president or owner of the foreign RIN owner
company, or by that person's immediate designee, and shall contain the
following declaration:
``I hereby certify: (1) That I have actual authority to sign on
behalf of and to bind [INSERT NAME OF FOREIGN RIN OWNER] with regard to
all statements contained herein; (2) that I am aware that the
information contained herein is being Certified, or submitted to the
United States Environmental Protection Agency, under the requirements
of 40 CFR part 80, subpart M, and that the information is material for
determining compliance under these regulations; and (3) that I have
read and understand the information being Certified or submitted, and
this information is true, complete and correct to the best of my
knowledge and belief after I have taken reasonable and appropriate
steps to verify the accuracy thereof. I affirm that I have read and
understand the provisions of 40 CFR part 80, subpart M, including 40
CFR 80.1467 apply to [INSERT NAME OF FOREIGN RIN OWNER]. Pursuant to
Clean Air Act section 113(c) and 18 U.S.C. 1001, the penalty for
furnishing false, incomplete or misleading information in this
certification or submission is a fine of up to $10,000 U.S., and/or
imprisonment for up to five years.''.
Sec. 80.1468 Incorporation by reference.
(a) Certain material is incorporated by reference into this part
with the approval of the Director of the Federal Register under 5
U.S.C. 552(a) and 1 CFR part 51. To enforce any edition other than that
specified in this section, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
must publish notice of change in the Federal Register and the material
[[Page 14904]]
must be available to the public. All approved material is available for
inspection at the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA).
For information on the availability of this material at NARA, call 202-
741-6030 or go to: http://www/archives.gov/federal_register/code_of_federal_regulations/ibr_locations.html. This material is also
available for inspection at the EPA Docket Center, Docket No. EPA-HQ-
OAR-2005-0161, EPA/DC, EPA West, Room 3334, 1301 Constitution Ave.,
NW., Washington DC. The telephone number for the Air Docket is (202)
566-1742. Also, this material is available from the source listed in
paragraph (b) of this section.
(b) American Society for Testing and Materials, 100 Barr Harbor
Drive, P.O. Box C-700, West Conshohocken, Pennsylvania 19428 (1-800-
262-1373, www.astm.org).
(1) ASTM D 1250-08 (``ASTM D 1250''), Standard Guide for Use of the
Petroleum Measurement Tables, Approved 2008; IBR approved for Sec.
80.1426(f)(8)(ii)(B).
(2) ASTM D 4442-07 (``ASTM D 4442''), Standard Test Methods for
Direct Moisture Content Measurement of Wood and Wood-Base Materials,
Approved 2007; IBR approved for Sec. 80.1426(f)(7)(v)(B).
(3) ASTM D 4444-08 (``ASTM D 4444''), Standard Test Method for
Laboratory Standardization and Calibration of Hand-Held Moisture
Meters, Approved 2008; IBR approved for Sec. 80.1426(f)(7)(v)(B).
(4) ASTM D 6751-09 (``ASTM D 6751''), Standard Specification for
Biodiesel Fuel Blend Stock (B100) for Middle Distillate Fuels, Approved
2009; IBR approved for Sec. 80.1401.
(5) ASTM D 6866-08 (``ASTM D 6866''), Standard Test Methods for
Determining the Biobased Content of Solid, Liquid, and Gaseous Samples
Using Radiocarbon Analysis, Approved 2008; IBR approved for Sec. Sec.
80.1426(f)(9)(ii) and 80.1430(e)(2).
(6) ASTM E 711-87 (``ASTM E 711''), Standard Test Method for Gross
Calorific Value of Refuse-Derived Fuel by the Bomb Calorimeter,
Reapproved 2004; IBR approved for Sec. 80.1426(f)(7)(v)(A).
(7) ASTM E 870-82 (``ASTM E 870''), Standard Test Methods for
Analysis of Wood Fuels, Reapproved 2006); IBR approved for Sec.
80.1426(f)(7)(v)(A).
[FR Doc. 2010-3851 Filed 3-25-10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P