Photo: stock
May 26, 2023
BY Erin Voegele
A $1.3 billion transportation budget package passed by the Minnesota legislature on May 21 aims to create a Clean Transportation Standard Working Group to study and address information gaps and opportunities related to the development of a state clean fuel standard (CFS). Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz is expected to sign the bill this week.
The legislative package is separate from a bill introduced earlier this year that seeks to implement a state CFS. That bill, SF 2584, remains pending in the legislature.
The transportation budget bill, HF 2887, would require the commissioners of Minnesota’s Pollution Control Agency and the state’s departments of transportation, commerce and agriculture to convene a Clean Transportation Fuel Standard Working Group to study and address information gaps and opportunities related to a clean transportation fuel standard that requires the aggregate carbon intensity (CI) of transportation fuel supplied within the state to be reduced to at least 25 percent below a 2018 baseline by the end of 2030, a 75 percent reduction by the end of 2040 and a 100 percent reduction by the end of 2050. Those are the same levels of CI reductions included in SF 2584.
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Membership of the working group would include renewable fuel producers; renewable natural gas (RNG) and organic waste interests; general farm organizations; general farm commodity groups; conventional transportation and fuel producers and retailers; tribal governments; environmental science organizations; environmental justice organizations; automotive manufacturers; forestry interests; electric utilities or cooperatives; electric vehicle charging infrastructure companies; aviation interests; water quality interests; a statewide organization of environmental and natural resource organizations; organizations with expertise in renewable energy and low-carbon transportation fuel policy; conservation organizations; organizations representing sustainable agriculture or regenerative biofuels producers; public health interests; and labor unions.
Appointments to the working group would be made by July 1. The group would be required to submit its findings and recommendations to relevant members of the Minnesota legislature by Feb. 1, 2024.
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The Michigan Advanced Biofuels Coalition and Green Marine are partnering to accelerating adoption of sustainable biofuels to improve air quality and reduce GHG emissions in Michigan and across the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence Seaway.
Sen. Roger Marshall, R-Kan., and Rep. Marcy Kaptur, D-Iowa, on April 10 reintroduced legislation to extend the 45Z clean fuel production credit and limit eligibility for the credit to renewable fuels made from domestically sourced feedstocks.
Representatives of the U.S. biofuels industry on April 10 submitted comments to the U.S. Department of Treasury and IRFS providing recommendations on how to best implement upcoming 45Z clean fuel production credit regulations.
The U.S. Energy Information Administration reduced its 2025 forecasts for renewable diesel and biodiesel in its latest Short-Term Energy Outlook, released April 10. The outlook for “other biofuel” production, which includes SAF, was raised.
FutureFuel Corp. on March 26 announced the restart of its 59 MMgy biodiesel plant in Batesville, Arkansas. The company’s annual report, released April 4, indicates biodiesel production was down 24% last year when compared to 2023.