SOURCE: U.S. Grains Council
July 12, 2022
BY U.S. Grains Council
Ahead of a USDA agricultural trade mission (ATM) to the United Kingdom, U.S. Grains Council staff met with government and industry officials in Paris and Brussels to assess the status of ethanol in the European Union and to further share the benefits of U.S. ethanol.
The EU is one of the largest and most consistent markets for U.S. ethanol. A long-term goal for the Council is for the European government to allow full access to corn-based ethanol in its policy revisions based on its science-based carbon reduction benefits. Together in marketing year 2020-‘21, the EU and the U.K. were the fifth-largest export market for U.S. ethanol at nearly 108 million gallons (equivalent to 38,297,872 bushels of corn), valued at $250 million.
In Paris, staff members met with the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development and the International Energy Agency to discuss the considerable role of first-generation ethanol as a solution that would bring immediate environmental and economic benefits to the EU. During the next leg of the mission, the group met with ePURE, a Brussels-based organization promoting the benefits of ethanol use throughout Europe; met with DG MOVE, the organization responsible for EU policy on mobility and transport; and took part in a strategy session with consulting group FTI.
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“These multilateral missions where we personally interact with key organizations based in the EU are crucial to deepening relationships to both educate and grow champions that will promote corn-based ethanol as a current viable solution to EU consumers and governments in their fight against rising greenhouse gas emissions while mitigating energy supply disruptions,” said Mackenzie Boubin, USGC director of global ethanol export development.
The group came together with other ethanol industry partners, including Growth Energy, the Renewable Fuels Association and Poet once arriving in the U.K. for the ATM.
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The mission included several sessions where participants received updates from government officials on topics including U.K. consumer insight, food standards and regulations and food hospitality and marketing. The ethanol-focused participants spent the final two days of the mission emphasizing key U.S. agricultural priorities to Greenergy, a fuel supplier; the Department of Transport, where participants discussed the U.K.’s Transport Decarbonization plan and the transition outlook towards lower carbon fuels; and S&P Global Platts, a commodity and energy insights provider.
“U.S. government engagement and advocacy that reiterates our message with U.K. stakeholders contributes to the Council’s objectives on increasing ethanol blends in country. As the U.K. begins creating their own national standards following Brexit, USDA involvement in promoting harmonized ethanol specifications will further allow access into the U.K. market,” Boubin said.
In September of 2021, the U.K. began expanding their gasoline supply from a base E5 toward an E10 blend. Today, total U.K. fuel ethanol consumption has reached 280 million gallons, equivalent to a seven percent ethanol blend, but is planning to achieve a 9.7 percent ethanol blend in the near term. With U.S. ethanol imports increasing 400 percent year-on-year, the Council applauds the U.K.’s recent move to an E10 blend and will continue to work with our partners in country to achieve a successful 10 percent implementation.
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