Renewable Fuel Stakeholders Launch National Campaign
September 27, 2012
Fuels America coalition to protect and promote national Renewable Fuel Standard
(September 27, 2012) Washington, DC – A large coalition of advanced and traditional renewable fuel stakeholders today joined forces to defend America’s Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS) and the economic, employment, domestic renewable energy and national security benefits the RFS provides. The new coalition, Fuels America, spans the full spectrum of domestically-grown renewable fuel, national security, renewable energy and other stakeholders.
The coalition also launched an online platform at FuelsAmerica.org and a Twitter presence @FuelsAmerica.
The launch comes as the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency considers a request to “waive” the RFS, a move that coalition members stressed would have serious consequences for America’s rural communities, renewable technology innovators and energy independence.
“Fuels America is built around one core idea: renewable fuel is essential to the U.S. economy, our nation’s energy security, our rural communities and the environment,” said former Congressman Jim Greenwood, President and CEO, Biotechnology Industry Organization (BIO). “More than 400,000 American jobs are supported by renewable transportation fuel, and America leads the world in renewable fuel innovation. That is why Fuels America’s diverse membership has come together to reset the national conversation on renewable fuel, protect the progress that has been made and ensure that America’s Renewable Fuel Standard continues its success.”
Fuels America members include:
25x25
Abengoa Bioenergy
ACORE
Advanced Ethanol Council
American Coalition for Ethanol
American Security Project
Biotechnology Industry Organization (BIO)
DuPont
Growth Energy
National Association of Wheat Growers
National Corn Growers Association
National Farmers Union
National Sorghum Producers
Novozymes
POET
Renewable Fuels Association (RFA)
The Fuels America campaign will be a national effort, including advertising, beginning in Washington, DC and several states, including Colorado, Ohio, Delaware and Montana. Each state will have its own online platform reachable through FuelsAmerica.org and feature the stories of renewable fuel innovators and communities with a stake in maintaining the RFS.
“In this election year all eyes are on Ohio, and in Ohio our eyes are focused on growing our state’s economy,” said Pam Hall, President of the Marion Area Chamber of Commerce in Marion, OH. “For a rural community with a declining population and other economic challenges, the 2008 opening of a renewable fuel plant in Marion County was clearly something to celebrate. Today 68 million gallons of ethanol are produced at our plant by 41 individuals who add to our local and state tax base. That plant would not have been built without the Renewable Fuel Standard, and that is exactly the type of industry our community needs to improve our economic future.”
“Renewable fuel matters to everyone in Colorado, from farmers in the eastern part of the state to researchers at our universities and entrepreneurs in our clean tech economy,” said Jim Imbler, President and CEO of Lakewood, CO-based ZeaChem Inc. “ZeaChem has grown from an innovative idea for producing cellulosic fuel to a scaled operation ready to manufacture. The investor certainty created by the Renewable Fuel Standard is essential to our continued growth, and to the growth of other advanced biofuels and bio-based chemicals companies like ours.”
Members of the Fuels America coalition also stressed that renewable fuel plays a central role in increasing America’s energy independence. Since 2000, domestically-grown renewable fuel has contributed to a 25 percent reduction in oil imports from the Persian Gulf, making the nation more energy independent and driving down prices at the pump. Americans saved $50 billion on imported fuel costs in 2011 thanks to renewable fuel.
“America’s energy security and national security depend on expanding our renewable fuel sector, said Vice Adm. Dennis McGinn (Ret.), President of the American Council On Renewable Energy (ACORE). “The renewable fuel innovation we have seen across the country since the RFS was created is helping break America’s dependence on foreign oil and giving our armed forces new assets on the battlefield. Protecting America’s Renewable Fuel Standard will protect that progress, improve our country’s energy security and protect our men and women in uniform.”
Coalition members noted that the rapidly emerging advanced renewable fuel sector has benefited directly from the RFS, with advanced facilities now producing fuel in Florida, Louisiana, Indiana, Kansas, Minnesota, Mississippi, South Dakota, Tennessee and Texas.
“The Renewable Fuel Standard has created billions in investment and created hundreds of thousands of careers,” said Adam Monroe, President of Novozymes North America. “If the RFS is altered or undermined, companies like ours will have to make tough choices about where to put our long-term dollars. Keeping those dollars, and the jobs they will continue to create, in America means keeping the RFS in place. It’s a market-based signal to innovators and investors – and it works.”
About Fuels America: Fuels America is a coalition of organizations committed to protecting America’s Renewable Fuel Standard and promoting the benefits of all types of renewable fuel already growing in America. Fuels America is founded on a simple core principle: renewable fuel is good for the U.S. economy, for our nation’s energy security and for the environment. FuelsAmerica.org and follow on Twitter @FuelsAmerica.
Contact info: info@fuelsamerica.org
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Fuels America is a broad coalition of stakeholders committed to protecting America’s Renewable Fuel Standard and promoting the benefits of all types of renewable fuel already growing in America.
We are founded on a simple core principle:
Renewable fuel is good for the U.S. economy, for our nation’s energy security and for the environment.
America’s Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS) has helped domestic, renewable transportation fuel strengthen America’s rural economies and communities. It has spurred billions of dollars of investment in new technology for conventional and advanced renewable fuel, making cleaner, homegrown alternatives available and reducing our consumption of foreign oil.
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Background: Originally adopted in the Energy Policy Act of 2005 (P.L. 109-58) and expanded in 2007 as part of the Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007 (P.L. 110-140), the RFS called for 36 billion gallons of renewable fuel to be used in our transportation fuel supply by 2022. Each year EPA sets an overall volumetric target for renewable fuel based on statutory thresholds and anticipated gasoline consumption in the country, as well as specific targets for advanced, cellulosic, and biomass-based diesel fuels, each of which must be derived from renewable feedstocks and meet specified greenhouse gas emissions reductions. Almost all of the future growth in the RFS is in advanced biofuels such as cellulosic ethanol.
The RFS is reducing our dependence on foreign oil by making clean, homegrown renewable fuels a part of our transportation fuel mix.
• Since 2000, renewable fuel has helped reduce oil imports from the Persian Gulf by 25%.
• Renewable fuel currently provides 10% of America’s fuel needs – and that amount is growing.
• The U.S. Departments of Energy and Agriculture have estimated that there is enough biomass in America to replace nearly a third of the country’s gasoline with renewable fuel by 2030.
• Almost two-thirds of future RFS volumes are allocated for advanced renewable fuel like cellulosic ethanol, which is made from next-generation feedstocks such as agricultural waste.
The RFS is strengthening rural communities, driving economic growth and supporting more than 400,000 jobs nationwide.
• The RFS has spurred billions of dollars of investment in advanced and conventional renewable fuel.
• Renewable fuel has driven a $500 billion increase in America’s farm assets since 2007.
• In 2011, gas prices were reduced by $1.09 per gallon and the average American household saved $1200 on their gas bill thanks to renewable fuel, according to independent studies.
We can’t afford to reverse this progress. We must protect the economic, security and environmental benefits that renewable fuel brings to the country. We must avoid near-term decisions that imperil America’s rural communities, entrepreneurs and innovators, and energy security.
We must protect the Renewable Fuel Standard.
www.FuelsAmerica.org / @FuelsAmerica




