A US appeals court has confirmed a rule from President Biden’s administration on biofuel blending requirements for oil refiners from 2020 to 2022.
The court rejected a challenge by oil refiners, affirming that the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) lawfully exercised its discretion in setting these obligations under the Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS).
In 2022, the EPA established biofuel blending mandates of 20.63 billion gallons and retroactive volume mandates for 2021 of 18.84 billion gallons and 2020 of 17.13 billion gallons.
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The agency declined to grant waivers to oil refiners seeking exemption from these requirements. However, it announced that small refiners would be given additional time to fulfil their 2020 blending obligations.
Oil refiners contested the rule, claiming that the standards were excessively stringent. In contrast, producers of cellulosic biofuels, made from sources like wood waste, challenged the rule, arguing that the standards for cellulosic biofuels were inadequately low.
“We hold that EPA complied with the law,” the court said in a ruling filed on Tuesday.
“Thanks to the D.C. Circuit opinion, EPA can ensure the integrity of its annual (Renewable Volume Obligation) and address shifts in market conditions and how refiners meet their blending obligations,” Growth Energy CEO Emily Skor said in a statement to Reuters.