By
Leah Douglas and Laura Sanicola
November 14,
2023
US drive to make green jet fuel with
ethanol stalled by CO2 pipeline foes
WASHINGTON, Nov 14 (Reuters) - The U.S.
drive to develop sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) using ethanol could
be slowed because of growing opposition to proposed pipelines that
would curb greenhouse gas emissions from ethanol plants by capturing
carbon dioxide and carrying it away to other states for storage.
Ethanol industry players say the developments
raise questions about future growth for U.S. producers of the biofuel,
including POET, Valero (VLO.N) and
others, who have been banking on proposed carbon capture and storage
(CCS) pipeline projects across the heartland.
These are needed to lower ethanol’s climate
impact enough for the fuel to qualify as a feedstock for SAF under the
U.S. Inflation Reduction Act (IRA).
President Joe Biden's administration has
committed to producing 3 billion gallons of SAF annually by 2030 and
35 billion gallons by 2050. The goal is to decarbonize the airline
industry while also supporting the ethanol sector and the corn farmers
that supply it.
The proposed pipeline projects would siphon
millions of tons of CO2 off Midwest ethanol processing plants and move
the gas to other states for underground injection. Some residents
along the pipeline routes worry the pipelines could spring deadly
leaks or that their
land will be seized to build the projects.
Last month, Omaha-based Navigator CO2 Ventures canceled its
proposed pipeline. Two others underway from Iowa-based Summit Carbon
Solutions and Denver-based Wolf Carbon Solutions face permitting
setbacks and public
resistance.
"Without carbon capture and storage, conventional
ethanol does not have a pathway into SAF under today's policies," said
Homer Bhullar, vice president at biofuel producer Valero Energy, which
was an investor in Navigator, said on the company’s Oct. 26 quarterly
earnings call.
Valero declined an interview request.
U.S. corn growers and the politically powerful
ethanol industry hope airline fuel production will boost sales as
ethanol’s traditional market as a gasoline additive shrivels due to
rising electric vehicle use and increased fuel efficiency.
Biden sought to kickstart SAF production with a
$1.25 per gallon production tax credit in the IRA. To be eligible for
the credit, SAF producers must demonstrate their fuel is 50% lower in
emissions than conventional jet fuel.
Currently, using ethanol to make SAF only cuts
its emissions by 15%, according to the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)
website.
"MARK MY WORDS"
Under a Biden administration blueprint shared
this year, some 10% of the 2030 SAF target is projected to come from
ethanol. Biden's public statements have been more optimistic about the
role of ethanol in the SAF program.
"Mark my words: the next 20 years, farmers are
going to be providing 95% of all the sustainable airline fuel," he
said in July at
a Maine rally.
Vegetable oils, municipal waste, agricultural
residues and other materials are also being developed as feedstocks
for SAF, said a DOE spokesperson. But ethanol must be a key ingredient
if the SAF program is to hit its targets, said Barry Glickman, a vice
president at Honeywell (HON.O),
an investor in some U.S. biofuel plants.
"If we cannot use U.S. ethanol, then there will
be a shortage of SAF," he said.
The DOE spokesperson confirmed that ethanol
producers must cut emissions of they want a long-term role in SAF
production. Producers say carbon capture and storage is the most
effective tool for doing that. Biofuels trade group Growth Energy says
the technique can slash emissions from ethanol production by 50% or
more.
Still, ethanol producers need carbon pipelines
because many ethanol plants are not near geologically appropriate
underground storage sites.
Navigator canceled its CCS pipeline project,
which would have captured carbon at 18 POET ethanol plants, after
South Dakota regulators rejected its permit application and landowners
along its route in other states opposed it.
South Dakota and North Dakota have rejected Summit's
permit applications this year and the firm has delayed its project's
operational date to 2026 from 2024.
Wolf's project also faces opposition in Illinois,
the location of its storage site.
Failure of these projects would be a huge
detriment to the industry's climate goals, said Nikita Pavlenko, fuels
team lead at the International Council on Clean Transportation.
"It would take the most effective tool in their
arsenal to reduce their emissions off the table," Pavlenko said.
Other options for reducing ethanol's carbon
intensity include using renewable energy at ethanol plants, or
climate-friendly farming practices for corn.
The ethanol industry is pushing federal
regulators to assess SAF emissions using a different
climate model that assigns a lower carbon impact from growing
corn. The Biden administration is expected to respond to
that request by year end.
(This story has been corrected to say that the
Navigator pipeline was denied permit in South Dakota, not North
Dakota, in paragraph 18)
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