Tuesday, August 6, 2013

Reuters: Regulatory News: US refiners, plagued by RINsanity, see "half step" on biofuels

Reuters: Regulatory News
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US refiners, plagued by RINsanity, see "half step" on biofuels
Aug 7th 2013, 04:08

Wed Aug 7, 2013 12:08am EDT

  By Sabina Zawadzki      NEW YORK, Aug 7 (Reuters) - For U.S. refiners facing a  multibillion-dollar bill linked to the soaring cost of renewable  fuel credits, a U.S. move toward easing biofuel mandates brought  to mind the first step in breaking a bad habit: recognizing  there is a problem.      But, they warned, it will be weeks or months before they can  fully shake off the surging costs caused by a scramble to  fulfill their obligation to blend growing volumes of biofuel  into gasoline and diesel. And a full recovery, some added, would  require changing the law that mandates a massive shift toward  renewable fuels in the world's biggest consumer.      On Tuesday, the Environmental Protection Agency said it  would be forced to scale back targets for biofuel use in U.S.  fuel next year, seeking to avoid a situation in which ethanol  use in gasoline would exceed the 10 percent level that is the  widely accepted norm -- the "blend wall", as it is known.      "The important part was this genuine acknowledgement here  that the RFS2 mandate system really has a significant problem  and that problem will become really exacerbated in 2014," Philip  Rinaldi, CEO of Philadelphia Energy Solutions (PES), the largest  refiner on the populous U.S. East Coast, said in an interview.      But the EPA offered little insight into how exactly it would  scale down the complex Renewable Fuels Mandate, the first  significant reduction in targets since the RFS was created in  2005. It said new targets would be published in September,  leaving the specter of weeks more uncertainty.      The refining industry has long said that increasing the  amount of ethanol it must blend, even as motor fuel consumption  is broadly falling each year -- will force it to spend billions  on ethanol credits to offset obligations because blending at  such levels would produce fuel that could damage vehicles.      Many were reluctant to celebrate too soon.      "Today's announcement by the EPA looks good on paper, but we  will have to wait and see what the effects will be on current  RINs prices," said Bill Klesse, CEO of Valero. "RINs have become  a market all to themselves, which was never the intention of the  law."      The early evidence wasn't encouraging. The credits used to  track compliance with the RFS, known as Renewable Identification  Numbers or RINs, dipped by around 10 percent on Tuesday, trading  just below 90 cents for 2013. Although down from a record of  $1.48 last month, they are still more than 10 times the price  last December, before fears of the "blend wall" intensified.            AN "OBLITERATED MYTH"      In theory, the EPA's promise to use "flexibilities" in the  RFS law in order to ease next year's targets should be good news  for refiners, who feared that falling gasoline demand may leave  them logistically unable to meet the targets.      Refiners will have an extra four months to adhere to the  2013 targets, with the deadline extended to June 30, 2014, which  could ease the rush on RINs this year.      The run-up in RIN costs has shifted the debate in  Washington, with refiners seizing the opportunity to talk about  passing the cost on to consumers through higher gasoline prices  and also crank up exports to record rates. They are not required  to submit RINs for fuel that is sold overseas.      Ethanol proponents who have fought for years to prevent any  backsliding in the mandate welcomed the EPA's move, hoping it  might ease pressure on Congress to amend or repeal the RFS.      "The EPA's announcement indicates the agency is willing to  make adjustments to the mandate to fit market realities," said  Michael McAdams, president of the Advanced Biofuels Association.  "I think it sends a signal to the market that they're inclined  to use their flexibility," McAdams said.      The biofuels industry says it backs the RFS because it weans  Americans of foreign oil while cutting greenhouse gas emissions  and provides billions in investment. It also notes fuels blended  with as much as 15 percent of ethanol have been authorized for  use in cars build since 2001, although sales of the fuel are  miniscule due to concerns about car engine warranties.      "The EPA has totally obliterated Big Oil's myth that the RFS  is inflexible and unworkable. As in years past, the finalized  annual requirements are a testament to the inherent flexibility  that is the backbone of the RFS," said Bob Dinneen, President  and CEO of the Renewable Fuels Association.            A "TEPID HALF-STEP"      In practice, however, many refinery executives worry that  even if a crash into the "blend wall" next year is averted,  another one may loom as the targets continue to rise.       The EPA had previously projected 18.15 billion gallons of  renewable fuels being blended in 2014 from 16.55 billion gallons  this year, with that amount rising to 36 billion gallons by  2022. In Tuesday's statement, which also formalized the 2013  targets, the agency promised to reduce both the "advanced  biofuel and total renewable volumes" next year.      Refiner Valero said it wants an RFS that is "workable and  fair".      "The RFS, with its RINs requirement, has created an uneven  and unfair wholesale and retail fuel marketplace that  arbitrarily picks winners and losers," said CEO Klesse.       Valero is among the hardest hit, with RIN costs at up to  $800 million this year. Philadelphia's Rinaldi declined to say  how much they were paying, but as a merchant refiner with  limited blending and retail outlets it too is hurt. Among the  winners: BP, which recently sold two big refineries.      Tweaking the rules a bit won't satisfy many in the industry,  who have stepped up the fight in recent months.      "It's a tepid half step in the right direction, and a clear  signal to (the U.S. Congress) to please legislate in this area,"  said Stephen Brown, vice president for federal government  affairs at independent U.S refiner Tesoro Corp.  
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