EPA To Make RFS Waiver Info Public
Over the past year, farmers and ethanol advocates alike have pressed the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to be more transparent when it comes to Renewable Identification Number (RIN) waivers for small refineries. Today, EPA recognized that concern and created a handful of new sections on their website to ‘increase transparency’ surrounding the Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS) the agency said in a release.
“For the first time, EPA is providing new information to the public on small refinery exemptions and RIN trading,” said EPA Acting Administrator Andrew Wheeler. “Increasing transparency will improve implementation of the RFS and provide stakeholders and the regulated community the certainty and clarity they need to make important business and compliance decisions.”
According to Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue, the RFS is one of the top issues farmers are worried about.
“We hear concerns about lack of transparency around the issuance of small refinery waivers and we are hopeful these changes will put everyone on a level playing field to receive the information at the same time,” said U.S. Department of Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue. “Farmers stay on top of every bit of news that comes out about the RFS and their industry, so providing them with more information is a priority. Adding timely updates to EPA’s website will be important to USDA’s customers, the people of American agriculture. We have had a great working relationship with Acting EPA Administrator Wheeler and we are pleased to continue it with this progress on RFS information.”
New information on the website includes:
· The number of small refinery exemption petitions received, approved, and denied for each compliance year;
· The weekly average price of Renewable Identification Numbers (RINs) traded; and
· The weekly volume of RINs traded.
EPA officials believe the data will provide important information for renewable fuel producers, fuel refiners, importers, and marketers that can be used as they make business and compliance decisions.
The EPA intends to coordinate small refinery hardship decisions with website updates allowing the recipients of waivers and the broader market receive the same information at the same time. The agency will also update information on RIN prices and trading volumes on a monthly basis.
According to Bob Dineen of the Renewable Fuels Association, the addition of this data to the EPA website is a “step in the right direction.”
“Today’s action may prevent small refiners from obtaining market-moving information before other participants in the marketplace,” he explained in a statement. “That’s important because it appears the RIN market was gamed earlier this year by a small group of refiners who were privy to sensitive information regarding compliance exemptions before the rest of the market knew what was going on. Hopefully, this will put a stop to that.”
Dineen says these actions aren’t enough, more information and transparency is still needed.
“Market participants and the public deserve to know exactly who is receiving small refinery exemptions and what criteria is being used by EPA in making the decision to grant or deny a waiver request,” he said.
The Agency has been working to upgrade online systems to provide easy access to the most up-to-date information. These technical upgrades to the website serve to improve transparency in the Agency’s implementation of the statute.
The updated RFS website includes interactive and dynamic features that allow users to customize display of RIN information, feedstock type, and producer attributes.
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