Biofuel imports, tax break rile up farmers and rural lawmakers
30 Nov 05 - In an article in today's Pioneer Press in Minnesota,
reporter Tom Webb writes an extensive story on farmer and lawmaker reaction to new foreign competition in the U.S. biodiesel and ethanol markets.
"A ship loaded with South American biodiesel pulled into a Florida port this month, and immediately qualified for a new U.S. biodiesel tax break. For the homegrown biofuels industry, it was a shocking notice that their domestic market had gone global," the article said.
"The American Soybean Association expressed outrage. Angry farm-state politicians vowed to rewrite tax law. And it stunned soybean farmers, who dreamed that biodiesel would become the next ethanol - a corn-fed economic lifeline across Minnesota and beyond, which has turned crops into homegrown fuel, rural jobs and farmer profits."
"Ethanol, too, is confronting import challenges. Latin American nations reportedly are ramping up ethanol production for possible export. Suddenly, U.S. farmers are nervous, just when it seemed that the promised land for biofuels was in sight."
While farm leaders argue that it makes no sense to become dependent on another foreign fuel supply, the article said that "Free-traders see it differently, arguing that farm fuels have enjoyed years of government protection; they welcome the challenge to become more competitive."
Just as a new U.S. boom in biodiesel and ethanol (and therefore higher potential demand for soybeans and corn and rural workers) was starting, biodiesel made from palm oil in Ecuador landed in Florida recently, with plans for more to follow than the U.S. produces in a year.
According to the Pioneer Press, "Most galling to soybean growers, the Internal Revenue Service ruled that the Ecuadorian biodiesel qualifies for the new $1 a gallon biodiesel credit just passed by Congress. That means the U.S. biodiesel market is wide open to all comers."
Read full story here.
SOURCE: Pioneer Press article Nov. 30, 2005.
30 Nov 05 - In an article in today's Pioneer Press in Minnesota,
reporter Tom Webb writes an extensive story on farmer and lawmaker reaction to new foreign competition in the U.S. biodiesel and ethanol markets.
"A ship loaded with South American biodiesel pulled into a Florida port this month, and immediately qualified for a new U.S. biodiesel tax break. For the homegrown biofuels industry, it was a shocking notice that their domestic market had gone global," the article said.
"The American Soybean Association expressed outrage. Angry farm-state politicians vowed to rewrite tax law. And it stunned soybean farmers, who dreamed that biodiesel would become the next ethanol - a corn-fed economic lifeline across Minnesota and beyond, which has turned crops into homegrown fuel, rural jobs and farmer profits."
"Ethanol, too, is confronting import challenges. Latin American nations reportedly are ramping up ethanol production for possible export. Suddenly, U.S. farmers are nervous, just when it seemed that the promised land for biofuels was in sight."
While farm leaders argue that it makes no sense to become dependent on another foreign fuel supply, the article said that "Free-traders see it differently, arguing that farm fuels have enjoyed years of government protection; they welcome the challenge to become more competitive."
Just as a new U.S. boom in biodiesel and ethanol (and therefore higher potential demand for soybeans and corn and rural workers) was starting, biodiesel made from palm oil in Ecuador landed in Florida recently, with plans for more to follow than the U.S. produces in a year.
According to the Pioneer Press, "Most galling to soybean growers, the Internal Revenue Service ruled that the Ecuadorian biodiesel qualifies for the new $1 a gallon biodiesel credit just passed by Congress. That means the U.S. biodiesel market is wide open to all comers."
Read full story here.
SOURCE: Pioneer Press article Nov. 30, 2005.
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