St. Louis, Missouri
April 13, 2005
The American Soybean
Association (ASA) expressed support for the "Fuels Security
Act of 2005" introduced today in the United States House of
Representatives by Stephanie Herseth (D-SD), Tom Osborne (R-NE),
Collin Peterson (D-MN), and Steve King (R-IA). The legislation
would establish a Renewable Fuels Standard (RFS) growing to 8
billion gallons by 2012. This legislation is identical to
legislation introduced in the Senate (S. 650) on March 17.
"This landmark
legislation would increase our nation’s energy independence,
protect air and water quality, provide increased flexibility for
refiners and stimulate rural economies through the increased
production of domestic, renewable fuels," said ASA President
Neal Bredehoeft. "Increased use of renewable fuels will help
support better prices paid to farmers."
The ethanol and
biodiesel industries have undergone unprecedented growth over
the past several years. In fact, the U.S. currently has the
capacity to produce more than 3.7 billion gallons of ethanol and
biodiesel, and plants under construction will add an additional
700 million gallons of capacity by the end of the year. Most of
this growth has been in farmer-owned plants, which taken as a
whole, now represent the single largest producer in the country.
"Clearly, the
renewable fuels industry is poised to make a significant
contribution to this nation’s energy supply," Bredehoeft said.
"With rising crude oil and gasoline prices hurting consumers,
and record petroleum imports worsening our trade imbalance and
slowing economic growth, we need to be maximizing the production
and use of domestic renewable fuels such as ethanol and
biodiesel."
The original
cosponsors of the bill are Marion Berry (D-AR), Sam Graves
(R-MO), Mark Kennedy (R-MN), Betty McCollum (D-MN), John McHugh
(R-NY), Tom Osborne (R-NE), Earl Pomeroy (D-ND) and Ike Skelton
(D-MO).
The production and
use of 8 billion gallons of ethanol, biodiesel and other
renewable fuels by 2012 will displace over 2 billion barrels of
crude oil and reduce the outflow of dollars largely to foreign
oil producers by $64.1 billion between 2005 and 2012. As a
result of the RFS, America’s dependence on imported oil will be
reduced from an estimated 68 percent to 62 percent.
The renewable
fuels sector will spend an estimated $6 billion to build 4.3
billion gallons of new ethanol and biodiesel capacity between
2005 and 2012, and nearly $70 billion on goods and services
required to produce 8 billion gallons of ethanol and biodiesel
by 2012. Purchases of corn, grain sorghum, soybeans, corn stover
and wheat straw alone will total $43 billion between 2005 and
2012.
The combination of
this direct spending and the indirect impacts of those dollars
circulating throughout the economy will add nearly $200 billion
to the Gross Domestic Product between 2005 and 2012, while
generating an additional $43 billion of household income for all
Americans between 2005 and 2012, and could create as many as
234,840 new jobs in all sectors of the economy by 2012.
"Enacting a RFS
that would provide a market of 8 billion gallons by 2012
demonstrates a firm commitment to reducing this nation’s foreign
oil dependence while providing a significant impact to the
American economy," Bredehoeft said. "The RFS is a vital and
necessary component of any energy policy designed to reduce our
nation’s dependence on foreign sources of petroleum. The 26,000
producer-members of the ASA urge passage of this important
legislation as quickly as possible." |