Clean Fuels: CARB proposal will raise fuel prices, thwart decarbonization progress
A proposed cap on soy- and canola-based biodiesel and renewable diesel could raise prices of fuel and goods for California consumers and set back decarbonization efforts by years, said Clean Fuels Alliance America and the California Advanced Biofuels Alliance in comments submitted to the California Air Resources Board.
The recently proposed amendments to the Low Carbon Fuel Standard would put a 20 percent cap on credits for vegetable-oil-based fuel, without sufficient scientific evidence to support such limitations.
“Substantially constraining the lowest-cost feedstocks for these petroleum-diesel replacements can raise the price of diesel fuel, increasing consumer prices of both the fuel and goods transported by trucking,” stated Cory-Ann Wind, Clean Fuels’ director of state regulatory affairs, in the submitted comments.
Biodiesel and renewable diesel have displaced nearly 75 percent of all diesel sold in the state and are responsible for 45 percent of California’s progress under the LCFS so far.
Capping the use of vegetable oils to power trucks and other heavy-duty vehicles will slow down California’s effort to decarbonize them.
Clean Fuels, CABA and other stakeholders are urging CARB to reconsider the proposed caps on vegetable oils in the LCFS in part because it will delay decarbonization and increase the cost to comply with California’s lofty greenhouse-gas reduction goals.
For every five years of delay, 13 times more emissions reductions will be required to have the same climate impact.
“Instead of penalizing fuels, CARB should be focusing on improving the robustness of the models and encouraging sustainable practices through targeted incentives that might provide a more effective balance between environmental protection, food security and the promotion of renewable energy,” Wind said.
Click here to read the full comments submitted by Clean Fuels and CABA.