The American Farm Bureau Federation (AFBF) urged the Biden administration to prioritize American-grown crops in the production of sustainable fuels during a meeting at the White House.
The meeting, which was organized by AFBF earlier this month, included leaders from the National Corn Growers Association and American Soybean Association to urge Senior Advisor to the President for Clean Energy Innovation John Podesta to take action.
“We appreciate John Podesta’s willingness to hear our concerns about the Clean Fuel Production Credit and the Sustainable Aviation Fuel Credit,” AFBF President Zippy Duvall said. “Both have the potential to be valuable incentives to produce homegrown biofuels that will help lower the nation’s carbon emissions and keep America’s farmers economically sustainable, but improvements are needed. These are tax credits that should benefit Americans, not foreign companies.”
Crops used for clean, renewable fuels are grown in the U.S. with a smaller environmental footprint than anywhere else in the world, AFBF said. Yet current guidance to produce sustainable aviation fuel does not require the use of domestically grown feedstocks. This results in interests from outside of the U.S. taking advantage of the credits at the expense of rural America. Cumbersome reporting demands also put the monetary benefit of participating in the market out of reach for many U.S. farmers.
Duvall and the other ag leaders called for the administration to move quickly in adopting workable regulations for the tax credits.
“Time is of the essence. The Clean Fuels Production Credit is scheduled to go into effect next year, and farmers must soon decide whether they are willing and able to participate in the program,” he said. “We urge Mr. Podesta and the administration to prioritize America’s farmers by establishing a domestic feedstock requirement for clean fuel production credits, and revise guidelines to make the goal of producing efficient biofuels more attainable.”
More information about tax policies that affect farmers can be found here.
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