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U.S. Senator Grassley backs plan to block EPA nomination over biofuel waivers – Metro US

U.S. Senator Grassley backs plan to block EPA nomination over biofuel waivers

Senate Finance Committee hearing on U.S. trade on Capitol Hill
Senate Finance Committee hearing on U.S. trade on Capitol Hill in Washington

NEW YORK (Reuters) – U.S. Senator Chuck Grassley said on Tuesday he supported a plan by one of his Senate colleagues to block the nomination of an Environmental Protection Agency official until the agency makes clear how it would handle requests from oil refiners for retroactive exemptions from their biofuel blending mandates.

Grassley and Senator Joni Ernst, both from Iowa, spoke last week with EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler to discuss the waivers, which biofuel advocates in their state claim hurt farmers by undermining demand for corn-based ethanol, Grassley said on a call with reporters.

The EPA recently received 52 new petitions for retroactive biofuel blending waivers that, if granted, would help bring refiners into compliance with a federal court ruling earlier this year that requires new waivers to take the form of extensions to old ones.

Grassley also recently discussed the waivers with a Department of Energy official, he said.

“I didn’t feel from either one of the two people I talked to that they were very enthused about dealing with them (the retroactive waivers),” Grassley said.

The waivers exempt oil refiners from U.S. laws that require that they blend billions of gallons of biofuels into their fuel pool. Biofuel advocates claim the exemptions hurt demand for their products, but the oil industry refutes that and says they are needed to help small facilities stay open.

Last week, Ernst announced her opposition to Doug Benevento’s nomination for EPA deputy administrator over the issue. Ernst is a member of the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee, which provides oversight on EPA.

Without Ernst’s vote, Benevento would not be brought before the committee to move forward with his nomination, her office said in a statement.

Grassley on Tuesday said the retroactive waivers do not meet the “common-sense pass.”

(Reporting by Stephanie Kelly; Editing by Bernadette Baum)