WASHINGTON, D.C. --
An oil and gas industry trade association filed a second lawsuit
challenging U.S. Environmental Protection Agency regulations governing
fuel additives that include biological materials.
The American Petroleum Institute, in lawsuits
filed yesterday and in March, is seeking to overturn an EPA standard
mandating the purchase of fuels formulated in part from biological
materials including switchgrass, wood chips and agricultural waste. The
group claims the regulations include cellulosic fuels that don’t exist.
“EPA’s unattainable and absurd mandate forces refiners
to pay a penalty for failing to use biofuels that don’t even exist,”
Bob Greco, API’s director of downstream and industry operations, said in
an e-mailed statement.
First passed in 2007, the regulation required refiners to buy 250 million gallons of biofuel annually.
Production failed to reach that level and the agency reduced the target
to 6.6 million for 2011, and 8.65 million for this year.
The Washington-based API, which represents more than
500 oil and gas companies, sued in March challenging the 2012 standard.
Oral argument in that case has yet to be scheduled.
Today’s lawsuit challenges the 2011 standard.
Carlton Carroll, a spokesman for the group, said the cases are “essentially arguing the same thing.”
Alisha Johnson, a spokeswoman for the EPA, said in an e- mail that the agency will review the lawsuit and “respond accordingly.”
Johnson said the agency was required by law to set the
cellulosic standard and offer ways for companies to comply, including
the purchase of waiver credits.
The case is American Petroleum Institute v. U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 12-01330; the earlier case is American
Petroleum Institute v. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 12-1139,
U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia (Washington).
Copyright 2012 Bloomberg
http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/news/article/2012/07/oil-group-files-second-lawsuit-over-epa-biofuel-standards
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