Florida Rules Could Open Vast Ethanol Market
US: December 24, 2007
NEW YORK - Florida published new proposed motor fuel rules Friday that could
lead to wider ethanol blending in the country's third largest gasoline
market.
Limited ethanol blending had already been occurring in Florida, but the
issuing of broad rules on gasoline containing ethanol is a step in creating
the regulatory framework needed in opening up the market to the burgeoning
US ethanol industry.
"We view it as a very positive development and a step in the right direction
in terms of creating the flexibility that Florida petroleum marketers need
to blend more ethanol," Matt Hartwig, a spokesman for ethanol industry group
the Renewable Fuels Association, said in an interview.
At least four other states in the US Southeast are also considering new
gasoline rules that could open markets to biofuels.
Florida held a hearing in October at the urging of the ethanol industry and
several oil companies to relax the state rules that had discouraged refiners
from adding ethanol to gasoline sold in the region.
Florida companies are eager to make biofuels from biomass such as orange
peels, while established ethanol producers are also eyeing the state fuel
pool, which could be up to a 1-billion-gallon-per-year ethanol market.
South Dakota-based POET, the largest US ethanol producer, expects to supply
the Florida market from five biorefineries it is building in Ohio and
Indiana. It hopes to send the fuel by train down to the Southeast.
The US ethanol industry has grown 40 percent this year as the government
offers incentives in an effort to begin to wean the country off foreign oil.
The energy bill signed by President Bush this week would boost blending of
alternative fuels like ethanol five fold by 2022 to 36 billion gallons per
year. (Reporting by Timothy Gardner; Editing by Christian Wiessner)
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