Virginia Makes Eighth State to Request Waiver of Ethanol Mandates

US - In a letter sent earlier this week, Virginia Governor Bob McDonnell petitioned the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to grant a waiver from the ethanol quotas mandated by the federal Renewable Fuels Standard (RFS).
calendar icon 29 August 2012
clock icon 4 minute read

In a show of support for the Virginia governor, the National Chicken Council, National Turkey Federation and the Virginia Poultry Federation offered their praise for McDonnell’s petition.

“I thank Governor McDonnell for his efforts to provide relief for Virginia’s chicken farmers and processors who have and continue to experience severe economic harm as a direct result of the federal ethanol mandate,” said National Chicken Council President Mike Brown. “Congress gave the EPA administrator the authority to act in a situation such as this to prevent a bad situation from becoming worse. I join Governor McDonnell in asking immediately for a full, one-year waiver from the RFS.”

“We commend Governor McDonnell in joining the requests for a waiver from the EPA,” said Joel Brandenberger, president of National Turkey Federation. “It is time for the EPA to act. Too much damage has already been done by this drought to our feed costs. We are asking them to step in and waive the mandate, before it causes further damage to our growers’ livelihoods.”

“We appreciate that Governor McDonnell took time to thoroughly and thoughtfully analyze the circumstances and determine that waiving the federal ethanol mandate is necessary to mitigate severe economic harm to Virginia’s livestock and poultry producers,” said Virginia Poultry Federation President Hobey Bauhan.

The RFS mandates that all US transportation fuel contain ethanol, effectively diverting more than 40 per cent of US-grown corn to fuel. In 2011, more corn went into gas than into feeding animals raised for food for the first time in history.

“The direct harm is caused by the RFS requirement to utilize ever-increasing amounts of corn and soybeans for transportation fuel, severely increasing the costs of producing food, and further depleting already severely stressed grain supplies,” said Governor McDonnell.

“Altogether, economic harm is being experienced by Virginia’s livestock and poultry production regions and important economic sectors in the state as a direct result of the implementation of the applicable volume requirements of the RFS. This harm could be alleviated by a full wavier of the RFS in 2012 and 2013,” he continued.

Poultry is essential to the economy of Virginia. Chickens are Virginia’s No. 1 farm commodity and the state is the fifth-largest producer of turkeys in the nation. According to McDonnell, agriculture generates more than $55 billion per year and 357,000 jobs for the commonwealth.

Governor McDonnell now joins twelve bipartisan members of the Virginia congressional delegation in calling for an RFS waiver, including: US Senators Jim Webb and Mark Warner, and Representatives Rob Wittman; Scott Rigell; Bobby Scott; Randy Forbes; Robert Hurt; Bob Goodlatte; Jim Moran; Morgan Griffith; Frank Wolf, and Gerald Connolly.

The chorus of cries for the waiver comes after the August 10 World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimates (WASDE) report. In the report, the USDA drastically reduced its 2012-13 corn crop estimate to 10.8 billion bushels with a yield of 123.4 bushels per acre. This estimate predicts 22 fewer bushels per acre, and 533 million bushels less than the previous estimate. This means the reserve corn supply will be the smallest carry-over since the 1995-96 crop year. USDA predicts prices of $7.50 to $8.90 per bushel at the farm level, which is more than 40 per cent higher than the previous crop year.

Virginia is the eighth state to file a petition from the waiver behind Texas, Georgia, New Mexico, Arkansas, North Carolina, Maryland and Delaware. Other requests to waive the RFS include calls to action from 156 US House members, 34 US Senators, poultry and livestock producers and the United Nations.

Charlotte Johnson

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