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果冻直播Regional NewsNew GREET Model Could Limit Availability of Cleaner Jet Fuel

New GREET Model Could Limit Availability of Cleaner Jet Fuel

Fargo 鈥 North Dakota corn farmers are concerned by the announcement from the U.S. Department of聽 Treasury (USDOT) limiting corn-based ethanol’s contribution to the decarbonization of the aviation sector.聽

Yesterday’s update to the Department of Energy鈥檚 (DOE) Argonne GREET model essentially dictates that corn based ethanol must be grown with three additional on-farm conservation practices in order to qualify for tax聽 credits available in the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) 鈥 cover cropping, minimized tillage, and nitrogen聽 management.聽

The IRA credit requires a 50 percent reduction in green house gas (GHG) emissions. However, the聽 administration鈥檚 announcement limits farmers’ options to reaching emission targets.聽聽

鈥淭he announcement is a blow to corn farmers across the state and country,鈥 said North Dakota Corn Growers聽 Association President Andrew Mauch, who farms in Richland County near Mooreton 鈥淭he Environmental聽 Protection Agency鈥檚 (EPA) recent emissions tailpipe rule will force corn demand downward, leaving our family聽 farmers in search of other markets in which to sell. The administration鈥檚 announcement forces current聽 voluntary practices to now become mandatory for farmers to access previously promised markets. With聽 decreasing prices and increasingly questionable profitability, the federal government is prompting our industry聽 to become vulnerable.鈥澛

The University of Nebraska-Lincoln in response to the EPA鈥檚 original tailpipe proposal, questioned earlier this聽 year whether that ruling could result in a “farm crisis like the 1980s.”

Additionally, the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) Economic Research Service forecasts farm聽 net income in 2024 at $116.1 billion, a 37 percent drop from 2022.聽聽

鈥淣orth Dakota farmers are not prepared to pair shrinking markets with already predicted tighter margins. It聽 feels especially discouraging that our government would do this to rural America based not based upon facts聽 and data,鈥 Mauch said.聽聽

The GREET model was first released by Argonne National Laboratory in 1995 on behalf of the U.S. Department聽 of Treasury. The model already incentivizes farmers for on-farm practices in its greenhouse gas lifecycle聽 analysis. The edits to the model announced yesterday by the U.S. Department of Treasury make changes to聽 the international land use change analysis that are seemingly arbitrary and without scientific basis. The聽 changes will increase the overall carbon intensity score of corn.聽

Because of the subjective change, farmers throughout the U.S. will be forced to implement a bundle of three聽 choices of practices to qualify for market access; the one-size-fits-all approach is unworkable. North Dakota鈥檚聽 State Climatologist estimates the growing season length in North Dakota varies from approximately 140 days聽 in southern North Dakota to 120 days in northern North Dakota. The difference in climate, soil, and season,聽聽

makes it difficult for North Dakota farmers to subscribe to the same conservation regimen in all areas of the聽 state, much less in all areas of the country.聽

To further complicate the administration鈥檚 intention, the current logistics of segregating corn grown according聽 to prescribed standards from corn that is not, make it unfeasible for most storage sites or transportation聽 models, which will limit production and use for SAF.聽

鈥淭he model’s changes prompt us to question if the administration really wants to decarbonize the聽 transportation sector or to simply pick winners and losers in the market,鈥 Mauch said. 鈥淭he prescriptive聽 announcement will greatly reduce corn-ethanol鈥檚 availability for SAF production and ironically in turn limit聽 availability of clean jet fuel in the short term.鈥

The National Corn Growers Association as well as North Dakota’s corn leaders plan to immediately and聽 continuously work with the administration on improving the requirements.聽

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