Farmdoc: RINs Prices Poised to Drop without RFS Reform
Source: By Todd Neeley, DTN/Progressive Farmer • Posted: Tuesday, February 20, 2018
East Coast refiner Philadelphia Energy Solutions recently filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, claiming $832 million in RINs costs drove the company to financial ruin. The Washington Examiner reported on Friday that Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, has developed legislation to reform the RFS, with talk of a bill being introduced next week.
Irwin said in an analysis the price of conventional biofuel, or D6, RINs are expected to “fall back their pre-2013 level of just a few cents without making any changes to the RFS.”
Irwin writes that D6 prices have spiked because of what he calls a gap between domestic ethanol consumption — estimated at around 14.5 billion gallons in 2017 — and the 15-billion-gallon RFS requirement for conventional biofuels.
As the blending of E10, E15 and E85 fuels have expanded, Irwin said that gap has continued to close and is expected to cause RINs prices to fall.
“What seems to have gotten lost in all the noise surrounding the political war over the RFS is how rapidly the conditions are changing that created the high ethanol RINs prices in the first place,” Irwin said. “The key is the gap between the ethanol blend wall and the conventional ethanol mandate.
“This means it is not out of the realm of possibility for D6 RINs prices to fall back their pre-2013 level of just a few cents without making any changes to the RFS.”
In a statement to DTN on Friday, Renewable Fuels Association President and Chief Executive Officer Bob Dinneen said all indications are the ethanol industry is exceeding expectations.
“The first supposed ‘blend wall’ was the 10% ethanol blend level,” he said.
“Well, we crashed through that last year and are now blending above 10% nationally. But the next blend wall is the 15-billion-gallon allotment for conventional ethanol. With increased E15 and E85 blending, we are careening toward smashing that wall as well. It seems, however, that the closer we come to that wall, the more intent some refiners become in hitting the brakes, insisting upon RFS demand destruction as the only safe course.”
Read the farmdoc analysis here: http://bit.ly/…