Vilsack: Biofuels reduce need for foreign oil, create jobs in rural America

  • During a recent tour of AGP Biodiesel, Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack discussed how the increased use of biofuels is helping to reduce the nation's reliance on foreign oil.
  • Vilsack highlighted action by the Environmental Protection Agency to establish the volume of biodiesel products required to be included in diesel fuel markets.

During a recent tour of AGP Biodiesel, Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack discussed how the increased use of biofuels is helping to reduce the nation's reliance on foreign oil. During the tour, Vilsack highlighted action by the Environmental Protection Agency to establish the volume of biodiesel products required to be included in diesel fuel markets.

"President Obama's all-of-the-above energy plan is working -- today, we are importing less foreign oil than we have in nearly two decades and we are creating jobs by producing more of our energy here at home, said Vilsack. "A key part of (Obama’s) strategy is the development and promotion of biofuels and bio-based products, which are helping us fuel our cars and trucks and displacing petroleum used in the manufacturing of household products. Over the past three years, we have doubled generation from renewable energy and today's announcement by EPA will ensure that we are continuing to utilize biodiesel to help meet our energy needs, create jobs and strengthen the rural economy."

The action by EPA sets the 2013 volume of biodiesel products required to be included in diesel fuel markets at 1.28 billion gallons under the Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007 (EISA) which established the second phase of the Renewable Fuel Standards program. EISA specifies a one billion gallon minimum volume requirement for the biomass-based diesel category for 2012 and beyond. It also calls on EPA to increase the volume requirement after consideration of environmental, market, and energy-related factors. The final action follows careful review of the many comments and additional information received since EPA proposed the volume last spring.

President Obama has laid out a bold goal of reducing oil imports by half by 2020 and in his Blueprint for a Secure Energy Future released in March, 2011 the administration laid out an all-of-the-above energy plan to achieve that goal by developing domestic oil and gas energy resources, increasing energy efficiency, and speeding development of biofuels and other alternatives. Domestic oil and gas production has increased each year Obama has been in office, while renewable energy generation from wind, solar, and geothermal has doubled.

Since August 2011, the White House Rural Council has supported a broad spectrum of rural initiatives including a Presidential Memorandum to create jobs in rural America through biobased and sustainable product procurement, a $350 million commitment in SBA funding to rural small businesses over the next five years, launching a series of conferences to connect investors with rural start-ups, creating capital marketing teams to pitch federal funding opportunities to private investors interested in making rural and making job search information available at 2,800 local USDA offices nationwide.

Discuss this Article 2

big_huck (not verified)
on Sep 21, 2012

What a crock. What all-of-the-above energy plan he is possibly talking about? The only increase in exploration is happening on private not public lands. What about some nuclear energy? It's got to be wind, solar and popcorn. Jobs? What about all the real for sure jobs that we could have had with the keystone pipeline? All I hear are crickets. We don't need no stinking pipeline from Canada, especially since my good buddy Warren Buffet happens to own or control the ole Santa Fe line that is the principle north south RR. You know who the oracle of omaha is. The big mouth running around talking about not paying his fair share. The same guy fighting with the IRS over the unfair share he owes! Why are we wasting our valuable farm land on this scam? We have so much oil, gas and coal available to us and we want to make worthless biofuels. People around the world are starving to death and inflation on food is going through the roof. If you want to cover your roof and yard in solar panels, go for it. If you want to put up windmills across your pasture, go for it. Give up on the ethanol. I'm tired of it tearing up my small engines.

J3rrYcid
on Feb 3, 2013

How sustainable are biofuels really in the long run? With the unpredictable weather and unfathomable natural disasters hitting the U.S. lately, I’m not sure how reliable wind, solar and geothermal energies are. In addition, my friend, who regularly replaces my car parts and is generally a car enthusiast, claims that using biodiesel can lead to poor performance during cold weathers. As I have to drive for almost an hour each day to work (since there is no bus stop near my home), driving is a very essential form of commute to me. It worries me if we are forced to switch to biodiesel.
http://www.carid.com

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