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Bizav Groups Urge Flexibility with Rules Guiding SAF
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A coalition of eight wrote the USDA about the criticality of regulations surrounding feedstocks
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Eight aviation organizations have appealed to the USDA to build in flexibility and follow existing approaches in regulations surrounding SAF feedstocks.
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A business aviation coalition asked the Biden Administration to follow its existing biofuel program regulations as it develops rules surrounding qualifying feedstocks for sustainable aviation fuel (SAF). In comments to a request for information rom the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) on quantifying, verifying, and reporting on greenhouse emissions from various feedstocks used to produce SAF, eight aviation organizations welcomed the Biden Administration’s efforts to facilitate the expansion of the production and use of biofuel.

Efforts are underway by the administration to work on greenhouse gas rules that will impact how SAF is produced and can qualify for the clean fuel production credit under the Inflation Reduction Act. That credit provides up to $1.75 per gallon for fuel using qualified feedstocks.

The organizations pointed to the approach already in place for the Renewable Fuel Standard and existing biofuel audit programs, saying this should be a guideline for SAF.

“The Bizav SAF Coalition encourages the department to enable as much adaptability and flexibility in its framework as is practicable and encourages the USDA to embrace a performance-based approach in its analysis, focusing on outcomes rather than prescriptive and exclusionary lists of acceptable feedstocks,” the organizations said in their letter to the USDA.

Without the appropriate flexibility, the groups warned, the U.S. will be unable to meet the goals of the Administration’s SAF Grand Challenge to encourage the production of at least three billion gallons of SAF per year by 2030.

“It is likely that we will only achieve those goals through the existing scale and capabilities of U.S. agriculture through access to sustainable crop-based feedstocks,” the coalition said.

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Newsletter Headline
Bizav Groups Urge Flexibility with Rules Guiding SAF
Newsletter Body

A business aviation coalition asked the Biden Administration to follow its existing biofuel program regulations as it develops rules surrounding qualifying feedstocks for sustainable aviation fuel (SAF). In comments to a request for information from the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) on quantifying, verifying, and reporting on greenhouse emissions from various feedstocks used to produce SAF, eight aviation organizations welcomed the Biden Administration’s efforts to facilitate the expansion of the production and use of biofuel.

Efforts are underway by the administration to work on greenhouse gas rules that will impact how SAF is produced and can qualify for the clean fuel production credit under the Inflation Reduction Act. That credit provides up to $1.75 per gallon for fuel using qualified feedstocks.

The organizations pointed to the approach already in place for the Renewable Fuel Standard and existing biofuel audit programs, saying this should be a guideline for SAF.

“The Bizav SAF Coalition encourages the department to enable as much adaptability and flexibility in its framework as is practicable and encourages the USDA to embrace a performance-based approach in its analysis, focusing on outcomes rather than prescriptive and exclusionary lists of acceptable feedstocks,” the organizations said in their letter to the USDA.

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The Biden Administration has issued a Grand Challenge to spool up SAF production.
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