The Unintended Consequences of Clean Fuel Policies (2024)

The Unintended Consequences of Clean Fuel Policies (1)

How policies affect emissions, land use, and the prices of fuel and vegetable oils

  • by Ria DeBiase

Over the last two decades, both the federal government and state governments have enacted policies to reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions in the transportation sector. In a new Special Issue of ARE Update, University of California agricultural economists explore how these federal and state renewable fuel policies have affected biofuel production for motor and aviation fuels and consider how these policies have affected land use and food prices. Their research shows that as U.S. demand for renewable diesel began to outpace supply, consumer prices for vegetable oil—which is used as a feedstock for renewable diesel—surged.

The national Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS) and California’s Low Carbon Fuel Standard (LCFS), implemented in 2006 and 2011, respectively, have led to an increase in the amount of biofuels consumed and produced in the United States. While the RFS mandates that a minimum volume of renewable fuels be blended into U.S. transportation fuels, the LCFS sets an annually increasing targeted reduction in transportation-related carbon emissions. The LCFS set a 2030 target date to reduce GHG emissions by 20% through the development of a carbon trading program that requires refiners who produce ‘dirtier’ fuels to buy credits from those who produce cleaner (e.g., renewable) fuels.

The authors show that after 2020, when LCFS credit prices (i.e., biofuel subsidies) were high, California saw an increasing volume of motor fuel coming from renewable diesel—which previously only made up around 5% of the state’s diesel blend. Currently, the retail diesel blend in California is 35% conventional diesel and 65% renewable diesel. By 2023, renewable diesel—which, unlike biodiesel, is a perfect substitute for conventional diesel—was the most consumed renewable fuel in California and also generated the most credits under the LCFS.

The agricultural inputs used to make renewable diesel can be used not only in the production of motor oil, but also in the development of sustainable aviation fuel (SAF). Additional tax credits set forth in the 2021 Inflation Reduction Act aim to bring about a 100-fold increase in the production of these fuels by by the end of decade. However, the authors of the second article show that current incentives to produce SAFs are not large enough to overcome the opportunity cost of instead using these fuels for on-road use.

After the drastic increase in demand for renewable diesel (up 500% over the last five years), a higher percentage now comes from edible vegetable oils. This increased demand almost certainly plays a role in increasing inflationary pressure on foods such as cooking oils.

UC Davis professor and co-author Jens Hilscher says, “From 2018 to 2024, food-at-home inflation was 24%, but over the same period, fats and oils inflation was 83%.”

The increased demand for these oils from the United States has also led to booms in production in countries such as Brazil and Indonesia, and some of the land conversion into these vegetable oil crops could result in deforestation. Greenhouse gas emissions are a global challenge. The authors show that local biofuel mandates often succeed in moving U.S. consumption of these fuels from one product or region to another without necessarily decreasing emissions at the national level. Their research emphasizes the importance of a coordinated effort to target emission reductions with a careful eye to the indirect consequences that inevitably result from ambitious policies.

To learn more about how federal and statewide renewable fuel policies have affected the demand for biofuels, read the full Special Issue of ARE Update 27(5), UC Giannini Foundation of Agricultural Economics,online at https://giannini.ucop.edu/filer/file/1719507310/21010/.

ARE Update is a bimonthly magazine published by the Giannini Foundation of Agricultural Economics to educate policymakers and agribusiness professionals about new research or analysis of important topics in agricultural and resource economics. Articles are written by Giannini Foundation members, including University of California faculty and Cooperative Extension specialists in agricultural and resource economics, and university graduate students. Learn more about the Giannini Foundation and its publications at https://giannini.ucop.edu.

Media Resources

Ria DeBiase, Communications Director, Giannini Foundation of Agricultural Economics, (530) 752-3508, rwdebiase@ucdavis.edu.

Jens Hilscher, Professor, Department of Agriculture and Resource Economics, UC Davis, jhilscher@ucdavis.edu.

Ellen M. Bruno, Assistant Professor of Cooperative Extension, Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics, UC Berkeley and Co-editor, ARE Update, Giannini Foundation of Agricultural Economics, ebruno@berkeley.edu.

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The Unintended Consequences of Clean Fuel Policies (2024)

FAQs

What are the uses of clean fuel? ›

Clean fuels used for cooking and lighting can include biogas, LPG, electricity, ethanol, natural gas. Furthermore, clean-burning stoves, solar cookers and alcohol-fuel stoves are cooking solutions that typically deliver high performance in terms of reducing indoor air pollution.

What is the carbon intensity of diesel? ›

The carbon intensity must be lowered by using compliance credits in accordance with section 11 to satisfy the reduction requirement for that compliance period. (3) For the purposes of subsection (2), the baseline carbon intensity of gasoline is 95 gCO2e/MJ and the baseline carbon intensity of diesel is 93 gCO2e/MJ.

Who owns Clean Fuel? ›

Led by partners Atty. Jesus “Bong” Suntay, Ralph Atienza, Marco Atienza, and Saymour Go, Cleanfuel has grown at an unprecedented rate, and now has numerous stations all over Luzon selling not only Auto LPG; but also quality Diesel and 91/95 octane premium fuels for less.

Is it good to clean your fuel system? ›

Benefits of Fuel System Cleaning

Improved Engine Performance: A clean fuel system results in better fuel flow, leading to improved engine performance, smoother idling, and reduced emissions. This, in turn, enhances the overall driving experience.

What is worse for the environment, gas or diesel? ›

Diesel cars tend to have lower volumetric fuel consumption figures than comparable gasoline vehicles. However, the benefit in terms of CO2 emissions is significantly lower, as the combustion of 1 liter of diesel fuel releases approximately 13% more CO2 than for the same amount of gasoline fuel.

Does diesel burn cleaner than gasoline? ›

Because diesels are more efficient, they do in fact emit less carbon dioxide than gasoline engines. Diesel fuel contains about 12 percent more energy per gallon than ordinary gasoline, and about 16 percent more energy than gasoline that contains ethanol.

How bad are diesel cars for the environment? ›

Despite producing less CO2 than petrol engines, a global emissions scandal revealed that many diesel models gave off far more harmful nitrogen oxides (NOx) than claimed. NOx isn't a greenhouse gas like CO2, so the worries about it aren't focused so much on the environment.

What does clean energy fuels do? ›

Renewable natural gas (RNG) is a transportation fuel made from organic waste. It can drastically reduce carbon emissions by over 300% versus diesel, and at a fraction of the price. Unlike conventional natural gas, renewable natural gas is not a fossil fuel and does not involve drilling or fracking.

What are the uses of good fuel? ›

Ideal fuels should be easy to store, leave behind no ash after being burnt and burn easily. They are cheap, easily available, produce no harmful odor while burning and can be transported easily and their combustion can be controlled.

What is the difference between clean fuel and dirty fuel? ›

Clean fuel refers to these categories of fuels: kerosene, Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG), electricity. In contrast, dirty fuels refer to fuels that are in their solid-state that emit a lot of toxic sub- stances and smoke.

What is an example of a cleanest fuel? ›

Hydrogen gas is a clean-burning fuel, because when it is combined with oxygen in a fuel cell, hydrogen produces heat and electricity with water vapor. So, hydrogen fuel does not produce any harmful gases, so it is considered as the cleanest fuel.

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