Trump Administration Unlikely to Finalize 2026 Biofuel Quotas This Year, Sources Say

By

trump october 2025 1200x810

  • EPA still reviewing comments; no end-of-year decision expected
  • Delay folds quotas into broader oil-agriculture policy talks
  • Uncertainty complicates contracts, hedging, and investment decisions

Dec 12 (Reuters) – The Trump administration is not expected to finalize 2026 biofuel-blending quotas before the end of this year, according to three sources familiar with the situation, extending uncertainty over a policy closely watched by the rival oil and agricultural sectors.


Get the Latest US Focused Energy News Delivered to You! It’s FREE:


The slowdown would throw one of the administration’s most consequential energy policy choices into next year and folds the highly anticipated quotas into a growing cluster of interlocking decisions the White House is weighing on biofuels policy.

Together, the moves have raised expectations the administration may look to strike a broader – albeit elusive – agreement between rival oil and agricultural interests.

The Environmental Protection Agency, which administers biofuels policy, has scheduled meetings with stakeholders on the quota rule early next, two sources told Reuters, a sign that the issue will be pushed into next year.

A third source also said the EPA’s decision was unlikely by the end of this year.

The sources spoke about the matter on condition of anonymity.

The EPA told Reuters it was still reviewing public comments on the volume requirements and declined to offer any guidance on timing. The volume mandates are administered under the Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS), the federal program that mandates the blending of biofuels such as ethanol and biodiesel into the U.S. fuel supply.

A delay in finalizing the mandates is important because fuel makers, farmers and commodity traders use them to lock in supply contracts, hedge volatile crop and energy markets, and justify investments in new production capacity.

Without clarity on next year’s quotas, companies say they are forced to hold back on deals and delay spending decisions that shape biofuel output and margins.

WHITE HOUSE LOOKS FOR COMMON GROUND

Earlier this year, the EPA proposed raising total renewable fuel requirements for 2026 and 2027, significantly increasing targets for advanced biofuels and biomass-based diesel targets while tightening rules on the use of imported biofuels.

The EPA had initially been expected to finalize the proposal by the end of October.

The quotas have increasingly been swept into a broader set of critical energy and agricultural policy decisions the administration is weighing in the coming weeks – issues that appear separate on their own but could be linked as part of a wider bargain between rival oil and agricultural interests, the sources said.

Those issues include legislative efforts to allow year-round sales of gasoline containing higher blends of ethanol, a proposal to penalize imported biofuels and feedstocks, and unresolved questions over whether and how larger refiners could be required to make up for gallons exempted from the RFS.

The White House has held several meetings in recent weeks with oil and agricultural groups in hopes of finding common ground.

Asked whether these issues are becoming increasingly connected, the EPA said it is “committed to strengthening American energy security and supporting American farmers.”

Reporting by Jarrett Renshaw; Editing by Paul Simao

Share This:


More News Articles

 

  • Related Posts

    Oil Prices Keep Climbing as Expanding Conflict Heightens Supply Risks

    Summary Brent and WTI benchmarks gain more than $4 Vessels avoid Strait of Hormuz as freight rates soar Crude prices to remain elevated over coming days, say analysts (Reuters) –…

    US LNG Exports Grew in February, New Output Could Help Fill Qatar Supply Gap

    Reuters U.S. exports of liquefied natural gas rose more than 17% last month from a year earlier as Venture Global’s Plaquemines plant in Louisiana ramped up production and Cheniere brought…

    Have You Seen?

    US LNG Exports Grew in February, New Output Could Help Fill Qatar Supply Gap

    • March 3, 2026
    US LNG Exports Grew in February, New Output Could Help Fill Qatar Supply Gap

    Oil Prices Keep Climbing as Expanding Conflict Heightens Supply Risks

    • March 3, 2026
    Oil Prices Keep Climbing as Expanding Conflict Heightens Supply Risks

    Analysts Warn of Largest Oil Supply Disruption in History

    • March 3, 2026
    Analysts Warn of Largest Oil Supply Disruption in History

    White House Prepares Plan to Combat Oil Price Spike

    • March 3, 2026
    White House Prepares Plan to Combat Oil Price Spike

    Iran War Pushes Middle East Oil Tanker Rates to All-Time High

    • March 3, 2026
    Iran War Pushes Middle East Oil Tanker Rates to All-Time High

    China Pressures Iran to Keep Strait of Hormuz Open to Oil and Gas Flows

    • March 3, 2026
    China Pressures Iran to Keep Strait of Hormuz Open to Oil and Gas Flows

    Solar & Storage Ethiopia 2026 Concludes with a Grand Celebration of Renewable Energy Leadership, Innovation, and Industry Excellence

    • March 3, 2026
    Solar & Storage Ethiopia 2026 Concludes with a Grand Celebration of Renewable Energy Leadership, Innovation, and Industry Excellence

    MNRE Notifies Green Methanol Standard Under National Green Hydrogen Mission

    • March 3, 2026
    MNRE Notifies Green Methanol Standard Under National Green Hydrogen Mission

    Sineng Electric to Supply Central Inverter Solutions to Egypt’s 1.65 GW Benban Solar Park, One of the World’s Largest Solar Power Plants

    • March 3, 2026
    Sineng Electric to Supply Central Inverter Solutions to Egypt’s 1.65 GW Benban Solar Park, One of the World’s Largest Solar Power Plants

    MNRE Notifies Green Ammonia Standard Under National Green Hydrogen Mission

    • March 3, 2026
    MNRE Notifies Green Ammonia Standard Under National Green Hydrogen Mission