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Date:Mon, 24 Apr 2000 02:46:00 -0700 (PDT)

BNA Environment Reporter

Oil, Ethanol Industries Far From Deal
On Pending Senate Bill to Limit MTBE


Oil and ethanol interests remain at odds as the Senate seeks to limit use of
the fuel additive methyl tertiary butyl ether (MTBE), making it uncertain
whether the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee will be able to
craft an acceptable national
solution to the problem of MTBE in water, lobbyists told BNA April 17-19.

Despite fundamental differences, however, all sources interviewed for this
story--including two oil industry officials, three ethanol advocates, and
several other sources active in the legislative process on this issue--said
that it still appeared possible that national MTBE legislation satisfying
multiple interests could be developed.

"I don't think we're at an impasse," one oil industry official said, echoing
comments by others in the debate. "I just think it's going to take time."
Whether this means that a compromise can be worked out during this
legislative session remains to be seen, this official and others said.

The committee chairman, Sen. Bob Smith (R-N.H.), has made MTBE a priority,
saying that Congress must eliminate the threat of water contamination posed
by the fuel oxygenate while being careful to preserve the air quality
benefits associated with MTBE-mixed gasoline.

The chairman's view of the issue, however, is contrary to the view held by
the Clinton administration, by ranking minority member Sen. Max Baucus
(D-Mont.), and by Democratic and Republican agricultural interests in the
Senate. These forces hold that corn-derived ethanol and possibly other
"renewable" fuels should gain a wider market under any legislation addressing
the threat of MTBE water contamination.

The oil industry and Smith disagree with that view.

Smith Rejects 'Renewables' Linkage

When the Clinton administration announced on March 20 its support for a
national renewable fuels mandate, Smith said "the issue of renewable fuels
has absolutely nothing to do with eliminating MTBE from our drinking water."
He repeated this point in a newspaper opinion piece April 10.

In addition to gasoline and ethanol advocates, several other interest groups
maintain an active role in the ongoing debate, and Senate committee staff ar
continuing behind-the-scenes meetings with all sides, sources said.

Generally, comprehensive MTBE legislation is expected to slash use of the
additive without necessarily eliminating it entirely. A committee bill also
is expected to provide states with the option of waiving the Clean Air Act
mandate currently driving the use of
MTBE and ethanol, another fuel oxygenate. At the same time, such a bill is
expected to include "no backsliding" language to ensure that air toxics
reductions achieved in the eastern United States over the last several years
are maintained even if states
waive out of the air act mandate.

Sources said the committee also is weighing possible cleanup liability relief
for MTBE producers and enhancements to fuel storage tank clean up programs.

Heavy Reliance on MTBE

MTBE is a high-oxygen, high-octane gasoline additive that is one of the most
heavily produced chemicals in the United States. With roughly 12 million
gallons of MTBE mixed with gasoline each day in the United States, the
chemical makes up more than 3 percent of gasoline by volume, according to the
oil industry.

MTBE use is driven mainly by the Clean Air Act requirement that all
"reformulated gasoline" contain at least 2 percent oxygen by weight.
Reformulated gasoline is sold in areas of the country with poor air quality.
According to the Environmental Protection Agency, more than 80 percent of
reformulated gasoline production relies on MTBE to meet the oxygen
requirement.

However, MTBE smells somewhat like turpentine and has been detected in public
water supplies, rendering at least a few of those supplies undrinkable. The
health effects of drinking MTBE in water are little known, but the chemical
does taste and smell bad, according to a February report by the Congressional
Research Service.

RFG programs in Chicago and Milwaukee rely on ethanol for oxygen content in
their reformulated gasoline. Among other concerns in the legislative debate,
the ethanol industry fears losing this market if Congress eliminates the 2
percent oxygen requirement in the Clean Air Act to address MTBE concerns, one
industry representative said.

There were 1.5 billion gallons of ethanol mixed into gasoline in 1999,
according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. USDA chief economist Keith
Collins said before the Senate Agricultural Committee April 11 that there are
55 ethanol plants in operation in
"nearly 20 states."

Bill Would Ease 2 Percent Oxygen Rule

To address water quality concerns, Smith has signed on to legislation (S.
1886) that would allow states to lift the 2 percent mandate driving MTBE use.

Introduced by Inhofe and Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), S. 1886 would not
ban or phase down MTBE outright. However, this is expected to change when and
if the Environment and Public Works committee marks up more comprehensive
legislation, oil, ethanol, and other sources said.

"I think there's a growing set of opinion ... that MTBE either needs to be
phased down to historic levels or phased out entirely over a period of some
years," an oil industry source said.

Chemical companies that make MTBE disagree and continue to urge an overhaul
of underground storage tank programs in order to mitigate water contamination.

According to one source familiar with the issue, Senate committee staff
members are considering several legislative ideas that might address concerns
of MTBE interests. Prospective liability relief from contamination cleanup
costs is under consideration, as is the idea that MTBE makers should get
expedited review of required permits when switching to alternate chemical
products.

In addition, the committee may be considering more rigorous regulation of
underground storage tanks as part of comprehensive MTBE legislation, this
source said.

Daschle, Harkin Drafts

At least 14 bills have been introduced in the 106th Congress to address the
problem of MTBE in water, according to the Congressional Research Service
report. The report said most bills would either eliminate the Clean Air Act
requirement driving oxygenate use or would explicitly ban MTBE.

Some of the bills would bolster the Environmental Protection Agency's
underground storage tank program since leaking USTs are considered the main
cause of water contamination. This approach is supported by certain MTBE
makers, who told BNA that water contamination is caused by leaking tanks and
not by the high-quality fuel additive.

Additional draft bills are pending introduction, including comprehensive
legislation by Sen. Tom Daschle (D-S.D.), the Senate minority leader, that
would significantly curtail MTBE use by 2004 while letting states take action
before then.

Daschle's bill--said by Baucus's staff to be supported by the ranking EPW
committee member--also would bolster ethanol production through a national
renewable fuels mandate, expanding national average ethanol use to 2 percent
or more over the next 10 years.

In addition, the draft legislation would amend the Solid Waste Disposal Act
to get states the money they need to implement UST cleanup programs.

Ethanol supporter Sen. Tom Harkin (D-Iowa) also is drafting MTBE legislation
that he hopes to introduce soon after the Senate's Easter recess, a
spokeswoman said. Harkin is ranking minority member of the Senate Agriculture
Committee and supports a renewable fuels standard. "If crafted in the right
way,'' Harkin has said, such a standard "could result in far more ethanol use
than current law."

Iowa ranks second after Illinois in total ethanol production capacity,
according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Nebraska ranks third and
Minnesota ranks fourth.

RFG Market

Despite calls for eliminating the 2 percent oxygenate requirement in the
reformulated gasoline program, ethanol interests said they still support
maintenance of the requirement combined with an MTBE ban.

Such a scenario would leave ethanol to fill the RFG market void, doubling
ethanol use over three to five years, sources said. If Congress were to
eliminate the 2 percent mandate but institute a national renewable fuels
requirement, ethanol use also is expected to at least double from current
levels. However, it would do so over a longer period of about 10 years, one
ethanol source said.

Oil industry officials, as well as Northeast states and some environmental
advocates, oppose this simple MTBE ban because it would create a "de facto
ethanol mandate." The oil industry also continues to oppose a national
renewable fuels standard, officials said.

A representative of Northeast states told a Senate panel April 11 that Smith
appeared to be exploring a compromise with ethanol interests, considering a
national average "alternative fuel" requirement that would benefit ethanol as
well as natural gas, electricity, and other transportation fuels.

The Northeast representative, Jason Grumet of Northeast States for
Coordinated Air Use Management, supports the national average, alternative
fuel approach, since it would offer the ethanol industry market share without
requiring the Northeast to use large quantities of Midwest-derived ethanol.

However, oil company interests reaffirmed April 17 their long-held opposition
to any new fuel mandates, saying concerns over MTBE in water should be
addressed by eliminating current statutory mandates and not by instituting
any new mandates.

Oil companies are particularly firm in their position given that agricultural
states are expected to play a key role in upcoming presidential elections, a
second oil industry official said. It is not simply that the industry opposes
new mandates--though that is
the case--but also that an ethanol-mandate "bidding war" might erupt in a
year when Republicans and Democrats are vying for Midwestern votes, the
official said.

Ethanol Supporters Want Expansion

Meanwhile, ethanol interests said they will continue to fight for expansion
of their product in the RFG market, and do not necessarily see a national
renewable fuels mandate as a legislative compromise.

The Clinton administration's renewable standard would require ethanol use
initially at current levels of about 1.2 percent of gasoline. The mandate
would then expand over 10 years, administration officials have said.

Ethanol is more volatile than MTBE, making it more difficult for oil refiners
to produce summertime gasoline that meets low emissions requirements for
volatile organic compounds. This is one reason the "de facto mandate" is
opposed by Northeast states and environmental interests. Some of the
renewables mandates under consideration in Congress would allow refiners to
meet requirements over an annual average, enabling them to avoid or reduce
their ethanol use in summer.

No Markup Scheduled

Smith staff confirmed only that discussions with oil, ethanol, environmental,
MTBE, and state interests continue. A spokesman said comprehensive MTBE
legislation "is something we're trying to get done quickly," but that a bill
markup has not been scheduled.

Discussions leading to a full EPW committee markup of more comprehensive MTBE
legislation are important to the legislative process, sources said, because a
bill is not expected to weather floor debate without early support from
Democrats and Republicans on the committee, as well as from members of the
Senate Agricultural Committee.

"I just can't see this getting duked out on the floor," said one ethanol
lobbyist. "I think that we, the MTBE folks, the oil company folks, and the
environmentalists all recognize that there is mutually assured destruction on
the floor."

According to one source, a new version of the bill is expected to push MTBE
use down to pre-1990 levels over about four years. Before the 1990 air act
amendments required the sale of reformulated gasoline, MTBE was used mainly
to enhance octane.

It is unclear whether the bill will somehow prove acceptable to both
Democrats and Republicans, ethanol and oil interests, as well as to Northeast
states, the Midwest, and California.

"Things change day to day," an oil industry official said. "I think the issue
could be resolved without the ethanol piece, but the ethanol piece is just so
difficult," he added.

"I think right now the chairman is poking around in the mud to find somewhere
with solid footing," an ethanol industry source said.