|
ASA Addresses Participants at Renewable Energy
Conference
October 12, 2006... Saint Louis, Missouri... Stephen
Censky, the Chief Executive Officer of the American Soybean Association
(ASA), today opened Plenary Session II at the Advancing Renewable Energy
Conference in Saint Louis. The conference, which was jointly hosted by the
U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) and the U.S. Department of Agriculture
(USDA), brought together key stakeholders in biofuels, wind, and solar
energy to accelerate development and rapid commercialization of renewable
energy technologies.
"Today I stand before you truly amazed by the growth
of the renewable energy industry, and genuinely proud of the contributions
made by the American Soybean Association to the advancement of biodiesel
fuel in the United States," Censky said. "When I was growing up
on a farm in southern Minnesota, the idea of running our farm tractors on
renewable fuel was not even contemplated. Today, farmers are a key
consumer segment for soy biodiesel."
According to the U.S. Department of Energy, biodiesel, a
renewable fuel that can be made from soybean oil, has become America’s
fastest growing alternative fuel. Today, there are 86 operational
biodiesel plants in the U.S., with 65 more already under construction and
an additional 13 being expanded. More than 600 fleets now use biodiesel,
including government and military, commercial and school buses.
For many, the highlight of the conference was an
appearance by President George W. Bush who said, "I have been to a biodiesel plant in Virginia. And it
doesn't take much capital investment to refine biodiesel from soy, soybeans; it just doesn't. Biodiesel is coming. It makes a lot of sense for us to continue to invest in biodiesel technologies to make the production process even more efficient.
President Bush went on to say, "These technological breakthroughs are going to say to our farmers, you're energy producers. And that's good for America."
"Biodiesel has been ASA’s number one domestic
policy issue for more than a decade, and I dare say that the biodiesel
industry in the United States would not be what it is today, if not for
the successful grassroots lobbying efforts of ASA and our state
affiliates," Censky said. "In 2005, the first year after the
Federal tax incentive was in place, U.S. biodiesel production tripled to
75 million gallons, and this year, we anticipate that figure will nearly
triple again to almost 200 million gallons."
In 1998, ASA led the charge in getting the Energy Policy
Act amended so biodiesel qualified as an alternative fuel. ASA then
pressed USDA and Congress to establish the CCC Bioenergy Program. And more
recently, ASA lobbied Congress to establish and extend the biodiesel tax
incentive, which has been so critical to the growth of biodiesel in the
last 2 years.
Biodiesel is an environmentally sound alternative to
petroleum diesel, and is made right here in the United States using
soybeans grown on U.S. farms. Biodiesel is a top-notch product that
lessens U.S. dependence on foreign oil, improves air quality, and
stimulates the rural economies where it’s produced.
Now ASA is advancing a three-point plan designed to enable
biodiesel producers to manufacture even greater quantities of this
renewable fuel. Specifically, ASA is asking Congress to include in any
energy package legislation that: 1. Extends the volumetric biodiesel tax
incentive; 2. Extends the small agri-biodiesel producer credit; and 3.
Authors and funds a CCC Biodiesel program.
With these programs in place, domestic biodiesel
production, just from soybean oil, could well surpass 600 million gallons
by 2015. Each gallon of domestically produced biodiesel represents an
expansion of distillate supplies, additional refinery capacity, and is a
direct replacement for imported fossil fuel.
"America’s energy challenges are well
documented," Censky said. "While there are no simple answers to
this problem, one can safely conclude that our country needs more fuel.
And that’s a need soybean farmers stand ready to fill through the
production of more soybean-based biodiesel."
--30--
For more information contact:
Stephen Censky, ASA Chief Executive Officer, (314)
754-1316, scensky@soy.org
Bob Callanan, ASA Communications Director, (314) 576-1770, bcallanan@soy.org
Access this release at www.SoyGrowers.com/newsroom/news.htm |