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ASA Voices Concerns about Bioenergy Program to House
Ag Committee
July 2, 2009…Saint Louis, Missouri… The American Soybean
Association (ASA) submitted comments today to the House Agriculture
Subcommittee on General Farm Commodities and Risk Management for the
record of the Public Hearing to review implementation of the Food,
Conservation, and Energy Act of 2008. ASA supported enactment of this
important legislation last year, and is interested in how the new
programs and changes in existing programs would be developed.
ASA brought to the Subcommittee’s attention implementation of the
Bioenergy Program for Advanced Biofuels, included in Section 9005 in the
Energy Title of the Farm Bill. ASA played a lead role in asking Congress
to extend the Bioenergy Program that had been initiated under the Farm
Security and Rural Investment Act of 2002, and ASA worked hard to see it
authorized and funded.
"The Bioenergy Program affects the viability of soybean farmers, as
well as the biodiesel industry, and we want to bring it to the attention
of the Agriculture Committee and the Subcommittee on General Farm
Commodities and Risk Management as well," said ASA President Johnny
Dodson, a soybean producer from Halls, Tenn.
The Rural Business-Cooperative Service of the U.S. Department of
Agriculture (USDA) published a Notice of Contract Proposal (NOCP) in the
Federal Register on June 12, 2009, announcing plans to implement the
Bioenergy Program for Fiscal Year 2009. ASA is pleased that the
Department has moved forward to put the Program in place this year, and
is pleased with the overall nature of the Program. However, ASA has
concerns with several provisions of the NOCP.
ASA is concerned with the manner in which USDA would determine Base
Production of new biorefineries for 2009 and the differential payments
for base and incremental production in future years.
"ASA supports making equal payments on actual production," Dodson
said. "These criteria should apply to the actual production of new and
old plants alike. Differentiating between older and newer plants using
actual production versus nameplate capacity could seriously undercut the
competitiveness of the older facilities and provide a windfall to the
newer ones. ASA urges the Department to reconsider this provision and
revise the NOCP accordingly."
ASA is also concerned with the misstatement in the USDA’s NOCP that
"Congress appropriated mandatory funding to this program as follows: $30
million for FY 2009." The 2008 Farm Bill provides mandatory funding for
the Bioenergy Program of $55 million in FY2009.
"ASA is disturbed that the Department chose to misrepresent the
decision by Congress to provide mandatory funding for the Bioenergy
Program as an appropriation," Dodson said. "We are concerned by the
decision to withhold $25 million of this mandatory funding. Unless these
decisions can be reversed, we ask the Committee to obtain written
assurances from the Department that the additional $25 million provided
in the Farm Bill for FY2009 will be added to the $55 million provided
for FY2010, and that the full amount of $80 million will be used under
the Bioenergy Program in the coming fiscal year."
ASA asked the Committee to conduct active oversight of the Bioenergy
Program for Advanced Biofuels to ensure that it is administered in a
manner that is equitable for all producers and consistent with the
intent of Congress, including using the full mandatory funding amounts
provided in the 2008 Farm Bill.
Access ASA’s entire statement at http://www.soygrowers.com/policy/backgrounders09/ASA-Bioenergy-HouseAg-062409.pdf
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For more information contact:
Johnny Dodson, ASA President, (731) 286-2268, johnnydodson@bellsouth.net
Bob Callanan, ASA Communications Director, 314-576-1770,
bcallanan@soy.org
Access this release at www.SoyGrowers.com/newsroom/news.htm |