WASHINGTON – An Obama administration plan to lower the target for biofuels in the nation's gasoline supply is causing a rift with leading Minnesota lawmakers over a vital state industry that recently opened its first gas station offering a 15 percent ethanol blend.
The proposal comes as corn-based ethanol, once seen as a green alternative to imported oil, is increasingly under attack by a host of detractors, from oil companies to environmentalists worried about land conservation.
"It's a huge threat," said Jerry Demmer, a Clarks Grove, Minn., corn grower and chairman of the Minnesota Corn Research and Promotion Council. "They smell blood in the water."
Farmers in Minnesota, which ranks fifth nationally in ethanol production, are casting the proposal as a win for Big Oil, which considers the ethanol standard an unwanted intrusion in the gasoline market.
Their Minnesota backers in Congress agree.
"At a time when the oil industry continues to receive billions of dollars in unnecessary subsidies, this decision is wrong," said Sen. Amy Klobuchar.
Sen. Al Franken, a fellow Democrat, cited "homegrown jobs" from renewable energy. "This is not the time to send a signal that we're cutting back on biofuels," he said.
The Obama administration says that it remains committed to biofuels, but that it is proposing for the first time to dial back refinery targets set in a landmark 2007 law that mandated a steady rise in the amount of ethanol blended into gasoline.