By Stephanie Kelly
NEW YORK, June 12 – The Trump administration on Friday proposed to increase the amount of biofuels that oil refiners must blend into the nation’s fuel mix over the next two years, driven by a surge in biomass-based diesel mandates.
The move, which also included measures to discourage biofuel imports, was welcomed by the biofuels industry, which had been lobbying on the issue for months.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency proposed on Friday total biofuel blending volumes at 24.02 billion gallons in 2026 and 24.46 billion gallons in 2027. That compares with blending requirements of 22.33 billion gallons in 2025.
Under the Renewable Fuel Standard, refiners are required to blend large volumes of biofuels into the nation’s fuel supply or purchase credits, called RINs, from those that do.
The proposal is driven in part by an increase in biomass-based diesel requirements. EPA set a quota of 7.12 billion biomass-based diesel RINs for 2026 – a measurement of the number of tradable credits generated by blending the fuel.
It said it projected that mandate would lead to the blending of 5.61 billion gallons. The EPA expressed the biomass-based diesel requirement in billion RINs in accordance with the agency’s proposal to reduce the number of RINs that could be generated from imported biofuels.
After accounting for the reduction for imported biofuels, the EPA said it projected the number of RINs generated for biomass-based diesel would be 1.27 and 1.28 RINs per gallon in 2026 and 2027, respectively. Previously, the EPA projected the average gallon of biomass-based diesel generated 1.6 RINs.
The volume mandate for 2025 for biomass-based diesel was 3.35 billion gallons, a figure the industry had complained was too low.
The oil and biofuel industries, both major lobbying powers in Washington, have highly anticipated the release of the proposal, which, if finalized, determines the fate of billions of dollars in fuel and tradable credit transactions.
As one of the first decisions made by the current Trump administration regarding federal biofuel policy, the proposal signaled the administration’s support for the biofuels industry, which has at times been at odds with oil companies.
A coalition of oil and biofuel groups banded together in a historically unusual move earlier this year to request biomass diesel blending for 2026 at 5.25 billion gallons, compared with 3.35 billion gallons in 2025.
The coalition, led by the American Petroleum Institute, argued that the EPA’s previous mandates failed to support the growth of the advanced biofuel industry and undercut the market.
Biofuel advocates cheered the proposal.
“USDA and EPA have never been more aligned on the need for more American-grown biofuels,” said U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Brooke L. Rollins.
“The volumes proposed today provide crucial growth opportunities for U.S. ethanol producers and farmers,” said Renewable Fuels Association President Geoff Cooper.
(Reporting by Stephanie Kelly in New York; editing by Philippa Fletcher)