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Advanced Biofuel Companies Ask Congress For Comprehensive Biofuels Policy

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by Staff Writers
Washington DC (SPX) Apr 02, 2009
Biofuel producers and biotechnology companies have asked Congressional leaders to help them overcome economic obstacles to obtaining financial backing and bring commercially ready advanced biofuels to the marketplace.

The Biotechnology Industry Organization (BIO) submitted a letter to Congressional leaders proposing six principles to guide development of legislation needed to support continued development and deployment of advanced biofuels.

Brent Erickson, executive vice president of the BIO's Industrial and Environmental Section, stated, "Federal leadership is required to stimulate the investment needed to create a brand new value chain for advanced biofuel production and biobased product manufacturing. Congress has authorized a number of programs to assist advanced biofuels producers, but what is needed is an effort to coordinate and fund these programs and help the development of the new feedstocks, transportation and delivery of products, alternative fuel distribution networks and vehicles, and many other parts of the value chain. Advancing the development of biobased products beyond just biofuels would also help to achieve cost-effectiveness."

BIO specifically recommended the following policy principles for the development of new legislation:

+ Implement a comprehensive systems policy approach to federal support for advanced biofuels and biobased products deployment that recognizes the need for coordinated end-to-end infrastructure development;

+ Inject immediate capital for biorefinery construction, feedstock development, and fuel delivery infrastructure by boosting funding and quickly issuing loans and loan guarantees for biorefinery construction;

+ Ensure a strong market for advanced biofuels by maintaining the Renewable Fuel Standard, addressing the blend wall, and extending the cellulosic producer tax credit;

+ Incentivize the full range of biobased products produced by biorefineries by ensuring renewable chemicals and biobased products facilities are eligible for grant and loan programs;

+ Aggressively fund ongoing research, development and deployment to maximize economic competitiveness, sustainability and greenhouse gas benefits of advanced biofuels and biobased products; and

+ Explicitly incentivize greenhouse gas reducing biotechnologies in climate change legislation.

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IATA aims for biofuels on commercial flights by 2011
Geneva (AFP) March 31, 2009
The international airline association IATA is aiming to approve biofuels for commercial flights by 2010 or 2011, its director general Giovanni Bisignani said Tuesday.







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