Rule change lets Nevada company turn trash into airplane fuel

Fulcrum BioEnergy’s Sierra BioFuels Plant in Storey County. (Fulcrum BioEnergy)

WASHINGTON — A Nevada plant can begin turning tons of garbage into a synthetic oil that can be refined into fuel for airplanes after an Environmental Protection Agency rule change.

After five years, the EPA finalized the rule sought by Fulcrum BioEnergy’s Sierra BioFuels Plant in Storey County. A company official told the Review-Journal the cutting edge facility would permanently employ roughly 120 people.

Once operating, it will process 175,000 tons of landfill garbage into 11 million gallons of synthetic fuel oil each year, company officials said.

Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto, D-Nev., who helped guide the company through the bureaucratic maze, said she hoped the plant would create more than a thousand indirect jobs throughout the state while reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

She called the project “an entirely new industry.”

After the project stalled at the EPA during the Trump and Biden administrations, Cortez Masto pushed for a regulatory rule change that will allow the synthetic fuel oils to be produced, marketed and sold.

The EPA announced that change Friday.

“I wouldn’t let unnecessary government bureaucracy stand in the way of this innovative new facility,” said Cortez Masto, in a statement detailing her involvement with the process since 2017.

Increasing ‘homegrown biofuel’

EPA Administrator Michael Regan said the agency actions and rules issued for the Renewable Fuel Standard program are “steps to increase the availability of homegrown biofuels.”

Reagan added that the intent of new rules on renewable fuel standards is to “provide more options for consumers at the pump.”

In the case of the Sierra BioFuels Plant, the synthetic material may be used in aviation, said Eric Pryor, Fulcrum’s president and chief executive officer, in a statement announcing operations at the facility east of Reno.

“Fulcrum is launching an entirely new source of low-cost, domestically produced, net-zero carbon transportation fuel, which will contribute to the aviation industry’s carbon reduction goals, U.S. energy security and address climate stability,” Pryor said in a statement.

In an interview with the Review-Journal, Benny Wong, Fulcrum BioEnergy managing director of fuels and regulatory affairs, said the Northern Nevada site was chosen because of the regulatory climate in the state, the landfill and the proximity to markets.

The EPA’s rule change was one of the final hurdles to moving ahead with the project, he said.

First such project in U.S.

“Our Sierra project would be the first municipal solid waste-to-fuel in the nation,” Wong said.

And that is no small feat.

These projects take a number of years to plan and build, Wong said.

Fulcrum BioEnergy first received a $105 million loan guarantee in 2014 from the U.S. Department of Agriculture to begin research and planning on the project.

Cortez Masto, who is also a member of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, helped the company secure that financial support from the department in 2017. Construction began in 2018 and finished in 2021.

Still, EPA rule changes were still needed. EPA continued to review the Renewable Fuel Standards program over two presidential administrations.

Cortez Masto talked recently with Regan and pushed the EPA to provide the regulatory “fix” in new rules. Regan announced that change last week in a batch of new rules issued by the agency.

Regan said the EPA’s new rules would “help to reduce our reliance on oil and put the (Renewable Fuel Standards) program back on track after years of challenges and mismanagement.”

In addition, the agriculture department announced last week that it would invest $700 million in biofuel producers who were economically hit by the coronavirus pandemic. The funds are part of the $2.2 trillion relief bill passed by Congress in 2020.

Contact Gary Martin gmartin@reviewjournal.com. Follow @garymartindc on Twitter.

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