Air Freight News

Brazil rebuffs US pressure to abandon tariffs on ethanol imports

Brazil will maintain tariffs on US ethanol imports despite “tough” complaints from the Biden administration, said Agriculture Minister Carlos Fávaro. 

“We cannot risk making things more precarious for Brazilian producers,” Fávaro said during a sugar cane industry conference in Brasilia on Wednesday. 

Ethanol is a hot-button issue in major corn-producing states such as Iowa and Illinois as US farmers face increasing competition from the Brazilian agricultural sector. Producers of South American ethanol made from sugar cane and corn want to increase sales to the US, where some renewable aviation fuel plants plan to use the biofuel as a feedstock.

US authorities have been pressuring Brazil to remove the tariffs reinstated by President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva’s administration. Fávaro said one option may be for Brazil to reduce tariffs in exchange for an increase in the domestic US gasoline-blending mandate. Such a move would increase overall demand for the biofuel, he noted.

“This way we would have a market big enough for everyone,” Fávaro said.

Bloomberg
Bloomberg

{afn_job_title}

© Bloomberg
The author’s opinion are not necessarily the opinions of the American Journal of Transportation (AJOT).

Similar Stories

United States and Norway issue innovative report creating greater transparency in critical mineral supply chains

Today, the U.S. Department of Commerce and the Norwegian Ministry of Trade, Industry, and Fisheries issued a thorough, innovative report presenting our shared understanding of non-market policies and practices (NMPPs)…

View Article
https://www.ajot.com/images/uploads/article/Rystad_chart_10_5.jpg
Rising data demand puts pressure on US energy grid, boosts gas projects / Rystad Energy
View Article
https://www.ajot.com/images/uploads/article/EIA_chart_3_9.jpg
EIA extends five key energy forecasts through December 2026
View Article
https://www.ajot.com/images/uploads/article/desert_original.png
New interagency study finds expansion of renewable energy production on federal lands could power millions more American homes
View Article
EIA Short-Term Energy Outlook

This edition of our STEO is the first to include forecasts for 2026.

View Article
https://www.ajot.com/images/uploads/article/January-STEO-energy-market.png
EIA publishes its first energy-sector forecasts through 2026
View Article