US Senators Query EPA on Possible Fake Chinese Used Cooking Oil

image is BloomburgMedia_SFRCPXT0G1KW00_28-06-2024_09-00-10_638551296000000000.jpg

Sample bottles of aviation biofuel, from left, biodiesel, industrial mix oil, left, and raw food waste oil at the Sichuan Jinshang Environmental Technology facility in Chengdu, China, on Friday, Jan. 13, 2023. The perfect Sichuan hot pot produces about 12,000 tons of waste oil each month in the Chinese city of Chengdu alone. So in 2016, a startup began exporting some of that leftover restaurant grease to Europe and Singapore, where it gets recycled into fuel pure enough to fly airplanes. Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg

A flood of used cooking oil from China and elsewhere is prompting US senators to question whether some of the shipments meant to supply the biofuel market may be fraudulent. 

Six senators, including Republican Joni Ernst of Iowa and Democrat Sherrod Brown of Ohio, sent the Biden administration a letter asking what steps were being taken to ensure that imports of the oil, known as UCO, do not contain virgin vegetable oil. Imports have surged from less than 200 million pounds a year in 2020 to more than 3 billion pounds last year, according to the June 20 letter.

“There is concern by some in the renewable fuels industry that large amounts of imported UCO may be a blend of UCO with virgin vegetable oils such as palm oil, which is directly linked to deforestation in Southeast Asia,” the lawmakers wrote to Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Michael Regan and top Biden administration officials overseeing trade and agriculture. 

If true, it would amount to “fraudulent value distortion” of the commodity meant to take advantage of US tax incentives as well as fraud under a US biofuel law, according to the senators. It also would severely undermine domestically produced agricultural products that already face “onerous verification and reporting requirements required of farmers to validate carbon-friendly practices,” according to the letter.

The senators asked for a response within 30 days. 

©2024 Bloomberg L.P.

By Kim Chipman

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