Saint Louis, Missouri
January 10, 2005
The 26,000 members of the
American Soybean Association
(ASA) today applauded the United States Department of
Agriculture (USDA) for publication of a final rule to implement
a program of preferred procurement of biobased products by
federal agencies. This final rule establishes provisions for the
Federal Biobased Products Preferred Procurement Program, which
requires all federal agencies to preferentially purchase
biobased products that have been designated by USDA as eligible
under this program.
"This rule
promotes energy independence and the use of environmentally
friendly renewable fuels like biodiesel made from soybeans,"
said ASA First Vice President Bob Metz, a soybean producer from
West Browns Valley, S. Dakota. "This will create new demand for
U.S. soybeans, and other agricultural commodities, and it will
help create jobs and strengthen investment in rural economies."
The new rule
establishes the process by which USDA will designate "items" for
preferred procurement by federal agencies. Items are generic
groupings of biobased products, such as biobased greases,
biodiesel and ethanol when used as additives, hydraulic fluids,
biobased polymers, industrial solvents, biobased fertilizers and
cutting oils. Federal agencies must assure within one year after
the publication of this final rule that their procurement
specifications require the preference of biobased products
consistent with this rule.
"The Federal
Biobased Products Preferred Procurement Program creates a
preference for the purchase of biobased products across the
entire federal government when such products are practical based
on price, availability and performance," Metz said. "Biodiesel
is a cleaner burning alternative to petroleum-based diesel. It
works in any diesel engine with few or no modifications, and
with passage of the new ASA-supported biodiesel tax incentive,
biodiesel is now cost-competitive with petroleum-based diesel
fuels."
USDA plans to soon
begin issuing a series of proposed rules that will designate
specific items for program eligibility. This process is expected
to extend over the next three years. Once an item is designated,
all manufacturers with products that fall within that item may
claim preferred procurement status for their products when
marketing to federal agencies as long as the biobased content of
their products is consistent with the statutory definition and
meets the minimum levels specified in the designation rule.
While this program is still being implemented, many federal
agencies are already incorporating biobased products in their
acquisition orders. |