HRES-1315-119
Referred to the House Committee on Energy and Commerce.
What it does
This resolution would express the House of Representatives' support for designating May 2026 as "Renewable Fuels Month." It would formally recognize the role of renewable fuels — including ethanol, biodiesel, renewable diesel, and sustainable aviation fuel — in reducing carbon emissions, lowering fuel prices, supporting rural economies, and reducing reliance on foreign energy sources. The resolution makes no changes to law, creates no new programs, and appropriates no funds.
Who benefits
Ethanol producers and corn farmers, particularly in Midwest states like Iowa, Illinois, and Nebraska. Soybean farmers and biodiesel/renewable diesel producers. Rural communities economically dependent on biofuel industries. Sustainable aviation fuel developers. Trade associations representing the renewable fuels sector, who gain a formal congressional endorsement. Indirectly, consumers if the resolution draws attention to fuel price reduction arguments.
Who is hurt
Petroleum and fossil fuel industries, which may view the resolution as a symbolic competitive disadvantage. Environmental groups that oppose corn-based ethanol on land-use or water-quality grounds may object to the resolution's framing. No group faces a direct legal or financial harm, as the resolution carries no binding effect.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the U.S. renewable fuels industry is a proven economic and environmental asset — directly employing over 79,000 workers, contributing nearly $50 billion to GDP in 2025, and reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 44–52% compared to gasoline, according to figures cited in the resolution. They contend that formal congressional recognition raises public awareness of an industry that strengthens domestic energy independence, supports rural livelihoods, and delivers measurable air quality benefits including up to 80% less particulate matter than petroleum diesel.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the resolution selectively presents industry-favorable data while omitting well-documented concerns: corn ethanol production requires significant land, water, and fertilizer inputs, and some lifecycle analyses find its net greenhouse gas benefits are smaller than claimed or even negative when land-use change is factored in. They contend that a congressional endorsement of renewable fuels without acknowledging these trade-offs amounts to a one-sided promotional statement that could lend unwarranted credibility to industry lobbying efforts on the Renewable Fuel Standard and related subsidies.