SRES-747-119
Submitted in the Senate, considered, and agreed to without amendment and with a preamble by Voice Vote. (consideration: CR S2435; text: CR S2445)
What it does
This resolution expresses the Senate's support for designating May 2026 as "Renewable Fuels Month." It recognizes 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. As a simple resolution, it does not create law, appropriate funds, or impose any legal obligations on any party.
Who benefits
Ethanol producers and corn farmers who gain positive national recognition for their industries. Soybean farmers and biodiesel/renewable diesel producers who are highlighted in the resolution's findings. Rural communities economically dependent on biofuel production. Trade associations representing the renewable fuels sector, who may use the designation for promotional purposes. Sustainable aviation fuel developers seeking broader public awareness.
Who is hurt
Petroleum and fossil fuel industries, whose products are implicitly contrasted unfavorably with renewable fuels in the resolution's findings. Environmental groups that oppose corn-based ethanol on land-use or water-quality grounds may object to the resolution's framing of ethanol's environmental benefits. No group faces a direct legal or financial burden, as the resolution carries no binding effect.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the U.S. renewable fuels industry supports over 316,000 direct and indirect jobs and contributed nearly $50 billion to GDP in 2025, making it a significant economic force worthy of national recognition. They contend that ethanol reduces greenhouse gas emissions by 44–52% compared to gasoline and that biodiesel and renewable diesel cut emissions by at least 50% versus petroleum diesel, providing measurable environmental and public health benefits alongside energy security gains.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the resolution's environmental claims are contested — corn-based ethanol production involves significant land use, water consumption, and fertilizer runoff that some lifecycle analyses suggest offset a portion of its carbon benefits. They contend that designating a promotional month using figures supplied largely by industry trade groups presents one-sided economic and environmental claims as settled fact, without acknowledging ongoing scientific debate over the net climate impact of biofuels.