Keep 45Z Working for Midwestern Farmers and Rural Communities

Clear, practical rules are needed to keep rural investment, jobs, and innovation rooted in the Midwest.

FILL OUT THE FORM to be involved in the 45Z public comment process and to support other farmers, working families, and local innovators, to push for common-sense agriculture, energy, and infrastructure solutions that put America first, and to strengthen our Midwest communities that feed and fuel the country.

For A 45z primer, click here to watch our 90-second video.

Importance of keeping our tax credits in the Midwest

  1. 45Z could create $6+ billion in annual value for the biofuels industry, and almost 90% of biofuel production occurs in the Midwest.

  2. 45Z electricity contracts alone could create almost $2 billion in annual value for the biofuels industry, representing huge investment potential for the Midwest power grid.

  3. Private 45Z capital from fuel producers puts more money into farmers’ pockets. That income circulates and multiplies locally, supporting feed and seed suppliers, grain elevators, farm equipment dealers, mainstreet businesses, local schools, and public works.

  4. Private 45Z capital from fuel producers reinvests in the Midwest power grid at a time when new investment is sorely needed, expanding diversified job creation for Midwesterners: linemen, skilled trades, construction, and other essential workers.

Crops like corn, soybeans, and sorghum are grown and sold to Midwest biofuels producers who sell transportation fuels on to American industry, logistics companies, and working families.

To claim the tax credit, biofuel producers earn and can also buy electricity and energy data - called EACs - from Midwest power generators like rural electric co-ops and individual farmers. Biofuel producers use their crop and EAC data to claim the 45Z tax credit.

Private 45Z capital from fuel producers puts more money into farmers’ pockets, circulating and multiplying locally, and reinvests in the Midwest power grid at a time when new investment is sorely needed and creates more skilled jobs for Midwesterners.