To amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to extend biodiesel and renewable diesel incentives, and for other purposes.
Summary
HR 8497 (SEED Act) extends existing biodiesel and renewable diesel tax credits through 2029, preventing a policy cliff for producers like REG and GPRE. The bill is in early legislative stages (referred to Ways and Means) with no CBO score or funding mechanism yet. Market impact is muted — existing support continues, but no expansion of eligibility or new spending is created. The presidential petroleum production memorandum is a separate, competing policy domain and does not directly alter this bill's economics.
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Key Takeaways
- 1.HR 8497 extends existing biodiesel/renewable diesel tax credits through 2029 — no new subsidies, no expansion of eligible fuels.
- 2.The bill is in early legislative stages (Ways and Means referral) with no Senate companion; low passage probability near-term.
- 3.Pure-play biodiesel producers REG and GPRE benefit from avoided policy cliff; ethanol-to-jet producers like GEVO see minimal direct impact.
- 4.The double-benefit denial clause prevents producers from stacking Section 40A and 45Z credits — a revenue-negative adjustment for producers who could previously claim both on different gallons.
- 5.Presidential petroleum production memorandum is a separate, competing policy dynamic; not a driver of this bill.
Market Implications
The market impact of HR 8497 is structural but muted given the early legislative stage. For REG and GPRE, the extension of existing credits removes a key policy uncertainty that has weighed on the renewable diesel sector since 2024. However, no real market data on stock price reactions is available for this specific event. The sector has been pricing in the risk that the blender credit would not be extended, and this bill provides a path to continuation. The double-benefit denial clause is a modest negative — it caps the total subsidy per gallon at the Section 40A level, precluding a potential transition to the generally more generous 45Z credit. The net effect for USDA-related stocks (e.g., $ADM, which buys soybean oil for renewable diesel) is neutral to slightly positive as demand certainty improves. The presidential DPA memorandum on petroleum production is a distinct policy thread and should not be conflated with the renewable diesel credit extension; the two have opposite directional pressures on conventional vs. renewable fuel margins.
Full Analysis
On April 27, 2026, Representative Carey (R-OH) introduced HR 8497, the Supporting Energy and Economic Development (SEED) Act, which proposes to extend existing biodiesel and renewable diesel tax incentives under the Internal Revenue Code through 2029. The bill is in the early legislative stage — referred to the House Committee on Ways and Means with 10 bipartisan cosponsors. No CBO score, no committee markup, and no companion Senate bill exists yet.
Critically, this bill is an authorization of tax credits, not an appropriation of new funds. The credit amounts are unchanged: the Section 40A income tax credit for biodiesel ($1.00/gallon for agri-biodiesel, lower for other types) and the corresponding excise tax credits under Sections 6426(c) and 6427(e) are extended in time only. A new 'denial of double benefit' provision prevents producers from stacking this credit with the newer Section 45Z clean fuel production credit — this is a structural tightening. Producers must choose one subsidy per gallon.
The direct beneficiaries are conventional biodiesel and renewable diesel producers: REG (the largest pure-play US biodiesel producer) and GPRE (growing renewable diesel capacity through its joint ventures). Both would see an extension of the existing subsidy that directly supports margins on several hundred million gallons annually. The bill does NOT expand the definition of renewable diesel to include alcohol-to-jet pathways; Gevo (GEVO) does not qualify for a material benefit under the current Code framework, though its SAF pathway under Section 40B remains separately available.
The recent Presidential Memorandum on domestic energy production (April 20) is a separate policy action focused on petroleum infrastructure under the Defense Production Act. While it creates competitive pressure for renewable fuels by potentially lowering domestic crude supply costs, it is not linked to this tax credit extension. At this early stage, the bill has low legislative velocity — single-day actions, no hearings scheduled — and faces an uncertain path in a divided Congress. The impact score of 3 reflects the low probability of near-term passage and the fact that even if enacted, the bill merely maintains the existing tax subsidy structure without expansion.
Intelligence Surface
Cross-referenced against federal contracts, SEC insider filings & congressional trade disclosures
No confirming evidence found yet from contracts, insider trades, or congressional activity
What the bill does
Extension of biodiesel and renewable diesel tax credit under Section 40A, extension of excise tax credits under Section 6426(c) and Section 6427(e) for biodiesel/renewable diesel blends used for taxable and non-taxable purposes, all extended through 2029.
Who must act
Green Plains Inc., an ethanol producer with growing renewable diesel and feedstock (soybean oil) operations, files US corporate taxes and participates in the renewable fuel credit ecosystem.
What happens
Extends the blender tax credit and excise tax refunds for biodiesel/renewable diesel through 2029, supporting demand for GPRE's renewable diesel production and feedstock (soybean oil) sales. The double-benefit denial applies equally, so GPRE cannot claim both the 40A credit and the 45Z credit on the same fuel.
Stock impact
GPRE produces renewable diesel through its 50/50 joint venture with a major oil company (via its Green Plains segment) and sells agricultural feedstocks. The bill extends the existing blender credit, underpinning margins on GPRE's renewable diesel volumes. No dramatic expansion, but eliminates near-term policy uncertainty.
What the bill does
Extension of renewable diesel tax credits under Section 40A, Section 6426(c), and Section 6427(e), all of which apply to renewable diesel as defined in the Code. The bill does not alter the definition of 'renewable diesel' to include non-ester renewable diesel (e.g., ethanol-to-jet/diesel pathways not yet covered).
Who must act
Gevo, Inc., a company developing renewable hydrocarbon fuels (renewable diesel, sustainable aviation fuel) using a different chemical process (alcohol-to-jet). The current Section 40A credit applies to 'renewable diesel' defined as diesel fuel derived from biomass using a thermal depolymerization process — GEVO's ethanol-to-hydrocarbon process may not qualify without additional Treasury guidance.
What happens
The bill extends existing credits but does NOT expand the definition of renewable diesel. GEVO's core pathway (ethanol-to-jet/diesel) relies more on the Section 40B (SAF) credit and the 45Z clean fuel production credit. The extension of the conventional biodiesel/renewable diesel credits does not directly benefit GEVO's current production unless GEVO's product qualifies as 'renewable diesel' under the existing Code definition.
Stock impact
GEVO's renewable diesel production is small and early-stage; the company's primary revenue opportunity is SAF under 40B. The bill does not expand eligibility to include alcohol-to-jet pathways under 40A. Hence the direct financial impact on GEVO is minimal — a neutral extension of existing incentives for conventional producers.
Connected Signals
Matched on shared policy language across AI analyses, with ticker & timing weight
Nationwide Consumer and Fuel Retailer Choice Act of 2025
A resolution expressing support for the designation of May 2025 as "Renewable Fuels Month" to recognize the important role that renewable fuels play in reducing carbon impacts, lowering fuel prices for consumers, supporting rural communities, and lessening reliance on foreign adversaries.
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FERMI FORWARD DISCOVERY GROUP, LLC: $2.4B Department of Energy Contract
PANTEXAS DETERRENCE, LLC: $3.5B Department of Energy Contract
PANTEXAS DETERRENCE, LLC: $3.5B Department of Energy Contract
FERMI FORWARD DISCOVERY GROUP, LLC: $2.4B Department of Energy Contract
PANTEXAS DETERRENCE, LLC: $3.5B Department of Energy Contract
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