LATEST
Español English 中文 Português Français Italiano Deutsch العربية Русский اردو

Biofuels: YPF Backs Bullrich's Bill but Warns on Biodiesel Limits

20/06/2026 12:31 - Economia

Planta moderna de producción de biocombustibles con silos de almacenamiento, tecnología de procesamiento de biodiésel y bioetanol, tuberías industriales, campos agrícolas de soja y maíz en el horizonte bajo cielo azul

A Strategic Crossroads for Argentina's Energy Future

The Argentine Senate has become the stage for a crucial debate that will define the country's energy matrix for the coming decades. On June 17, 2026, joint sessions of the Budget and Mining/Energy committees gathered to discuss updating the regulatory framework for biofuels—a pending issue for 15 years.

For international readers, biofuels (biodiesel and bioethanol) are fuels derived from agricultural products like soy and corn. Argentina is a global agricultural powerhouse, making this debate central to its economy. The voice of YPF (Yacimientos Petrolíferos Fiscales), the state-majority-owned energy giant, carried significant weight.

Mauricio Martín, Deputy Director of YPF, surprised many by supporting the bill presented by Senator Patricia Bullrich. However, he issued a stark warning: a biodiesel blend exceeding 10% in diesel is not viable due to current logistical and commercial chain limitations.

"It is not a limitation of will, but of the logistical and commercial chain that must be taken into account," Martín stated during the hearing.

The Bullrich Initiative: Gradual Growth

The proposed bill establishes a 15-year regime with specific blending mandates (known locally as 'corte'):

Fuel Type Initial Blend After 1 Year
Biodiesel (in Diesel) 7.5% 10%
Bioethanol (in Gasoline) 12% 15%

YPF clarified that while current blends (theoretically 7.5%, practically ~6%) represent 4.5% of consumer cost, raising the cut to 10% would add approximately 3 percentage points to the price structure. Exceptions are proposed for cold zones in Patagonia and mining operations.

Criticism: Regulatory Capture?

Claudio Molina, a key advocate for the biofuels industry, offered a counterpoint. He argued that the current situation reflects a "regulatory capture" where large oil companies influence the rules to the detriment of smaller producers.

Market Concentration

Just 4 companies control 94% of the liquid fuels market in Argentina. Meanwhile, about 25 independent companies produce biodiesel for the domestic market and risk being displaced by the major players.

Molina defended a bill by Senators Vigo, Espínola, and Moisés, arguing it better balances the interests of large agribusiness traders and independent regional producers, preventing abrupt economic concentration.

Fiscal Impact: The Cost of Delay

Opponents often cite the fiscal cost. The Budget Office estimated the Vigo bill at US$ 180 million. However, Molina highlighted that the state has absorbed roughly US$ 12 billion since late 2019 due to frozen fuel tax adjustments, a subsidy to fossil fuels that dwarfs the biofuels cost.

The consensus is clear: the debate is not just about fuel percentages, but about whether Argentina prioritizes regional employment and clean energy or reinforces the dominance of fossil fuel importers.

Key Terms Explained
  • YPF: Argentina's flagship energy company, historically state-owned.
  • Corte (Blend): The percentage of biofuel mixed into standard fossil fuel.
  • Patagonia: Argentina's southern region, often requiring specific fuel variants due to cold weather.
Today's News
Alfredo's Column Alfredo S. Quiroga

Alfredo S. Quiroga