The biodiesel crossroads: SMEs at risk due to prices and the new legal framework

  • Economic losses in the sector exceed $53 million due to pricing below operating costs.
  • There is an intense legislative debate between total market liberalization and maintaining a system of protection for small industries.
  • Large exporters question the lack of investment by SMEs, while the latter denounce a systematic non-compliance with current regulations.
  • Legal certainty and the ability to compete in international markets such as the European one are the main concerns of the entire value chain.

Biodiesel production plant in crisis

The biofuels industry is currently experiencing a perfect storm where the viability of small and medium-sized enterprises hangs by a thread. In recent months, discontent has been growing due to a series of administrative decisions that have left the local producers in a situation of extreme vulnerability financial, causing a climate of uncertainty that threatens to paralyze entire plants.

The core of the conflict lies in the gap between production costs and government-regulated retail prices. According to various industry sources, accumulated losses already exceed fifty million dollars, forcing many companies to close. currently operate at minimums or directly at a lossjeopardizing the job security of thousands of families linked to this industrial activity.

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Financial impact and regulatory strangulation in the sector

The situation has reached a critical point because the Energy Secretariat has reportedly distanced itself from the technical parameters established by current legislation to determine the value of biodiesel. SMEs complain that the legal formula that should guarantee a reasonable return has been ignored, leading to a scenario of massive decapitalization for the companies responsible for supplying the domestic fuel market.

At various times, the price officially set by the State has even fallen below the market value of soybean oil, which is the main input for manufacturing. This economic distortion means that producing each ton of biofuel is a burden for the profit and loss accounts, which has already led to legal consultations to assess possible claims for financial damages and lack of legal predictability.

Two opposing models for the future of the law

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The debate has moved forcefully into the legislative arena, where the type of regulation that will govern the activity in the coming years is being decided. On the one hand, there are proposals that advocate for a free market model and absolute deregulationThis allows large, integrated companies to compete directly with SMEs. This option aims to eliminate production limits and foster competition through an electronic transaction system.

On the other side are those who defend the need for maintain the quota system and state protection for SMEs located in regional areas. This approach argues that, without a protective framework, small plants would not be able to survive against the production scale of large multinational oil companies, which would ultimately destroy the industrial fabric of various provinces and concentrate the market in the hands of a few.

The controversy over investment and competitiveness

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From sectors most closely linked to exports, a harsh critique has been leveled at SMEs, accusing them of failing to take advantage of decades of protection to modernize. They argue that, despite years of regulatory benefits, many of these plants still lack the necessary resources. ability to process its own raw materialsalways depending on the purchase of oil from third parties, which limits its efficiency in an increasingly demanding global market.

However, the international context doesn't help either, as the sector faces constant challenges such as to plant-based biodiesel. Although trade disputes have been won before the World Trade Organization in the past, the tightening of external regulations is forcing the domestic industry to seek legislation that not only resolves the internal conflict but also fosters the competitiveness necessary to continue exporting.

The resolution of this conflict now seems to depend on the ability of the various stakeholders to reach a consensus on regulations that increase the mandatory blending percentages in gasoline and diesel. Achieving a balance that allows regional SMEs to survive without hindering the expansion of large integrated plants is the outstanding task to prevent the current paralysis from turning into the permanent closure of facilities. The future of sustainable energy in the region necessarily depends on... to restore investor confidence and security where the rules of the game will be respected in the long term.

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