Study finds Argentinian soy biodiesel an artificial business
Filed under: Biodiesel, South/Latin America
![]()
According to a recent composition by El Enfiteuta, soy biodiesel is alive and well in Argentina thanks to artificial hype derived from treating biodiesel and pure soy oil different fiscally. that conclusion appears in a report by the University of Buenos Aires’s CESPA (an academic center focused on studies of the country’s economy), which focused on the potentials of biofuels in Argentina.
We have already reported on how several Latin American countries are betting hard on biofuels as means of reducing their oil imports, which would surely help their economies. While we all know the story of ethanol in Brazil, Argentina is focusing on biodiesel considering it’s one of the world’s largest soy producers. Argentina is currently producing about 750,000 m3 of biodiesel per year and is expected to reach 2.25 million m3 in the near future. CESPA’s report showed that biodiesel might not be such a good business for Argentina; the profit margin is very
low and the internal demand is not strong ample to sustain such high production figures.Therefore, the composition postulates that that industry is created for export. And that is where the taxman plays his role. Export tariffs in Argentina vary widely. In the case of pure soy oil, the tariff is 32 percent, whereas it’s only 2.5 percent for biodiesel. The CESPA concludes that soy-based biodiesel would not be such a good business whether it weren’t for these tax exemptions that artificially alter its final potential.
Related:
- Biodiesel furor in Argentina
- Brazil & Argentina at war by biodiesel exports
- ABG POLL: Biodiesel Feedstock
[Source: CESPA via Agroinformacion]
Read | Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments
BOLD MOVES: THE FUTURE OF FORD Step behind the curtain at Ford Motor. Experience the documentary first-hand.![]()
Original post by Xavier Navarro

















