Sunday, May 3, 2026

U.S. Gasoline Types: Conventional, Reformulated, Regional, and Seasonal Blends, Octane Grades, Reid Vapor Pressure Limits, and State Differences


     

      The Energy Information Administration (EIA) has long done a good job explaining the details of gasoline types and differences. They explain that in the U.S., motor gasoline is a blend of different hydrocarbons and chemicals. The exact blends vary by season and by region. The EPA requires different blends in regions with air quality concerns.

Key differences between formulations include octane rating, volatility—commonly measured as Reid vapor pressure (RVP)—and emissions. “This year, the EPA will relax federal enforcement of summer RVP standards to help reduce gasoline prices.”

     There are two main types of American gasoline formulations: conventional and reformulated (RFG). Most of the U.S. uses conventional gasoline, which meets air quality standards in those areas. RFG is required where conventional gasoline would exceed smog air pollution limits in accordance with the Clean Air Act. RFG burns cleaner but costs more to produce. The EPA notes that about 25% of U.S. gasoline is RFG. The first phase of the RFG program began in 1995, and the second (current) phase began in 2000. RFG is currently used in 17 states and in the District of Columbia. California requires a blend called Phase 3 RFG. RFG requirements have helped to reduce summer smog in vulnerable cities. The EPA explains some other important aspects of the RFG program below:

Building on the success of the RFG program, EPA has harmonized requirements that apply to both conventional gasoline (the typical gasoline used in non-RFG areas) and RFG. For example, CG and RFG must both comply with same standards for benzene and sulfur content. This ensures that both CG and RFG provide similar substantial reductions in emissions of toxic pollutants and emissions of nitrogen oxides, which react in the atmosphere to form smog. In addition, RFG continues to provide reductions in emissions of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) from onroad and nonroad sources during the summer due to its lower vapor pressure, which is a measure of how easily gasoline evaporates. VOC emissions also contribute to the formation of smog.”

 

Octane Ratings

     Both kinds of gasoline are available in different grades, the familiar regular, midgrade, and premium varieties, which vary by octane. Ethanol may be blended with both types.

The octane rating is the measure of fuel stability. The rating is based on the pressure at which a fuel spontaneously combusts (auto-ignite) in a testing engine. The octane number is the simple average of two different octane rating methods—motor octane rating (MOR) and research octane rating (RON)—that differ primarily in the specifics of the operating conditions. The higher an octane number, the more stable the fuel.”

     The familiar grades and their octane numbers are shown below.




     Octane is C8H18. It has 18 isomers, or different molecular configurations.

Of the 18 isomers of normal octane (C8H18), octane gets its name from the 2,2,4-Trimethylpentane compound, which is highly resistant to auto-ignition. This iso-octane has been assigned the reference value of 100 for testing purposes. The extremely unstable normal heptane (C7H16) molecule is the 0 octane reference fuel.”

     Below, they explain how octane levels affect how the engine runs and burns fuel, potentially producing knocking and pre-ignition.





     Modern engine computers can minimize knocking and pre-ignition by reacting to them quickly when they occur. Octane is measured with an octane testing engine.

 

Seasonal and Regional Blends Vary by Reid Vapor Pressure (RVP) Limits

     Seasonal changes to gasoline blends are mainly changes in volatility as measured by Reid Vapor Pressure (RVP).

“…the lower the RVP, the less volatile the gasoline and the less evaporative the emissions. To reduce smog-forming emissions, the EPA mandates that summer grade gasoline has a lower RVP (less volatility) to control evaporation, which would normally increase in warm weather. In cold weather, higher volatility helps engines start more easily.”

     The EPA regulates different regions according to different RVP limits. Below, the EIA explains how RVP limits change by region and through the year.




     Lowering RVP for summer blends requires the addition of more expensive components such as alkylate. In winter, it is OK to use less expensive butane to raise octane values, but it also raises RVP, so alkylate is used instead to raise octane values in summer. 




     Below is a map of the U.S. showing summer blends in different states and regions.




     State blends include State Implementation Plan (SIP), Arizona Cleaner Burning Gasoline (AZ-CBG), and California Reformulated Gasoline (CA RFG). California has a summer RVP limit of 7.0 psi and extends the summer blend time periods in different regions as shown below.





References:

 

What’s in your gasoline? Understanding U.S. motor gasoline formulations. Energy Information Administration. April 15, 2026. What’s in your gasoline? Understanding U.S. motor gasoline formulations - U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA)

Gasoline explained. What is octane? Energy Information Administration. Gasoline explained - octane in depth - U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA)

EPA Fortifies Domestic Fuel Supply, Provides Americans with Relief at the Pump by Approving Nationwide E15 and Removing Boutique Fuel Markets for E10. U.S. EPA. March 25, 2026. EPA Fortifies Domestic Fuel Supply, Provides Americans with Relief at the Pump by Approving Nationwide E15 and Removing Boutique Fuel Markets for E10 | US EPA

Reformulated Gasoline. U.S. EPA. Reformulated Gasoline | US EPA

Gasoline Reid Vapor Pressure. U.S. EPA. Gasoline Reid Vapor Pressure | US EPA

Alkylation is an important source for octane in gasoline. Energy Information Administration. February 13, 2013. Alkylation is an important source for octane in gasoline - U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA)

Saturday, May 2, 2026

U.S. Imports: Most Come from the EU, Mexico, Canada, and China: Intellectual Property Concerns


   

     As the Trump tariff wars, or fiascos if you prefer, get restrained by U.S. law and begin returning funds to affected businesses, I saw the following graph and thought it would be a good idea to analyze U.S. imports a bit.




     My guess is that the way the Trump administration sees it is that since we buy so much from the EU, that should give us some leverage over them. One could also see it the other way around: that since we are dependent on the EU for so much of our imports, it gives them some leverage over us. Both are likely true.

     China, a source of 9.9% of U.S. imports, has long been accused of intellectual property rights violations for stealing U.S. corporate secrets. Now, another communist country, Vietnam, a country that provides an outsized 4.7% of U.S. imports and is 6th in U.S. imports by country, has been accused of violating intellectual property rights, according to a new report. Thus, we now get a total of 14.6% of our imports from countries credibly accused of intellectual property violations. The office of the U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) issued the report, which has both a priority watch list and a lesser watch list. The priority watch list contains the usual suspects, including India, China, Venezuela, and Russia, but also surprisingly Chile and Indonesia. Reuters summarizes the lists below.



     Argentina and Mexico were recently removed from the priority watch list. The lesser watch list contains 19 trading partners, of which the EU was recently added. I suspect that is due to the Trump administration controlling the office and supporting Trump’s personal tiffs with the EU. The EU Parliament’s trade chief recently referred to the U.S. as an unreliable trading partner. Both sides are accusing the other of violating the agreement signed in July 2025 when the EU agreed to erase tariffs on US industrial goods in exchange for a 15% tariff ceiling on most EU products. The EU complained that the U.S. expanded a 50% aluminum and steel tariffs in August to include more products. The European Parliament has approved the deal but has yet to ratify it.

 

 

References:

 

EU Parliament trade chief calls Trump tariff threat unacceptable. Jorge Valero. Bloomberg. May 1, 2026. EU Parliament trade chief calls Trump tariff threat unacceptable

US names Vietnam as top concern country in intellectual property rights report. Kanishka Singh. Reuters. April 30, 2026. US names Vietnam as top concern country in intellectual property rights report | Reuters

Energy Sanctions and the Implications of Lifting Them: Some Thoughts


        The international community has existing sanctions on Russian and Iranian oil & gas. Both sources make up a significant amount of the total oil & gas on the market. While the two countries have still been able to sell their products at discounted prices to willing buyers, namely India and China, they make less profit, and there is less product on the market due to less profit to invest in increasing production. India and China have benefited economically from the arrangement without much scrutiny until the sanctions-leveling parties confronted them. When Russia invaded Ukraine and sanctions were leveled, it was widely acknowledged that there would be buyers since taking that much product off the market would destabilize it and make prices rise precipitously. It was also acknowledged that it would take time for the oil and gas to be replaced on the market. Thus, the sanctions were not enforced very much. In recent months, beginning with actions in Venezuela in January 2026, sanctions began to be enforced more heavily. Trump also made some sort of agreement with India for them to phase down purchases of sanctioned oil. Then the Iran War erupted, and for 30-days Russia was given a sanctions waiver to sell at the current elevated value its sanctioned oil that was already in tankers in the ocean. That waiver was lifted, then reinstated for another 30 days with the goal of helping to stabilize markets.

     People have criticized the effects of sanctions, saying they generally don’t work and end up hurting the people rather than the target government. There is some truth to this. They often only partially work, and they often negatively affect the population. Like it or not, economic pressure via sanctions is a tool that will continue to be used, however imperfect it is. 

     The Trump administration has just this year employed three blockades on oil and fuel. The first one was on Venezuela, the next on Cuba, and the third on the Strait of Hormuz. This is another form of economic pressure. In the case of Cuba, some have argued that it is a bad idea on humanitarian grounds. I agree with them in this case, as there are more humane ways to pressure a country than to starve it of needed energy. Fortunately, they have relented and allowed Russian fuel to be delivered. I think that they should have instead been more proactive and permitted fuel deliveries from Mexico, a friendly country, rather than Russia, an adversary that is also sanctioned. Mexico argued that it should deliver fuel to Cuba, but the Trump administration allowed the Russians to be proactive by semi-provocatively trying to challenge the blockade. Perhaps, with the need for more fuel on the market due to Iran, Trump essentially relented to weak Russian pressure and allowed Russian fuel to be delivered. Of course, Ukraine has been justifiably sore at Russia being allowed to sell oil and gas at good prices so that they can better fund their offensive war. Meanwhile, the Ukrainians have been pounding Russian oil & gas infrastructure, including refineries, affecting fuel availability and volumes able to be sold. In a sense, Ukraine is offsetting some of that extra profit Russia would be making and slightly supporting higher oil & gas prices.

     The Russians probably expect the lifting of all energy sanctions if an agreeable peace to their war is established, and the Iranians are arguing for sanctions relief in exchange for slowing their nuclear ambitions. I doubt that full sanctions relief is really on the table for either country. Both countries are so far away from international norms in terms of behavior, criminality, militarism, and terroristic activities that I would think only partial or phased-out sanctions relief is currently morally feasible, and only if peace is agreed. I do invoke morality here, as an aspect of justice and law, and as a nod to the human sense of fairness.

     The effects of lifting sanctions will likely be to flood the markets with more products, which should lower prices. It could also eventually bring more countries to join or rejoin OPEC as a means to keep pricing profitable. The opposite has been happening with the UAE leaving OPEC, no doubt prompted by the damage to its industry by Iranian missiles and drones.

     The U.S. has benefited from the lifting of sanctions against Venezuela as more of its oil has been diverted to U.S. refineries, well-equipped to refine it, and has helped keep U.S. gasoline and diesel prices lower than they could have been.

     Some have noted that the current scarcity of oil and gas on the market is a cue to advance energy security by investing more in renewables. The high oil & gas prices make such investments more desirable as well. I would argue, however, that the issue of scarcity on the market is likely to be temporary as the Iran War is resolved and commerce resumes through the Strait of Hormuz. This means that the high prices are likely temporary, although it has been acknowledged that they will likely linger for some months afterward. The scarcity on the market is also temporary, so the argument for increasing energy security through renewables is basically the same argument it was before the disruptions. A better argument for renewables development would be low oil & gas prices, since that would make more funds available to invest in less profitable renewables. And don't forget, while renewables do offer some energy security against villains like Russia and Iran, they also increase dependency on China for minerals, minerals processing, magnets, and other components. 

 

Offshore Wind Lease Buyouts: What is Happening? They Set a Potentially Dangerous Precedent, Say Former DOI Officials


      On March 23, 2026, it was announced that:

TotalEnergies has signed settlement agreements with the U.S. Department of the Interior to "relinquish” two offshore wind leases worth nearly $1 billion off the coasts of North Carolina and New York and “will no longer develop offshore wind projects” in the U.S.”

     Some consider this buyout and others announced since then to be shocking and against the norms of business and capitalism as they are usually practiced. TotalEnergies would also be required to invest an equal amount of money into U.S. oil & gas production and processing, under the terms of the agreement. For the company, that is likely an economic boon, since oil and gas investments are significantly more profitable than wind investments and do not require any direct subsidization. The company said it will divert the $928 investment into U.S. LNG, drilling projects in the Gulf, and shale plays. They also noted that the diversion of funds would be beneficial since U.S. wind is expensive compared to European wind due to the lack of manufacturing and other support infrastructure for the fledgling U.S. wind industry.

TotalEnergies’ studies on these leases have shown that offshore wind developments in the United States, unlike those in Europe, are costly and might have a negative impact on power affordability for U.S. consumers,” the company said. “Since other technologies are available to meet the growing demand for electricity ... in a more affordable way, TotalEnergies considers there is no need to allocate capital to this technology in the U.S.”

     The cancellation of the wind projects represents 4.2 GW of wind capacity. The projects had not begun construction yet. The Trump administration had tried and failed to block some of the offshore wind projects that were well underway with construction. Some of those have recently entered into service.

     On April 27, 2026, according to Utility Dive, the DOI announced that:

Bluepoint Wind offshore New York and Golden State Wind offshore California “each separately agreed to voluntarily end their offshore wind leases” and not to pursue any new offshore wind projects in the United States. DOI put the value of the lease agreements and potential reimbursements at $765 million for Bluepoint and $120 million for Golden State.”

     The DOI cited costs to taxpayers and ratepayers in its decision, through both required subsidization and likely higher power costs, to buy out the leases. Others have criticized the administration for these actions and for using the Treasury Department’s Judgment Fund to finance the buyout.

     Former DOI officials, including former Bureau of Ocean Energy Management director Liz Klein and Tony Irish, a former associate solicitor with the Interior Department and now senior counsel at Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility, have criticized the buyouts, saying they create a dangerous precedent. Irish noted that if these buyouts go unchallenged legally:

“…there’s nothing to stop a future Democratic administration from pursuing similar types of arrangements where they claim they’re going to sue conventional oil and gas, or deepwater drillers in the Gulf Coast.”

     He may have a point, but I am not sure. A DOI spokesperson explained the buyouts, and I generally agree with most of these points regarding affordability and practicality:

Offshore wind projects across the country are collapsing under their own skyrocketing costs. Forcing taxpayers to prop them up is reckless, expensive, and irresponsible. Redirecting funds into American oil, gas and LNG infrastructure ensures reliable, affordable, domestically controlled energy instead of doubling down on one of the costliest and least dependable power sources on the market.”

     The total of the buyouts now represents 8.6 GW of wind power scrapped at a cost to the government of $1.8 billion. Klein questioned the legality of the agreements:

There is no legal basis for the scheme that they have put together to provide what they’re calling reimbursement for the offshore wind lease amounts in exchange for conventional energy related activities that these companies were planning on doing anyway, by all indications.”

No agency has authority to just give money away to companies, in exchange for those companies to invest in various energy projects that themselves are generating profits for those companies.”

     No legal challenges have been announced yet, but Irish noted that if a federal judge were to declare the buyouts to be illegal, the likely outcome would be for the companies to resume the wind leases and the government to get its money back. He noted:

There are all sorts of policy issues that can be ‘resolved’ in one way or another through these backdoor settlements of non-existent agency actions in both directions. It really should be chilling to all the aspects of industry, particularly those that engage with the public lands ... It removes the risk from the businesses and places it completely on the federal government and ultimately the taxpayer, because it will just enable anyone who no longer believes in their investment to cut bait and get a full refund without any risk.”    

     I wonder how many of these projects were initiated before inflation rose significantly post-COVID and the cost of borrowing skyrocketed, which really changed the economics of these projects. It's as if some of these companies may even be relieved to trade investments with difficult profitability for investments with likely higher profitability. I see the change in economic viability and profitability of these projects and the potential benefits to taxpayers/ratepayers as making the buyouts a pragmatic action, despite their difficult legal standing.



References:

 

Offshore wind lease buyouts create troubling precedent, say former DOI officials. Diana DiGangi. Utility Dive. April 30, 2026.  Offshore wind lease buyouts create troubling precedent, say former DOI officials | Utility Dive

TotalEnergies accepts $1B offshore wind buyout, pivots to oil and gas in US. Diana DiGangi. Utility Dive. March 23, 2026. TotalEnergies accepts $1B offshore wind buyout, pivots to oil and gas in US | Utility Dive

2 more offshore wind projects scrapped under Trump administration pressure. Meris Lutz. Utility Dive. April 28, 2026. 2 more offshore wind projects scrapped under Trump administration pressure | Utility Dive

The Importance of Source Rocks in Hydrocarbons Exploration: AAPG’s Rasoul Sorkhabi Explains


      AAPG editor Rasoul Sorkhabi wrote an article for AAPG Explorer about source rocks, specifically “generative” source rocks, since not all source rocks generate producible hydrocarbons. He defines generative source rocks as follows:

A generative (or an effective) petroleum source rock is a clay-rich or carbonate sedimentary rock that has generated, or is generating, and has expelled, or is expelling, oil and/or gas.”

     Recently, I learned about (and blogged about) an exception, where a very good oil & gas basin offshore Indonesia has sandstone source rocks that carried leaf and coal fragments via turbiditic currents. That, however, was an unusual situation, quite rare.

     He reviews what makes a petroleum system, and below gives seven “grades: of source rock.




Source rock with trap, seal, reservoir, and migration pathways is what constitutes the petroleum system.”  

     He notes that source rock investigations are very important for shale plays, which are “self-sourced” in that the source rocks and the reservoir rocks are one and the same. Even some shale plays are not viable due to hydrocarbons migrating out of the source rocks. I remember when American shale plays were being explored after the advent of successful high-volume hydraulic fracturing and horizontal wells. There was one potential play in Alabama’s Black Warrior Basin, the Floyd Shale, in which were found what are known as “dead oil stains,” indicative of oil that was once in the reservoir but no longer present. It was considered highly prospective since it met most of the requirements for a good source rock. The problem with the Floyd Shale is thought to be a loss of reservoir seal, which allowed much of the hydrocarbons to move out of the shale reservoir. Other evidence of this includes the lack of overpressure in the shale.

    Sorkhabi notes that carbon, or TOC, alone is insufficient. TOC changes with thermal maturity. Hydrogen index (HI), determined by pyrolysis, combined with adequate TOC, is a better overall indicator of hydrocarbon yield.

     He mentions two methodologies found in the literature that can evaluate source rock potential:

Researchers Gerard Demaison and Bradley Huizinga suggest using the Source Potential Index (SPI). This index combines rock thickness and density with potential yield (a sum of S1, free hydrocarbon, and S2, generated hydrocarbon in pyrolysis) and then calculates metric tons of hydrocarbon per square meter.”

Another research team, Andrew Pepper and Elizabeth Roller, suggest using the Ultimate Expellable Potential (UEP) metric, which integrates rock thickness and density with TOC, HI, transformation ratio, and oil versus gas components to estimate generated and expelled oil volume.”

Basin modeler Zhiyong He of ZetaWare considers both metrics useful in their own ways. SPI gives mass, and UEB gives the volume of source hydrocarbons. Both SPI and UEP help create generative maps laid over the depositional span of source rock formations.”

     Other methodologies include determining oil mobility and expulsion efficiency, and determining original TOC and HI values through maturity and statistical analysis.

     Sorkhabi explores the importance of kerogen typification. Kerogen is the insoluble organic matter that is cracked via burial heat and pressure. Its type is based on thermal maturity, which indicates what hydrocarbons the rocks will produce, whether oil, condensate, or natural gas. He discusses the Van Krevelen diagram or cross-plot of atomic hydrogen-to-carbon and oxygen-to-carbon ratios, originally developed to determine coal ranks, and the limitations of this diagram.

To address these issues, geochemists suggest organo-facies (visual kerogen) analysis. Another technique is to analyze S2 peak materials from pyrolysis by gas chromatography.”

     Below is his concise analysis of thermal maturity:



     Source rock analysis is in the realm of petroleum geochemistry, and he says there is still much more to learn about it. He gives two current challenges to understanding via source rock analysis and basin modeling:

1)        “Well data are location-specific. The deep hydrocarbon kitchen would be the last space to drill, or it may remain undrilled, even after a long production history from reservoirs.”

2)        “Validating the results of source rock evaluation applied to a basin is tricky. Reservoir oil to source rock fingerprinting using age-diagnostic or facies-diagnostic biomarkers obtained from gas chromatography-mass spectrometry can be helpful to some extent, but such data are usually scarce.”

   

    

 

References:

 

How to Spot Generative Source Rocks: A review of proposed evaluation methods and criteria. Rasoul Sorkhabi. AAPG Explorer. April 1, 2026. How to Spot Generative Source Rocks

Lessons learned from the Floyd shale play. Harry Dembicki Jr. and Jonathan D. Madren. Journal of Unconventional Oil and Gas Resources. Volume 7, September 2014, Pages 1-10. Lessons learned from the Floyd shale play - ScienceDirect

Friday, May 1, 2026

The U.S. Now Has Three Offshore Wind Projects in Production: Dominion’s Coastal Virginia, Orsted’s Revolution Wind, and Vineyard Wind: House GOP Members Propose Extending Wind Tax Credits Expected to Expire in July 2026


       In March, Dominion Energy’s Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind began generating electricity for the grid just days after Orsted’s Revolution Wind entered into service off the coast of Rhode Island. Days ago, it was announced that the Vineyard Wind project offshore Maine is fully up and running. Vineyard had already been producing electricity and played a key role in assuring winter reliability during the 2026 cold spell. As explained below by Heatmap AM’s by Alexander Kaufman, the stage is now set for Vineyard to produce power at affordable prices for power consumers:

On Monday, Massachusetts Governor Maura Healey announced that Vineyard Wind had activated its electricity contracts with utilities, setting fixed prices for the 800-megawatt project 15 miles south of Martha’s Vineyard and Nantucket over the next 20 years. In a press release, Healey said the power purchase agreements will save Massachusetts ratepayers roughly $1.4 billion in electricity costs throughout these next two decades. “Throughout one of the coldest winters in recent history, Vineyard Wind turbines powered our homes and businesses at a low price and now that price goes even lower with the activation of these contracts,” Healey said in a statement. “Especially as President Trump is taking energy sources off the table and increasing prices with his war in Iran, we should be leaning into more American-made wind power.” Vineyard Wind first began selling power to the market in 2024, but at what The New Bedford Light called “fluctuating and at times higher prices.” As of this week and for the next year, the price will be set at $69.50 per megawatt-hour.

     While the biggest recent wind story seems to be the Trump DOI buying out offshore wind leases if the companies agree to invest in oil & gas projects instead, the U.S. wind industry, both onshore and offshore, continues to grow. The U.S. installed wind capacity is at 159.5 GW, of which 159.3 GW is onshore, with a mere 171 MW of offshore wind capacity online. However, offshore wind capacity is expected to grow to 4.2 GW by the end of the year, which means by the end of the year it will be “on the map” in terms of power generation. Many of us thought that Biden’s push for offshore wind was too ambitious, especially as borrowing costs skyrocketed, affecting project economics and triggering renegotiations of terms. Thus, if the Trump administration’s delays of wind projects and wind lease buyouts don’t expand, they will likely just affect some of the total number of projects. It seems clear that offshore wind may be scaled back, but it won’t be shut down. This is important for the fledgling infrastructure, supply chains, component manufacturing, and equipment buildout of a U.S. offshore wind industry. It needs to be supported, preferably by an unconstrained industry.




     Clean Technica’s Michael Barnard summarizes offshore wind project statuses:

What the Trump administration tried to freeze through political interference, the courts largely refused to let die. Five of the country’s marquee offshore wind projects, Vineyard Wind 1, Revolution Wind, Sunrise Wind, Empire Wind 1, and Dominion Energy’s Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind project, all won preliminary court relief after the late 2025 federal suspension orders, and all remained in construction or forward motion by April 2026. Revolution Wind had already begun delivering power into New England, Vineyard Wind had entered initial operations, and Sunrise, Empire, and CVOW were all still advancing through construction, commissioning, and related offshore works. The point matters beyond the individual projects. Washington succeeded in injecting delay, cost, and uncertainty, but it did not erase the industrial reality that billions had already been committed, steel was already in the water, and state demand for large-scale offshore electricity had not disappeared because a hostile administration wished it so.”

     In partnership with the North America’s Building Trades Unions, four GOP House members introduced a bill to restore tax credits for wind, solar, hydrogen, and other clean energy technologies that were phased out by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. The new bill, the American Energy Dominance Act, would remove the accelerated deadlines. The tax credits are currently set to expire in July 2026. Some have suggested that the bill is unlikely to pass unless or until the Democrats gain more seats in Congress, despite House Republicans sponsoring the bill. In March, Democrats introduced a bill to restore the same tax credits. Since both parties have introduced bills to restore the incentives, I am not sure why analysts are so sure the bills are not likely to succeed without a Democratic controlled Congress, but perhaps that is the case for now. I still think the incentives should be restored, but as a ratepayer, I do not think renewables should be overly supported or accelerated.  

    

 

 

References:

 

Vineyard Wind enters into full service. Heatmap AM. Alexander Kaufman. April 29. 2026.

America’s Wind Market Keeps Building Under Policy Pressure. Michael Barnard. Clean Technica. April 17, 2026. America’s Wind Market Keeps Building Under Policy Pressure - CleanTechnica

House Republicans introduce bill to extend renewables tax credits. Diana DiGangi. Utility Dive. Apri 27, 2026. House Republicans introduce bill to extend renewables tax credits | Utility Dive

The Environmental, Water Quality, Habitat, Flooding, and Climate Impacts of Beaver Dams: New Research Shows They Are a Good Carbon Sink, but What About Methane Emissions?



Some Beaver Facts

     There are two beaver species worldwide, the North American beaver (Caster canadensis) and the Eurasian beaver (Caster fiber). Beavers inhabit all 50 U.S. states but are less common in the Southwest. They also inhabit much of Canada, Northern Mexico, much of Europe, and some of Asia. The North American Beaver is one of North America’s largest rodents. They have specialized teeth, suitable for gnawing down trees with which to build their dams and lodges. They live 5-12 years. They mate for life. Each couple produces a litter of 1-4 kits each year. The young adolescents help with their parents’ following litter, then at two years old, they set out to mate and then build their own family lodge. They are herbivorous. Their flat tails are used as rudders for swimming, to aid them in sitting, and to smack on the water to warn other beavers of potential danger.






     Beavers have been referred to as ecosystem engineers since they literally create wetlands and ponds, which become habitats for other species. Their dams filter water, mitigate drought, and increase the biodiversity of flora and fauna. They use trees, branches, sticks, rocks, vegetation, and mud to build their dams. They also build canals to connect ponds. I am guessing the dam below is from the American West.




     They build two kinds of lodges: bank lodges on stream banks and open-water lodges. An open-water lodge is shown below.




     Beavers are also sometimes considered to be skilled foresters:

Beavers practice what is known as coppicing, which means cutting away some of the woodier sections of plants to allow for new growth of beaver food.”

This is something that conservationists currently do to stimulate new diversity in regions with no natural beaver populations and is absolutely necessary for some species to thrive.”

Robins, blackbirds, chaffinches and tits are examples of coppice species, that thrive in coppiced woodlands.”

     Beavers have been extensively trapped for their pelts, which has led to roughly 10 times fewer of them. However, their numbers are now growing fast. 





Mosquitoes, Flooding, and Loss of Water Downstream: Some Potential Negative Impacts

     One potentially negative impact of beaver dams is that the pooled water can increase the prevalence of mosquitoes. The Northeast Massachusetts Mosquito Control and Wetlands Management District did a study to determine the impact of beaver dams on mosquito populations and determined that they can increase the prevalence of mosquitoes, especially if the beaver lodges are abandoned. This is concerning since mosquitoes transmit diseases to humans, including West Nile Virus.

Beaver impacted waterways were evaluated to determine where and when breeding takes place within the system. In addition, overwintering conditions were evaluated to determine the potential for beaver lodges to act as hibernacula for adult mosquitoes. The results suggested that waterways with abandoned beaver lodges had a greater chance of increased mosquito breeding versus waterways with active beaver lodges.”

     Beavers are thought to mitigate flooding in general. However, some people who live very near beaver dams say they can increase flooding locally. I know of one area in Western West Virginia, in the backwaters of the Little Kanawha River, where they seem to keep the water in check. There is no flooding there. There, they seem to have a mechanism to keep the water flowing as well. This is in a shady area. I took the picture below a few years ago. They have since moved their dams around a little bit. This is in a confined area, very close to human dwellings. 




     The other beaver dams I am familiar with are in Southeastern Ohio. This is in a sunny area with several large dams. I have heard that some of the locals have complained about flooding and mosquitoes. It is said that the ponds behind beaver dams can create localized flooding. There are ways to mitigate it, including diverting water or lowering the dams. I took the picture below.




     A 2025 study published in Communications Earth & Environment had researchers from Stanford and the University of Minnesota examine the effects of beaver reintroductions.

Despite the potential for wetland resilience and restoration, beaver activity can create problems for nearby communities. New dams can temporarily reduce water flows, putting stress on downstream water users already struggling to find sufficient surface water supplies during drought conditions. Unmanaged beaver populations can pose a flooding threat to homes, crops, and infrastructure.”

     The researchers also noted that in places where beavers have become a nuisance by flooding farmers' fields or even roads, they can be moved to other areas where they will not have those negative effects on humans.

Ultimately, the researchers envision dynamic risk maps that policymakers, watershed managers, and ecologists can use to quantitatively evaluate where, when, and how to bring back beavers.”

 

Mostly Beneficial Water Quality Impacts

      A Microsoft CoPilot Search for Beaver Dam effects on water quality yielded the following:

Beavers significantly improve water quality by building dams that slow water flow, trap sediments, and create diverse habitats, which collectively enhance freshwater ecosystems.”

     Water with more sediment filtered out is clearer and cleaner. According to the EPA, we still don’t know the full effects of beavers on water quality.

Because stream ecosystems are complex, it can be difficult to understand how disturbances and changing environmental conditions will impact the ecosystem. Additionally, the impacts of beaver dams may vary widely across biomes because the underlying watershed characteristics are different.”

     Studies have shown that water downstream of beaver dams has less suspended solids and nitrates. However, some pollutants may increase downstream of the dams. The effects on water quality can vary depending on factors like season, temperature, water depth, and water flow rate. Sediments that are trapped and then drop to the bottom may increase pollutants in sediments accumulating at the stream bed bottoms. This can be beneficial for a pollutant like nitrogen since it can buy time for microbes to convert nitrates to nitrogen gas, a process known as denitrification. However, it can also lead to the accumulation of pollutants. Beaver ponds can also help to recharge local groundwater.




     A 2025 study in Communications Earth & Environment assessed the variables that led to the most surface water accumulation due to beaver dams in the Western U.S.  They determined that dam length was the most important variable and that dam length was controlled mostly by hydrologic and geomorphology variables. The paper’s abstract is below.

“…valley geometry alone does not determine dam length, but rather a balance between valley shape, hydrological inputs, and soil conditions.”

 




Beaver Dams Create and Improve Habitats

     The trapped sediment will eventually drop to the bottom and support aquatic plant life, which creates habitat. The dams can also trap some agricultural runoff, which also supports aquatic plants.

     According to the Beaver Trust, beaver dams can significantly increase biodiversity:

Beavers are defined as a keystone species as they create unique, complex freshwater ecosystems which provide opportunities for many insects, amphibians, birds, fish and mammals. Beaver wetlands have been found to be home to 50% more species than wetlands not created by beavers.”

     As noted above, the beavers practice coppicing, which is known to increase forest biodiversity. Beavers are considered to provide many ecosystem services, and habitat creation is one of the most important.

     A 2025 study in the Journal of Animal Ecology suggests that beaver dams improve bat habitats. The study shows that more bats hunt in beaver territories than outside of them. One reason is thought to be that there are more insects for the bats to feed on in beaver areas. One endangered bat thrives in dead trees, and beavers do create more dead trees both through flooding them and chewing them down.

 

Beaver Dams as Carbon Sinks

     A 2026 study published in Communications Earth & Environment assessed the ability of Eurasian beavers to create net carbon sinks. According to Phys.org:

The researchers' findings demonstrate that these beaver-engineered wetlands can store carbon at rates up to 10 times higher than similar systems without beaver activity. Over a 13‑year period, the wetland accumulated an estimated 1,194 metric tons of carbon, equivalent to 10.1 metric tons of CO2 per hectare per year.”




     The researchers found that in some seasons, the beaver-dammed regions were a net carbon source, but when averaged throughout the year, they were a significant sink. This study also found that the increase in methane due to expanding wetlands was a negligible effect. I admit I found that to be surprising.  It could mean that these complexes were not resulting in increases in net new inundation. As noted in the section below, this may differ considerably from other environments, such as Arctic tundra, as well as with changes in new inundation. 

Despite uncertainties, the capacity for sediment burial to offset and exceed gaseous C emissions underscores the role of beavers as natural agents for buffering climate change.”

     The researchers also cautioned that beaver dams are often temporary, which can change carbon sequestration effects. The sequestration effects are also limited to small areas compared to the overall land areas.

Dr. Joshua Larsen, from the University of Birmingham and lead senior author of the study, said, "Our findings show that beavers don't just change landscapes: they fundamentally shift how CO2 moves through them. By slowing water, trapping sediments, and expanding wetlands, they turn streams into powerful carbon sinks. This first-of-its-kind study represents an important opportunity and breakthrough for future nature‑based climate solutions across Europe."

 

Methane Emissions Increase Significantly from Beaver Ponds on Arctic Tundra

      Wetlands emit significant amounts of methane via anaerobic decomposition of newly submerged organic matter. Beaver dams basically submerge previously unsubmerged land or partially submerged land.

     A 2023 paper published in Environmental Research Letters examined beaver ponds in the Arctic tundra in Alaska, where beavers have been expanding. They found that beaver ponds increase the amount of methane emitted.

Comparing beaver ponds to all non-beaver waterbodies (including waterbodies >450 m from beaver-affected water), we found significantly greater CH4 hotspot occurrences around beaver ponds, extending to a distance of 60 m. We found a 51% greater CH4 hotspot occurrence ratio around beaver ponds relative to nearby non-beaver waterbodies.”

     This research suggests that while beaver ponds in temperate regions may not affect methane emissions very much, they do increase methane emissions significantly in Arctic tundra regions.

A study from the boreal forest of Quebec found that beaver ponds were responsible for emitting 18% of the total CH4 flux. The high uncertainty on existing estimates of beaver pond CH4 fluxes is partly due to the difficulty of monitoring CH4 fluxes in-situ or remotely and the challenges of extrapolating spatially and temporally limited samples. Our results indicate that in the Arctic tundra environment, where permafrost predominates, beaver ponds enhance CH4 release.”

 

 

 

References:

 

Beavers can convert stream corridors to persistent carbon sinks. Science X staff. Phys.org. March 18, 2026. Beavers can convert stream corridors to persistent carbon sinks

Beavers can convert stream corridors to persistent carbon sinks. Lukas Hallberg, Annegret Larsen, Natalie Ceperley, Raphael d’Epagnier, Tom F. Brouwers, Bettina Schaefli, Sarah Thurnheer, Josep Barba, Christof Angst, Matthew Dennis & Joshua R. Larsen. Communications Earth & Environment volume 7, Article number: 227 (2026). Beavers can convert stream corridors to persistent carbon sinks | Communications Earth & Environment

North American Beaver. Nevada Department of Wildlife. North American Beaver - Nevada Department of Wildlife

Beaver Factsheet (FAQ). Beaver Trust. December 2020. Fact sheets

Do beaver ponds increase methane emissions along Arctic tundra streams? Jason A Clark, Ken D Tape, Latha Baskaran, Clayton Elder, Charles Miller, Kimberley Miner, Jonathan A O’Donnell, and Benjamin M Jones. Environmental Research Letters. 18 (2023) 075004. July 3, 2023. Do beaver ponds increase methane emissions along Arctic tundra streams?

Factors influencing surface water accumulation in beaver pond complexes across the Western United States. Luwen Wan, Emily Fairfax & Kate Maher. Communications Earth & Environment. volume 6, Article number: 614 (August 11, 2025). Factors influencing surface water accumulation in beaver pond complexes across the Western United States | Communications Earth & Environment

Strategically bringing back beavers could support healthy and climate-resilient watersheds. Madison Pobis. Phys.org. August 11, 2025. Strategically bringing back beavers could support healthy and climate-resilient watersheds

Beaver Facts. Fact Animal. 18 Beautiful Beaver Facts - Fact Animal

Beavers create habitats for bats and support endangered species. Beate Kittl. Phys.org. November 13, 2025. Beavers create habitats for bats and support endangered species

Beaver Impacts on Mosquito Control. Northeast Massachusetts Mosquito Control and Wetlands Management District. Beaver Impacts on Mosquito Control | Northeast Massachusetts Mosquito Control and Wetlands Management District

How Do Beaver Dams Affect Water Quality? U.S. EPA. June 11, 2024. How Do Beaver Dams Affect Water Quality? | US EPA

 

 

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