Downsize DC: End the Ethanol Scam

FrankRep

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End the Ethanol Scam

Downsize DC
April 7, 2008


Please send Congress a message instructing them to end all subsidies and mandates for the production and use of ethanol.

Click here:
http://action.downsizedc.org/wyc.php?cid=91

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The politicians want us to burn more ethanol in our cars. Like most plans concocted by politicians, this one is a terrible idea that is having devastating consequences. Here are the facts about ethanol . . .

Ethanol consumes more energy than it produces. A study by Cornell and UC Berkeley found that corn converted to ethanol consumes 29% more energy than it creates. Most of these energy losses come from the burning of extra fossil fuels. Energy losses from other sources of ethanol, such as switch grass (45%) and wood (57%) are even worse.

Strike one for ethanol.

Burning ethanol in our cars emits less carbon dioxide (CO2) than burning gasoline, but this hardly matters given the net energy loss involved in ethanol's production. Burning extra fossil fuels to create ethanol adds more carbon dioxide to the atmosphere than we save by using ethanol as a partial substitute for gasoline. Overall, ethanol increases CO2 emissions, raising the risk of global warming.

Strike two for ethanol

When farmers use their land to grow crops for ethanol production, instead of food, the food supply drops and the price of food rises. Increased food prices create an incentive to plow new land to replace the missing food crops. Expanding the acreage used for agriculture also adds extra CO2 to the atmosphere. A study reported in the journal "Science" indicates that, depending on the crop used to create the ethanol, it could take tens or even hundreds of years for ethanol to make up for the CO2 surge caused by plowing more land for agriculture.

Strike three for ethanol. If we were playing baseball ethanol would now be on its way back to the dugout, but we aren't done yet . . .

Ethanol increases the cost you pay for food. A University of Iowa study indicates that ethanol production increased the average food bill by about $47 over the last six months of 2007. This increase in food prices is also having knock-on effects on food prices around the world, devastating consumers in under-developed nations.

Strike four for ethanol.

Ethanol also makes your fuel prices rise. Politicians mandated that refineries add 4 billion gallons of ethanol to your gasoline in 2006, in spite of the fact that ethanol is twice as expensive as gasoline. This is part of the reason it costs you so much to commute to work.

Strike five for ethanol.

Ethanol has also been sold as a way to make our fuel supply more secure, but an examination of this claim by scholars from the Cato Institute (published in the Washington Post) indicates that corn crops are far more variable than the world oil supply. The more we depend on ethanol the more likely we are to have fuel shortages after a bad harvest.

Strike six for ethanol. Having struck out twice, you might think that it's time for ethanol to retire from the field, but there's still more to come . . .

Ethanol has also been sold as an important part of achieving energy independence, but this is another myth. Even if we used ALL the corn produced in the U.S. to make ethanol, and NONE of it for food, U.S. gasoline consumption would drop by only about 12%. This wouldn't even make us independent of the oil we import from the Middle East (which is about 14% of our total consumption), let alone the oil we import from other parts of the globe.

Strike seven for ethanol.

Ethanol makes it more likely that you will burn to death in your car. Neither water nor conventional foams work on ethanol fires. Ethanol fires require special materials and training to extinguish.

Strike eight for ethanol.

The ethanol program is really a government program of corporate welfare. In "Archer Daniels Midland: A Case Study In Corporate Welfare," James Bovard shows how big agri-business corporations have used government subsides and tax breaks, like those for ethanol, to loot billions of dollars from taxpayers and consumers. Our government's ethanol policies are a major culprit. Bovard estimates that every $1 of profit earned by ADM from its ethanol operation has cost taxpayers $30.

Strike nine for ethanol. We have now retired the side.

The case is clear. All government mandates, subsidies, and tax breaks for ethanol production must end, immediately. If we can achieve this goal we will improve the environment, reduce government spending, and make it easier to balance the federal budget. Better yet, all of this can be achieved while also lowering your fuel and food prices.

Please send Congress a message instructing them to end all subsidies and mandates for the production and use of ethanol. You can do so here.


Downsize DC
http://www.DownsizeDC.org
 
Brill :) I already knew it consumed more energy than it produced...

Ethanol makes it more likely that you will burn to death in your car. Neither water nor conventional foams work on ethanol fires. Ethanol fires require special materials and training to extinguish.

Hmmm, maybe this can be useful then ;)
 
Every source of energy consumes more than it produces. So that's not a great argument.

Still shouldn't be subsidised :) .
 
I am in charge of doing my company's quarterly newsletter. We started out last year as just a small front & back 2 pager and have decided to go to a folded 11x17 four pager.

In the issue coming out in a few days (April 15th, and not a word about tax day), I am researching an article about alternative energy. I should mention at this point that my company is an environmental consulting firm. No, not the tree hugging kind. Rather, we help builders & land owners figure out how to work within regulations to do what they want to do with their own land. I guess we would be almost opposite of a tree hugging type of environmental company.

I've been researching solar energy as my first article in this series of looks at alternative energy. I've come across many interesting alternatives that haven't hit mainstream yet and are infinitely more viable than ethanol, which I've firmly decided is a turn in the completely wrong direction.

One thing I came across that those interested might want to look at is Algae based fuel. Apparently someone has made some very interesting progress in this field and was recently featured on CNN. I'm at work right now and don't have all my links handy (and I'm in a bit of hurry to post this), so do a Google search for Algae energy" or something along those lines. You will probably come up with the CNN video on the first hits.

Oh and just as a side note, I am doing 2 articles in this edition. The other one is on Benjamin Franklin and his "environmentalist" role historically.
 
All bio-based fuels have one major problem- they require lots of land and water to produce even a fraction of the gasoline we consume every day. Converting land to production of bio-fuel (whether corn, switchgrasss or sugarcane or whatever) must come at the expense of food production and will reduce the supply of food and raise their costs- as we are seeing now. Prices for corn have risen and the animal product that consume corn like meat and dairy product are higher. Soybean production has shifted to corn reducing the supply and raising the price of those items. World populations continue to grow and the demand for food is increasing while the space for growing food is decreasing. Bio fuel cannot hope to replace much more than a small portion of our petroleum consumption. They also require petroleum based fertilizers. Even the water it would require is already facing limited supplies. Agriculture consumes the vast majority of all the water we use.

There is presently no single technology that can replace oil. The only thing with a decent shot now is to have electric powered vehicles and nuclear power plants to create the energy to charge them with. That will require hundreds of nuclear plants which are very difficult to get aproved.

I should add that I like to consider myself green and want to find alternatives to petroleum. I don't even drive a car.
 
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