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Our Clean Energy Future Should Minimize Ethanol
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New energy corporation's 102 mmgy ethanol plant in South Bend, Indiana
Credit:  Wikimedia Commons

“We will harness the sun and the winds and the soil to fuel our cars and run our factories…All this we can do. All this we will do.

“Now, there are some who question the scale of our ambitions, who suggest that our system cannot tolerate too many big plans. Their memories are short, for they have forgotten what this country has already done, what free men and women can achieve when imagination is joined to common purpose and necessity to courage.”

–President Barack Obama Inauguration Speech--Jan. 20, 2009.

“We are at a turning point in our history. There are two paths to choose. One is a path I've warned about tonight, the path that leads to fragmentation and self-interest. Down that road lies a mistaken idea of freedom, the right to grasp for ourselves some advantage over others. That path would be one of constant conflict between narrow interests ending in chaos and immobility. It is a certain route to failure.

All the traditions of our past, all the lessons of our heritage, all the promises of our future point to another path, the path of common purpose and the restoration of American values. That path leads to true freedom for our nation and ourselves. We can take the first steps down that path as we begin to solve our energy problem.

Energy will be the immediate test of our ability to unite this nation, and it can also be the standard around which we rally. On the battlefield of energy we can win for our nation a new confidence, and we can seize control again of our common destiny.”

From--President Jimmy Carter’s infamous “Great Malaise Speech” July 15, 1979

Among the many great challenges of the Presidency of Barack Obama will be his ability to thwart history again and solve America’s lingering “energy crisis.” Declared back in the 1970’s when OPEC exposed the soft vulnerability of America’s car culture to embargo, every President since Nixon has promised a solution to U.S. dependence on imported crude oil and failed. In fact, the crisis of oil addiction has gotten only worse as the decades have passed and American car companies have chosen to build Hummers and SUV’s over hybrids, and people have bought them for status.

Also long time environmentalists concerned with climate change have been waiting for real action on renewable energy since President Carter outlined his grand plan—in his notorious “Great Malaise” speech. President Carter chastised Americans who “tend to worship self-indulgence and consumption” and called for an end to foreign oil dependence and compared energy conservation to “an act of patriotism.” Public reaction to his call for America to seek “a new sense of purpose” in the energy crisis is still openly ridiculed to this day even though Carter set forth many good initiatives and few bad ones, like corn-based ethanol.

Americans might be waiting long after 2022 for their five million green jobs and true energy independence if the pink elephant of alternative energy a.k.a. the Ethanol Lobby has its way. President Obama’s glorious plan for a “clean energy future” baffles environmentalists as it continues to promote biofuels, like corn-based ethanol, as an answer to our energy problems despite the facts.

The jury is out and the facts are in. The American consumer has voted with his money: the corn-based ethanol industry is not a fiscally viable alternative energy source and environmental scientists are stating that it’s production and use is actually contributing more to global warming than regular gas.

Corn-based ethanol’s profitability without government assistance—subsidies and tariffs on foreign ethanol-- are years off in the distant future, if not impossible to achieve. The industry received $3 billion in 2007 -- almost twice as much as solar, wind, geothermal and other biomass combined. Recently, the Environmental Working Group analyzed data from the Energy Information Administration, and found corn-based ethanol received three-quarters of all tax benefits doled out by Washington for renewable energy.

Even with new federal and state laws designed to create a market for the bio-fuel, billions in federal subsides, the devotion of politicians like Barack Obama, Tom Vilsack and George Bush II and the unlimited resources of the giant agriculture lobby, ethanol is a failure. We need a new direction in alternative energy and I am asking the Obama administration “to spend wisely” and “reform bad habits” in its fight against global warming and for U.S. energy independence.

This giant albatross of alternative energy—ethanol--won the favor of Obama early on and in the waning days of the presidential campaign, Heather Zichal, Obama’s Campaign Policy Director for Energy, Environment and Agriculture, announced at the opening of an Ohio ethanol plant: “Now is not the time to pull the rug out from under the ag policies that help (ethanol) to find profitability in the marketplace.”

During the campaign, Candidate Obama called for additional funding for biofuels and next-generation ethanol (Cellulosic ethanol made from switch grass) to reach targets of 60 billion gallons of “renewable fuels” by 2022. In order to create a market for ethanol, Obama is calling for all new cars to be "flex fuel"—able to run E85 (85 percent ethanol, 15 percent gas) by 2013.

The appointment of former Iowa Governor Tom Vilsack to be Secretary of the Department of Agriculture is seen as a signal to corporate agribusiness—some of the biggest polluters in America—that the government feedbag isn’t being removed anytime soon. In fact, they’re lining up at the public trough for more billions of tax dollars, subsidies to produce bio-fuels like corn-based ethanol, which has failed to deliver either energy independence or savings.

The Washington Post said “Vilsack's nomination was cheered by groups representing big agricultural interests, which praise him for his support of biotechnology and subsidies for corn-based ethanol.”

To make matters worse, a Democratic Congress passed the Bush “Energy Independence and Security Act”, mandating ethanol production to be doubled to 15 billion gallons by 2015 up from 6.5 billion gallons produced in 2007. Its passage was a giant victory for the corporate agri-business lobbyists and yet another tremendous defeat for true alternative energy advocates, who can’t even get a seat at the table.

According to the Chicago Tribune, Magellan Midstream Partners, owner of the longest refined-oil pipeline in the nation, is now seeking to develop the first "dedicated ethanol pipeline" from Iowa to New York City and hopes President Obama will approve a loan guarantee of $3.5 billion through the Department of Energy.

But the news on ethanol continues to be bad. A new Stanford University study on alternative energy proposals claims that bio-fuels—like ethanol--actually cause more air pollution, requires more land to produce, generates less horsepower than regular gasoline and costs the consumer more, despite being priced less at the pump.

Mark Z. Jacobson, a professor of civil and environmental engineering at Stanford University, recently published the first comprehensive study of major alternative energy proposals in Energy & Environmental Science magazine stating that “Ethanol-based biofuels will actually cause more harm to human health, wildlife, water supply and land use than current fossil fuels."

Jacobson’s study is being called “the first quantitative, scientific evaluation” of the currently proposed U.S. alternative energy-related solutions. He assessed not only their potential for delivering energy for home and vehicles, but also scientific data on their impact on human health, global warming, national energy security, water and land allocation, wildlife displacement, water and air pollution, reliability and sustainability.

Among the top rated choices are, in order, wind, concentrated solar, geothermal, tidal, solar panels, wave and hydroelectric, all based on his assumption that all vehicles would be using that particular fuel source.

Bringing up the rear—again—is corn and cellulosic ethanol which Jacobson calls “the most damaging choice we could make in our effort to move away from fossil fuels” and that this energy source would continue to be a factor in the more than 15,000 air-pollution related deaths each year in the U.S.

"There is a lot of talk among politicians that we need a massive jobs program to pull the economy out of the current recession," says Jacobson. "Well, putting people to work building wind turbines, solar plants, geothermal plants, electric vehicles and transmission lines would not only create jobs but would also reduce costs due to health care, crop damage and climate damage from current vehicle and electric power pollution, and would provide the world with a truly unlimited supply of clean power."

Another battle over corn resources is taking place in the grocery store and in the farms and ranches around the Midwest. It pits corn farmers, corporate agri-business and the Ethanol Lobby against family farmers, livestock producers and environmentalists.

In Missouri, the “E-10 mandate” requires all gasoline sold in the state to contain 10 percent ethanol whenever ethanol is cheaper than gas. But there is a grassroots movement building to repeal the 2006 ethanol mandate. Missouri State Rep. Mike Dethrow, who initially voted for the E-10 mandate, has filed legislation to lift it.

Some livestock producers in the state, who need low corn-feed prices to compete, believe the mandate sides with the grain producers by guaranteeing a market for corn whenever ethanol is cheaper than gas.

During the height of the commodities speculation bubble in 2008, corn prices rose dramatically, causing animal feed to skyrocket and beef and other corn-based products prices to soar.

As the markets bottomed out, corn farmers who benefited from high corn prices began to suffer and are suffering now. Last year, corn prices topped $7 a bushel but have dropped to less than $4 a bushel at many grain elevators. The volatility in corn prices forced several ethanol manufactures into bankruptcy in 2008, as the ethanol boom turned to bust.

VeraSun Energy, the nation’s second largest ethanol producer, declared bankruptcy which idled Nebraska ethanol plants in Albion, Ord and Central City. Also construction on ethanol plant projects around Nebraska at Aurora, Carleton and Wahoo have stopped.

Ethanol producer Advanced BioEnergy itself defaulted on a $10 million loan to build another plant in that state where it operates a Fairmont, Neb., plant as well as two sister plants in South Dakota.

Last summer, Denver-based ethanol producer Biofuel Energy declared it didn't have enough cash to cover $46 million in losses on contracts for corn, ethanol and the natural gas used in its operations and filed bankruptcy.

Now farmers throughout the Corn Belt, who hold futures contracts on grain priced at $6 or $7 a bushel, are now being asked by the bankrupt companies to sell their corn at around $2 a bushel. Not even legal contracts to corn farmers are being upheld, and many who once supported the industry are becoming wary of doing business with ethanol producers, who are not required to be bonded and secured.

As the debate over energy independence and alternative fuels rages, President Obama should take a second look at the alleged benefits of expanded ethanol use and give more resources to real alternative energy solutions that are both environmentally sound and fiscally sustainable.

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Comments 8 comments for this article
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Added: March 05, 2009. 08:15 PM CDT
I have a house for sale next to an ethanol plant
any takers?
Anonymous
Added: February 26, 2009. 11:44 PM CDT
Ethanol.....is a bad option?

Where did the author get his information about ethanol from? I am no scientist but I think everyone not being paid off can agree that ethanol is the BEST choice for our future energy needs!!! I do agree that so far there have been major issues with corn ethanol. I specifically have a problem with using corn do to the effects it has on the food prices but it also happens to be very inefficient. The single best achievable plan I have seen is held by a Florida based company named EPEC. They use sweet sorghum. After carefully reviewing the details
it is the best choice. It is a heat tolerant,drought tolerant, flood tolerant relative of sugar cane. It will not impact food prices and it can grow anywhere in the US with the ability to be harvested more than once in the southern states.It has a 10-1 energy ratio. The most appealing part of the EPEC plan is the fact they are not going to need 5 years and 1 billion dollars to build some huge eye sore of a processing plant, they will be able to process the sorghum right after harvesting in a modular plant right on site. Everyone wins, it will allow us to become energy independent while providing jobs in a diverse number of local communities all over the country as well as support this countries farmers with a cash crop that will increase there revenue per acre, reduce input of water and fertilizer and increase output of high quality animal feed. That's not even half of the benefits of using sweet sorghum. This company EPEC really has an impressive plan and more power to them.Its about time someone stepped up to the plate!!!
Nick
Added: January 23, 2009. 06:47 PM CDT
Test Test
This is a test. This is a test.
Anonymous
Added: January 23, 2009. 05:33 PM CDT
Sorry Daniel Starling, but you don't know what you are talking about
Gee Mr. Starling, but you don't know what you are talking about.

Starling is a avid supporter of hydrogen power for everything, and has been fighting against clean, convenient ethanol for years.

Let me tell you this- I use ONLY E85, and have for the last two years. You see, I am a retired military officer, and I don't want to send money to foreign nations, when we can instead provide the fuel we need here now, grown here domestically, for all our vehicle needs.

Save American soldiers, sailors, airmen and marine's lives- buy E85- not gasoline.

Someday Starling might invent a way to economically do the hydrogen he pushes. Maybe he'll take it from water.

But then again, there will be others from Stanford University then complaining that using water for fuel is bad.

Ethanol is good. We need higher gasoline taxes to deter it's use, and use the money to support ethanol expansion and deployment.
Jim
Added: January 23, 2009. 12:20 PM CDT
Ethanol from an ASE Master Automotive Technicians point of view.

Not only can we grow ethanol here in the USA, it is also a much better fuel than gasoline. Ethanol needs less air in an engine than does gasoline, it also tolerates much more compression and ignition advance, as well as cutting emissions of CO, HC, and NOx by 90% or more. All of these traits combine to provide greater efficiency, better power, greatly improved drivability, all from something we can grow here in the USA. Increased compression is increased efficiency, increased mileage, and increased power, provided it does not pre ignite.

It does not ruin engines, it does not leave carbon deposits that wear cylinder walls, valves, and contaminates oil. Engines running ethanol have longer periods between oil changes and virtually no wear for the first 500,000 miles. Your car will run cooler, last longer, and be more fun to drive on alcohol.

Of course you can see a drop in mileage when running alcohol in an engine designed to run on camel whiz gasoline, it has to be seriously de-tuned to run on gas. Lower compression, retarded ignition advance, increased wear and emissions all conspire to make gasoline a poor automotive fuel. Trying to make ethanol run in an engine designed for gasoline will use more fuel, as gas engines are inefficient by design.

An engine designed to run solely on ethanol can get much better mileage with more power and virtually no emissions than any gasoline powered engine. If you dont have to compromise and crutch the engine to use gasoline, you can actually utilize it much more efficiently and use less fuel.

Ethanol as opposed to electrical cars. What do we do when we want to go more than 120 miles and we have an electrical car? I suppose we could fly there instead, or stay overnight at a motel while our car charges. Traveling 1000 miles in current electrical powered vehicles would take more time than riding Amtrak. Until the range is vastly improved, recharging takes minutes instead of hours, and there is a clean way to get the electricity for them, electric cars arent the answer for transportation, except in cities where the normal commute is less than 50 miles. In rural areas where there is often double that distance between towns, electric cars would be an insurmountable burden to an already economically poor area, as most are. Engines designed to run on very high ethanol blends, or straight ethanol, can have a greater range than both gasoline and electrical cars, with virtually no emissions. Considering this is the KC Tribune, you should know about the rural areas and the distances between cities. Have you driven to Topeka, Omaha, or Wichita lately? How would an overnight stay for a trip to Topeka sound?

Electric cars are clean, but where does the electricity come from? In places that dont have nuclear or geothermal power, its a coal fired plant. So in essence you are trading the emissions from cars for those from a coal burning plant.

Most people drive during the day, so they can charge the car at night. Power plants are often down on production this time of night, so they see electric cars as a way to keep production up. If the grid doesnt have demand, they cant put more energy into it, so they want a way to run the plant all out all the time. that means more emissions from the coal being burned.

Wind farms are awesome, I really like them and the idea of a wind farm. I have a wind generator. Problem is the wind isnt always there. We havent had a wind that will turn the turbine outside for three weeks. Geothermal is quite useful too, but only where it is available. What to do where there isnt enough wind, nor enough geothermal, without having half a square mile covered in solar panels that only get 20% efficiency? So far coal is the only choice, since no new Nuke plants are being built, and the cost is more than 3x what a coal plant costs.

It sounds to me like you are advocating coal as a transportation fuel and calling it environmentally friendly.

Ethanol is biodegradable, an ethanol spill is easily handled with water. Oil not so much. Ethanol can be made by anyone, literally anyone. it takes some time, effort, and knowledge to make fuel, but anyone can do it. That means we arent beholden to a monopoly of fuel providers, since we can make it ourselves. We can make it from any plant material that has starch or sugar. Potatoes, beets, even cattails that are considered a weed and sprayed in some states. Cattails are actually an enormous energy crop. They have 6 times the starch of a potato, potatoes are just behind corn for starch content per ton. An acre of cattails grown in concert with a waste water treatment facility, can provide 1000 to 10,000 gallons of ethanol. They thrive in the water that comes from those plants, and they clean it in the process. even if wiped out with spray, cattails come back within two to five years. We could actually utilize them to clean our water, and make our fuel, while providing jobs. I would say more jobs for a longer period of time than setting up wind farms and power lines. There are other crops and plants we can use, and we can use them relatively easily, we only have to.

Corn is being used right now due to simplicity and the enormous overabundance of it we have. Really it is a very good place to start, and we should continue to make fuel from corn. The byproducts are incredibly valuable as cattle feed, fertilizer, and even for human consumption since the only part used in ethanol production is the starch. Cows and pigs dont digest starch, it passes right through them. Same with the cellulose, and that is what is used to make ethanol. All the good parts of the food are left intact, nothing is wasted unless you are careless. No corn cannot do it all, but corn can do a good part of it.

To malign ethanol just because it is currently made from corn is ludicrous. To say ethanol is bad for the environment is both uneducated and ignorant. To assume ethanol cannot be sustained and is economically a disaster, well that is looking at it through oil filled goggles. No it wont fit the paradigm of oil with a single source and be utterly controllable by a very few.

Ethanol is the future, electrical transportation is also the future, every clean burning fuel on earth has a future provided it can be made rather than dug up or pumped from the ground. If it is nonrenewable, it will run out sometime.

There is no one single answer to our energy needs, all are required and all can be utilized. Cutting out a major portion that is available right now this very minute would be less than intelligent.

T.S.
Added: January 23, 2009. 11:56 AM CDT
SWEET SORGHUM IS THE ANSWER TO ETHANOL
Corn is the culprit here, Brazil uses more ethanol than oil and 90% of there vehicles run on Sughar cane based ethanol. Companies like Epec Holdings in Florida are using a weed called sweet sorghum and get a 10 to 1 return on energy, corn get 1.3 to 1 and sugar can 8 to 1 unit. We can grow the right crop it just wont help the lobbyist so you dont hear about it.
Ed
Added: January 23, 2009. 11:10 AM CDT
43% of the 3 billion in "subsidies" paid to oil companies to blend ethanol that the author refers to is actually nothing more than an adjustment to correct a non-btu based road tax. Ethanol is taxed on a volumetric basis, just like gas or diesel--not on a BTU basis. Therefore without the "subsidy" ethanol would be over taxed on a per mile basis by 43-45% in most states. Using the "subsidy" statement as the author did is very misleading.
Phil
Added: January 23, 2009. 09:50 AM CDT
Oil Fears Ethanol.. Oil Fears Americas actually having a Choice at the Pump
Well that was a rather amusing article.

The reality is E85 ethanol is the ONLY alternative fuel that gives Americans Choice at the pump.

E85 ethanol is the ONLY fuel that gives Americans the power to choose ethanol an American fuel or Gasoline made from the bloody Middle East.

The reality is Ethanol is the ONLY alternative fuel that is available TODAY that offers America protection from being held hostage to Foreign oil.

The Reality is Obama is absolutely correct..Every Vehicle should be capable of running on higher blends of ethanol..as not only for National Security reasons but as away to allow ALL Americans CHOICE at the pump.(thus creating competition to Gasoline and lowering the cost on both fuels )

The Reality is the Auto Industry can convert all their vehicles to run on the Middle East Gasoline or American Ethanol for under $150 per vehicle.

Since we the taxpayers are bailing out the Auto Industry that should be the least we get is a vehicle that can run on American fuels. Especially since the cost is minor.

Electric Vehicles, Hydrogen vehicles are still a thing of the future. And are plug in Electric vehicles really what we want ? They raise the price of your car 10-15 thousand and you get the joy of higher electric rates as hundreds of millions electric cars are plugged in.(Your Utility Company is foaming at the mouth ..ready and willing to plug you in)

Absolutely we should continue working towards other alternatives but the Reality is ethanol is already reduced our dependence on foreign oil...and has brought down the price of all fuels.

Ethanol has already taken 10% of Oils Market and Oil has no choice but to lower their prices.

Ethanol is already competing and helping all Americans despite their personal choice of fuel.

As far as Ethanol production causing food prices ot rise.. rediculas anyone that can do basica Math can clearly see.

If Ethanol were the cause of high corn food prices why corn only $4 a bushel when we make a Billion more gallons of Ethanol this year that last year when corn prices were $7 a bushels.

WE are producing a record amount of ethanol ..and the reality is corn is cheap and ethanol is cheap ...and yet food is still high ?

How is that? ..well for starters there is literally just pennies worth of corn in any food product ..

Take a product that is entirely of made of Corn.. a $3.29 1 lb box of Corn flakes for example.

A Bushel of corn weighs 56 lbs.. Corn is $4 a Bushel ! (think about that for a moment.you can buy 56 POUNDS of corn for $4 !)

Bu corn 56lbs/ $4.00 = 7 cents .thats how much the "CORN" cost in a 1lb box of corn flakes

$3.29- .07 = $3.22 7 cents worth of corn..that's the REALITY despite the propaganda being spread by the likes of Daniel Starlings Oil Companies and Food Producers.

We already have 1,399 Cities across the United States selling E85 (1,939 Stations)

Ethanol SI working and the only problem is Oil is scared to death .. and that is why you see all these scary stories about ethanol .

Oil has a Monopoly on fuel..

Ethanol is the ONLY Alternative fuel that is actually breaking up that Monopoly .. the Only Alternative fuel that is actually contributing to bringing down the cost of gasoline and fuel costs for everyone.

Ethanol has created hundreds of thousands of new American jobs in American communities and the Money stays here ! ..

We have to decide as a Country do we want to continue to be subservient to the Middle East of do we want to provide our own energy needs and i the process create jobs and security here at home or send the Jobs and security overseas.

It is real simple ..we have already demonstrated that "yes we can" ..

HR 6 Energy and National; Security act mandates 36 Billion gallons of ethanol by 2022. The Act also requires that 16 Billon be created form celluose material..to move beyond corn.

The first 2 Celluose Ethanol Plants begin Production this spring .. Coskata energy that GM is invested in can make cheap ethanol from just about anything including industrial waste and even old tires !

[i]"Using patented microorganisms and transformative bioreactor designs, Coskata ethanol is produced via a unique three-step conversion process that turns virtually any carbon-based feedstock, including biomass, municipal solid waste, bagasse and other agricultural waste into ethanol, making production a possibility in almost any geography. Coskata’s process technology is ethanol-specific and enzyme independent, requiring no additional chemicals or pre-treatments; environmentally superior, reducing carbon dioxide emissions by as much as 84% compared to conventional gasoline; and has the ability to generate 7.7 times as much energy as is required to produce the ethanol, compared to corn ethanol which generates approximately 1.3 times as much energy according to Argonne National Labs.[/i]
http://www.coskata.com/PressRelease-Launch.htm

When you see what ethanol has already provided and what is just around the corner then you begin to understand the fear that is going through Oil and why they pay people to slam ethanol and try to get you to believe it is evil...

Here is the GMA Grocer Manufactures Association actually trying to hire a Marketing firm to slam ethanol .. (they can raise food prices/profits and conviently blame ethanol )

They talk about making (for money) cozzy relationships with Newspaper Editors, about Posting on comment sections like this , about Standing outside Grocery Stroes passing out brochures telling you ethnaol is the reaosn you food prices are going up, they talk about getting on CNN and all the news media..

All the "bad bad ethnaol" stories you heard started last yera was all orchestrated and originated from this BID to slam ethanol Proposal..

http://www.growthenergy.org/foodvsfuel/GMA_Proposal.pdf



It all boils dow to Do YOU wnat a choice at the pump, do you want Oil to continue in it's Monopoly positions , do you wnat to be subservient to the Middle East , should we continue to send our troops in harms way simply to die and kill for "Oil"?
.. when we know for a fact that we can make our own fuel..enough at least to not be subservient to other countries for our energy needs.

Ethanol is a solution.. clearly it is a solution if it wasn't a solution the Oil companies wouldn't give it all the attention they do.

It is the only Alternative fuel the the Oil Propagandist attack on a daily basis ..

Ethanol is the only alternative fuel Oil fears because Ethanol is here Today already taking market-share ad cutting into Oils business and profits..

The Reality is Oil fears ethanol and is doing everything they can to stop it from spreading..

The Reality is Ethanol offers consumers choice ..and the last thing the oil Companies want is for YOU to actually have a choice at the pump..


Dan McCullough
E85Prices.com
Dan McCullough
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