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Myth: Ethanol is Great


If ethanol’s so good, why does it need government subsidies? Without subsidies, ethanol would cost much more than gasoline. The claim that using ethanol will save energy is another myth. Studies show that the amount of energy ethanol produces and the amount needed to make it are roughly the same. And because ethanol degrades, it can’t be moved in pipelines the way that gasoline can. So many more big, polluting trucks will be needed to haul it. More bad news: The increased push for ethanol has already led to a sharp increase in corn-growing, which means much more land must be plowed. That means much more fertilizer, more water used on farms and more pesticides. A University of Minnesota study shows that even turning all of America’s corn into ethanol would meet only 12 percent of our gasoline demand. Studies indicate that the standard mixture of 90 percent ethanol and 10 percent gasoline pollutes worse than gasoline. Virtually all studies show that the greenhouse gases associated with ethanol are about the same as those associated with conventional gasoline once we examine the entire life cycle of the two fuels. Surely, ethanol must be good for something. And here we finally have a fact. It is good for something – or at least someone: corn farmers and processors of ethanol, such as Archer Daniels Midland, the big food processor known for its savvy at getting subsidies out of the taxpayers. The Many Myths of Ethanol (ABC News) abcnews.go.com Ethanol And Biodiesel From Crops

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Outside editorial: On ethanol: Enough already

Outside editorial: On ethanol: Enough already
The following editorial first appeared in the Chicago Tribune:

Read more on Juneau Empire

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Plant Solar Cells On Ethanol Fields Only Once,$101 Bil Wasted Every Year,Oil Ethanol Subsidies


Plant New Cheap Solar Cells Once,On Ethanol Fields – Quit Being Patheticly Stupid , …Plant Solar Cells Once On Ethanol Fields with $101 Billion Oil Ethanol Subsidies,.. .. If all the automobiles in the United States were fueled with 100 percent ethanol, a total of about 97 percent of US land area would be needed to grow the corn feedstock. Corn would cover nearly the total land area of the United States. Suppression of Technology by an oil interest or some other faction whose control or monopolistic income over the people will be impaired by the emergence of the technology. …Everyone makes their own choices. He who endures to the end, shall have Salvation. .. Every Being is Good, Pure and (super)Natural, regardless of anything. Perhaps, a bit mis-guided (for sure, more than a bit). Redemption, or paying for your sins, is how you get to the end, and it’s all included in the ongoing Evolution, which includes, redemption, transmutation or transfiguration, and ascention, to Heaven on Earth. I,m saying, Redemption For All Who Chose It, or Eternal Damnation Until You Redeem Yourself,Starting NOW, .., that includes,.. popes, queens, presidents, prime ministers,angels devils,humans, and any other beings on earth.

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Walk For Liberty Day 126 – Federal Government Corn Subsidies and Corn Ethanol Fuels Are Both Dead Wrong For the Environment and the Economy – Gasoline Is MUCH BETTER For the Environment and the Economy Than Ethanol – Learn Why the Corn Lobby Sucks


Blog.WalkForLiberty.com C L I C K H E R E http (clickhere to subscribe to the WalkForLiberty channel) *** Video notes September 6th 2008, day 126; Yellowstone Trail; Ipswich, South Dakota; Corn; Corn subsidies; Corn fuel; Ethanol; E-85; Producing 1 gallon of gasoline takes 19% of the amount of energy which is derived by burning that gallon of gasoline; Producing 1 gallon of ethanol actually takes 29% more energy than is actually derived from it by burning it; Corn lobby; Corn farmers; Hemp; Walked 20.57 miles; Lat: 45 degrees 26′7″ N; Lon: 98 degrees 44′33″ W; Edited by Will’s brother, John at HowToTeachEnglishOnline.com ; LDL *** About the Walk For Liberty What are you willing to do for freedom? Vote? Protest? Participate in a rally? Walk all the way across the country? We are. This summer, a group of activists will be walking across America to achieve more freedom and liberty. Our pioneer forefathers trekked across the continent from the east to the west to find a better life for themselves. This time, we’re doing it in reverse. I am walking coast-to-coast across the country, from Oregon to New Hampshire. I am joined by my immediate family as well. We’re on a quest to gain more freedom for ourselves and for our country by spreading the message of freedom and liberty along the way. Why are we doing this? We see the gradual chipping away at freedoms in America, and want to do our part to stop it. My wife and I are moving to New Hampshire as part of the Free State Project

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Is Obama against drilling because he is funded by ‘Big Ethanol?’?

Mr. McCain advocates eliminating the multibillion-dollar annual government subsidies that domestic ethanol has long enjoyed. … he also opposes the 54-cent-a-gallon tariff that the United States slaps on imports of ethanol made from sugar cane, which packs more of an energy punch than corn-based ethanol and is cheaper to produce. We made a series of mistakes by not adopting a sustainable energy policy, one of which is the subsidies for corn ethanol, which I warned in Iowa were going to destroy the market” and contribute to inflation, Mr. McCain said this month in an interview with a Brazilian newspaper, O Estado de São Paulo. “Besides, it is wrong,” he added, to tax Brazilian-made sugar cane ethanol, “which is much more efficient than corn ethanol.”
Mr. Obama, in contrast, favors the subsidies, some of which end up in the hands of the same oil companies he says should be subjected to a windfall profits tax.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/25324195/

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Is biodiesel and ethanol fuel production worth losing lives?

We knew the price of beef would go up when ethanol fuel from corn began being subsidized by our tax dollars. The profits from growing corn have gone through the roof thanks to our (the tax payers) generosity or congresses stupidity!. Not only are beef prices are up (what do cows eat?) but so is milk, icecream and cheese. What will they do now, increase subsidies on milk so the politicians won’t be accused of adversely affecting childrens developement?

http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/markets/united_states/article2080599.ece

It’s getting so bad that the UN says they can’t afford to feed the starving Africans any more. Doesn’t anyone consider ALL the consequences before catering to environmental activists and big agriculture lobyists? Or did they think a few hundred-thousand Africans wouldn’t be missed.

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/7345310a-32fb-11dc-a9e8-0000779fd2ac.html

AfMiYg – You are right about ethanol being an energy loser. Plus growing corn has a big environmental impact from soil depletion and fertilizer and insecticide runoff into steams.

The “global warmers” don’t want us burning coal because it has a slightly higher carbon-to-hydrogen ratio than oil. In fact, according to Kyoto, coal is bad but ethanol is good. In fact Kyoto is OK with cutting down old-growth forests for fuel as long as you replant them with faster growing pine or fir trees.

http://archive.greenpeace.org/pressreleases/climate/2000nov9.html

BroHam – blame the uN not me. I’m just the messenger.
Z H – obesity is a cultural thing BECAUSE fat wives are a sign that their husband is a good provider. This is what you would expect in a continent where 850 million are starving.
Mark T – I know what you are saying. I have first hand knowledge of this phenomena in Nepal. When food is abundant, the people pro-create like rabbits. When the food runs out the kids are sent to orphanages subsidized by foreign charities through the UN and the World Bank. So what is the answer? Let them starve so future generations won’t? Maybe…

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Ethanol uses more imported oil than the fuel it creates. Isn’t that like 0bama paying people to put gasoline?

… in 1 gallon bottles and giving those people a government subsidy to sell it — then saying it makes us less dependent upon the Arabs?

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ETHANOL a GOOD IDEA BAD JOKE FOR ECONOMY?

http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index;_ylt=Ag6VPKM_fQkT86XRCSDY5VcjzKIX;_ylv=3?qid=20070619162210AAFQiJS

Today I heard the news that wheat prices (affecting all wheat byproducts like bread) have doubled. One of the main reason is government subsidy to corn. More wheat fields are taken over by corn farmers reducing the wheat harvest. Because more corn is converted into Ethanol, prices of corn is also 2.5X that of last years prices.

Should we call on congress to rethink this push for ethanol? Corn that is use for food and feed for livestock is being diverted to ethanol manufacturers with subsidies from taxpayers’ money!
There are so many well informed answers posted here. I hope we the people can have a voice and say ‘NO’ to this wasteful project.

Stop RAPING America. This type of crime is treason as I see it.

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Ethanol from corn will double food prices, almost every food item has some form of corn in it?

POLICYMAKERS and legislators often fail to consider the law of unintended consequences. The latest example is their attempt to reduce the United States’ dependence on imported oil by shifting a big share of the nation’s largest crop, corn, to the production of ethanol for fueling automobiles.

Good goal, bad policy. In fact, ethanol will do little to reduce the large percentage of our fuel that is imported (more than 60%), and the ethanol policy will have widespread and profound ripple effects on other markets. Corn farmers and ethanol refiners are ecstatic about the ethanol boom and are enjoying the windfall of artificially enhanced demand. But it will be an expensive and dangerous experiment for the rest of us.

On Capitol Hill, the Senate is debating legislation that would further expand corn ethanol production. A 2005 law already mandates production of 7.5 billion gallons by 2012, about 5% of the projected gasoline use at that time. These biofuel goals are propped up by a generous federal subsidy of 51 cents a gallon for blending ethanol into gasoline, and a tariff of 54 cents a gallon on most imported ethanol to help keep out cheap imports from Brazil. The proposed legislation is a prime example of throwing good money after a bad idea.

President Bush has set a target of replacing 15% of domestic gasoline use with biofuels (ethanol and biodiesel) over the next 10 years, which would require almost a fivefold increase in mandatory biofuel use, to about 35 billion gallons. With current technology, almost all of this biofuel would have to come from corn because there is no feasible alternative. However, achieving the 15% goal would require the entire current U.S. corn crop, which represents a whopping 40% of the world’s corn supply. This would do more than create mere market distortions; the irresistible pressure to divert corn from food to fuel would create unprecedented turmoil.

Thus, it is no surprise that the price of corn has doubled in the last year — from $2 to $4 a bushel. We are already seeing upward pressure on food prices as the demand for ethanol boosts the demand for corn. Until the recent ethanol boom, more than 60% of the annual U.S. corn harvest was fed domestically to cattle, hogs and chickens or used in food or beverages. Thousands of food items contain corn or corn byproducts. In Mexico, where corn is a staple food, the price of tortillas has skyrocketed because U.S. corn has been diverted to ethanol production.

And any sort of shock to corn yields, such as drought, unseasonably hot weather, pests or disease could send food prices into the stratosphere. Such concerns are more than theoretical. In 1970, a widespread outbreak of a fungus called southern corn leaf blight destroyed 15% of the U.S. corn crop.

Politicians like to say that ethanol is environmentally friendly, but these claims must be put into perspective. Although corn is a renewable resource, it has a far lower yield relative to the energy used to produce it than either biodiesel (such as soybean oil) or ethanol from other plants. Moreover, ethanol yields about 30% less energy per gallon than gasoline, so mileage drops off significantly. Finally, adding ethanol raises the price of blended fuel because it is more expensive to transport and handle.

Lower-cost biomass ethanol — for example, from rice straw (a byproduct of harvesting rice) or switchgrass — would make far more economic sense, but large volumes of ethanol from biomass will not be commercially viable for many years. (And production will be delayed by government policies that specifically encourage corn-based ethanol by employing subsidies.)

American legislators and policymakers seem oblivious to the scientific and economic realities of ethanol production. Brazil and other major sugar cane-producing nations enjoy significant advantages over the U.S. in producing ethanol, including ample agricultural land, warm climates amenable to vast plantations and on-site distilleries that can process cane immediately after harvest.

Thus, in the absence of cost-effective, domestically available sources for producing ethanol, rather than using corn, it would make far more sense to import ethanol from Brazil and other countries that can produce it efficiently — and also to remove the 54-cents-per-gallon tariff on Brazilian ethanol imports.

Our politicians may be drunk with the prospect of corn-derived ethanol, but if we don’t adopt policies based on science and sound economics, it is consumers around the world who will suffer the hangover.
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The Auto Channel Fights for the Truth about Ethanol Versus Gasoline – VIDEO ENHANCED

The Auto Channel Fights for the Truth about Ethanol Versus Gasoline – VIDEO ENHANCED
A couple of months ago Bob Gordon and I posted some stories and a RoadTrip video we produced about ethanol.

Read more on The Auto Channel

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