View Full Version : With Food Costs Rising, Lawmakers Debate the Benefits of Ethanol
Pale Rider
05-07-2008, 07:41 AM
With Food Costs Rising, Lawmakers Debate the Benefits of Ethanol
Tuesday, May 06, 2008
WASHINGTON — Just months ago, ethanol was the Holy Grail to energy independence and a "green fuel" that would help nudge the country away from climate changing fossil energy.
Democrats and Republicans cheered its benefits as Congress directed a fivefold increase in ethanol use as a motor fuel. President Bush called it key to his strategy to cut gasoline use by 20 percent by 2010.
But now with skyrocketing food costs -- even U.S. senators are complaining about seeing shocking prices at the supermarket -- and hunger spreading across the globe, some lawmakers are wondering if they made a mistake.
"Our enthusiasm for corn ethanol deserves a second look. That's all I'm saying, a second look," said Rep. Jane Harman, D-Calif., at a House hearing Tuesday where the impact of ethanol on soaring food costs was given a wide airing.
The dramatic reversal has stunned ethanol producers and its supporters in Washington as they have seen their product shift from being an object of praise to one of derision.
Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, one of the Senate's two working farmers and a longtime ethanol booster, said he finds it hard to believe that ethanol could be "clobbered the way it's being clobbered right now" over the issue of food costs. What does the cost of corn have to do with the price of wheat or rice, he is telling people.
The uproar over ethanol is clearly gaining momentum.
The governor of Texas and 26 senators, including the GOP's presumptive presidential nominee John McCain, are asking the Environmental Protection Agency to cut this year's requirement for 9 billion gallons of corn ethanol in half to ease, they say, food costs. Connecticut's governor recently asked Congress to temporary waive the requirement.
Article continues here... (http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,354350,00.html)
avatar4321
05-07-2008, 11:27 AM
stupid people. what's to debate? It sucks. If they could make ethanol without affecting the food supply then maybe it wouldnt be so bad but they cant turn so much of the food supply into energy and not expect bad circumstances.
Pale Rider
05-07-2008, 12:33 PM
stupid people. what's to debate? It sucks. If they could make ethanol without affecting the food supply then maybe it wouldnt be so bad but they cant turn so much of the food supply into energy and not expect bad circumstances.
I know this, you know this... why is it always so freaking hard for Washington to get it?
avatar4321
05-07-2008, 04:10 PM
I know this, you know this... why is it always so freaking hard for Washington to get it?
i dont think its that they dont get it. I think they just have other priorities... IE $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
Hagbard Celine
05-07-2008, 04:32 PM
Silly rabbit. Ethanol can be made from anything fermentable. Grass, sugar, corn, leaves. Pretty much anything green. What's there to debate? Brazil is already leading the world in production of this stuff and they don't make it from corn.
MtnBiker
05-07-2008, 06:05 PM
Silly rabbit. Ethanol can be made from anything fermentable. Grass, sugar, corn, leaves. Pretty much anything green. What's there to debate? Brazil is already leading the world in production of this stuff and they don't make it from corn.
Brazil is using sugar cane to make their ethanol. It is not just about the plant material. Considerations also need to be made in the resources needed to make ethanol, the land, the water, the harvesting requirements and what are the oppurtunity costs to the food supply when such resources are used to make fuel rather than food. Also consider how much engery it takes to make energy, corn and sugar cane ethanol require heating to start the fermentation process, so it takes energy to make energy. Enzyme based ethanol, such as grass may be more feasible. So yes, there is plenty to debate, nothing silly about it.
PostmodernProphet
05-07-2008, 06:17 PM
so it takes energy to make energy
you don't think it takes energy to refine oil?....besides, the real benefit of biofuels is that we aren't shipping our money to Venezuela or Saudi Arabia to fuel our cars......
avatar4321
05-07-2008, 06:23 PM
you don't think it takes energy to refine oil?....besides, the real benefit of biofuels is that we aren't shipping our money to Venezuela or Saudi Arabia to fuel our cars......
no we are just starving people.
actsnoblemartin
05-07-2008, 07:06 PM
and the world.
according to the I.M.F.
no we are just starving people.
glockmail
05-07-2008, 07:15 PM
you don't think it takes energy to refine oil?....besides, the real benefit of biofuels is that we aren't shipping our money to Venezuela or Saudi Arabia to fuel our cars...... It takes about 4 gallons of ethanol to make 5 gallons of ethanol. The efficiency with crude oil to fuel products is much, much higher.
PostmodernProphet
05-07-2008, 07:16 PM
no we are just starving people.
are you taking the position then that farmers should be forced to go back to the days when they were earning $1.97 a bushel for corn so that the poor of the world should be allowed to eat?....do you realize that until ethanol came around, the farmers WERE the poor of the world, trying to make a living in 2004 on the same price per bushel that they received in 1979?....and surviving only with federal subsidies?.......if you want to feed the poor, shell out a twenty and buy three or four bushels of corn for them, don't expect the farmers to foot the bill for you......
PostmodernProphet
05-07-2008, 07:19 PM
It takes about 4 gallons of ethanol to make 5 gallons of ethanol. The efficiency with crude oil to fuel products is much, much higher.
so what....you take a barrel of oil out of the ground and burn it, it is gone forever.....you grow a couple hundred bushels of corn or a few acres of switch grass and turn it into ethanol and you do it again next year.....besides, bio-fuels will create tens of thousands of jobs in the US building and running refineries, etc.....
MtnBiker
05-07-2008, 07:21 PM
you don't think it takes energy to refine oil?....
Where exactly did I make any reference to oil production?
glockmail
05-07-2008, 07:28 PM
so what....you take a barrel of oil out of the ground and burn it, it is gone forever.....you grow a couple hundred bushels of corn or a few acres of switch grass and turn it into ethanol and you do it again next year.....besides, bio-fuels will create tens of thousands of jobs in the US building and running refineries, etc.....
I'm not against them, I just don't think that they should be subsidized or mandated. Let the market decide what fuel is best and most efficient, whatever. I am also not against using taxes and tarrifs on each product to reflect its true cost. For instance, high tarrifs on OPEC oil to pay for all the shit we have to do in the Middle East, like fighting wars and protecting Israel from former camel jokeys who can now affford Russian weaponry.
MtnBiker
05-07-2008, 07:29 PM
bio-fuels will create tens of thousands of jobs in the US building and running refineries, etc.....
That same logic could be applied to oil refineries as well.
MtnBiker
05-07-2008, 07:30 PM
I'm not against them, I just don't think that they should be subsidized or mandated. Let the market decide what fuel is best and most efficient, whatever.
Right-o!
Kathianne
05-07-2008, 07:49 PM
no we are just starving people.
Yep, that's the bottom line. I for one, really am surprised it's the Republicans carrying this water. Where are the Democrats, that care so much for 'the world?' Umm, I guess their mantra as Goldberg has pointed out so well, it's all about the 'process' not the 'product.' It's what really does consign them to fascists.
PostmodernProphet
05-07-2008, 08:56 PM
I'm not against them, I just don't think that they should be subsidized or mandated. Let the market decide what fuel is best and most efficient, whatever. I am also not against using taxes and tarrifs on each product to reflect its true cost. For instance, high tarrifs on OPEC oil to pay for all the shit we have to do in the Middle East, like fighting wars and protecting Israel from former camel jokeys who can now affford Russian weaponry.
the problem with letting the market control the result in this situation is that it takes too long to make the transition, which results in things like food shortages....it should have been a triggered and controlled transition....then we would have avoided some of these problems....
PostmodernProphet
05-07-2008, 08:57 PM
That same logic could be applied to oil refineries as well.
which leaves us dependent on oil imports in both the short and long run....
Kathianne
05-07-2008, 09:18 PM
the problem with letting the market control the result in this situation is that it takes too long to make the transition, which results in things like food shortages....it should have been a triggered and controlled transition....then we would have avoided some of these problems....
As the Romans found out, the dictator is very efficient, except where they have an agenda...
PostmodernProphet
05-07-2008, 10:20 PM
Refineries weren't built in a day.....
MtnBiker
05-08-2008, 12:25 AM
which leaves us dependent on oil imports in both the short and long run....
Corn will not change that.
We (the U.S.) consume about 388,600,000 gallons of gasoline per day. http://www.eia.doe.gov/neic/quickfacts/quickoil.html
Total U.S. corn supplies are projected to be a record 14.6 billion bushels. http://www.agriview.com/articles/2007/10/18/crop_news/crops01.txt
One bushel of corn will yield about 2.75 gallons of ethanol, from the dry mill method. http://www.usda.gov/oce/EthanolSugarFeasibilityReport3.pdf
So if we used all of our nation's 2008 corn supply of 14,600,000,000 bushels, it would yeild about 40,150,000,000 gallons of ethanol. If we assume that miles per gallon are the same for gasoline and ethanol at a rate of 388,600,000 gallons of use per day, we would have about a 103 days worth of fuel.
avatar4321
05-08-2008, 12:52 AM
the problem with letting the market control the result in this situation is that it takes too long to make the transition, which results in things like food shortages....it should have been a triggered and controlled transition....then we would have avoided some of these problems....
I dont know. I would suspect that if we eliminated the subsides and investments in ethonal then we would see the market correct itself overnight.
avatar4321
05-08-2008, 12:55 AM
Refineries weren't built in a day.....
Maybe not. But just the prospect of more refineries in the future would have the speculators dropping the price in oil. If we eliminated all non-vital regulation (which is probably all of it) that stands in the way of building refineries and created incentives to build more i think we would see the prices drop fast enough. Allowing drilling will help too.
glockmail
05-08-2008, 05:40 AM
the problem with letting the market control the result in this situation is that it takes too long to make the transition, which results in things like food shortages....it should have been a triggered and controlled transition....then we would have avoided some of these problems....
I agree. Free market goals should be set then worked in gradually, say over three years.
glockmail
05-08-2008, 05:52 AM
.....If we assume that miles per gallon are the same for gasoline and ethanol at a rate of 388,600,000 gallons of use per day, we would have about a 103 days worth of fuel. It takes about 1.5 gallons of ethanol to equal the energy content of gasoline, so that figure goes to 69 days.
I'm not sure how the energy balance works out with respect to the fact that it takes the energy equivalent of 4 gallons of ethanol to make 5 gallons of ethanol, or if it is considered in your calculations.
PostmodernProphet
05-08-2008, 06:14 AM
Corn will not change that.
We (the U.S.) consume about 388,600,000 gallons of gasoline per day. http://www.eia.doe.gov/neic/quickfacts/quickoil.html
Total U.S. corn supplies are projected to be a record 14.6 billion bushels. http://www.agriview.com/articles/2007/10/18/crop_news/crops01.txt
One bushel of corn will yield about 2.75 gallons of ethanol, from the dry mill method. http://www.usda.gov/oce/EthanolSugarFeasibilityReport3.pdf
So if we used all of our nation's 2008 corn supply of 14,600,000,000 bushels, it would yeild about 40,150,000,000 gallons of ethanol. If we assume that miles per gallon are the same for gasoline and ethanol at a rate of 388,600,000 gallons of use per day, we would have about a 103 days worth of fuel.
first of all, I assume you realize that "ethanol" does not equal "corn"....the goal of biofuels is to turn what we have in surplus into fuel.....when the process began in the US, corn was what we had in surplus.....obviously, the demand for biofuels changed that quickly......you can make ethanol out of the residue that remains when you squeeze the juice out of an orange....you can make ethanol out of the peelings that are left when you make potato chips....you can make ethanol out of the grass clippings you bag when you mow your lawn.....
second, to eliminate our dependence on foreign oil you don't need to replace 100% of our oil consumption, you need to replace the percentage of it that you import......
Pale Rider
05-09-2008, 10:44 AM
There's much to debate about corn or oil for energy, but the bottom line to consumers is, "is it going to cost me more at the grocery store if they use all this corn than it would at the pump if they don't?"
THAT is the question.
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