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| The Ethanol Fiasco | | Print | |
| Written by Bob Confer | |||||||||
| Monday, 04 January 2010 00:02 | |||||||||
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He made this belief a key component of his platform while running for the office of President and his campaign website — which since the November 2008 election has been slightly modified to serve as advertising piece for his presidency — says: President Obama has a comprehensive plan to chart a new energy future by embracing alternative and renewable energy, ending our addiction to foreign oil, addressing the global climate crisis and creating millions of new jobs that can’t be shipped overseas. This far-fetched idea, that the economic impact will be significant enough to employ millions, is a recurring theme of his speeches regarding his plans for taking us out of the Great Recession, of which green energy consistently ranks among his top three initiatives. Similarly, the supposed positive domino effect of Green Economics was a key part of the Bush administration’s and its Democratic Congress’s combined efforts to relentlessly promote and subsidize ethanol. Rather than increasing the employment rolls, those efforts increased consumer prices and accounted for vast transfers of wealth, something that should be a lesson to learn from for the current President. Trackback(0)
Comments (3)
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Dan McCullough
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Nonsense Utter Nonsense ..there is literally "pennies" worth of corn in any product that uses corn. Lets do the real math. Corn is at $4 for a bushel..that is 56lbs of corn for $4. Expensive? blubbering nonsense. We should be embarrassed at paying $4 for 56lbs of corn. At the retail level .. Cost of Corn in 1 lb of Corn Flakes... Bushel of Corn weighs 56lbs. 1 Bushel of Corn @ $4.10 $4.10 / 56 = 7 cents 7 Cents worth of corn goes into a 1-lb box of corn flakes. That's 8 bowls of cereal for 7 cents . That's a pure simple fact that anyone that can do a little basic math understands. The REAL costs of food is transportation , storage, processing , energy for cooling , heating cooking and wages up and down the line and of course profits up and down the line. That is where 95% + cost of "our" food costs are. Corn (any grain) represents a very very small fraction of the cost of our food. Dan McCullough E85Prices.com |
Dan McCullough
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... Ethanol Industry now employs a million Americans in communities across the United States. It has reduced our need for 10 billion gallons of imported Gasoline that we subsidize in the Middle East with our troops blood as well as hundreds of billions of dollars(every year). The more ethanol we produce and use ,the more Americans jobs that are created and the less dependent on foreign oil we become. That is simply a fact that can be twisted all day long but at the end of the day it remains a fact . As far as corn ethanol, it is a mute point anyway as BY LAW we can only produce 15 billion gallons of corn ethanol a year. (of the 36 billion gallons a year mandated by the Energy and Security Act of 2007 http://frwebgate.access.gpo.go...40.110.pdf Since we already produce 11 Billion gallons of corn ethanol the transition to cellulosic ethanol has begun. Verenium is making ethanol out of woodchips , and even trash at their Jennings , Louisiana Plant http://gas2.org/2009/01/09/fir...d-running/ Coskata has started making ethanol out of woodchips , industrial garbage and even old tires ! At the their demonstration Plant in Madison , Pa and already has Licensing partners lined up. Algenol will be ready to start this year .. Thye say.. The Algenol ADVANTAGES are many. The DIRECT TO ETHANOL™ process uses both a proprietary algae and proprietary collection methods to produce cost effective ethanol that: 1.Does NOT require food based feedstocks like corn or sugarcane. 2.Does NOT require harvesting. 3.Does NOT require fossil fuel based fertilizers. 4.Does NOT require fresh water. 5.Does NOT require large amounts of fossil fuel. 6.Does NOT require arable land. 7.Does use desert land and marginal land. 8.Does make fresh water from seawater during the process. 9.Does have an energy balance over 5.5:1 (energy output : fossil fuel input). |
Dan McCullough
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... Ethanol is creating direct competition to Oil and keeping fuel prices lower for everyone .. http://www.card.iastate.edu/pu...8wp467.pdf Using pooled regional time-series data and panel data estimation, we quantify the impact of monthly ethanol production on monthly retail regular gasoline prices. This analysis suggests that the growth in ethanol production has caused retail gasoline prices to be $0.29 to $0.40 per gallon lower than would otherwise have been the case. The analysis shows that the negative impact of ethanol on gasoline prices varies considerably across regions. The Midwest region has the biggest impact, at $0.39/gallon, while the Rocky Mountain region had the smallest impact, at $0.17/gallon. The results also indicate that ethanol production has significantly reduced the profit margin of the oil refinery industry. The results are robust with respect to alternative model specifications. So enough of the nonsense slamming ethanol. How about an article as to why we are (subsidizing oil) sending our kids to kill and be killed for Oil ? Or an Article on the fact that our National Security is as stake because we import 68% of the Oil we need. We don't need anymore "New Americans" we need Real Americans that support American Industry instead of OPEC. Dan McCullough E85Prices.com |
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Since his days as a U.S. Senator, Barack Obama has trumpeted renewable energy as the catalyst for the future growth of America’s economy. He believes to this day that investments in wind, solar, and ethanol energy will excite the marketplace and put Americans back to work.