The Politics of Corn

idiotekniQues

Platinum Member
Jan 4, 2007
2,572
0
71
"Exposing the Corn-Based Ethanol Hoax as a Solution to Peak Oil
Corn lobby's tall tale of a gas substitute
The Christian Science Monitor
Straight to the Source

America is swooning over ethanol, the renewable fuel which, in the US, is derived from corn. President Bush predicts ethanol will replace gasoline. Congress has mandated nearly doubling its production. But so far, ethanol is more politics than promise.

Over the next five years, $5.7 billion in federal tax credits will support the ethanol market - a boon to Midwest corn growers who are certainly no hayseeds when it comes to lobbying members of Congress.

But just what do US taxpayers get in return for these silo-sized subsidies? A renewable biofuel that reduces greenhouse-gas emissions, yes, and a safe substitute for dangerous gasoline additives. Overall, though, the net energy gain from corn-based ethanol is modest, and there are serious issues to consider in making it widely available at America's gas stations. Currently, it accounts for just 3 percent of the nation's fuel.

Supporters of corn-based ethanol promote it as one way to cure America's fossil-fuel addiction. That's an exaggeration as high as an elephant's eye. The libertarian Cato Institute says it takes the equivalent of seven barrels of oil to produce eight barrels of corn-derived ethanol. Argonne National Laboratory, which studies ethanol for the Department of Energy, is more generous: for each unit of energy to grow, process, and transport corn ethanol, it yields 1.35 units of energy.

True, this high-octane fuel gives engines a kick, but it gets significantly lower miles per gallon, necessitating more frequent fill-ups. Ethanol's also more expensive than gasoline, and, as a blend, contributes to its high price.

Other downsides: Corn ethanol does reduce atmosphere-warming carbon emissions, but environmental organizations such as the Sierra Club say it actually is worse than gasoline in making smog. Meanwhile, builders of the nearly 200 ethanol manufacturing facilities under construction or planned are being tempted to power their facilities with coal. That's because it's less expensive than their current choice, natural gas. Coal power would wipe out or reduce the greenhouse gains of ethanol.

However, there is a better way. Fly on down to Rio for a look at the world's leader in sugar-cane ethanol. Brazil's widely consumed ethanol is almost eight times more fossil energy efficient to produce than the US corn-based stuff. Its ethanol manufacturing is powered not by fossil fuels, but by cane-stalk residue. The downside is huge acreage demand (no small consideration if the US greatly ramps up production).

The sugar cane that grows so easily in the tropics may not be America's answer, but common agriculture and forestry products that contain highly energy-efficient cellulose could be. Prairie switch grass touted by President Bush is just one of many possibilities, although years away.

Yet the US continues to focus almost exclusively on domestic corn ethanol, for instance shutting out imports through high tariffs. This keeps US ethanol prices high and protects the industry from competition with more energy efficient varieties. Arizona Republican Congressman John Shadegg is rightly bucking the US ethanol lobby by proposing a temporary suspension of these tariffs.

Ethanol holds promise for the US, but not unless corn-based political distortions are distilled out of it."

http://www.organicconsumers.org/articles/article_461.cfm
 

dmcowen674

No Lifer
Oct 13, 1999
54,894
47
91
www.alienbabeltech.com
Originally posted by: idiotekniQues
"Exposing the Corn-Based Ethanol Hoax as a Solution to Peak Oil
Corn lobby's tall tale of a gas substitute
The Christian Science Monitor
Straight to the Source

America is swooning over ethanol, the renewable fuel which, in the US, is derived from corn. President Bush predicts ethanol will replace gasoline. Congress has mandated nearly doubling its production. But so far, ethanol is more politics than promise.

Over the next five years, $5.7 billion in federal tax credits will support the ethanol market - a boon to Midwest corn growers who are certainly no hayseeds when it comes to lobbying members of Congress.

But just what do US taxpayers get in return for these silo-sized subsidies? A renewable biofuel that reduces greenhouse-gas emissions, yes, and a safe substitute for dangerous gasoline additives. Overall, though, the net energy gain from corn-based ethanol is modest, and there are serious issues to consider in making it widely available at America's gas stations. Currently, it accounts for just 3 percent of the nation's fuel.

Supporters of corn-based ethanol promote it as one way to cure America's fossil-fuel addiction. That's an exaggeration as high as an elephant's eye. The libertarian Cato Institute says it takes the equivalent of seven barrels of oil to produce eight barrels of corn-derived ethanol. Argonne National Laboratory, which studies ethanol for the Department of Energy, is more generous: for each unit of energy to grow, process, and transport corn ethanol, it yields 1.35 units of energy.

True, this high-octane fuel gives engines a kick, but it gets significantly lower miles per gallon, necessitating more frequent fill-ups. Ethanol's also more expensive than gasoline, and, as a blend, contributes to its high price.

Other downsides: Corn ethanol does reduce atmosphere-warming carbon emissions, but environmental organizations such as the Sierra Club say it actually is worse than gasoline in making smog. Meanwhile, builders of the nearly 200 ethanol manufacturing facilities under construction or planned are being tempted to power their facilities with coal. That's because it's less expensive than their current choice, natural gas. Coal power would wipe out or reduce the greenhouse gains of ethanol.

However, there is a better way. Fly on down to Rio for a look at the world's leader in sugar-cane ethanol. Brazil's widely consumed ethanol is almost eight times more fossil energy efficient to produce than the US corn-based stuff. Its ethanol manufacturing is powered not by fossil fuels, but by cane-stalk residue. The downside is huge acreage demand (no small consideration if the US greatly ramps up production).

The sugar cane that grows so easily in the tropics may not be America's answer, but common agriculture and forestry products that contain highly energy-efficient cellulose could be. Prairie switch grass touted by President Bush is just one of many possibilities, although years away.

Yet the US continues to focus almost exclusively on domestic corn ethanol, for instance shutting out imports through high tariffs. This keeps US ethanol prices high and protects the industry from competition with more energy efficient varieties. Arizona Republican Congressman John Shadegg is rightly bucking the US ethanol lobby by proposing a temporary suspension of these tariffs.

Ethanol holds promise for the US, but not unless corn-based political distortions are distilled out of it."

http://www.organicconsumers.org/articles/article_461.cfm

It's the Christian Science Monitors heroes that put this $5.7 billion in subsidies in place.

I'm sure they are getting kickbacks themselves out of it.
 

techs

Lifer
Sep 26, 2000
28,561
4
0
The big corn producers see fortunes being made on "shortages" of gasoline, fortunes on monoplies like cable t.v., fortunes on credit card abuses, and they just want their unfair share of the Republican agenda.
 

Corn

Diamond Member
Nov 12, 1999
6,389
29
91
Without a doubt, Corn is power.....but then ATP&N already knew that. Other than that, ethanol sucks. Eat more peas--they look better in your poop than I do.
 

ProfJohn

Lifer
Jul 28, 2006
18,251
8
0
Speaking of corn? anyone remember when they were on South Park?

BTW the future is most likely cars than can be charged by plugging into your house combined with nuclear and wind/solar power.
 

miketheidiot

Lifer
Sep 3, 2004
11,062
1
0
why don't we make ethanol from sugar cane if its so much better? A rumor i heard once is that it's illegal to make ethanol from anything other than corn. I dunno though.
 

smashp

Platinum Member
Aug 30, 2003
2,443
0
0
Ive talked to my neighbor who is a business manager for a pretty large Grain and Feed place here in ohio. they are also the largest collective in the area so he deals with alot of Farmerers.

He thinks this ethanol is awful. The Corn farmers now think their sitting on a gold mine as the price of corn is driven through the roof, But its the Dairy, Beef and Chicken farms that are really taking the Hit, and getting hit real hard. He mentioned to me that one of the Leading agg companies that has been there in the past to help farmers out with fertilizer,seeds, and other items( I forget there name) Is now on the other end and one of the biggest players in the ethanol market. He felt it was Crap because they are hurting their original customer base by chasing short term government subsidies and handouts to boost the bottom line
 

imported_Shivetya

Platinum Member
Jul 7, 2005
2,978
1
0
Originally posted by: Corn
Without a doubt, Corn is power.....but then ATP&N already knew that. Other than that, ethanol sucks. Eat more peas--they look better in your poop than I do.

such a quote was more intelligent than the typical inane partisan rantings of dmcowen and techs, who never contribute anything to a discussions of value.