Categorized | Environment

Don’t Believe the Ethanol Hype

We happy few here at Open Market have really been in tune with the rock journalists of America recently. First Kurt Loder trashes Michael Moore’s Sicko, and now Rolling Stone blows the whistle on the ethanol scam:

As the king of ethanol hype, Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa, put it recently, “Everything about ethanol is good, good, good.”

This is not just hype — it’s dangerous, delusional bullshit. Ethanol doesn’t burn cleaner than gasoline, nor is it cheaper. Our current ethanol production represents only 3.5 percent of our gasoline consumption — yet it consumes twenty percent of the entire U.S. corn crop, causing the price of corn to double in the last two years and raising the threat of hunger in the Third World. And the increasing acreage devoted to corn for ethanol means less land for other staple crops, giving farmers in South America an incentive to carve fields out of tropical forests that help to cool the planet and stave off global warming.

So why bother? Because the whole point of corn ethanol is not to solve America’s energy crisis, but to generate one of the great political boondoggles of our time. Corn is already the most subsidized crop in America, raking in a total of $51 billion in federal handouts between 1995 and 2005 — twice as much as wheat subsidies and four times as much as soybeans. Ethanol itself is propped up by hefty subsidies, including a fifty-one-cent-per-gallon tax allowance for refiners. And a study by the International Institute for Sustainable Development found that ethanol subsidies amount to as much as $1.38 per gallon — about half of ethanol’s wholesale market price.

More news and analysis on the topic is available at the Facts About Ethanol site.



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Comments

  1. Stan Cotton says:

    How about a Cane Mutiny to take on the agri-biz propaganda mill.

    The back room boys want you to believe billions in tax-payer subsidies is achieving energy independence, It’s not. The fixers want you to believe that a 54 cents a gallon tax on imported sugar cane ethanol is helping farmers. How’s that helping farmers? They sell all the ethanol they can make now, and it’s not enough and they pocket a 51 cents per gallon subsidy to boot. All that ethanol tariff does is stop motorists from buying cheap, renewable ethanol from our best friends.

    If it was just greed, that’s one thing. Keeping an affordable, clean renewable energy source like cane ethanol out of consumers’ gas tanks is unpatriotic.

  2. Well said, Stan. And here is a link to the study mentioned in the Rolling Stone article. The GSI is a program under the IISD, by the way:

    http://www.globalsubsidies.org/

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