Guest post by Steve Goreham
Originally published in The Washington Times.
Last week, Bob Goodlatte (R-Va.) and other lawmakers introduced legislation in the House of Representatives calling for major changes in the Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS). The RFS is the reason why most US automobile fuel contains ten percent ethanol. The bill would eliminate the current mandate to blend 15 billion gallons of corn ethanol into fuel by 2022 and ban ethanol fuel content over ten percent. But are ethanol mandates good public policy?
For decades, ethanol vehicle fuel was touted first as a solution to reduce oil imports and second as a solution for global warming. The Energy Tax Act of 1978 established the US “gasohol” industry, providing a subsidy of 40 cents per gallon for ethanol blended with gasoline. President George W. Bush promoted biofuels to reduce dependence on foreign oil, stating, “I set a goal to replace oil from around the world. The best way and the fastest way to do so is to expand the use of ethanol.” Last year the Environmental Protection Agency promoted E15, a fifteen percent ethanol blend for cars and trucks, announcing, “Increased use of renewable fuels in the United States can reduce dependence upon foreign sources of crude oil and foster development of domestic energy sources, while at the same time providing important reductions in greenhouse gas emissions that contribute to climate change.” But it appears that these two reasons for promoting ethanol vehicle fuel have disappeared.
First, US dependence on oil imports is greatly reduced. Net imports of crude oil peaked in 2005, providing 60 percent of US consumption. In 2012, just six years later, oil imports dropped to 40 percent of consumption and continue to fall. Imports from the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries declined from half of US imports in 1993 to 40 percent of imports 2012. Canada is now the largest single-nation supplier of crude to the US, rising from 14 percent in 1993 to 28 percent today. Construction of the Keystone pipeline would switch additional imports from OPEC to Canada.
At the same time, US oil production is ramping due to the hydrofracturing revolution. Oil production from shale fields in North Dakota and Texas led to a boost in US oil production by 30 percent since 2006. Industry experts predict almost all US petroleum will come from domestic and Canadian sources by 2030. There’s no longer a need to force ethanol use to reduce oil imports.
Second, recent studies show that the use of ethanol and biodiesel does not reduce greenhouse gas emissions. For many years, proponents of decarbonization assumed that the burning of biofuels would be “carbon neutral.” The carbon neutral concept assumes that as plants grow they absorb carbon dioxide equal to the amount released when burned. If true, the substitution of ethanol for gasoline would reduce emissions.
But a 2011 opinion from the Science Committee of the European Environment Agency pointed out what it called a “serious accounting error.” The carbon neutral concept does not consider vegetation that would naturally grow on land used for biofuel production. Since biofuels are less efficient than gasoline or diesel fuel, they actually emit more CO2 per mile driven than hydrocarbon fuels, when proper accounting is used for carbon sequestered in natural vegetation. Further, a 2011 study for the National Academy of Sciences found that, “…production of ethanol as fuel to displace gasoline is likely to increase such air pollutants as particulate matter, ozone, and sulfur oxides.”
Ethanol fuel is no bargain. For example, when gasoline is priced at $3.40 per gallon, the 85 percent ethanol blend (E85) is priced at about $3.00 per gallon. But since the energy content of ethanol is only 66 percent that of gasoline, a tank of E85 gets only about 71 percent of the mileage of a tank of pure gasoline. E85 fuel should be priced at $2.41 per gallon for the driver to break even. According to the US Department of Agriculture, ethanol fuel remains about 25 percent more expensive than gasoline.
World biofuel production has increased by a factor of seven over the last ten years. Corn and soybean prices have doubled over the same period. (US Dept. of Energy, Food and Policy Research Institute, 2011)
Mandates for ethanol vehicle fuel are also boosting food prices. Forty percent of the US corn crop is diverted to produce about ten percent of US vehicle fuel. Global corn and soybean prices have doubled over the last ten years in concert with the growth in ethanol and biodiesel production. Anyone who drives a car or eats food is paying higher prices due to ethanol mandates.
But isn’t ethanol fuel sustainable? Not in terms of water consumption. Studies by the Argonne National Laboratory and the Netherlands University of Twente found that ethanol production consumes twice to dozens of times more water than gasoline produced from petroleum, even from Canadian oil sands.
Gallons of water consumed per gallon of fuel produced for gasoline, ethanol, and biodiesel from various sources, including irrigation and fuel production, but not including precipitation. Variations in water consumption for three US regions and global averages for ethanol and biodiesel are primarily due to amount of irrigation used and agricultural yield. (Argonne National Laboratory, 2009; University of Twente, 2009)
Suppose we return to using corn for food and gasoline to power our vehicles?
Steve Goreham is Executive Director of the Climate Science Coalition of America and author of the new book The Mad, Mad, Mad World of Climatism: Mankind and Climate Change Mania.
A. Scott:
As a courtesy, I am writing to inform that I did read your response to me at April 17, 2013 at 6:17 am.
I do not get involved in political debates of countries other than my own (i.e. the UK). And I was only pointing out the economic fact that the mandate is a subsidy. People are entitled to their opinions based on facts, but basic facts need to be understood.
Richard
“Is it time to end ethanol vehicle fuel mandates?”
To answer this question it is necessary to understand the full history behind the mandates.
The original purpose of the mandates from the vehicle side (recognizing but not at this time addressing the farm subsidy aspect) was to reduce the emission of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) which tend to be very toxic. Ethanol as a fuel additive is very good at achieving this and is safer than nearly all other alternatives.
Later the amounts of ethanol required were increased beyond what is needed for VOC control. The stated purpose of this at the time was reducing dependence on foreign oil, but looking at who was pushing for it, the real purpose was likely strictly to increase the farm subsidy aspect.
Those who tout ethanol as cleaner burning forget ethanol reduces a vehicle’s gas mileage, effectively reducing any positive effects adding ethanol supposedly provides. Corn should be grown for human and animal consumption, not fuel. Period!
The Ethenol mandate is simply a subsidy to Archer Daniels Midland, probably the worst corporate wellfare queen in the country.
MattN says:
April 17, 2013 at 4:03 am
“Have you seriously looked at this in detail from an engineering practicality standpoint? How big a tank would be needed for the CH4? How the required tank would *subtract* from usable internal ‘carry’/transport space? The gas pressures involved? The *demand* placed on fixed the nat gas delivery (infrastructure) system?
Any of that?”
Nope. I’m just an idea guy. 10 years ago, I read an article in Car and Driver where they tested a dual-fueled Volvo exactly like I described. The problem was NG fueling stations were few and far between and when you DID find one it took forever to fill up, so you were always running on regular gas. But if we could do it at night in our garage, like some do for their EVs…
2 generations ago we launched men into space using equipment with vacuum tubes. You really think we can’t do this??
——————————————————————
Hi, MattN,
look here: http://skycng.com/homefillingstation.php
There are lots of CNG-capable cars availlable on the european marked, already. Some cars may be retro-fitted with CNG-fuel systems, too, but there are a host of cars availlable straight from the manufacturer equipped with CNG-fuel-systems, also.
http://www.afdc.energy.gov/vehicles/natural_gas_availability.html
On a side-note: Did you know that IRAN is the biggest market for CNG-fuelled cars in the world today?
http://energyoutlook.blogspot.de/2013/03/natural-gas-vehicles-already-big-in.html
http://www.autoblog.com/2013/01/11/iran-invests-heavily-in-natural-gas-cars/
It looks like the USA is sanctioning Iran into prosperity, at last…
Enjoy!
Ian W – if ethanol use is the reason for corn price increases then why did the price of most all other commodities increase as well. Corn, soybeans, wheat, cotton and others.
As to your statements on corn – I suggest research – start with the USDA Filed Grain Yearbook, and educate yourself on US corn use and exports.
The US imported 765,000 metric tonnes of corn in 2011/ 2012. We exported 38,430,000 metric tonnes.
From 2005 to 2011 we provided 51.4% of the worldwide corn imports to other country’s. Despite ramping up corn use for ethanol.
The tiny amount of corn we important is a fraction of the large amount of corn we export as the world largest single supplier of corn to the world. Until 2010/11 we were a larger than the combined group of other primary corn exporting regions including; Argentina, Ukraine, Brazil, India and the EU.
Sorry – but there is little relevance to the US importing a tiny fraction of the amount we export.
One of the most dastardly things about the ethanol mandate is the slow strangulation of livestock growers and food processors in the food chain to households. There is a farm sector and manufacturing sector being harmed here without a lot of attention. What would normally be considered a stable part of the economy is being destabilized by govt. policy. Add this to list of reforms that don’t happen until there is another crisis.
The ethanol subsidy that corn farmers get has skewed the numbers of other crops planted. Many farmers stopped growing other crops because they know they are going to get an artificial price for corn.
So the price of other food crops have gone up too because there is less available. So people get less mpg with E10 so have to spend more on fuel, pay more for products made from corn and also pay more for products made with other crops because the ethanol subsidy has reduced supply of those crops. And that’s not counting paying higher taxes to pay for the ethanol subsidy.
Resourceguy:
Your post at April 17, 2013 at 6:49 am says
I am not commenting on the validity of your assertions concerning market distortions.
I write to point out that the possibility of such effects is the explanation for my statement at the end of my post at April 17, 2013 at 5:59 am which said concerning my anology of a hypothetical mandate for use of straw in bricks
Richard
richardscourtney says:
April 17, 2013 at 5:59 am
Is there any possible justification for such a subsidy for straw? If so, then a direct State Benefit to the farmers who provide the straw would be a more efficient subsidy for their farming.
============
However, under GATT/WTO and similar rules, a direct State Benefit is unfair competition. Countries get around this by bending the rules to their advantage.
Bending the rules is less efficient as you have recognized. However, politics tends to favor trade in one direction only, so we end up with artificial barriers that hurt the rest of us to the benefit of a few. Otherwise the politicians don’t get a big fat campaign contribution and someone that will bend the rules will take their place.
In addition to Gorham’s false ethanol water claim, he overlooks that there is a net return of 23 % protein enriched distillers grain used as animal feed, just like the field corn would have been. So the net ethanol use is about 13-14% in tons, against about a 25% increase in plantings. On my farm, we tookmout two small pastures to increase corn plantings, sell more than half the corn for ethanol in a deal that trucks the distillers grain back, and switched the herd to a mix of distillers grain plus corn (for the carbohydrate). That allows is to feed less of the protein rich alfalfa, which we can sell because hay is scarce owing to southern drought, and make up the roughage different with more chopped silage. There is much less of an impact on food supply that the comments above would suggest.
The main reason corn and soybean prices have risen is increasing export demand, especially to China, where both are used as animal feed for poultry and hogs as the meat proportion of their diet increases on average.
That said, cellulosic ethanol would be a better ethanol option substituting for MBTE (but not at the EISA07 mandated E10 blend wall) IF economic, because does not require arable land. But it isn’t economic without subsidies or higher petroleum prices at current technology in either POET or ABENGOA scale facilities now coming on line. The only potentially viable biofuel solution at present is the KIOR process, which produces synthetic crude from whole tree chipped southern yellow pine that can be refined into gas, diesel, or jet kerosene. We shall soon know whether the process is economic at scale. Hopefully it is, since the world has a major crude supply problem by about 2020 despite frcked tight oil. There is as much bad information about that out there (on the hyped side) as in Mr. Gorham’s poorly researched article.
ferdberple:
I write as a courtesy to say I read your post addressed to me at April 17, 2013 at 7:10 am.
I agree with you concerning reasons for politically inspired subsidies, but that agreement is not a comment of any kind concerning the specific subsidies being discussed in this thread.
Richard
You could say that when Congress created those ethanol mandates, they honestly believed most ethanol would be produced from cellulose and other non-food crops. Or you could say lobbyists from big ag companies such as ADM bought themselves a huge profit at public expense.
Either way, it’s time to end this fiasco. The number just don’t work. We don’t have a shortage of recoverable oil, we have a shortage of oil production in this country. Already most of our imported oil come from Canada and Mexico and not the Middle East. We could easily become North American-energy independent in a few years if the politicians, bureaucrats, lobbyists and green fanatics got out of the way.
Regardless of the specific physics behind it all there is another good reason to stop using arable land to produce fuel. The Industrial Revolution was almost entirely possible because energy production (coal) was concentrated geographically, thus eliminating the Malthusian dependence of energy on arable land. The modern world was born in the Industrial Revolution. Its really just about that simple.
My car runs very poorly on ethanol contaminated gasoline. However, I can no longer find a station that even sells uncontaminated gas. I wonder if these ethanol contaminants are being blended into the 18¢ a gallon gasoline they’re selling in Venezuela? I somehow doubt it.
How about converting natural gas to a liquid fuel? Not, LNG, which is kept liquid under pressure, but Gas-To-Liquid (GTL) conversion.
http://www.natgas.info/html/gastoliquids.html
http://www.shell.com/global/future-energy/meeting-demand/natural-gas/gtl.html
http://www.consumerenergycenter.org/transportation/afvs/gtl.html
Your state may mandate ethanol in gasoline. Mine requires 10% ethanol.
Dear Mr. Goreham:
Nice article – but you missed one important factor: the production of gasoline is taxed at every stage, the production of ethanol subsidized at every stage. From a consumer perspective E10/15 costs more than gasoline although it contains a lower net level of tax, but from a government perspective a gallon of E10/15 gives up tax revenues on the missing gasoline, and costs money on the ethanol component.
cf my 2007 Calgary Herald column – now at winface.com/ethanol.html
Mile per gallon, engine efficiency, energy content per gallon, government subsidies etc – all factors related to the only meaningful measure to the consumer which is “miles per dollar” for a given vehicle.
Wow! I have little knowledge of this issue and I can honestly say, having read through the posts, that I have less understanding than I did before. Here is what I have learned:
1. It’s complicated
2. It’s good for your engine and it’s bad for your engine
3. It is more efficient and it is less efficient
4. It costs more and it costs less
5. It causes starvation and it has no impact on starvation
6. It is better for the environment and it is worse for the environment
7. The ethanol mandate causes many problems and ending the mandate would cause many problems.
8. It’s complicated.
I would suggest that we let the free market decide, but we don’t have a free market. Politics is intertwined with the market like weeds in a long, untended garden. Even without politics, a truly free market can only exist where the rule of law is uniform and effective, otherwise, the temporarily more powerful will suppress their competition through ‘unfair’ practices. The ‘free market’ has always been a goal, but never a reality. Still, striving for a free market is the wisest course of action.
The climate change issue, on the other hand, is so very attractive. There is absolutely no upside for humanity in promoting the myth of CAGW! If we stopped worrying about man-made climate change today, only those living off the myth would be negatively impacted. The rest of humanity would benefit! It is not complicated at all!
A more interesting graph, would be biofuel production vs fossil fuel usage. Did biofuel make any difference to fossil consumption, or does the amount of fossil fuel needed to produce a gallon of biofuel cancel out the difference?
.
The new rallying cry for the Greens. Buy a gallon of biofuel and starve a child. You know it makes sense……
Is it time to end ethanol vehicle fuel mandates?
YES! And subsidies for solar and wind power, as well!
MtK
Late in replying, but Ethanol does not improve emissions in modern engines equipped with aftertreatment catalysts. Ethanol and other “oxygenates” do lean out the Air/Fuel ratio in carburated vehicles and if those vehicles are running rich, this change in A/F ratio will reduce CO and HC emissions. But it also tends to increase NOx emissions which will increase air pollution and can lead to the “weekend” oxone affect where ozone actually increases during the weekend when hydrocarbon emissions from some sources are reduced.
The Coordinating Research Council conducted a study of the impact of increased EtOH up to 15% in modern engines (not specifically designed to run on E85) and found that there is increased engine wear and fuel system failures with E15 vs E10. Thus the consumer will spend more money for higher ethanol content fuels as well as get lower fue efficiency due to the lower energy content of ethanol vs conventional hydrocarbon fuels.
And how exactly is this occurring? The production of ethanol creates both ethanol and a significant quantity of Distillers Dried Grain Solids – a high quality animal feed that replaces on a net basis, from memory, close to 50% of the corn used for ethanol.
And please provide actual proof for your position and claim.