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The Inconvenient Truth About Ethanol

921 messages,  Last post on Oct 07, 2009 at 10:53 AM

You are in the Ethanol - E85 FlexFuel Forum. Your Host is pf_flyer

What is this discussion about? Alternative Fuels


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#505 of 921
Re: Corn [nascar57] by jkinzel
May 14, 2008 (10:39 am)
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Replying to: nascar57 (May 14, 2008 8:23 am)

The evidence is so incredibly overwhelming as to what ethanol has done to our economy and in some parts the economies of other countries.
 
I find it shameful and embarrassing that our government continues to promote and support its use on such a grand scale.
#506 of 921
Re: Corn [nascar57] by gagrice
May 14, 2008 (1:19 pm)
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Replying to: nascar57 (May 14, 2008 8:23 am)

There is more corn available right now than there was at this time last year.
 
What crops were not planted to make way for more corn? I know fields in the Imperial Valley of CA are growing corn where they used to grow lettuce and other vegetables. Good for the farmers bad for the consumers. From your lack of response you must think that the price of oil going up since the ethanol mandate is just coincidence. I think we are caught in a battle between Big Ag and Big Oil. We are just the poor slobs that are paying the price. Also soybeans are being used for biodiesel. Though last I read they were too expensive to use. There is no mandate on biodiesel so the market sets the price, not Uncle Sam. When we come up with a feedstock for ethanol that is not mandated and is cost effective let me know. When Congress lifts the tariff on Brazilian ethanol I will know they are getting serious about alternatives.
#507 of 921
Corn by nascar57
May 14, 2008 (4:39 pm)
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Pf Flyer I am so glad you know how to make a graph. If you do not understand market drivers behind this dont just look at a picture and blame it on Ethanol. There are so many other factors that caused corn to increase by $2 a bushel. First off Brazil has not had the weather that they would like down there, Europe and Australia have had terrible droughts which has increased the feed use for corn due to the fact that wheat touched $20 and steered feeders away from wheat and into more corn. If you want to talk about inflation influencing food prices you are terribly un informed if you think oil has nothing to do with this. Oil has directly impacted fertilizer prices, chemical prices, seed prices, and most other farm inputs. Ethanol has helped the demand side of the picture but the crude market had had MUCH more impact on the consumer side. Think about a loaf of bread, the farmer's share is less than the cost of the wrapper. Ya know what factors the cost of that wrapper, YEP OIL!!!!!!! Gagrice my lil no-minded friend, the ethanol mandate has been around before 2007. Also the blenders credit for ethanol has been decreased by 6 cents a gallon. Ethanol also brings down the price of gas to the consumer by 10-15%, if you have any idea where to even check the price of ethanol, you will see it is trading in the mid 2.40's range while RBOB gas is 3.12-3.15. Gagrice also you complain about the POOR consumers. You know what, the increase in crude prices since 2001 is equivalent to a 45% increase in the income tax. Hmmm, I wonder what is really putting the pinch on. You people simply amaze me that you are so un-informed, gotta love that California crowd
#508 of 921
Soybeans by nascar57
May 14, 2008 (4:44 pm)
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Also my little friend Gagrice, Soybeans are NOT being driven by bio-diesel. It is again major weather concerns in the South African region along with record LOW carry-out numbers that the US is currently experiencing. As the price of crude climbs, the bushels of beans used for Bio-Diesel increases greatly, since it makes Bio-Diesel that much more competitive. If you people really want commodity prices to go down, Oil is going to be the main commodity to recess into a much lower trading range, if that doesnt happen, Higher commodity prices will be here to stay for the time being. Put some market driven thinking to work in your arguments people!
#509 of 921
Re: Corn [nascar57] by gagrice
May 14, 2008 (5:23 pm)
Reply

Replying to: nascar57 (May 14, 2008 4:39 pm)

Gagrice my lil no-minded friend, the ethanol mandate has been around before 2007.
 
Yes it has. The energy bill of 2005. I think you really need to do more research before you set yourself up as an authority on a subject. Take a look at when oil took a rocket ride up. It was under $40 per barrel when the ethanol mandate went into affect. You are right the increased demand on diesel and fossil fuel based fertilizers have an affect on oil prices. So does the government thinking they can bully the oil producers by making fuel from corn. Just how much corn have you raised on your farm. I raised a lot and it was not worth the diesel used to plant and harvest it from 1976-1980. Not to mention the interest on seed and fertilizer at 20%. So I do know what farming is all about and I feel for the farmers. The ones that were run out of business in the late 1970s by Mega Ag corporations. The same ones that are reaping a windfall profit at the tax payers expense. When you move out of your utopian ethanol cocoon maybe you will see the real inconvenient truth about corn ethanol.
 
Oil rise from 2005 ethanol mandate:
http://zfacts.com/p/196.html
#510 of 921
Re: Soybeans [nascar57] by texases
May 14, 2008 (6:36 pm)
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Replying to: nascar57 (May 14, 2008 4:44 pm)

Nascar, I'll make you a deal - farmers growing corn can only raise it using ethanol-fueled tractors, cars, everything. They'll produce next to no net ethanol, as all the energy needed to raise the very ineffecient corn crop uses it up. I've got nothing against farmers, just nonsense laws placating them at no real benefit to the country. The only good source of ethanol today is sugarcane from the tropics - oops, I forgot, there's a tariff, and, oops again, they're cutting down the rainforests to grow it.
#511 of 921
Ethanol a history lesson..... by gagrice
Jun 01, 2008 (7:20 am)
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For those that think ethanol use in automobiles is a recent development. It was the fuel of choice in the beginning of the automobile age. Just so you know I am not against ethanol. Just ethanol made from important food stocks.
 
The first cars back in the late 1800s ran primarily on alcohol.
 
It was the only reliable, combustible fuel that was available. Oil had already been discovered, but it had a completely different use at that time; it was used for heating and lighting homes.
 
So the part that they couldn’t use for heating and lighting — the stuff that wanted to explode and nobody wanted to put in an oil lamp — they threw away.
 
John D. Rockefeller did some experimentation and found out that, although it didn’t do such a good job, it would run a car, too. And he started selling it at dirt-cheap prices in the cities, where he had his oil distribution business.
 
So gasoline was an industrial waste by product that was marketed as an alternative to the standard fuel, which was alcohol.
 
The big proponent of alcohol in cars was Henry Ford. He thought that alcohol was the very best fuel for cars — it was clean, it was efficient, and there were a lot more stills in this country than gas stations.
 
So Ford and Rockefeller fought tooth and nail over what was going to be the nation’s fuel supply, until Rockefeller decided not to play fair anymore.
 
Rockefeller gave the Women’s Christian Temperance Union $4 million dollars to lobby Congress with. That would be like $400 million dollars today, and, yes, you can buy Congress for that. And so they passed Prohibition. You probably thought it had something to do with drinking and moral decay. But can you imagine an all-male Congress voting to keep working men from drinking?
 
So for 13 years alcohol went off the market as a fuel, as an industrial product that used to compete with many oil products and for drinking also.
 
After they make everything they call valuable out of oil — plastics, drugs, pesticides, industrial chemicals — everything left over is dumped into the gasoline. So on any given day there are 400 toxic chemicals dumped into gasoline, and those might not necessarily be the same chemicals the next day. It is whatever is left over.
 
So gasoline is the biggest toxic waste disposal system in the world, and its in the open and legal.
 
They enable us to use our cars to spew their toxic waste back into the air. And they make something like $2,500 from a barrel of oil, for the industrial chemicals, and something like $100 a barrel from the gasoline, and they don’t care if they made zero, because they get rid of all their toxic waste.
#512 of 921
Re: Ethanol a history lesson..... [gagrice] by jkinzel
Jun 01, 2008 (10:17 am)
Reply

Replying to: gagrice (Jun 01, 2008 7:20 am)

Great History lesson Gary. Thanks
#513 of 921
$1.34/Gallon for Ethanol by avalon02wh
Jun 02, 2008 (3:08 pm)
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http://www.greencarcongress.com/2008/05/verenium-commis.html
 
Good old Zymomonas mobilis may save the day.
 
I see that Canada has decided to dip their toe in the alcohol, so to speak, by requiring an E5 mix by 2010.
 
In 2004, Canada used 10.5 billion gallons of gasoline per year. The E5 mix will require about 500 million gallons of ethanol. In 2007 Canada produced 211 million gallons. Canada will need to build 5 to 6 new ethanol plants, if they are not already in the works.
 
Those extra 289 million gallons of ethanol will require about 100 million more bushels of corn. Canada already imports about 43 million bushels a year.
 
The ethanol needed in Canada pales when compared to the 4 billion gallons of U.S. ethanol production coming on line in 2008. Corn will be in high demand. Makes me glad I don't own any livestock that eats corn.
 
I wonder what happens in 2009 or beyond when there is a problem with corn production. Weather happens.
 
http://www.ethanolrfa.org/industry/statistics/
https://topcropmanager.annexweb.com/content/view/1481/67/
http://www.ethanolrfa.org/industry/outlook/
#514 of 921
Re: $1.34/Gallon for Ethanol [avalon02wh] by gagrice
Jun 02, 2008 (4:05 pm)
Reply

Replying to: avalon02wh (Jun 02, 2008 3:08 pm)

I believe the Canadians are close to going into production with a biomass to ethanol plant. They were going to build their first one in Idaho. Not sure what has happened with their funding.
 
If Canada is hoping for a quick fix with Corn ethanol, they are in for a big surprise.

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