-Caveat Lector-

A Times Editorial

Ethanol in the tank

Washington keeps propping up the influential ethanol industry, causing
gasoline prices to rise while doing little or no good for the environment.

© St. Petersburg Times, published July 18, 2001


The Bush administration is forcing California to add ethanol to the state's
gasoline, a requirement that Gov. Gray Davis says will raise gas prices and
cause shortages nationwide. While the Environmental Protection Agency
justifies ethanol-enhanced gasoline as necessary to reduce ozone pollution,
Davis says it will actually keep California from having cleaner air.

Davis may have a point.

The federal Clean Air Act requires densely populated areas in 11 states to
add an "oxygenate" to gasoline, and there are only two: a petroleum-derived
substance called MTBE, which is the most widely used, and ethanol.
California currently uses MTBE, but it is being phased out in 2002 because it
pollutes groundwater.

That leaves ethanol, which is made from corn. About 6 percent of the nation's
corn crop is fermented and distilled into ethyl alcohol, the ingredient that
gives whiskey its kick, and marketed as ethanol. While ethanol alone can be
used as a fuel, it is twice as expensive (without government subsidies) and
less efficient than gasoline.

Corn farming is propped up by federal price supports, and ethanol
production is given a tax exemption that has cost the government more than
$10-billion in revenues. Even after the largesse, ethanol is still more
expensive than gasoline. Also, ethanol is difficult to transport and must be
mixed close to where it is produced, mostly in the Midwest. In California,
ethanol is expected to boost gas prices up to 3 cents per gallon, while it
decreases mileage by about 3 percent.

Davis warns that ethanol shortages could push California gas prices up by
50 cents per gallon. While that is probably an exaggeration, California will
need 600-million gallons of ethanol a year, a challenge to ethanol producers.
And if there are shortages, it will affect gas supplies and prices in many cities
and states outside California. (No part of Florida is required to use an
ethanol additive.)

At least California will have cleaner air, federal officials say. Maybe not.

While the ethanol additive does reduce carbon dioxide emissions, it may
cause more nitrogen oxide to be released in exhaust. Because both
substances contribute to ground-level ozone pollution (smog), ethanol's
impact on California air quality is questionable.

Davis asked for a waiver from the ethanol requirement, and he was backed
up by oil companies, which say they can exceed clean air standards by
reformulating their gasoline rather than adding ethanol. The Bush
administration denied the waiver.

California Sen. Dianne Feinstein has filed a bill that would allow a governor
to waive the ethanol requirement as long as the state still complies with the
Clean Air Act. That's a reasonable compromise that would lower gas costs
and improve supplies, but it has little chance of success.

Here is why. Many Republican and Democratic officials, especially those
from farming states, are beholden to the farm industry and ethanol producers.
A major Republican contributor, Archer Daniels Midland, is the largest maker
of ethanol. And new Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle, a South Dakota
Democrat, introduced the amendment to the Clear Air Act that requires the
ethanol additive.

Ethanol also figures into another irresponsible program. U.S. automakers
build more than 1-million cars a year with engines that can burn ethanol or
gasoline, and in return a federal program gives them a big break on meeting
overall mileage standards. Intended to relieve our dependence on foreign oil,
the program actually makes it worse. Virtually none of the cars uses ethanol
because fewer than 1 in 1,000 service stations offers it. The program actually
causes more gas to be consumed because it allows more gas guzzlers on
the road.

So ethanol is not a solution to California's air pollution problems or to a more
independent gasoline supply. Politicians are merely propping up the ethanol
industry. And all Americans could end up paying the price.


Steve Wingate, Webmaster
ANOMALOUS IMAGES AND UFO FILES
http://www.anomalous-images.com

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