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The battle over tanking ethanol subsidies

By | December 3, 2010, 4:00 AM PST

The new year may see the end to some ethanol subsidies.

The volumetric ethanol excise tax credit (VEETC) which gives a 45-cent/gallon tax incentive for pure ethanol that is blended with gasoline, will expire at the end of the month. As will a tariff of 54-cents/gallon of imported ethanol, such as Brazil’s sugar cane-based fuel, meant to spur domestic demand.

A bi-partisan group called to put the subsidies to rest in a letter, reported the Washington Post on Tuesday. The letter, signed by 17 senators (9 democrats, 8 republicans), states:

Subsidizing blending ethanol into gasoline is fiscally indefensible. If the current subsidy is extended for five years, the Federal Treasury would pay oil companies at least $31 billion to use 69 billion gallons of corn ethanol that the Federal Renewable Fuels Standard already requires them to use. We cannot afford to pay industry for following the law.

The law, finalized in November, calls for about 8 percent of all fuel used in 2011 to be from renewable sources and for blending 36 billion gallons of renewable fuel with transportation fuel by 2022.

But not all things bi-partisan take course without a fight. Not surprisingly, Midwestern senators on both sides of the aisle are clinging to the subsidies that keep federal money flowing to their constituents. Yesterday, 15 of them responded with their own letter, stating:

Our country is spending over $730 million a day on imported petroleum this year, money that often ends up in the hands of unstable or unfriendly governments. The price tag for our dependence on foreign oil is likely to rise even higher as the economy recovers. This is not the time to reduce the supply of a domestic source of fuel and place at greater risk the thousands of well-paying jobs that the renewable fuels industry has created.

One of the co-signers, Chuck Grassley (R-IA) wants to extend the VEETC until 2015. While “renewable,” how good corn-based ethanol is for the environment, cars, and food prices is highly questionable.

Just Tuesday, the U.S. Geological Survey released a report saying government programs encouraging biofuel production caused corn acreage in the Mississippi Delta to grow 288 percent in 2007, while land for cotton decreased 47 percent. With corn requiring more water and fertilizer than cotton, the crop shift, they say, is affecting water levels and quality in northwestern Mississippi. Nitrogen levels in the Yazoo River, which feeds into the Mississippi, have grown 7 percent between 2002 and 2008, with repercussions for the Gulf’s dead zone.

In an article discussing whether the oil spill or ethanol was worse for the Gulf, SF Gate reported:

Ethanol consumes two-thirds of all federal subsidies for renewable fuels, said Ken Cook, president of the Environmental Working Group, an advocacy group, leaving solar, wind and the rest to fight over the remaining third. Corn ethanol cost taxpayers $17 billion from 2005 to 2009, his group estimates.

“This is another industry that’s entirely a creature of the government, even more so than corn growing per se,” Cook said. “The production of ethanol wouldn’t happen at all without government subsidies and protection.”

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Melissa Mahony

About Melissa Mahony

Melissa Mahony was a contributing editor for SmartPlanet from 2010 to 2011.

Melissa Mahony

Melissa Mahony

Contributing Editor

Melissa Mahony has written for Scientific American Mind, Audubon Magazine, Plenty Magazine and LiveScience. Formerly, she was an editor at Wildlife Conservation magazine. She holds degrees from Boston College and New York University's Science, Health, and Environmental Reporting Program. She is based in New York.

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Melissa Mahony

Melissa Mahony

Melissa does not have financial holdings that would influence how or what she covers. She currently works for the Wildlife Conservation Society as an editor. Should Melissa cover a topic in which the WCS is involved, she will disclose this fact in her writing.

She writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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0 Votes
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RE: The battle over tanking ethanol subsidies
Without Ethanol my car gets 33 MPH with it I get 28 MPG. I end up buring 1 gallon MORE fuel per tank using it than not. And how me burning 1 gallon MORE to go the same distance is helping me / the enviornment ? So my modern car uses 30 gallons of fuel MORE per year with this in the tank than without - $900 more money to accomplish the same task. 200 million cars on the road and so that means 6 BILLION extra gallons of fuel used to drive the same distance? And this is a good thing?
Posted by TAPhilo
3rd Dec 2010
0 Votes
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RE: The battle over tanking ethanol subsidies
The worst form of pollution is poverty! Ultimately global warming is a political question and only secondarily a scientific question! Only wealthy nations can afford to deal with pollution.

Ask yourself this question: would all the best efforts of mankind have prevented the tropical heat of the dinosaur era? Obviously not because mankind came much later! And mankind is not the source of global warming in the 21st century: it is a repeating natural cycle!

America has 1/4th of the coal on planet Earth and 200 years worth of natural gas. Let?s burn it, regain our wealth and fund research for alternate fuels from a position of strength; instead of sending $640 billion a year to our OPEC enemies and fighting foreign wars that have recently cost over a trillion dollars! Bring the jobs and money back home to America!!!
Posted by Repeal
3rd Dec 2010
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It's about time
Ethanol subsidizes were always one of the best examples of how government mucking around in markets can do more harm than good. Unintended consequences included greatly increased food prices, and farmers losing a lot of money in ethanol co-ops when the market collapsed in the summer of 2008 (before the economic crash).

This was a classic case where powerful political, business, and academic interests joined to spend public money to benefit only a few. Ideally, it wouldn't take studies over years to determine that subsidizing ethanol was a loser. With a more market driven approach without subsidies farmers would have figured out a long time ago that growing corn for ethanol instead of other crops would not be profitable.

All this ignored a natural cap that exists in America to ethanol. With our current (non-flex) engines, the gas mix can contain at most only 10% ethanol. Once that wall was hit, no amount of subsidies could provide a market for more ethanol. As that limit was reached, market signals would have told farmers to back off production. But instead virtually unlimited government subsidies hid that signal, and farmers soon found themselves producing too much ethanol and taking huge losses. Thank you big business and big government. Thank you academics who think they are smart enough to control all the variables -- and our lives.
Posted by zackers
3rd Dec 2010
0 Votes
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RE: The battle over tanking ethanol subsidies
Well, we know it is a boondogle and that it was all a lie and a great way to scare people into ponying up billions to stop global warming so....maybe we should just end it. Even Al Gore admits that he worked for the subsidies just to get votes even though he knew ethanol was worse economically and environmentally.
Posted by JimRicker
3rd Dec 2010
0 Votes
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Geico man: Is subsidizing ethanol, a stupid idea?
Yeah, I know he'd say "a bad idea", but in this case, "a stupid idea" is more fitting.
Posted by adornoe
3rd Dec 2010
0 Votes
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Chop it all.
I have said it for years. All government subsidies of private industrys needs to end.

Lets start here since it is expiring.
Posted by Hates Idiots
3rd Dec 2010
0 Votes
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RE: The battle over tanking ethanol subsidies
Not only is it a bad idea to burn food but we also subsidizing Europe every time a gallon of this blend is shipped there. We are borrowing $.40 on every dollar spent in this country and we let this happen. Also, I'd rather have no alcohol in my gas I use in my 1990 motorcycle. It wasn't meant to run on it. I now buy Sta-bil marine stabilizer to help take care of that problem.
Stop the subsidy. give me back better mileage and stop damaging my old engine.
Posted by philwhite42@...
3rd Dec 2010
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It is the plan TAPhilo..
You buy more gas, I buy more gas, everyone buys more gas.

And Uncle Sam collects more per gallon gas taxes because more gallons are sold.

A 1% increase in gas sales translates to billions in new tax revenue for them to spend.

The spike in gas prices to over $4 drove federal tax revenues down for almost a year because people conserved gas. Reduced gas sales for something like 11 months in a row drove tax revenues down even before the spike in unemployment killed income tax revenue.
Posted by Hates Idiots
3rd Dec 2010
0 Votes
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Not a technical issue
This is pure political waste. That's why it needs to go. The
subsidies have no positive outcome. They are simply waste,
bureaucracy, and pork.

Those who think it is a requirement for gas to have less than
10% ethanol are wrong . Ethanol replaced Octane
which is toxic, and generally awful. Most modern cars should
probably be burning at least 15% to 20%. For those worried about
fuel economy, it is illegal to distribute fuel unmixed with ethanol. If
you're dangerously mixing up your own in your garage from crude
and not cutting it with a non-ethanol Octane and non-ethanol lead
substitute, you're destroying your engine. Buying a new car has a
greater enviro impact than saving 30 gallons of gas a year.

The subsidies need to be separated from the debate over whether
ethanol is good or bad. The subsidies are bad policy and need to
be abolished.
Posted by tkejlboom
3rd Dec 2010
0 Votes
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RE: The battle over tanking ethanol subsidies
Not only do we get worse gas mileage with alcohol blends, but also the performance is decreased. Then there's problems it creates with small engines like chain saws, the alcohol eats up the fuel lines and have to be replaced every year, sometimes twice a year.
It's just plain wrong for us taxpayers to foot the bill for these subsidies. Aren't we broke enough already?
Posted by Tinman57
3rd Dec 2010
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RE: The battle over tanking ethanol subsidies
Why not biogas?
History: In 1994 there was research on biogas paid by oil industry (NREL). When it was clear that it can be more favourable for inhabitants than fossil sources but not for oil industry, they started to support research ?ethanol from cellulose?. Research on the promising High Solids Anaerobic Digestion disappeared in all countries!
Future: Imagine that all Renewable Organic Materials in residues and waste will be transformed by microorganisms by modern methods to two valuable products:
1) energy-rich methane in biogas and
2) biofertilizers containing most of the plant nutrients, beneficial microorganisms and bioenergy that is important for fertility of cultivated soils.
We need to recycle plant nutrients, use bioenergy more efficiently and minimize use of man-made chemicals!
Posted by Rusvede
4th Dec 2010
0 Votes
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RE: The battle over tanking ethanol subsidies
With gas already at 3 bucks, and oil company profits at record highs, we should not be subsidizing them in any way. That includes military support in getting the stuff here. prices should be capped as well.
Posted by guywayne
5th Dec 2010
0 Votes
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The only downside of eliminating "gasahol"...
...(as it was called in the Carter era when this madness started) is
that it's been the best example to date of what kind of damage
subsidies and government intervention does to the marketplace.

Consumers are forced to buy a substandard fuel that costs far
more and does far more environmental harm than oil does. As
was stated in the report to eliminate ethanol subsidies,
"Historically our government has helped a product compete in
one of three ways: subsidize it, protect it from competition, or
require its use. We understand that ethanol may be the only
product receiving all three forms of support from the U.S.
government at this time."
Posted by JohnMcGrew@...
7th Dec 2010
0 Votes
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It is Friday and 5 o clock shome where.
I need it after what I just read on MSNBC.com.

I just read that the UN is worried about food riots in several nations this winter as the US uses more than 35 percent of its corn crop for making ethanol fuels.

Yet more proof that the mandate of using food for fuel is stupid.
Posted by Hates Idiots
14th Jan 2011
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