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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: food costs + ethanol's benefits + ethanol  Related to the article below (Last Update: 6/11/2008)

Biofuels: Brazil disputes cost of sugar in the tank
Scenta.co.uk, UK -
UNICA insists that Brazilian ethanol output is not contributing to increasing food costs, with Jank describing as "ridiculous" claims that biofuels are - as ...

Domestic Fuel
Ethanol and Biodiesel Groups React to Anti-Biofuels Coalition
Domestic Fuel, MO -
Biofuels are currently contributing over 8 billion gallons of fuel to our fuel supply, without which fuel prices, and consequently food prices, ...
A rebuttal for flawed energy proposals
Tracy Press, CA -
There is a better alternative: nuclear, solar, wind, bio-diesel and ethanol. ?The use of food to make fuel has not only raised food costs to us but now is ...

Politico
Farm-Belt Voters Favor Eliminating or Scaling Back Corn Ethanol ...
The National Center for Public Policy Research, DC - Jun 9, 2008
Ethanol is the fuel to nowhere. Like the infamous 'bridge to nowhere' earmark, ethanol mandates mean we all pay enormous costs so a few can benefit. ...
Time to revisit food-to-fuel mandate Politico
all 3 news articles »
Biofuels burn bright in Oregon's future
The Oregonian - OregonLive.com, OR -
For example, Oregon's biofuels program includes a renewable fuel standard that ensures market access for ethanol and biodiesel and includes incentives for ...

Javno.hr
Don't blame Brazilian biofuels
guardian.co.uk, UK - Jun 6, 2008
Brazilian ethanol, unlike its incredibly inefficient North American competitor, has had no demonstrable impact on the recent increase in food prices, ...
Brazilian Ethanol Doesn't Hurt Food Output, Lula Says (Update1) Bloomberg
US food policy under fire at summit Los Angeles Times
Biomass Energy Outlook RedOrbit
WatertownDailyTimes.com - The Tech Herald
all 663 news articles »

St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Corn has far reaching tentacles
St. Louis Post-Dispatch,  United States - Jun 9, 2008
In recent weeks, with corn prices climbing and economists predicting greater increases in food costs, the debate over ethanol's role has reached global ...
Gas Prices Force Americans to Push for Ethanol Fuel
Earthtimes (press release), UK - Jun 10, 2008
Even in the face of heavy criticism from anti-ethanol groups and misplaced blame for rising food prices, the ethanol fuel industry continues to help keep ...
Barron's sees ethanol stocks poised for a rebound
BloggingStocks -
Pacific Ethanol is expected to came with a loss this year. The benefits of using ethanol are not difficult to observe. Oil refiners get a credit of 51 cents ...
Gas Prices Force Americans to Push for Ethanol Fuel
istockAnalyst.com, OR - Jun 10, 2008
Even in the face of heavy criticism from anti-ethanol groups and misplacedblame for rising food prices, the ethanol fuel industry continues to help keepfuel ...
Source: Google News

From the Cover: Environmental, economic, and energetic costs and benefits of biodiesel and ethanol -
J Hill, E Nelson, D Tilman, S Polasky, D Tiffany - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2006 - National Acad Sciences
... much petroleum without impacting food supplies ... in petroleum prices, high production
costs made biofuels ... synfuel hydrocarbons or cellulosic ethanol, if produced ...

Ethanol Fuels: Energy Balance, Economics, and Environmental Impacts Are Negative -
D Pimentel - Natural Resources Research, 2003 - Springer
... production occupies cropland suitable for food production and ... that operate in the
entire ethanol production system. ... inputs include the direct costs in terms of ...

Ethanol fuels: Energy security, economics, and the environment -
D Pimentel - Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics, 1991 - Springer
... from federal and state subsidies, plus costs as- sociated ... Decisions about the
practicality of ethanol production in ... involved in converting human food into fuel ...

Fuel Ethanol from Cellulosic Biomass -
LEER LYND, JH CUSHMAN, RJ NICHOLS, CE WYMAN - Science, 1991 - sciencemag.org
... for research-driven improvements, a cost-competitive process ... technology for ethanol
production from cellulosic materials is ... that for production from food crops ...

Ethanol Production Using Corn, Switchgrass, and Wood; Biodiesel Production Using Soybean and … -
D Pimentel, TW Patzek - Natural Resources Research, 2005 - Springer
... federal and state sub- sidies, plus costs associated with ... Ethanol production in the
United States does not benefit ... diverting land and pre- cious food into fuel ...

[BOOK] The Economic Impact of the Demand for Ethanol
M Evans, MK Evans - 2000 - books.google.com
... The increase in food prices caused by the demand for ethanol will be fully
offset by adecline in the price of energy. Hence there ...

OVERVIEW AND EVALUATION OF FUEL ETHANOL FROM CELLULOSIC BIOMASS: Technology, Economics, the … -
LR Lynd - Annual Reviews in Energy and the Environment, 1996 - Annual Reviews
... motivated by support of farm prices remove an ... crops without significant displacement
of food crops is ... Conversion of waste materials into ethanol in general ...

[PDF] Outlook for Biomass Ethanol Production and Demand -
J DiPardo - Washington, DC: Energy Information Administration, 2004 - tonto.eia.doe.gov
... local collection infrastructure has been built up, costs would come ... of cellulosic
biomass in the production of ethanol also has environmental benefits. ...

Fuel ethanol after 25 years -
AE Wheals, LC Basso, DMG Alves, HV Amorim - Trends in Biotechnology, 1999 - Elsevier
... animal feed to products for the food (including nutraceuticals ... With oil prices at
an all-time low and ... to implement carbon taxes, fuel-ethanol production will ...

[PDF] The Energy Balance of Corn Ethanol: An Update
H Shapouri, JA Duffield, M Wang - ageconsearch.umn.edu
... Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada (AAFC) (1999) and Wang ... required to produce a gallon
of ethanol from 120,000 ... ARMS (formerly called the Farm Costs and Returns ...

Source: Google Scholar
   
   

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  • WASHINGTON —  Just months ago, ethanol was the Holy Grail to energy independence and a "green fuel" that would help nudge the country away from climate changing fossil energy.

    Democrats and Republicans cheered its benefits as Congress directed a fivefold increase in ethanol use as a motor fuel. President Bush called it key to his strategy to cut gasoline use by 20 percent by 2010.

    But now with skyrocketing food costs -- even U.S. senators are complaining about seeing shocking prices at the supermarket -- and hunger spreading across the globe, some lawmakers are wondering if they made a mistake.

    "Our enthusiasm for corn ethanol deserves a second look. That's all I'm saying, a second look," said Rep. Jane Harman, D-Calif., at a House hearing Tuesday where the impact of ethanol on soaring food costs was given a wide airing.

    The dramatic reversal has stunned ethanol producers and its supporters in Washington as they have seen their product shift from being an object of praise to one of derision.

    Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, one of the Senate's two working farmers and a longtime ethanol booster, said he finds it hard to believe that ethanol could be "clobbered the way it's being clobbered right now" over the issue of food costs. What does the cost of corn have to do with the price of wheat or rice, he is telling people.

    The uproar over ethanol is clearly gaining momentum.

    The governor of Texas and 26 senators, including the GOP's presumptive presidential nominee John McCain, are asking the Environmental Protection Agency to cut this year's requirement for 9 billion gallons of corn ethanol in half to ease, they say, food costs. Connecticut's governor recently asked Congress to temporary waive the requirement.

    Meanwhile, Sen. John Thune, R-S.D., is gathering senators' signatures on a letter opposing any EPA action so "this attack on ethanol will be blocked," said a statement from Thune's office. "It will be a fight."

    Robert Meyers, an EPA deputy assistant administrator, told a House hearing Tuesday the agency will respond to the request as quickly as possible, but doubts anything will be forthcoming for about three months. There's a regulatory process to follow, he said.

    But lawmakers, even those who enthusiastically supported the requirement for refiners to ramp up ethanol use to 36 billion gallons a year by 2022 from about 7 billion gallons last year, have begun to have qualms.

    "Corn ethanol was presented as an almost Holy Grail solution," said Rep. Mike Doyle, D-Pa. "But I believe its negatives today far outweigh its benefits. ... We need to revisit this ... and back away from the food to fuel policy."

    Rep. Joe Barton of Texas, the ranking Republican on the House Energy and Commerce Committee, said he will introduce a bill to abandon the ethanol requirement passed just before last Christmas and go back to the one Congress enacted in 2005 that would call for a more modest ethanol increase.

    But Barton is not so naive to think his bill has a chance. House Democratic leaders have given no indication of retreating from the ethanol requirement. Still, said Barton, "it's worth putting in."

    In fact, most of the squirming over ethanol and food prices appears to many as little more than political posturing with little chance of actual legislation emerging this crowded election year when much of Congress often seems to be in stalemate.

    Like soaring gasoline prices, skyrocketing food costs are largely beyond the realm of what Washington can do.

    And ethanol's powerful farm lobby still has considerable clout.

    "The ink has hardly dried on this new law when the clamoring began ... for congressional intervention," Rep. John Dingell, D-Mich., chairman of the Energy and Commerce Committee, said Tuesday of the ethanol uproar.

    But Dingell made clear he has no intention of making any significant changes in the production requirements passed in December as part of a broader energy bill, saying such a move "would be unwise and could lead to unintended consequences."

    Still, congressional unease about the food for fuel debate is showing itself in a number of places.

    In a massive farm bill, for the first time in memory lawmakers recently trimmed back the federal tax subsidy for corn ethanol, reducing the tax break from 51 cents to 45 cents a gallon.

    At the same time, however, lawmakers reiterated their support for making ethanol production from cellulosic feedstocks -- wood chips, switchgrass and even garbage -- commercially viable. The same farm bill provides $400 million for cellulosic ethanol research and development.

    And the rush of hearings into the food-to-fuel issue show no sign of subsiding. The hearing on Tuesday by an Energy and Commerce subcommittee vied for attention with another hearing into the soaring cost of diesel fuel. The Senate's Homeland Security and Government Affairs Committee has scheduled another hearing on food and fuel on Wednesday.

    Will anything come of it?

    "Nothing," says Rep. John Shimkus, R-Ill., during a break in Tuesday's session.

    Shimkus, whose state has one of the biggest ethanol producers in Archer Daniels Midland Co., supports the mandate and sees heavy reliance on corn as a feedstock only temporary. "It's a bridge (to) cellulosic ethanol and we can't jettison the present and not get to the future," he says.

    Bob Dineen, president of the Renewable Fuel Association, which represents the ethanol industry, says the issue is about getting away from using oil, an argument that resonated with lawmakers and convinced them to mandate the increased ethanol production.

    His argument is twofold: It's a myth that corn-based ethanol is causing today's high food prices and that because ethanol is cheaper than gasoline, it's cutting the costs for consumers at the pump.

    If ethanol production were cut in half this year, as EPA is being asked to do, insists Dineen, gasoline prices could increase by nearly a third because of supply disruptions and the higher cost of replacement gasoline.

    "It's difficult for me to conceive that they will back away from something they passed just five months ago," says Dineen.


     

     

     

     

     
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