Sunday, November 06, 2005

Ethanol Production is a Welfare Industry

The Alternative Energy Blog had a great article back in July on the viability of ethanol as a substitute for gasoline. Clearly, there has been billions of taxpayer dollars spent on creating an ethanol industry, despite the fact that it is sustainable only with the addition of cheap oil inputs in ethanol's source and manufacture. Here is a portion of the discussion:

The stickiest question about ethanol is this: Does making alcohol from grain or plant waste really create any new energy?

The answer, of course, depends upon whom you ask. The ethanol lobby claims there's a 30 percent net gain in BTUs from ethanol made from corn. Other boosters, including Woolsey, claim there are huge energy gains (as much as 700 percent) to be had by making ethanol from grass.

But the ethanol critics have shown that the industry calculations are bogus. David Pimentel, a professor of ecology at Cornell University who has been studying grain alcohol for 20 years, and Tad Patzek, an engineering professor at the University of California, Berkeley, co-wrote a recent report that estimates that making ethanol from corn requires 29 percent more fossil energy than the ethanol fuel itself actually contains.

The two scientists calculated all the fuel inputs for ethanol production—from the diesel fuel for the tractor planting the corn, to the fertilizer put in the field, to the energy needed at the processing plant—and found that ethanol is a net energy-loser. According to their calculations, ethanol contains about 76,000 BTUs per gallon, but producing that ethanol from corn takes about 98,000 BTUs. For comparison, a gallon of gasoline contains about 116,000 BTUs per gallon. But making that gallon of gas—from drilling the well, to transportation, through refining—requires around 22,000 BTUs.

In addition to their findings on corn, they determined that making ethanol from switch grass requires 50 percent more fossil energy than the ethanol yields, wood biomass 57 percent more, and sunflowers 118 percent more. The best yield comes from soybeans, but they, too, are a net loser, requiring 27 percent more fossil energy than the biodiesel fuel produced. In other words, more ethanol production will increase America's total energy consumption, not decrease it. (Pimentel has not taken money from the oil or refining industries. Patzek runs the UC Oil Consortium, which does research on oil and is funded by oil companies. His ethanol research is not funded by the oil or refining industries.)

Ethanol poses other serious difficulties for our energy economy. First, 8 billion gallons of ethanol will do almost nothing to reduce our oil imports. Eight billion gallons may sound like a lot, until you realize that America burned more than 134 billion gallons of gasoline last year. By 2012, those 8 billion gallons might reduce America's overall oil consumption by 0.5 percent. Way back in 1997, the General Accounting Office concluded that "ethanol's potential for substituting for petroleum is so small that it is unlikely to significantly affect overall energy security." That's still true today.

Adding more ethanol will also increase the complexity of America's refining infrastructure, which is already straining to meet demand, thus raising pump prices. Ethanol must be blended with gasoline. But ethanol absorbs water. Gasoline doesn't. Therefore, ethanol cannot be shipped by regular petroleum pipelines. Instead, it must be segregated from other motor fuels and shipped by truck, rail car, or barge. Those shipping methods are far more expensive than pipelines.

There's a final point to be raised about ethanol: It contains only about two-thirds as much energy as gasoline. Thus, when it gets blended with regular gasoline, it lowers the heat content of the fuel. So, while a gallon of ethanol-blended gas may cost the same as regular gasoline, it won't take you as far.


We are forgetting what high-quality even looks like anymore. Sheesh!

6 Comments:

Gary Dikkers said...

"Ethanol poses other serious difficulties for our energy economy. First, 8 billion gallons of ethanol will do almost nothing to reduce our oil imports."

All good comemnts JCRIT. Your observation that 8 billion gallons won't make much difference is absolutely correct.

First, ethanol cannot replace gasoline on a one-for-one basis: Because of its lower energy density, it takes almost 1.5 gallons of pure
ethanol to provide the energy in one gallon of gasoline. Even in a
perfect world, eight billion gallons of ethanol could replace no more
than 5.2 billion gallons of gasoline.

Second, the ethanol industry is built on a foundation of fossil fuel consumption:

-- Farmers must burn diesel fuel to run their tractors and corn
pickers.

-- Tire companies must consume fossil fuels to make the millions of
tires farmers and the trucks that haul ethanol use each year.

-- Chemical plants use natural gas to make the millions of tons of
fertilizers; pesticides, herbicides, and fungicides farmers depend upon.

-- Ethanol plants burn still more natural gas to mill and distill
corn into ethanol.

-- Trucking companies burn still more diesel fuel hauling corn from
farm to ethanol plant, and finished ethanol from the plant to retailer.

It is ironic that if ethanol becomes our primary liquid fuel, we would
still be dependent on an overseas fossil fuel.

Almost all ammonia fertilizer is now made from natural gas. What is not
widely known is that an increasingly large percentage of that fertilizer is made overseas and must be imported into the U.S. Any increased use of ethanol only means an increased dependence on fertilizer made from foreign natural gas.

Unless you are a corn farmer, or run an ethanol plant and can use federal tax breaks and subsidies to make a profit, corn ethanol is a losing proposition.

It takes more fuel to make corn ethanol, than the fuel value of the ethanol. (Don't confuse energy and fuel. The ethanol lobby like to say ethanol production returns more energy than it uses. That is true, but that excess energy is not in the useable form of a fuel. The excess energy is locked in the waste products from fermentation and distillation and is only useful as cattle feed.)

8:28 AM  
Anonymous said...

Yup, only good for cattle feed.
Who needs to eat anyway. Who needs milk?
Farmers subsidies are being reduced every year, who needs farmers anyway, we'll just import our food. I see ethanol in its infancy. It will become more profitable and will promote competition, and maybe spur other inovations.
Maybe you have a solution?
What do you drive? What US products have you bought recently?
What contributions have YOU made?

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