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Ethanol Aff
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Shift Solvency.......................................................................................................................................................36
Subsidies Key........................................................................................................................................................37
Subsidies key........................................................................................................................................................38
Subsidies Key........................................................................................................................................................39
Subsidies key........................................................................................................................................................40
Corn Subsidies = nearly all.................................................................................................................................41
Modelling..............................................................................................................................................................42
Brazil Shift............................................................................................................................................................43
Brazil Shift............................................................................................................................................................44
Lift Tarriff Key ....................................................................................................................................................45
Brazil Ethanol Solves...........................................................................................................................................46
Brazil solves food prices......................................................................................................................................47
Brazil Solves Food Prices....................................................................................................................................48
Brazil Relations....................................................................................................................................................49
Brazil Relations....................................................................................................................................................50
Brazil has capacity...............................................................................................................................................51
AT Brazil Defo......................................................................................................................................................52
AT Brazil Defo......................................................................................................................................................53
AT Brazil Defo......................................................................................................................................................54
Corn Collapse inevit/”Bubble”...........................................................................................................................55
Corn Collapse Inevit............................................................................................................................................56
Corn Collapse Inevit............................................................................................................................................57
Plan solves investment bubble............................................................................................................................58
Plan solve invest bubble......................................................................................................................................59
Price Stability.......................................................................................................................................................60
Recession collapses ethanol industry..................................................................................................................61
Food prices hurt ethanol industry......................................................................................................................62
Cellulosic Shift......................................................................................................................................................63
Food prices Internal Link - Generic...................................................................................................................64
Food prices Internal Link - Generic...................................................................................................................65
Food Prices Internal Link – generic ..................................................................................................................66
Food Prices Internal Link – generic ..................................................................................................................67
Food Prices – Developing world ........................................................................................................................68
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1AC – Ethanol
Observation One: The Status Quo.
The Federal government provides massive subsidies to the ethanol industry at all levels of ethaol
production and consumption.
Koplow in 07 (Douglas, Biofuels – At What Cost? Government support for ethanol and biodiesel in the United States: 2007
update October 2007)
Government support is provided at all stages of production and consumption Support is often delivered through
overlapping policies of federal, state and municipal jurisdictions. At the federal level, the largest contributor remains excise
tax credits provided to biofuel blenders. Over the 2006–12 period, we estimate these credits will be worth $
48 billion in subsidies to the ethanol sector, or nearly 60 percent of total support. The credits will
provide nearly $ 5 billion in support to biodiesel, or roughly 45 percent of its total support. Market price
support measures how barriers to imports and domestic purchase mandates protect biofuel producers and enable them to earn more revenue than would
otherwise be the case. Generally, it results from above-market prices paid by consumers. Market
price support is currently the
second-largest element of support for ethanol. Transfers generated under the current 7.5 billion
gallon per year federal mandate during the 2006–12 period were estimated to be roughly $ 17
billion. Crop subsidies provide lower-priced feedstocks to biofuel producers and remain an
important form of support, especially in the ethanol sector. Although some types of crop payments have declined greatly
due to higher market prices, direct payments are still expected to top $ 5 billion for the 2006– 12 period. The
decline in certain forms of support has been offset to some degree by a rising share of key crops (corn, soy, sorghum) that is being diverted to energy markets.
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1AC - Ethanol
The subsidies for corn choose a market winner and vastly distort the market. The resulting
overproduction makes a collapse of the corn ethanol industry inevitable without liberalization.
Robbin S. Johnson former senior vice president of corporate affairs at Cargill Inc. and C. Ford Runge 2007
Distinguished McKnight University Professor of Applied Economics and Law and director of the Center for
International Food and Agricultural Policy at the University of Minnesota. Ethanol:Train Wreck Ahead?
Government policy is stoking unsustainable growth of the corn-based fuel. A more sober, diversified approach
is needed. Issues in Science and Technology Fall http://www.issues.org/24.1/p_johnson.html
If we are to avoid a situation in which ethanol becomes a demand diverter for corn, a fundamental
reorientation in farm and energy policies is required. The alternative policy model will require
replacing the mandates, subsidies, and tariffs designed to help an infant industry with a new set of policy instruments intended to
broaden the portfolio of energy alternatives and to create market-driven growth in renewable energy demand. Today, politicians compete with
one another to raise the biofuels mandate. Little apparent consideration is given to the potential consequences of building markets on
political fiat rather than sound finances. The result is that capacity is built too fast, at uneconomic scale, and in the
wrong locations. Competing interests such as domestic feeders and foreign consumers can get
trampled in the process, especially during a short crop, when the mandate functions as an embargo on
other uses. Eventually, competing suppliers take over the traditional markets imperiled by ill-
considered mandates. As this scenario unfolds, the burden of false economics and competitive
responses may become too much to bear, and the shaky superstructure will crash, stranding assets and
bankrupting many. In order to avoid such a crash, the United States should not increase the biofuels
mandate beyond the current level of 7.5 billion gallons. Next, consider subsidies to ethanol. The
blender’s tax credit of 51 cents per gallon enabled ethanol to compete with gasoline in a market
characterized by low gasoline prices and surplus corn supplies. That market no longer exists. Gasoline prices have
skyrocketed because of high petroleum prices. The fixed per-gallon subsidy generated high profit margins for ethanol
producers, which led to excessive growth in production. Some suggest correcting for this effect by replacing the fixed subsidy with
a variable one that would decline as oil prices rose. This approach essentially would link ethanol to the volatile petroleum market. Linking to the demand side of
the equation, however, may not be the best avenue for reconciling food and fuel uses. We
should consider the subsidy’s effect on the
supply side of the equation. To the extent that an ethanol subsidy reduces surpluses, it is likely to enjoy
continued and significant political support. But if it creates shortages and diverts corn from food and
feed to fuel uses, it will become increasingly controversial and politically vulnerable, as will the tariff
walls erected to keep cheaper Brazilian ethanol out of the U.S. market.
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1AC – Ethanol
Rapid overinvestment in Biofuels risks overproduction and a “bubble” burst making ethanol production
an unsustainable option for alternative energy.
Richard Conniff, 2007 2007 Guggenheim Fellow. Who's Fueling Whom? Why the biofuels movement could
run out of gas * Smithsonian magazine, November 2007 http://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-
nature/presence-biofuel-200711.html?c=y&page=4
So what's the hitch? Partly it's that bit about doing a little planning. The
move to biofuels thus far looks more like a stampede
than a considered program to wean ourselves from fossil fuels. Critics in the financial community
have used words like "gold rush" and even the dreaded "bubble," fretting that "biofool" investors
are putting too much money into new refineries, which could go bust as markets and subsidies shift
or as technologies and feedstocks become obsolete. Betting the farm on biofuels has become
commonplace: this year alone American farmers planted an additional 15 million acres in corn, and
they were expecting one of the largest harvests in history. The share of the corn crop going into ethanol is also increasing
pell-mell, from about 5 percent ten years ago to 20 percent in 2006, with the likelihood that it could
go to 40 percent in the next few years. Not surprisingly, the price of corn doubled over the last two years.
This past January, angry consumers took to the streets in Mexico City to protest the resulting surge in the price of tortillas, a staple food. In China,
rising feed costs boosted pork prices 29 percent, prompting the government to back off its plan to
produce more biofuels. Even titans of agribusiness worried out loud that we might be putting fuel for our cars ahead of food for our bellies. The
chief executive at Tyson Foods said the poultry producer was spending an extra $300 million on feed this year and warned of food-price shocks rippling
through the market. Cargill's
chief predicted that reallocation of farmland due to biofuel incentives could
combine with bad weather to cause food shortages around the world. Cattle ranchers and
environmentalists, unlikely bedfellows, both called for rethinking those incentives.
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The diversion of corn to ethanol disrupts food and commodities markets rapidly increasing the price of
staple crops across the globe.
RUNGE AND SENAUER 07 (C. Ford Runge and Benjamin Senauer, “How Biofuels Could Starve the Poor,”
Foreign Affairs, May/June 2007, C. Ford Runge is Distinguished McKnight University Professor of Applied
Economics and Law and Director of the Center for International Food and Agricultural Policy at the University
of Minnesota. Benjamin Senauer is Professor of Applied Economics and Co-director of the Food Industry
Center at the University of Minnesota)
The current biofuels craze is neither clean nor green. Instead, it has disrupted food and commodities markets and
inflicted heavy penalties on poor consumers. These developments have occurred despite record global
grain harvests in 2007. Our analysis (and virtually everyone else's), assumes that normal trends in grain yields
will continue or improve. But U.S. corn yields, despite dramatic increases over the last half-century,
have also shown significant departures from trend, including decreases of roughly 30 percent in some
years due to adverse weather. Planting delays this spring in the Corn Belt due to wetter, cooler
conditions are beginning to raise concerns about this year's crop. And, as reported recently in the Wall
Street Journal, many economists "believe that food inflation will rise faster than the USDA estimate
and likely continue into 2009." The policy response to these pressures, in both rich and poor countries, has not been encouraging. Rather
than reducing the mandates, subsidies, and tariffs that buttress the ethanol industry, the U.S.
government has larded new agricultural legislation in Congress with further subsidies and shifted
blame to other countries (or to economists). The one token reduction came in the recent farm bill, which trimmed the ethanol subsidy from 51 to 45
cents per gallon--hardly a significant change.
Ethanol production also diverts other staple crops. Even marginal increases in the price of food puts 1.1
billion people at risk.
Robbin S. Johnson former senior vice president of corporate affairs at Cargill Inc. and C. Ford Runge 2007
Distinguished McKnight University Professor of Applied Economics and Law and director of the Center for
International Food and Agricultural Policy at the University of Minnesota. Ethanol:Train Wreck Ahead?
Government policy is stoking unsustainable growth of the corn-based fuel. A more sober, diversified approach
is needed. Issues in Science and Technology Fall http://www.issues.org/24.1/p_johnson.html
As biofuels increasingly impinge on the supply of corn, and as soybeans and other crops are
sacrificed to grow still more corn, a food-versus-fuel debate has broken out. Critics note that domestic and international consumers of
livestock fed with grains face steadily rising prices. In July 2007, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development issued an outlook for 2007–
2016, saying that biofuels
had introduced global structural shifts in food markets that would raise food
costs during the next 10 years. Especially for the 2.7 billion people in the world living on the
equivalent of less than $2 per day and the 1.1 billion surviving on less than $1, even marginal
increases in the cost of staple grains can be devastating. Put starkly: Filling the 25-gallon tank of a
sport utility vehicle with pure ethanol would require more than 450 pounds of corn, enough calories
to feed one poor person for a year.
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The tightening of corn supply makes any disruption drive food prices into the stratosphere.
Henry I. Miller, Colin A. and Carter 2008 professor of agricultural and resource economics at the
University of California, Davis and , M.S., M.D., is a research fellow at the Hoover Institution January 2008
. THE ENVIRONMENT: Running on Empty Hoovier Digest
http://www.hoover.org/publications/digest/13871832.html
In the short and medium term, ethanol can do little to reduce the vast amount of oil that is
imported, and the ethanol policy will have profound ripple effects on other commodity markets. Corn
farmers and ethanol refiners are ecstatic about the ethanol boom, of course, and are enjoying the windfall of artificially enhanced demand. But it is already
proving to be an expensive and dangerous experiment for the rest of us. With other countries joining the United States in
ramping up biofuel production, mainly of ethanol, world food prices are skyrocketing. A 2005 law
mandates production of 7.5 billion gallons by 2012, about 5 percent of the projected gasoline use at that time. These biofuel goals are
propped up by a generous federal subsidy—via tax credits—of 51 cents a gallon for blending
ethanol into gasoline, and a tariff of 54 cents a gallon on most imported ethanol, to keep out cheap
imports from Brazil. Such subsidies ignore science and economics in favor of politics, and show disdain for free markets. Thus, it is no surprise
that the price of corn has doubled in the past year—from $2 per bushel to $4. We are already seeing upward pressure on food prices:
nationally, food prices were up 3.9 percent in April 2007, compared to a year earlier. An Iowa State University study estimates that
food prices have already increased by $47 annually per capita, or $14 billion overall. Until the recent ethanol boom, more than 60
percent of the U.S. corn harvest was fed domestically to cattle, hogs, and chickens, or used in food or beverages. Thousands of food items
contain corn or corn byproducts. A spokesman for one of California’s largest cattle ranches and feedlots noted that since the end of 2005,
the company has experienced a 36 percent increase in the cost of feed, which translates to an additional
expense of $101 per animal raised. Reflecting these trends, the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association has demanded an end to both
government subsidies for ethanol and the import tariff on foreign ethanol. The poultry industry is also squawking. The National Chicken Council demands
remedies from senators who represent the big Southern poultry states, and the National Turkey Federation estimates that its feed costs have gone up nearly
$600 million a year. These effects may only hint at things to come. Any
shock to corn yields, such as drought, unseasonably
hot weather, pests, or disease, could send food prices during the next few years into the
stratosphere. Even Gregory Page, the CEO of agribusiness giant Cargill, a major beneficiary of the ethanol boom, shares these fears: “We just have to
be sure that the more is- better mind-set [regarding ethanol] doesn’t get way out ahead of the capacity of the land to provide the fuel. . . . What we would like
to see is some thoughtfulness about what we will do if we have a weather calamity.” Such
concerns are more than theoretical: in
1970, a widespread outbreak of a fungus called southern corn leaf blight destroyed 15 percent of the
U.S. corn crop, and in 1988, drought reduced U.S. corn yields by almost 30 percent.
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Rising prices of maize—and potentially of cassava, which is also an ethanol feedstock— would be a concern for the world’s
poor, most of whom are net food purchasers. Maize is the preferred staple food of more than 1.2
billion people in Latin America and Africa (Global Crop Diversity Trust 2006). Cassava provides one-third of the caloric needs in
sub-Saharan Africa and is the primary staple for more than 200 million poor people. It is also a reserve when other crops fail. A study at the
University of Minnesota estimated that, for every percentage increase in the real prices of staple
foods, the number of foodinsecure people in the world would rise by more than 16 million (Runge and
Senauer 2007).
Foods security outweighs all other impacts – it makes every impact inevitable
Trudell, J.D. Candidate 2006, 05 (Robert H., Fall, Food Security Emergencies And The Power Of Eminent Domain: A Domestic
Legal Tool To Treat A Global Problem, 33 Syracuse J. Int'l L. & Com. 277, Lexis)
Today, more than 842 million people - nearly three times the population of the United States - are chronically
hungry. 43 "Chronic hunger is a profound, debilitating human experience that affects the ability of individuals
to work productively, think clearly, and resist disease. It also has devastating consequences for society: it drains economies,
destabilizes governments, and reaches across international boundaries." The enormous number of chronically hungry people
44
conjures up a critical question: how can we feed these people? While the rate of population growth has been leveling off in the developed, wealthy countries of the
world, the populations of the poorest countries and regions of the world still grow at an alarming pace. 45 Population statisticians refer to this phenomenon as
population momentum. 46 Of the seventeen countries whose women average six or more births in a lifetime, all but two are in Africa. 47 In
sub-Saharan
Africa, millions are undernourished and millions more live on a dollar a day, making it the most poverty-
stricken region in the world today. [*285] Chronic hunger and poverty are the rock-and-a-hard-place in between which the people of sub-
48
Saharan Africa find themselves today. One tragedy endlessly feeds upon and exacerbates the other because a person needs money to buy food, but she (or he)
cannot earn money when she is chronically hungry. 49 The food security issues of this region are a global concern. Silvio Berlusconi,
Prime Minister of Italy, and Chairperson of the 2002 World Food Summit in Rome said, "Together with terrorism, hunger is one of the
greatest problems the international community is facing." Human security is a value which can be broadly defined as both the
50
51
"freedom from fear" and the "freedom from want." Until recently, security was largely a concern arising out of the conflict among states, i.e. state security, which
can be summed up in the phrase "military preparedness." 52 Today, it is recognized that the achievement of freedom from want is as important a goal as the
achievement of freedom from fear and countries must arm themselves against such fear by addressing food insecurity. 53 In an editorial in the Economist, Kofi
Annan, Secretary General of the United Nations, wrote that today's threats to security - terrorism, food security and poverty - are all interrelated so that no one
country can tackle them alone. 54 For example, keeping our food supply secure plays a direct role in achieving freedom from fear. The State Department has been
studying the possibilities of food-borne bioterrorism, introducing the national security element to food security concerns. 55 Likewise, in December [*286] 2004,
during his resignation announcement, Tommy Thompson, the former Secretary of the Health and Human Services Department, stated: "For the life of me, I cannot
understand why the terrorists have not attacked our food supply, because it is so easy to do." 56 Yet it is a mistake to think of global security only in military terms.
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Food security deserves its place in any long-term calculation regarding global security. Widespread
chronic hunger causes widespread instability and debilitating poverty and decreases all of our safety, for
example from the increased threat from global terrorism. Widespread instability is an unmistakable
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characteristic of life in sub-Saharan Africa. Food insecurity, therefore, causes global insecurity because
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widespread instability in places like sub-Saharan Africa threatens all of our safety. Food insecurity in the
unstable regions of the world must be taken on now lest we find ourselves facing some far worse danger in
the days to come.
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Elliot, 2008 (Larry, Journalist, “Soft Landings and Hard Realities: The IMF Thinks We Can Ride Out This
Crisis, But There Could Be Far Worse News To Come”, Guardian Weekly, April 18, Lexis)
The first is that it is far too early to say that the worst is over. Henry Paulson, who does Summers's old job at the US treasury,
said he expected to see some impact from lower interest rates and tax cuts by the third quarter of this year. But that depends on the US housing market
stabilising, because until it does there is a real risk of a vicious circle of foreclosures, collapsing consumer confidence, rising unemployment, bigger losses for
US banks, tighter credit conditions and a falling stock market. The IMF says that risks are still heavily weighted to the downside. It produced an alternative
scenario in which there would be a further tightening of credit conditions, a far bigger drop in equity and property prices than it currently expects, a gloomier
assessment of the prospects for long-term productivity growth in the US, and an unwillingness on the part of foreign investors to continue buying US assets. It
already believes there is a 25% risk of a global recession; under this alternative scenario it says there would be a deeper and longer period of falling growth in
the US, accompanied by an extended period of weakness in the eurozone and spillover effects on the rest of the global economy through weaker trade flows
and tougher credit conditions. This scenario looks just as realistic as the fund's baseline soft-landing forecast. For one thing, there is a clear disjunction between
the idea that this is the biggest financial shock since the Depression and the idea that there will be only a short-lived and relatively mild impact on growth. In
addition, the soft-landing thesis conveniently ignores the other headwinds facing the global economy.
These include rocketing commodity prices that are contributing to a sharp rise in imported inflation, severe downward pressure on the dollar that threatens to
become a disorderly plunge, the still-sizeable global imbalances that have resulted in massive trade surpluses in Asia, and massive trade deficits in the US,
which have been only slightly reduced by a cheaper greenback and weaker growth. That
list was supplemented last week by global
hunger caused by rising food prices. The world has suddenly woken up to what should have been
blindingly obvious: trying to solve the problem of climate change by using crops for biofuel was a
short-term fix with potentially lethal result. If you encourage farmers to use land that would have
produced food for fuel, the price of food will go up. Gordon Brown considers this to be a serious crisis and is right to call for a
global response. Yet apart from the humanitarian need to help those going hungry, rising food prices
make it harder to avoid recession in the West, since they stifle consumer confidence and make
policy-makers warier about cutting interest rates.
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1AC Environment
Advantage____: The Environment
Scenario One: Soil Erosion
High prices mean that increasing farmers have no incentive to put land into the Conservation Reserve
Program which is necessary to prevent soil erosion and protect fragile habitats.
Richard Conniff, 2007 2007 Guggenheim Fellow. Who's Fueling Whom? Why the biofuels movement could
run out of gas * Smithsonian magazine, November 2007 http://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-
nature/presence-biofuel-200711.html?c=y&page=4
One other problem with the rush to "greener" fuels is that, despite the biodiversity happy talk,
wildlife is already prominent among biofuel victims. Last year, for instance, farmers were protecting about
36 million acres through the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Conservation Reserve Program (CRP),
which works to restore degraded lands, reduce soil erosion and maintain wildlife habitat. CRP land
is what biofuel proponents often have their eyes on when they talk about producing biofuels and
biodiversity by growing switchgrass. But farmers look at the bottom line, sizing up the $21 per acre
they net with the CRP payment (to take a representative example from southwest Minnesota) against the $174 they can
now earn growing corn. And they have begun pulling land out of CRP and putting it back into
production.
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1AC Environment
Moreover,
the supposedly "green" virtues of biofuels are not quite what they seemed. In fact, biofuels
pose major risks to the environment. In October 2007, the Nobel Prize winning chemist Paul Crutzen,
who pioneered the atmospheric science of ozone depletion, co-authored an article demonstrating that
the heavy application of nitrogen fertilizer on corn (for ethanol) and on European rapeseed (for
vegetable-oil biodiesel) would produce such high levels of atmospheric nitrous oxide--which is 296
times more damaging as a greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide--that it would have a net negative effect
on greenhouse gas emissions. In early 2008, two articles in Science showed that forests or grasslands converted for the production of biofuels will
immediately incur a "carbon debt," due to the release of carbon dioxide from biomass and soil. This long "payback" for biofuels is disappointing in light of the
The second Science study demonstrated that biofuel production often displaces
urgency of global warming.
crops, moving them to new areas where further land-use conversions are required. In the Corn Belt of
the Midwest, biofuels helped to convert nearly 20 million acres from soybean production to corn
production in 2007, pushing soybean prices higher while encouraging extensive applications of
nitrogen and phosphorus fertilizers that run off into lakes and streams, enter the Mississippi River,
and eventually reach the Gulf of Mexico where they have created an oxygen-starved "dead zone." The
authors found that such land-use changes nearly double greenhouse emissions over 30 years, and
increase greenhouse gases for 167 years.
Janet Raloff, senior editor of Science News June 5, 2004; Vol. 165, No. 23 , p. 360 Massive oxygen-starved
zones are developing along the world's coasts http://www.sciencenews.org/articles/20040605/bob9.asp
Although the precise timing and size of the Gulf's dead zone varies with the weather, in many years it encompasses 22,000 square
kilometers, aparcel of underwater real estate roughly the size of New Jersey. Fish that can evacuate as oxygen drops do so—although
abandoning their home habitat may render them vulnerable to predators. Crustaceans and other seafloor life that can't leave fast enough simply die. There's no
mystery as to what triggers this annual hypoxic zone, as the oxygen-starved region is formally termed. Into the Gulf of Mexico, the
Mississippi River deposits water that is heavily enriched with plant nutrients, principally nitrate. This pollutant fertilizes the
abundant growth of tiny, floating algae. As blooms of the algae go through their natural life cycles and die, they fall to the
bottom and create a feast for bacteria. Growing in unnatural abundance, the bacteria use up most of the oxygen from
the bottom water. Dead zones tend to develop in quiet, deep water a few km offshore. Typically, they appear where a river spews rich plumes of nutrients
into water that's stratified because of either temperature or salinity differences between the bottom and the top of the water column. If the water doesn't mix,
oxygen isn't replenished in the lower half. The good news is that the Gulf's dead zone disappears each winter, observes Fred Wulff of the University of
Stockholm. In the eastern Baltic Sea, where he works, a permanent dead zone covers up to 100,000 square km. Nasty blooms of blue-green algae in the Baltic also
lead to regular beach closures and fish kills. Caused almost exclusively by human activities, coastal dead zones are becoming
increasingly common and recurrent, observes Robert J. Diaz of the Virginia Institute of Marine Sciences in Gloucester
Point. His group finds that the number of major dead zones has been roughly doubling every decade since the 1960s. On March
29, the United Nations Environment Program issued its first Global Environment Outlook Year Book, a volume highlighting issues requiring urgent attention. The
report drew notice to the increase in major coastal dead zones. After examining unpublished data by Diaz' team, the U.N. body concluded that there are some 150
recurring and permanent dead zones in seas worldwide. Over the past century, "overfishing was the leading environmental issue affecting our seas," Diaz says. "In
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the new millennium, it's going to be oxygen." How low? Fully oxygenated waters contain as much as 10 parts per million of oxygen. Once oxygen falls to 5
ppm, fish and other aquatic animals have trouble breathing. Sharks begin vacating areas with 3 ppm of oxygen, while most other fish can hold out until about 2
ppm. Sediment dwellers that can't leave a hypoxic zone begin dying at around 1.5 ppm. In some dead zones, oxygen hovers at 0.5 ppm or lower for months.
Marine ecologists have documented both large and small dead zones in U.S. coastal waters throughout the past decade. Diaz and his coworkers wanted to extend
the findings worldwide. During the past several years, they scoured many years of marine-science reports for indications of large dead zones. Sixty-eight
large, persistent, and recurring dead zones spanning the world's seas were reported for the first time during the 1990s.
Most, Diaz says, appear to be ecosystems that had at that time just reached their breaking point. The problem of dead
zones is escalating rapidly and globally, he concludes. His team is now investigating whether recurring dead zones are mushrooming in size or impact. Making such assessments won't
be easy, he concedes, because even for the best-studied sites, the dead zones in the Gulf of Mexico and the Mid-Atlantic region's Chesapeake Bay, quantitative data remain meager. Nancy N. Rabalais, an aquatic
ecologist with the Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium in Chauvin, has been trying to fill in some gaps. She's been mapping the Gulf of Mexico's dead zone for roughly 20 years. When spring rains scour farm
fields as far upstream as Ohio, Minnesota, and Montana, spilling huge quantities of nitrogen into the Mississippi, it's only a matter of weeks before the oxygen concentrations in the Gulf begin to respond. "Once a
decline starts, it goes from about 5 [ppm] to close to 0 in about 7 to 10 days," Rabalais says. Shrimp and bottom-dwelling fish tend to evacuate into a halo around the periphery of the hypoxic zone, she notes. This
hasn't escaped the notice of fishing fleets, which sometimes fill their landing quotas of commercially valuable catch by trawling the edges of a dead zone. However, such fishing success can mask a pending
catastrophe, Diaz warns. In Europe, he recalls, "fishermen were laughing at scientists in the mid-'70s," when the latter cautioned that hypoxia was threatening bottom-dwelling aquatic life in the eastern end of the
North Sea separating Norway, Denmark, and Sweden. Harvests of Norwegian lobsters, for instance, remained robust through 1978. The next year, however, these shellfish and the area's many bottom-dwelling fish
were gone. The earlier bumper crops had reflected landings of oxygen-stressed animals that had left their burrows and other familiar turf to breathe easier, Diaz explains. Fishing for indicators Although scientists
haven't observed fish dying in the Gulf of Mexico, J. Kevin Craig of Duke University in Beaufort, N.C., may be seeing harbingers of an impending crisis in brown shrimp (Farfantepenaeus aztecus), the Gulf's highest-
valued species. He has investigated two parameters of the animals' health: size and lipid content. Over the past 3 decades, the average size and therefore price of Gulf shrimp has been falling, Craig notes. His data also
show that the concentration of lipids in a shrimp's body—representing the energy stores these animals carry—tends to be 20 to 25 percent lower in animals caught in low-oxygen areas than in those caught in fully
oxygenated water. The combination of factors suggests that hypoxia slows the animals' growth, the aquatic ecologist says. By contrast, Craig's team found "no obvious negative effects of hypoxia on growth or lipid
content of the Atlantic croaker [Micropogonias undulatus]." Although this bottom-dwelling finned fish, as shrimp do, migrates just beyond the dead zone when oxygen concentrations plummet, its lipid concentration
doesn't suffer. Also, its average size hasn't diminished over the years during which the Gulf of Mexico dead zone has grown. In fact, Craig says, since the displaced fish normally hovers at the edge of hypoxic zones—
where many other evacuees also hang out—croakers may actually benefit from the oxygen crisis. To a predatory croaker, he speculates, the edge of the dead zone is "like a smorgasbord." Denise Breitberg of the
Smithsonian Environmental Research Center in Edgewater, Md., has witnessed a similar dichotomy of dead-zone winners and losers in the Chesapeake. Anchovies (Anchoa mitchilli), for instance, spawn in surface
waters, releasing eggs that sink to the sediment. If the eggs land in a hypoxic area, they'll die. On the other hand, Breitberg has found that the Bay's gelatinous species—its comb jellies (Mnemiopsis leidyi) and
stinging sea nettles (Chrysaora quinquecirrha)—are quite tolerant of hypoxia. "Both can survive for several days at 0.5 [ppm oxygen], a habitat from which finfish are excluded," she reports. Breitberg worries that a
growing dead zone in the bay each summer is creating a habitat that favors jellyfish over the commercially valuable finfish, crabs, and oysters. Despite the nation's most aggressive state and local efforts to curtail
nutrient releases into local waters, last year's dead zone in the Chesapeake was the largest ever measured. Gulf course Accounts describing occasional bouts of hypoxia in the Gulf of Mexico date back to 1884, when
a Mobile, Ala., newspaper reported a "jubilee"—a prolonged, anomalous run of fish and crabs into the shallows at Mobile. According to Diaz, although the reporter recommended that local citizens avail themselves of
a
this "gift from God," it and subsequent jubilees almost certainly stemmed from the runoff of plant nutrients from farms and towns, which led to marine organisms' fleeing a new dead zone. For U.S. ecologists,
nagging question today is how much reduction in nutrient inputs to the Gulf of Mexico must occur for its dead zone to
shrink substantially. Over the past few years, Don Scavia of the National Ocean Service in Silver Spring, Md., has developed a computer model of the
annual Gulf dead zone. By correlating river inputs with the dead zones that Rabalais has mapped since 1985, Scavia's team calculated relationships between
freshwater flow, the Mississippi's nitrate content, and the Gulf's oxygen concentrations. Then, the team ran the model backward, plugging in annual measurements
for the past half-century of nitrate concentrations, the annual cycle of the Mississippi's flow, and weather data. The calculations indicate that dead zones didn't
become large, annual phenomena until the mid-1970s, says Scavia, who is currently the director of the Michigan Sea Grant program in Ann Arbor. But now that
it's perennial, the hypoxia phenomenon will be hard to vanquish, the model also indicates. By running the model forward in time, Scavia's
team analyzed how much farmers and other polluters in the Gulf watershed—an area covering 41 percent of the lower
48 states' area—would have to scale back their nitrogen releases to limit the zone to an annual average of just 5,000
square km., a target set by the federal government 3 years ago. The researchers' conclusion: a 40 to 45 percent annual
cutback in the nutrient releases. That nitrogen reduction is daunting, says Robert W. Howarth of Cornell University. "Over the past 20 years, nitrogen
pollution in coastal waters has increased pretty steadily, about 1 percent per year," he notes. A biogeochemist, Howarth chaired a National
Academy of Sciences committee that studied nutrient pollution in coastal waters and 4 years ago issued a report
finding that the problem, affecting almost all U.S. coastal waters to some degree, was so serious that urgent national
action was imperative. To date, Howarth tells Science News, because the federal government currently seeks only voluntary
controls on nutrient runoff, there hasn't been much action. In fact, budget cuts are reducing the already-scheduled
monitoring. Murky future Instead of getting better, the Gulf's dead zone could quickly get a lot worse, says Scavia.
"There comes a time when the fisheries collapse," he says. Not only will commercial harvests plummet, but fish and shrimp reproduction will
also drop off. In some cases, a commercially popular fish might completely disappear. Unfortunately, he says, no one knows how close the Gulf is
to that point. It might take a year, or it could take 2 decades. The problem, Scavia notes, is that once a hypoxia-fostered
collapse starts, "it happens fast" and can be devilishly hard to reverse.
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ADI 08 Spring
Ethanol Aff
1AC Environment
Science Daily 2007. Increase in Ethanol Production from Corn could Significantly Harm Water Quality.
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/10/071010120538.htm
In terms of water quantity, the committee found that agricultural shifts to growing corn and
expanding biofuel crops into regions with little agriculture, especially dry areas, could change
current irrigation practices and greatly increase pressure on water resources in many parts of the
United States. The amount of rainfall and other hydroclimate conditions from region to region
causes significant variations in the water requirement for the same crop, the report says. For example, in
the Northern and Southern Plains, corn generally uses more water than soybeans and cotton, while the reverse is true in the Pacific and mountain regions of the
country. Water demands for drinking, industry, and such uses as hydropower, fish habitat, and recreation could compete with, and in some cases, constrain the
use of water for biofuel crops in some regions. Consequently, growing biofuel crops requiring additional irrigation in
areas with limited water supplies is a major concern, the report says. Even though a large body of
information exists for the nation's agricultural water requirements, fundamental knowledge gaps
prevent making reliable assessments about the water impacts of future large scale production of
feedstocks other than corn, such as switchgrass and native grasses. In addition, other aspects of
crop production for biofuel may not be fully anticipated using the frameworks that exist for food
crops. For example, biofuel crops could be irrigated with wastewater that is biologically and chemically unsuitable for use with food crops, or genetically
modified crops that are more water efficient could be developed.
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ADI 08 Spring
Ethanol Aff
1AC Brazil
Tariffs on Brazilian sugar cane ethanol cause an overemphasis on corn ethanol. The plan solves by letting
Brazilian ethanol compete in the US market. They have the capacity to supply the US with enough
ethanol to solve.
Dallas Morning News 6 May 2008 “Brazil Seeing Sweet Profit From Sugar Cane-Based Ethanol”
Twenty thousand acres of sugar cane are sprouting through the red soil around this small town, destined for fuel tanks across the world. It's the start of a $2.7 billion
ethanol project put together by Brazil Renewable Energy Co., or Brenco, a private venture financed
by U.S. and Brazilian investors. They plan to export a billion gallons of ethanol a year by 2015 --
enough fuel to offset demand for 65,000 barrels a day of oil. About 350 miles to the east, in fields surrounding the town of Flores de Goias, a firm
from Irving, TruEnergy Renewable Fuels, is putting together a $523 million ethanol project that could offset 8,700 barrels a day of oil demand. With world oil consumption running at 86 million barrels a day, the
ethanol produced by these two private companies will amount to a modest alternative contribution. Global ethanol production, however, is already greater than the yearly increase in world oil demand. Without
ethanol, high oil prices would be higher still. "Demand for oil is increasing every year, but reserves are more and more difficult to find," said Brenco founder Henri Philippe Reichstul, a former head of Brazil's
Petrobras oil company. "We have an alternative that is also the fastest way of reducing your emissions from cars
without changing anything," he said. "To me, it looks like a no-brainer." Still, others say ethanol advocates are driving drunk. Biofuels -- especially corn-based
ethanol made in the United States -- are under attack for inflating food prices, destroying rain
forests, depleting water supplies and increasing pollution. "We felt there was good reason to investigate this avenue for generating a sustainable
fuel away from oil," said Ken Cook, president of the farm-oriented Environmental Working Group in Washington. But "we are replacing oil insecurity with food
insecurity." Gov. Rick Perry and Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, R-Texas, have urged the Bush administration to ease up
on ethanol mandates for gasoline because of rising food costs. Seventeen countries now require
refiners to add ethanol to gasoline. Last year, Congress ordered the use of enough biofuels to equal
20 percent of U.S. transportation needs -- 35 billion gallons -- by 2022. One-fourth of the U.S. corn crop
now goes to ethanol, and corn prices are so high that ethanol producers are struggling to make
money as rising feedstock costs eat into profits. "The corn price spike has scared a lot of investors,"
said Paul Ho of Credit Suisse's Renewable Energy Group. Investors in Brazil are turning to sugar cane. Brenco and TruEnergy
are planting in Brazilian cattle pastures and say they aren't crowding out grain producers. Best sugar cane
The two companies' sugar cane plantations are more than 1,000 miles south of the Amazon forest, where high rainfall makes sugar cane an uneconomical crop. (Plant stress creates the sugar, so a period of drought
"Sugar cane
makes for the best sugar cane.) "Ethanol in the U.S. has struggled a lot because the high price of corn creates a lot of food vs. fuel pressures," said Tim Lavender, president of TruEnergy.
doesn't have that." Ethanol from sugar cane could lower food prices, Mr. Lavender said. Federal Reserve
Chairman Ben Bernanke says foreign ethanol can take the pressure off the U.S. corn crop and has
recommended that Congress drop a 54-cents-a-gallon tariff on Brazilian ethanol. Brazil is expecting
global demand for its ethanol to surge. Companies have announced plans for 75 ethanol plants.
International investors are soon expected to account for more than 15 percent of Brazil's ethanol
production. Starting in September, TruEnergy plans to build three ethanol plants in the Brazilian state of Goias. They will be fed by farmers promising to grow 148,000 acres of sugar cane. Mr.
Lavender said he has lined up engineering and operations companies, a farmers' co-op and a prospective client -- the commodities trading arm of Gazprom, Russia's giant energy company. He still needs capital.
TruEnergy's principals have $4 million invested in the deal and hope to find Brazilian investors
willing to put in $150 million, Mr. Lavender said. The total cost of the project is estimated at $523 million. Brenco partners Mr. Reichstul's partners include Sun Microsystems
founder Vinod Khosla, AOL founder Steve Case and California supermarket magnate Ronald Burkle, who has an investment partnership with Bill and Hillary Clinton. (Brenco says the Clintons are not direct
investors in the company.) The Brenco investors have assembled $200 million for their project. They plan to cultivate 988,000 acres of sugar cane at three plantations, including one outside the town of Costa
Rica. Brenco and TruEnergy say they can generate all the electricity they will need by burning the
sugar cane leaves and depleted stalks, with enough left over for a profitable side business selling
power to Brazil's utilities. The international ethanol market is tiny compared with that for oil and gasoline. With pretty much only a domestic market,
Brazilian producers typically depress ethanol prices whenever they bring a plant into operation, said Marcos Jank, president of the Brazil Sugar Cane Industry Association. Brazil
produces 5.8 billion gallons a year of ethanol but exports a mere 960 million gallons. A university
study done last year for the Ministry of Science and Technology found that Brazil would be capable
of supplying the world with 52 billion gallons a year -- 1.4 million barrels a day -- if an additional $9.5 billion were invested
in pipelines, terminals and new plants. More than 100 countries could turn sugar cane into fuel for the international market, Mr. Jank said. About 20 nations dominate the often shaky international oil market.
16
ADI 08 Spring
Ethanol Aff
1AC Brazil
Brazilian Sugar cane ethanol is far superior to corn ethanol. It solves food prices, production costs, water,
environment, and efficiency.
Eric Reguly, Special Business section reporter, “It's time to kill corn subsidies and go Brazilian” The Globe and Mail (Canada), May
12, 2008, Lexis
Your doctor will tell you not all cholesterol is created equal. The dangerous version can kill you, the good can make you healthier.
Brazil uses the
same line with ethanol. The corn-based stuff pumped out by the Americans and Canadians is bad, bad, bad.
But our sugarcane ethanol is cheap and plentiful and environmentally friendly. There is no doubt
sugarcane ethanol is the more attractive fuel by almost every measure; just how much is still matter of political and
scientific debate. Which raises the question: If there is good ethanol and bad ethanol, why not take the good, ditch the bad and put the billions of savings to
other uses? Forget it. The
United States and Canada use a wall of import duties and tariffs to repel Brazil's
sugarcane ethanol, and protect corn ethanol. They do so in spite of the barrage of evidence that the
latter is harmful to taxpayers and the environment and is pushing up food prices around the world.
In Canada, the House of Commons just approved a bill that will require gasoline to have 5-per-cent ethanol content by 2010. Europe is implementing
aggressive biofuel content rules. The Americans treat corn ethanol as a birthright. The Brazilians are old ethanol pros. Sugarcane ethanol came to life in the
1970s, when the twin oil shocks made gasoline prices unaffordable. The government subsidized production and encouraged auto makers to engineer cars that
could run on ethanol. The effort was pretty much a dud. The engine technology was abysmal and falling oil prices soon made gasoline attractive again. In the
1980s, Brazil killed the subsidies. But Brazil saw a long-term future in sugarcane ethanol, and it slowly came back to life. The fuel could create jobs in the
deregulating agriculture industry, reduce the dependence on foreign oil and give motorists a choice at the pumps. Technological improvements would allow car
engines to run on various ethanol-gasoline mixtures. At the time, sugarcane's relative environmental benefits were of no concern. The attraction was low cost
Sugarcane is everything corn is not. Corn
and high efficiency in a country too poor for high-tech alternatives to gasoline and diesel.
is a food. Turning it into fuel raises food prices because of competition for arable land. In the United
States alone, one-third of the corn crop goes to ethanol production. In the European Union, some 15 per cent of arable
land will have to be devoted to biofuel production to meet content mandates. Yes, sugar is food. But it is not a staple. Sugarcane
ethanol is inexpensive to produce. It requires no irrigation and only small amounts (relative to corn)
of fertilizers and pesticides. It grows year round. The factories where sugarcane is turned into
ethanol are clever little contraptions. The waste material is burned to produce steam, which spins a
turbine to make electricity. About 3 per cent of Brazil's electricity comes from the ethanol factories.
The figure is expected to rise to as much as 15 per cent by 2015. Where sugarcane shines is in
efficiency. One hectare yields 7,500 litres of ethanol. One hectare of corn produces about 4,000
litres, according to the United States Department of Agriculture. The Brazilian sugarcane
association, known as Unica, claims one unit of energy is required to produce nine units of
sugarcane ethanol. The ratio for corn is far worse, at one to two. Did we mention Brazilian ethanol
gets no subsidies? To be sure, sugarcane is not perfect. Since most of it is harvested by hand (mechanization is coming), the working conditions can
be grim, and flash burning is often used to clear the foliage around the plants to make access easier. Burning creates carbon dioxide. While sugarcane is grown
near Sao Paolo, well south of the Amazon rain forest, the argument can be made that the land devoted to sugarcane displaces other crops, resulting in
deforestation elsewhere. Add up the pluses and the minuses and sugarcane ethanol blows corn ethanol off the farm. So why not import it? Because ethanol is
all about transferring wealth to the American and Canadian corn industries. The subsidies are rich, the market is guaranteed through content goals. The
American corn ethanol machine will tolerate no threats. The new U.S. Farm Bill proposes to extend the ethanol import tariffs - 54 cents (U.S.) a gallon - for
another two years.
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ADI 08 Spring
Ethanol Aff
1AC Brazil
Opening the market to Brazilian ethanol is key to US Brazil relations.
Brazil Institute Special Report | April 2007 | Issue No. 3 The Global Dynamics of Biofuels Potential Supp ly
and Demand for Ethanol and Biodiesel in the Coming Decade Woodrow Wilson Center for International
Scholars
Emerson Kloss, a diplomat at the trade policy sector desk for agricultural issues at the Embassy of Brazil in Washington, argued that the U.S.-
Brazilian partnership is one of many important joint ventures being pursued by the Brazilian
government to expand the production and consumption of ethanol. Only with a truly international
market for biofuels will Brazil and the United States have the structural market conditions
necessary to develop and expand their own internal market and increase the participation of
biofuels within their own energy matrix. Partnerships such as the U.S.-Brazilian one reflect the
importance that Brazil places upon international cooperation on energy, as well as Brazil’s desire to
bring alternative development to poor countries by creating an international market for biofuels
Numerous requests from developing nations hoping to cooperate in the field of ethanol have led to Brazil’s recent reassessment of the importance of energy, as
seen in departmental and ministerial restructuring efforts to better coordinate energy issues among Brazilian agencies.
Current partnerships
with countries in the Caribbean, Africa, and Asia seek to replicate Brazil’s positive experience with
the production of ethanol. Brazil’s experience has provided a good source of income for rural
populations and encouraged development in the country’s underdeveloped Northeast. Even more promising
in terms of development has been the production of biodiesels through palm oil and castor beans, although this industry is only in the initial phases and is thus
relatively small in Brazil. The joint U.S.-Brazilian strategy of energy cooperation is a key step in this
direction.
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ADI 08 Spring
Ethanol Aff
1AC – Plan
The United States Federal Government will eliminate nearly all domestic agricultural subsidies for corn
ethanol including but not limited to all tariffs on imported ethanol, the volumetric excise tax credits for
blending ethanol, Renewable Fuel Credits and the Renewable Fuel Standard.
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ADI 08 Spring
Ethanol Aff
1AC Solvency
The plan allows biofuels to compete on the open market increasing the efficiency of ethanol and
eliminating incentives to overproduce corn.
Koplow in 07 (Douglas, Biofuels – At What Cost? Government support for ethanol and biodiesel in the United States: 2007
update October 2007)
Biofuels should compete head-on with alternative ways to reduce oil demand in the transport sector
Given the inefficiencies that have been identified, combined with the rising environmental costs of biofuel production around the world, there is no reason that
this one particular approach aimed at addressing energy security and climate change concerns should be given a free rein. Rather, it should compete directly for
public support with alternative strategies, such as improving fleet efficiency, and encouraging hybrid and plug-in hybrid drive trains. While legislative efforts
often contain public disbursements in all of these areas, there is no integration and no evaluation of the relative efficiency of the different policies in achieving
the desired objectives. Policy
initiatives are adding additional layers of complication and distortion
Congress appears convinced that the way forward is for them to continue to micro-manage the
evolution of the market for transport fuels, with specific funding to specific fuels and technologies.
There is an unwarranted confidence that they are somehow better placed to choose market winners,
rather than focusing instead on establishing a level and transparent playing field on which all
suitable strategies can compete. By forcing diversification of feedstocks away from corn, farmers and biofuel producers might be
compelled to use less economically worthwhile crops (with the consumer or taxpayer paying the additional cost via higher prices or additional cellulosic
subsidies). The proposed Biofuel Energy Reserve, which sets up a series of payments to farmers for growing cellulosic crops, is one example. Initiatives
allowing B20 vehicles to earn CAFE credits will likely compound existing perverse effects associated with Flex Fuel Vehicle exemptions from CAFE. Such
exemptions are estimated to boost U.S. oil imports by 80,000 barrels per day. A pending trading system for these credits would enable manufacturers that have
reached their allowed reduction in CAFE targets as a result of either FFV or pending B20 rules to sell the credits to other car firms. Implementation of such a
A wide array of possible formulations of the
system would generate additional losses in the efficiency of the transport fleet.
Renewable Fuel Standards—addressing targets; special credits for E85, cellulosic, or biomass-fired
production facilities; and eligible fuels—all promise a range of unexpected and perverse outcomes
that will yield few tangible benefits in terms of energy efficiency, diversification, or GHG mitigation.
Yet, notably absent from the scores of legislative proposals are a simplification of the policy
environment, increased competition amongst alternative solutions, and reliance of pricing
mechanisms to target research and optimize production. There seems to be no political will to end
the excise tax credits, despite their duplication with the RFS mandates. Efforts to reduce or end
ethanol tariffs, even though this would also be a cost-effective way to diversify the country’s supply
of alternative transport fuels, have failed repeatedly. Rising subsidies have an opportunity cost, not just a financial one The tens of
billions of dollars spent on biofuels rearrange all sorts of economic relationships from land use,
cropping patterns, and choice of outlet markets. Public funds spent inefficiently on biofuels are also
unavailable to pursue more rapid and cost-efficient solutions to the real issues we face as a society.
The U.S. farm system is already distorted, with wide-ranging subsidies to water use and crop
production. The added layer of biofuel subsidies makes it quite likely that the country will squander
truly valuable inputs, such as soil fertility and groundwater, to produce non-durable and rapidly
consumed biofuels. There are already signs that this is happening, both in the United States and around the world. Restructuring U.S.
policy would make a big difference in ameliorating this trend.
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ADI 08 Spring
Ethanol Aff
1AC Solvency
The plan would massively reduce costs of biofuels and eliminate market distortions.
Masami Kojima of the Oil, Gas, and Mining Policy Division, World Bank; Donald Mitchell of the
Development Prospects Group, Development Economics, World Bank; and William A. Ward 2007, Professor
and Director, Center for International Trade, Clemson University. 2007 Energy Sector Management Assistance
Program Considering Trade Policies for Liquid Biofuels
Biofuel trade liberalization would increase competition, which should in turn help improve
efficiency, bring down costs, and enable the world’s most efficient producers to expand their market
share. Removal of high tariffs would bring down prices in highly protected markets, although world
biofuel prices may rise. That said, removing border restrictions for biofuels while continuing the
agricultural and biofuel policies that distort biofuel markets could prolong those distortions, as
additional markets for subsidized agricultural outputs and biofuels would be created. The greatest welfare gains might be realized
with the full range of trade reforms carried out simultaneously. Failing that, trade in ethanol and biodiesel might be
liberalized as a first step. Such a move could also force governments to address openly the question (and the
costs) of what objectives their biofuel support policies are actually pursuing.
Masami Kojima and Todd Johnson October 2005 Energy Sector Management Assistance Programme
(ESMAP) Potential for Biofuels for Transport in Developing Countries
Because commercial feedstocks for biofuels are crops at present, large expansion of biofuel
production could put upward pressure on food or animal feed prices. In a liberalized market, crop
substitution should not normally lead to higher prices, since most foods and feeds are tradable and
prices are set by world prices. In a liberalized regime, food or feed prices will rise in response to
crop substitution only if the scale of substitution is so significant as to reduce the world supply of
the substituted crop. With incomplete liberalization, however, where agricultural or other policy
interventions continue to make it difficult for farmers or consumers to adjust, international prices
will not necessarily play such a buffering role in the local economy (for example, where overvalued exchange rates and
foreign exchange shortages impede importation of additional food or animal feed). Any pass-through effects of the biofuel program upon these other segments
of society should be captured in the economic analysis of the program.
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ADI 08 Spring
Ethanol Aff
1AC Solvency
Removing subsidies is key to opening the domestic market to other countries and other types of ethanol.
Koplow in 07 (Douglas, Biofuels – At What Cost? Government support for ethanol and biodiesel in the United States: 2007
update October 2007)
Import tariffs on ethanol constrain the gallons brought in from outside the country. Were the borders
open, a larger quantity of less expensive foreign ethanol would enter the country, bringing U.S. ethanol
prices down. Renewable Fuel Standards (RFS) constrain the ability to meet demand with other fuels,
generating an artificial price premium on the blends allowed under the particular RFS statute. This
premium will flow to domestic or foreign producers of eligible fuels. In practice today, the beneficiary
of this policy is predominantly domestically produced corn-based ethanol. Market price support is a measure of how
much extra income U.S. ethanol producers receive as a result of market interventions that artificially raise domestic returns. Some of this return may come through
higher market prices for their product. However, another
important source of subsidy is through the value of Renewable
Fuel Credits (RFCs) they earn by making a particular fuel. Although it is government policies that
create market price support, the actual financial flows usually involve a transfer from consumers to
producers through higher prices. Elobeid and Tokgoz (2006) have estimated this value econometrically, updating their earlier work on the
subject. Were trade barriers to be removed alone (retaining the existing renewable fuel mandate of 7.5 billion gallons per year), they estimate the average U.S.
ethanol prices from 2006–2015 would fall by 13.6 percent, or $ 0.27 per gallon.7 Applying
this to domestically-produced ethanol
generates a subsidy of $ 1.3 billion in 2006, rising to more than $ 3 billion per year as domestic
production grows. Should the import tariff remain in place while more stringent Renewable Fuel
Standards are implemented (as are proposed in pending energy legislation), the MPS would be
expected to rise significantly.8 Though importers also benefit from the higher-than-market prices, the tariff serves to direct most
of the benefits to domestic producers. Foreign producers that do access the U.S. market (and its associated
market price support) must first pay an “entry fee” in the form of the tariff. This reduces their effective MPS subsidy, though
apparently not to zero. Official tariff rates on ethanol imports include a 2.5 percent ad valorem rate and an
additional 54 cents per gallon secondary tariff on certain source countries (most notably Brazil). However,
data compiled by the U.S. International Trade Commission (USITC) indicate that actual duties collected on imported ethanol during 2006 and the first half of 2007
were much lower, averaging only 14 to 16 cents per gallon. This may be the result of drawbacks under existing law that allow tariff rebates if a duty-paid good, or a
substitute good, is exported. In practice, a “person who manufactures or acquires gasoline with ethanol subject to the duty imposed...can export jet fuel (which does
not involve the use of ethanol) and obtain a refund of the duty paid...” (Joint Committee on Taxation, 2 October 2007a: 48).
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ADI 08 Spring
Ethanol Aff
Support to production and consumption is provided at many points in the supply chain. For the purpose of this report, the dividing line between production and
consumption is taken as the point at which the biofuel leaves the manufacturing plant. The one exception is volumetric (i.e., pergallon) subsidies provided to
blenders, which are treated in this report as falling on the production side of the dividing line. At the beginning of the supply chain are
subsidies to what economists call “intermediate inputs”— goods and services that are consumed in the production
process. The largest of these are subsidies to producers of feedstock crops used to make biofuels, particularly corn
(for ethanol) and soybeans (for biodiesel). Although these subsidies do not result in a one-for-one reduction in the feedstock prices, and
therefore the input costs for biofuel manufacturers, they are believed to have some depressing effect on prices. Fabiosa et al. (2006), for example, estimate that
full liberalization of agricultural markets with the removal of trade distortions would raise world (and therefore U.S.) prices of corn by 5.7 percent. Moreover,
to the extent that production of the feedstock crops creates a demand for subsidies, the proportional share of the total subsidies to those crops used in the
production of biofuels can be considered one element of the gross costs to government of promoting biofuels. (The net cost would take into account any
increased taxes paid by farmers as a result of their increasing taxable incomes). Ducks Unlimited, for example, has pointed out that subsidies for crops—and
the expansion of biofuels in particular—are contributing to the conversion of former grasslands to row crops and the loss of small wetlands in the Dakotas
(Niskanen, 2006). Subsidies to intermediate inputs are complemented by subsidies to value-adding factors—capital
goods; labor employed directly in the production process; and land. In the case of biofuels, most of the federal
subsidies supporting value-adding factors in the United States are linked to productive capital. These typically take
the form of grants, or reduced-cost credit, for the building of biofuel manufacturing plants. Some localities are
providing land for biofuel plants below market prices or for free; or exempting land from property taxes. Many
others are paying, at the taxpayer’s expense, for upgrades to roads or rail lines servicing biofuel plants. These types of
subsidies lower both the fixed costs and the investor risks of new plants, improving the return on investment. Further
down the chain are
subsidies directly linked to output. Output-linked support includes pergallon federal tax credits to both the
biodiesel and ethanol sectors. These are nominally provided to fuel blenders, and they enable those
blenders to pay a higher price for the biofuels they purchase than they could without the subsidy. Production-
linked subsidies are also common at the state level. Government policies that artificially elevate the price of biodiesel or ethanol are also relevant here.
Import tariffs that protect domestic producers from cheaper imports are one example, impeding the ability
of foreign producers to capture domestic market share. Tariffs are particularly costly to consumers at points of the country that are
far geographically from domestic biofuel production, but easily accessible to imports, most notably the east and west coasts. Subsidies are also
being provided to help reduce the costs of building or refurbishing the storage tanks and infrastructure
required for distributing biofuels, particularly E85 (a blend of 85 percent ethanol and 15 percent gasoline).
These help increase the availability of biofuels and reduce the total cost of supplying them to final consumers. Subsidies and government-procurement
preferences for the purchase of vehicles that are intended to run on biofuels increase the potential size of the market for biofuels, albeit indirectly. Nonetheless,
these policies are often drivers behind other policies to increase the production or availability of biofuels. For example, having purchased flex-fuel vehicles
(vehicles capable of running on ethanol-gasoline blends containing up to 85 percent ethanol) in the past, many federal and state agencies are now requiring that
these vehicles run on E85 whenever practical. Subsidies and regulatory requirements more directly affect the demand for biofuels. Subsidies
for
consumption are minor, and have been provided mainly through government procurement programs that
give preference to biofuels (such as that of the U.S. Navy for biodiesel) and assistance to school districts and municipalities that run vehicles
(particularly buses) on biofuels. Of much greater influence have been so-called “renewable fuel standards,” which
require that a specified percentage of biofuels be used in total transport fuels consumed. Such standards—
particularly if they are mandated and not just indicative targets—set a floor for the amount of biofuels that
will be sold, independent of price. These are expected to become an increasingly important source of
subsidies in the future.
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ADI 08 Spring
Ethanol Aff
A basic understanding of core issues regarding subsidy policy is helpful in interpreting this report. The following points provide a useful introduction to
subsidy evaluation and address a number of areas of frequent confusion. Not
just cash. Government subsidies are often thought
of as cash payments from a government to a private individual or firm. While cash grants are
subsidies, there are many other more complex methods that governments use to transfer value to
the private sector. These include reduced tax rates; government-provided loans or insurance at
below-market rates; guarantees on private loans; special requirements or bans that affect either
biofuels or their substitutes; and surcharges or tariffs on competing products. While the details of these
approaches can, and do, vary widely, all are used to some degree to subsidize ethanol and biodiesel in the United
States.
The availability of subsidies and other supportive mechanisms from federal, state, and local
governments is expansive. A broad mix of policy tools is utilized and includes grants, tax breaks,
lending and credit enhancement programs, regulatory mandates, funding for research and
development, and direct payments. Producers can tap into subsidies at almost every point of the
ethanol production process, and often several sources of support are available for each level (Koplow
2007). Figure 7 illustrates the types of subsidies provided at various stages of the biofuel supply chain. The largest subsidies are provided
to producers of feedstock crops, in most cases corn. Other subsidies lower the cost of building
manufacturing plants by providing land for free or at a reduced cost, or by providing infrastructure
support. Tax credits paid to blenders of gasoline and fuel support the actual output of the
production process – ethanol, in this case. Price support for the ethanol product also comes in the
form of tariffs. Finally, consumption of ethanol is buttressed by the renewable fuel standards and
mandates for using ethanol-gasoline blends. The stage is set through market price supports that act to suppress the price of domestic
ethanol. These come in the form of tariffs and consumption level requirements, guaranteeing a baseline
market for the commodity. The current tariff is $0.54/gallon and is applied to most countries’
ethanol exports. Domestically produced ethanol is protected from foreign competition. The Federal
Renewable Fuels Standards mandate that four billion gallons of renewable fuels is consumed by
2006, 7.5 billion by 2012, and potentially 36 billion by 2022, although only 15 billion gallons will
come from corn (Goodell 2007).
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ADI 08 Spring
Ethanol Aff
The two most important liquid biofuels today are ethanol and biodiesel, and they are of primary
interest for transportation. Support policies for these two biofuels fall into two general categories: (1)
policies to replace consumption of petroleum fuels with such programs as mandated biofuel use and
comparative reductions in fuel tax for biofuel; and (2) policies to stimulate biofuel production
domestically through—for example— producer subsidies, import tariffs to protect local producers
and direct government support for all biofuels to local production, and research to develop new or
improved technologies. Some policies distort trade directly and are thus obvious subjects of this report.2 Other policies do not distort trade
directly but may affect it indirectly.
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Ethanol Aff
Direct and indirect policy-induced price distortions greatly affect the financial attractiveness of ethanol
and biodiesel production and trade. The resulting price distortions are large, and the forward and
backward links with other pricedistorted markets are strong. This suggests that policy analysis should use
economic values rather than relying only on financial or market prices, and that economic analysis needs
to approximate general equilibrium considerations across multiple markets in which many related prices
are distorted by domestic and foreign government policies. Financial price relationships for biofuels
generally should be viewed with some skepticism, and, for policy purposes, attention should be paid to
those economic values for which distortions have been accounted. ESMAP (2005) details a framework for
economic analysis.
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Ethanol Aff
One question in the context of the Agreement on Agriculture is whether the current agricultural
support for biofuels or their feedstocks belongs to the amber box or the green box. To be eligible for green box
payments, certain criteria must be met. Under all circumstances, subsidies must be publicly funded, not involve transfers from consumers, and not have the
effect of providing price support to producers. In addition, the government support must meet specific policy criteria, the relevant one of which for biofuels is
described in annex 2, paragraph 12, to the Agreement on Agriculture. That paragraph covers payments under environmental programs. Payments must be part
of a clearly defined government environmental or conservation program and must fulfill specific conditions, including those related to production methods or
inputs. Payments must be limited to the extra costs or loss of income arising from compliance with the program (WTO 2007). It seems difficult to regard
subsidies given to promote biofuel production as offsetting the extra cost or loss of income involved in complying with an environmental program. For
example, as described in appendix C, the
U.S. government does not consider that the Bioenergy Program of the
Commodity Credit Corporation met any of the policy-specific criteria in the green box. Citing
annex 3, paragraph 7, of the Agreement on Agriculture, which states that “measures directed at
agricultural processors shall be included [in the Aggregate Measure of Support] to the extent that
such measures benefit the producers of the basic agricultural products,” the USDA suggested that
the Bioenergy Program could be viewed as an amber box subsidy (USDA 2006l). This statement also
suggests that the USDA regards subsidies for ethanol production as agricultural subsidies.
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ADI 08 Spring
Ethanol Aff
Some support policies for biofuels do not in themselves distort trade, such as biofuel mandates (for
example, mandatory blending) and fuel tax reductions that do not distinguish between domestic and imported biofuels. Other policies—such as
import tariffs and producer subsidies—clearly protect or subsidize domestic production at the
expense of foreign-produced biofuels.
Production and trade policies for biofuels and for agriculture cannot be easily separated. WTO
negotiations have taken a comprehensive view of what constitutes trade restrictions and offer a useful framework in which to consider trade policies. The
WTO defines trade liberalization to include reducing import tariffs, import quota restrictions,
export subsidies, and, significantly, domestic support (subsidies). Subsidies are defined in the WTO
Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures to include not only direct payments to
producers, but also reductions in taxes and other charges that reduce government revenues
otherwise due.
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Ethanol Aff
Fuel tax reductions are typically granted to domestic and imported biofuels alike, in order to
comply with World Trade Organization (WTO) principles that prohibit adjusting internal taxes and
other internal charges to afford protection to domestic products. In the case of ethanol, however,
these tax reductions are often offset by nearly equivalent import tariffs to prevent foreign producers
from sharing in the tax reductions provided to domestic consumers. Border protection through high tariffs and quota
restrictions is a fiscally inexpensive way of protecting domestic producers and is liberally used by governments. Ethanol enjoys much higher tariff rates than
biodiesel. The European Union levies a specific import duty of €0.192 (US$0.26) per liter on undenatured ethanol and €0.102 (US$0.14) per liter on denatured
ethanol; nevertheless, 101 developing countries enjoy duty-free access to the EU ethanol market. The United States levies a specific tariff of US$0.1427 per
liter of ethanol in addition to a small ad valorem tariff. Some countries in the region enjoy various forms of duty-free access to the United States, and others
take advantage of the “duty drawback” regulation. Australia has a specific import tariff of $A 0.38143 (US$0.31) per liter for both ethanol and biodiesel. Even
Brazil levies a 20 percent ad valorem import tariff on ethanol, although it was lifted temporarily in February 2006 in the face of a looming ethanol shortage.
Tariff rates on biodiesel in industrial countries are typically low (Australia and Canada being two exceptions). Ethanol
is classified as an
agricultural good and biodiesel as industrial. Ethanol’s agricultural classification affords countries
that impose high tariff rates on ethanol more time to liberalize ethanol trade, protecting domestic
producers longer.
Ethanol is agricultural because it could be drank if you wanted. Biodiesel is not considered an
agricultural product.
Masami Kojima of the Oil, Gas, and Mining Policy Division, World Bank; Donald Mitchell of the
Development Prospects Group, Development Economics, World Bank; and William A. Ward 2007, Professor
and Director, Center for International Trade, Clemson University. 2007 Energy Sector Management Assistance
Program Considering Trade Policies for Liquid Biofuels
Agricultural goods tend to enjoy greater protection than industrial goods. Importantly, once a good
is afforded protection, it is easier to prevent reform if the good is classified as an agricultural
commodity and trade negotiations fall under the Agreement on Agriculture. Ethanol, but not
biodiesel, falls under this agreement. Ethanol is included in the WCO’s HS chapter 22, and annex 1 to the Agreement on Agriculture
states that HS chapters 1 through 24 are covered by the agreement. Biodiesel, on the other hand, falls under chapter 38, which is excluded from consideration
under the agreement. The rationale for classifying ethanol under agriculture is that, undenatured, it can be
imbibed. Support given to biodiesel manufacture may fall under governments’ commitments under the Agreement on Agriculture if the subsidies can be
shown to reach the farmer directly. One example is if the biodiesel manufacturer is required to offer a minimum guaranteed price to the farmer. Indirect
benefits to agriculture as a result of increased demand for biodiesel—from such government
interventions as biodiesel mandates or fuel excise tax exemptions—are not considered agricultural
subsidies. Although ethanol is classified as an agricultural good, it remains to be seen how subsidies
provided for ethanol production will be reported to the WTO (that is, as agricultural subsidies or nonagricultural
subsidies).
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Ethanol Aff
AT We have to be Biodiesel
Biodiesel subsidies pale in comparison to corn ethanol subsidies.
Koplow in 07 (Douglas, Biofuels – At What Cost? Government support for ethanol and biodiesel in the United States: 2007
update October 2007)
Biodiesel subsidies in the update are $ 520–640 million for 2006, rising to $ 1.9 billion by 2008 along
with production. However, both the FAPRI and the EIA project flat or slightly negative growth in the next five to seven years as the biodiesel industry
struggles financially. Under the current policy environment, biodiesel is expected remain a small player in the liquid biofuel
sector. While subsidies for the 2006–12 period are still estimated at the quite sizable level of $ 9–11
billion, aggregate total support levels are a small portion of that flowing to ethanol.
30
ADI 08 Spring
Ethanol Aff
Rising prices for all crops, driven in part from high demand for corn use in the ethanol sector, has
reduced federal payouts under counter-cyclical and loan-deficiency programs almost to zero. These
types of programs aim to support farmer incomes when commodity prices are weak. However, direct payments (not linked to prices)
continue to be paid to producers of program crops (including corn and soybeans), and the share of total
harvests going into fuels has continued to grow. As a result, the pro-rata share of crop subsidies to
biofuel producers have not fallen as steeply as might have been expected given surging crop prices.
Ethanol’s pro-rata share of corn subsidies are an estimated $ 490 million for 2006, rising to nearly $ 775
million by 2012; the similar value for sorghum is roughly $ 15 million per year. Biodiesel’s pro-rata share of soy subsidies is slightly higher than $ 20 million
per year.
Feedstocks typically account for more than half of the production costs of liquid biofuels. Despite
remarkable reductions in production costs over the years in Brazil, the United States, and elsewhere, biofuels to date have been only
marginally economic under favorable conditions (high world oil prices and low feedstock prices) and only in a handful of
circumstances, as in Brazil in 2004 and 2005. More generally, biofuels have not been commercially viable without
significant government support, even though the two leading biofuel markets are also two of the
most efficient producers of biofuel feedstocks (net of subsidies, Brazil is the world’s lowest cost producer of sugarcane, and the
United States is one of the lowest cost producers of maize). Consequently, all biofuel markets have been supported by
government protection policies. Only about one-tenth of the biofuels produced and sold are internationally traded, and Brazil accounts for
about half of the exports. There is little trade of biodiesel, although it is growing.
Corn production is one of the heaviest subsidized activities in the country. The average annual
payment during 2000-2004 to crop producers was $4.5 billion. This number more than doubled to $9.4 billion in 2005.
Based on the share of total corn used for ethanol production, between $820 and $1.4 billion went to
support this point of the ethanol supply chain. It should be noted that more than 80% of the corn
subsidy is captured by 10 states that have the largest ethanol capacity (Koplow 2006).
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Ethanol Aff
Reductions in Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) requirements for firms selling Flexible-
fuel Vehicles (FFV’s) also remain in place, whether or not the vehicles actually do use alternative
fuel during operations. The resultant net reduction in the efficiency of the U.S. vehicle fleet has been
estimated by the Union of Concerned Scientists to increase our oil imports by 80,000 barrels per
day (roughly 1 billion gallons per year) (MacKenzie et al., 2005). Pending legislation, discussed in Chapter 5, could extend the CAFE
exemptions to a wide variety of biodiesel vehicles, worsening this problem.
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Ethanol Aff
The volumetric excise tax credits for blending biofuels remain the single largest implemented
subsidy to both ethanol and biodiesel. Rates have remained the same over the past year, with every gallon of ethanol (including imports) receiving a
51 cents per gallon blender’s credit. For biodiesel, rates have remained at 50 cents per gallon for biodiesel from waste cooking oils and $ 1.00 per gallon for
biodiesel made from virgin agricultural feedstock. No caps or linkage to oil prices have been instituted; as a result, the subsidy cost has risen linearly with
domestic consumption. In
our October 2006 report, we noted the existence of a further tax loophole that
enabled the excise tax credits to be excluded from taxable income (most tax credits are added to
taxable income, reducing their cost to the Treasury). Sources within both the Joint Committee on Taxation of the U.S. Congress
(JCT) and the U.S. Department of Treasury (Treasury) have confirmed that there have been no technical corrections in how the excise tax credits are treated by
the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). As a result, the credits are still excludible from taxable income. The incremental benefit of this exemption was $ 1.2 billion
for ethanol in 2006 on top of a direct revenue loss of $ 2.8 billion; and $ 105 million for biodiesel, on top of $ 250 million direct revenue loss. The
incremental subsidy from this tax loophole, supposedly a policy accident, has become the third
largest subsidy to ethanol and the second largest to biodiesel. By 2015, even if there is no increase in
the RFSs, the VEETC will generate subsidies of $ 6.3 billion per year on a revenue loss basis and $
8.9 billion per year on an outlay equivalent basis. The comparable figures for the VBETC on biodiesel are $ 470 million and $ 670
million per year. The low values for biodiesel result from quite negative predictions of how much the industry will grow over the next five to seven years. Also
of interest is the fact that ethanol credits are earned on both the ethanol volume and the denaturants included in these blends to improve their usability.
Currently, the U.S. JCT estimates that roughly $ 60–80 million per year in credits (already reflected in the above totals) are associated with the denaturants
(Joint Committee on Taxation, 19 June 2007a: 2).
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Ethanol Aff
The small producer tax credit provides a 10-cents-per-gallon production tax credit, up to $ 1.5 million
per year per plant, for any ethanol or biodiesel producer with less than 60 million gallons per year in
capacity. Prior to the Energy Policy Act of 2005 (EPACT05), the production cut-off was only 30 million gallons per year, and less than 40 percent of the
plants then producing were able to qualify based on size. In 2006, when the new limits took hold, the share of ethanol plants
qualifying jumped to nearly 85 percent. This has been declining as newer plants entering the market
tend to be larger than 60 million gallons per year. By the end of 2009, less than 60 percent of the plants
will meet the 60 million gallons per year cut-off, based on construction trends. The PTC is capped at $ 1.5 million per
plant per year. While this subsidy may have influenced plant sizing in the early days of the ethanol industry,
most new ethanol facilities seem to be above the cut-off. The effects may be more relevant for biodiesel producers, where plant
sizes tend to be smaller. Industry-wide, maximum small-producer tax credits are estimated at $ 110 million per year, rising to roughly $ 170 million annually over
the next couple of years. Actual levels may be lower, depending on how joint ownership requirements are
interpreted. The capacity limits on the credits disallow the subsidy if combined capacity for a single investor exceeds 60 million gallons per year. While
each plant will be a separate corporation, it is likely that at least some of the majors would have these PTCs
disallowed on the basis of cross-ownership patterns, reducing the national magnitude of the subsidy.
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ADI 08 Spring
Ethanol Aff
If biofuels are not economic but some governments are prepared to offer considerable price
subsidies, trade opportunities might arise for countries with duty-free access. Indeed, some countries in Eastern
Europe and former Soviet Union republics are launching or planning to start biodiesel production with a view to exporting to the European Union. The
financial viability of such trade obviously depends on political decisions in the countries providing
large subsidies. The sustainability of such trade is uncertain. In general, lowering trade barriers
increases global welfare in the long run. Biofuel trade is no exception. Reducing border barriers to biofuel
trade would increase competition, which should in turn help improve efficiency, bring down costs,
and enable the world’s most efficient producers to expand their market share. As the study on U.S.-
Brazil ethanol trade cited in chapter 3 shows, removal of high tariffs would bring down prices in
highly protected markets and increase consumption.
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ADI 08 Spring
Ethanol Aff
Shift Solvency
Favoring corn makes the makes the market less efficient.
Daria Karetnikov, et al 2007 University of Maryland Graduate Program in Sustainable Development &
Conservation Biology Problem Solving Fall 2007 How far can corn take us? Evaluating the impacts of ethanol
Final Report
To shift energy policy to sources that are truly sustainable and generate much more energy than is
used in manufacturing the fuel requires an honest assessment of many fuel types and sources. Incentives
for using diverse renewable energy technologies such as wind and solar power need to be strengthened. As discussed above, cellulosic biofuels can also be part
of the overall equation and their potential should be fully evaluated. One
of the major ways in which economic benefits can
be preserved as ethanol production moves to take advantage of non-corn feedstocks is to shift farm
policy. Instead of subsidizing the production of a certain commodity (in this case, corn), farm policy
can be directed to support investments in biorefineries. By guaranteeing a certain return on an investment in an ethanol
refinery, the government would release the farmer from her reliance on corn growing and allow the
flexibility necessary to adjust to demand for new feedstocks. When the industry does shift to a more
energetically efficient commodity, such as switchgrass, the corn farmer will be able to profitably
switch alongside. Additionally, encouraging the marketing of all co-products can generate higher income
for ethanol operations and eliminate some of the wastes created by the factory.
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ADI 08 Spring
Ethanol Aff
Subsidies Key
Federal subsidies are the number one reason ethanol can compete in the market.
Daria Karetnikov, et al 2007 University of Maryland Graduate Program in Sustainable Development &
Conservation Biology Problem Solving Fall 2007 How far can corn take us? Evaluating the impacts of ethanol
Final Report
Whether or not ethanol is currently cost-competitive with gasoline is not a debate. It is widely
agreed that under current technological processes and gasoline prices, ethanol production is not a
costcompetitive alternative. Exactly how far ethanol falls short is not clear. One study cites that ethanol costs $0.50 more per gallon to produce
than petroleum (Saitone 2007). Another study phrases the discrepancy differently. It finds that while the production cost of ethanol was $0.46 per energy
equivalent liter (EEL) of gasoline, the price of gasoline was $0.44 per EEL in 2005. Without even considering making a profit, ethanol’s production costs are
greater than the entire price of gasoline (Hill 2006). This breakdown may shift as oil prices continue their ascent. The
industry freely
acknowledges its reliance on the government support programs. Pacific Ethanol’s filed prospectus
states that “the production of ethanol is made significantly more competitive by federal tax
incentives.” The company further describes that the elimination of the largest programs, such as the
Federal Excise Tax Credit and the Renewable Fuels Standards minimum level mandates, would
have a grave material impact on the company’s operations (Pacific Ethanol, Inc 2006). VeraSun Energy Corporation, the
third largest producer of ethanol in the U.S. similarly acknowledged its dependency on subsidies. In its statement to the U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission the company wrote that the “U.S.
ethanol industry is highly dependent upon a myriad of federal and
state legislation and regulation and any changes in legislation or regulation could materially and
adversely affect our results of operations and financial position” (VeraSun 2006).
Jerry Taylor, a senior fellow at the Cato Institute, explained the economics of ethanol versus petroleum fuels at The Heartland
Institute’s March 17 Energy Summit in Chicago. Taylor pointed out that without government subsidies and mandates,
there would be no commercial market for ethanol because it would cost roughly $4 to $6 per gallon at
the pump. “Ethanol subsidies are directly draining the wallets of American taxpayers,” Taylor said in an
interview after the conference. “Not only that,” Taylor noted, “ethanol subsidies are raising prices for fuel
consumers, raising prices for corn consumers, and causing a related rise in the price of numerous
other food crops.” Jake Caldwell, director of policy for the Resources for Global Growth program at
the left-leaning Center for American Progress, argued at the Summit that up-front subsidies are a necessary
component of the government supporting a fragile ethanol economy until it can stand on its own
merits in the free marketplace.
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Ethanol Aff
Subsidies key
ETHANOL IS MORE COSTLY THAN GASOLINE AND WOULDN’T SURVIVE WITHOUT
SUBSIDIES
WILLIAMS 08 (“Archer Daniels Midland, Big Corn and The Ethanol Hoax,” Walter Williams, March 12,
2008, Walter E. Williams holds a bachelor's degree in economics from California State University (1965) and a
master's degree (1967) and doctorate (1972) in economics from the University of California at Los Angeles.)
Ethanol is 20 to 30 percent less efficient than gasoline, making it more expensive per highway mile. It takes
450 pounds of corn to produce the ethanol to fill one SUV tank. That's enough corn to feed one person for a year. Plus, it takes more than one
gallon of fossil fuel -- oil and natural gas -- to produce one gallon of ethanol. After all, corn must be
grown, fertilized, harvested and trucked to ethanol producers -- all of which are fuel-using activities. And,
it takes 1,700 gallons of water to produce one gallon of ethanol. On top of all this, if our total annual corn output were put to ethanol
production, it would reduce gasoline consumption by 10 or 12 percent. Ethanol is so costly that it wouldn't make it in a free
market. That's why Congress has enacted major ethanol subsidies, about $1.05 to $1.38 a gallon, which is
no less than a tax on consumers. In fact, there's a double tax -- one in the form of ethanol subsidies and
another in the form of handouts to corn farmers to the tune of $9.5 billion in 2005 alone.
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ADI 08 Spring
Ethanol Aff
Subsidies Key
THE US ETHANOL INDUSTRY IS EXPLODING IN SIZE AND RELIES ON SUBSIDIES
RUNGE AND SENAUER 07 (C. Ford Runge and Benjamin Senauer, “How Biofuels Could Starve the Poor,”
Foreign Affairs, May/June 2007, C. Ford Runge is Distinguished McKnight University Professor of Applied
Economics and Law and Director of the Center for International Food and Agricultural Policy at the University
of Minnesota. Benjamin Senauer is Professor of Applied Economics and Co-director of the Food Industry
Center at the University of Minnesota)
Now, thanks to a combination of high oil prices and even more generous government subsidies, corn-based
ethanol has become the rage. There were 110 ethanol refineries in operation in the United States at the
end of 2006, according to the Renewable Fuels Association. Many were being expanded, and another 73 were under
construction. When these projects are completed, by the end of 2008, the United States' ethanol production
capacity will reach an estimated 11.4 billion gallons per year. In his latest State of the Union address, President George W. Bush
called on the country to produce 35 billion gallons of renewable fuel a year by 2017, nearly five times the level currently mandated. The push for ethanol
and other biofuels has spawned an industry that depends on billions of dollars of taxpayer subsidies, and not
only in the United States. In 2005, global ethanol production was 9.66 billion gallons, of which Brazil produced 45.2 percent (from sugar cane) and the United States
44.5 percent (from corn). Global production of biodiesel (most of it in Europe), made from oilseeds, was almost one billion gallons
The AAA calculates that ethanol has recently cost 20 to 30 cents per gallon more than regular gasoline.[1]
And that does not take into account the heavy taxpayer subsidies, including a 51-cent-per-gallon tax
credit, without which ethanol would be even costlier. Proponents insist that economies of scale will kick
in and make ethanol more affordable as the mandated levels are ratcheted up, but there is no sign of that
actually happening. The opposite is more likely. For example, ethanol costs more to transport than
gasoline, and the expanding mandates necessitate usage well outside of its Midwestern home base.
Ethanol is also more expensive to use in the summer: It contributes to smog and in several markets can
be used only with a costlier base blend that compensates for this shortcoming; but this blend must be
used year-round. Over the longer term, the law requires that corn alternatives like cellulosic ethanol be used as well.
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ADI 08 Spring
Ethanol Aff
Subsidies key
Taylor 07 James M. Taylor, 1 May 2k7, The Heartland Institute. Environment & Climate News. “Brazilian
Sugarcane Subsidies No Model for U.S. Policy.”
Xavier notes corn-based ethanol is not capable of competing in the free market absent substantial
federal subsidies. "American taxpayers today pay twice for ethanol," Xavier observes, "once in crop
subsidies to corn farmers and again in a 51-cent subsidy for every gallon of ethanol. Without such a
subsidy, ethanol simply would not be cost-competitive with gasoline." Xavier also notes ethanol may damage the
environment when produced on a large scale from low-yielding crops such as corn. Expanding corn acreage to meet artificially inflated ethanol demand will come
at the expense of forests and prairies that are presently not cultivated, Xavier observes. Perhaps
most importantly, according to Xavier,
Brazil's ethanol infrastructure model "did not arise from free-market competition: It required huge
taxpayer subsidies over decades before it could become viable.
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ADI 08 Spring
Ethanol Aff
Federal subsidies will continue to overwhelmingly go to corn ethanol until at least the next election in
2012.
Koplow in 07 (Douglas, Biofuels – At What Cost? Government support for ethanol and biodiesel in the United States: 2007
update October 2007)
Since the original report was published in October 2006, support for biofuels has continued to be provided at both the state and
federal levels. Most of the policies are linked to raw production or consumption levels and are not designed to phase out when oil prices (and biofuels are more
competitive) are high, nor once specified production targets are met. As a result, the aggregate level of support has risen, though the subsidies per unit of
energy output have remained fairly level. The
vast majority of government support goes to corn ethanol; this trend will
continue under pending legislation, at least through to 2012. Despite rising awareness in the local and
national media of some of the environmental and economic problems associated with the biofuel build-
out, governments around the country continue to significantly expand public subsidization of the industry.
This is particularly evident with in respect of planned extensions of the volumetric excise tax credits (with few added controls), and the much higher mandated
consumption targets under proposed updates to the Renewable Fuels Standard (RFS). Reaching the RFS, including in some of the pending legislative
proposals, will cost more than $ 130 billion per year by 2025, according to estimates by the Energy Information Administration. Many of the policies currently
in place do not appear co-ordinated or well targeted. Rather they are duplicative, with tax credits, grants, and feedstock support added to consumption
mandates.
Koplow in 07 (Douglas, Biofuels – At What Cost? Government support for ethanol and biodiesel in the United States: 2007
update October 2007)
Assuming no change in the RFS, we estimate that total support for ethanol was
between $ 5.8 billion and $ 7.0 billion in 2006, and
will rise sharply to $ 11 billion by 2008 and $ 14 billion by 2014 (see Table 4.1). Total undiscounted subsidies to
ethanol from 2006–2012 are estimated at between $ 68 and $ 82 billion. Implementation of a higher RFS
(e.g., 36 billion gallons by 2022) would increase total subsidies by tens of billions of dollars per year
above these levels. These figures are higher than what we estimated last year. The increase is driven
primarily by higher consumption of ethanol fuels than what we had previously estimated. Other changes included
lower pro-rata corn subsidies (due to declining counter-cyclical payments), the incorporation of estimates for tax-exempt solid waste bonds used by ethanol
plants, and better characterization of market price support for imports. Market price support, related to the combination of high barriers to imports and
domestic purchase mandates, comprises the second largest subsidy to ethanol, at $ 1.3 billion in 2006, rising to more than $ 3 billion per year by 2010. As
noted earlier, it is likely to become the largest subsidy if modified to 35 or 60 billion gallon levels. For now, however, the largest element
remains the VTEEC. Worth $ 3–4 billion in 2006, this program will subsidize the ethanol industry by $ 34 to $ 48 billion during the 2006–12 period. Feedstock
support also remains important, despite falling countercyclical support, as direct payments remain high and ethanol is absorbing an ever-higher share of the
total corn crop. State policies beyond reductions in motor fuel taxation were quantified only for 2006, based on last year’s analysis. Had these many state
supports been catalogued and quantified, the magnitude of state and county supports would be much larger than what is shown in Table 4.1.
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ADI 08 Spring
Ethanol Aff
Modelling
THERE IS A WORLDWIDE TRANSITION TOWARD BIOFUELS
RUNGE AND SENAUER 07 (C. Ford Runge and Benjamin Senauer, “How Biofuels Could Starve the Poor,”
Foreign Affairs, May/June 2007, C. Ford Runge is Distinguished McKnight University Professor of Applied
Economics and Law and Director of the Center for International Food and Agricultural Policy at the University
of Minnesota. Benjamin Senauer is Professor of Applied Economics and Co-director of the Food Industry
Center at the University of Minnesota)
The European Commission is using legislative measures and directives to promote biodiesel, produced
mainly in Europe, made from rapeseeds and sunflower seeds. In 2005, the European Union produced 890
million gallons of biodiesel, over 80 percent of the world's total. The EU's Common Agricultural Policy also promotes the
production of ethanol from a combination of sugar beets and wheat with direct and indirect subsidies. Brussels aims to have 5.75 percent of
motor fuel consumed in the European Union come from biofuels by 2010 and 10 percent by 2020. Brazil,
which currently produces approximately the same amount of ethanol as the United States, derives almost
all of it from sugar cane. Like the United States, Brazil began its quest for alternative energy in the mid-1970s. The government has
offered incentives, set technical standards, and invested in supporting technologies and market
promotion. It has mandated that all diesel contain two percent biodiesel by 2008 and five percent
biodiesel by 2013. It has also required that the auto industry produce engines that can use biofuels and has developed wide-ranging industrial and land-use
strategies to promote them. Other countries are also jumping on the biofuel bandwagon. In Southeast Asia, vast
areas of tropical forest are being cleared and burned to plant oil palms destined for conversion to
biodiesel.
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ADI 08 Spring
Ethanol Aff
Brazil Shift
Trade liberalization key to maintaining the success of the ethanol markets- Brazilian ethanol key to this.
Elobedi and Tokgoz 06- (Amani Elobeid and Simla Tokgoz,October 06, “Removal of U.S. Ethanol Domestic
and Trade Distortions: Impact on U.S. and Brazilian Ethanol Markets” Center for Agricultural and Rural
Development
Iowa State University)
The effect of the removal of trade distortions extends beyond the ethanol market, affecting the corn
market and its by-products, as well as the sugar market. The price of corn in the U.S. is impacted
by the change in the demand for corn used in ethanol production. This affects the prices of other crops in the U.S. and
the area allocation between them. This has implications for the U.S. livestock sector because the prices of feed by-products from ethanol production change as
well as the prices of other feeds such as the price of soy meal. Brazilis a major player in the world ethanol market where
both gasoline and sugar prices play an important role in determining what happens. The tariff rate
in the U.S. is approximately 45 percent in ad valorem terms, which means that if it were eliminated, the U.S. market would
become very attractive to Brazil. Under this scenario, with the increase in the world ethanol price, more
sugarcane is diverted toward the production of ethanol and thus, the price of raw sugar rises.
Ethanol and sugar in Brazil compete for sugarcane. Depending on the prices of ethanol and sugar, Brazil may end up increasing
both the production of ethanol and sugar by expanding sugarcane area. Brazil can produce and export more ethanol than is
projected in this study given stronger assumption on its ability to increase sugarcane production
through acreage expansion, its potential to increase ethanol production capacity, and future
investments in infrastructure.
Ending the usage of corn-based ethanol and using Brazilian sugar cane-based ethanol would allow for a
more efficient, affordable and environmentally safe biofuel to be used
Financial Times in May 21, 2008 (“Poor Practices Taint Brazil’s ethanol industry,” London edition 1, from World News Section,
pg 10, d/l: from LexisNexis)
Brazil's long-standing biofuel programme, which dates back to the 1970s, is increasingly eyed with admiration and a dose of suspicion by the developed world.
The Latin giant is the global leader in the area, with biofuels widely used in transport. The sales of popular flex-fuel vehicles, which can switch between petrol
and ethanol, leapt to 72 per cent of total vehicle sales last year compared to a trifling 3 per cent in 2002. Brazil's
sugarcane based ethanol is
cheaper and more energy-efficient than the corn-based version common in the US, where starch has to be
converted to sugar before being distilled. The complexity of the process means corn-based ethanol
produces only 10-20 per cent less carbon emissions than petrol. Sugarcane ethanol cuts emissions by 87-
96 per cent. Brazil's programme has reduced the country's dependence on petrol and cut emissions of CO significantly, according to Celso Amorim,
2
Brazil's foreign minister. Brazil has one of the lowest rates of CO2 emissions per head in the world at 1.76 tonnes a year
versus the world average of 4.18 tonnes, he says. Nathaniel Jackson, senior investment officer at the Inter-American Development Bank in Washington, says
the bank is supportive of the development of "smart" biofuels, such as Brazilian cane ethanol. "I wouldn't call corn-based ethanol a 'dumb' biofuel, but
reports show the conversion of corn into ethanol is having an effect on food prices." He sees a sea-change in support
for over the last year and points out that corporations such as Wal-Mart are embracing new initiatives: "We've reached a tipping point," he says.
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Ethanol Aff
Brazil Shift
Brazillian Sugar Cane can compensate for US Ethanol
The Dallas Morning News 08’
[http://www.redorbit.com/news/business/1372084/brazil_seeing_sweet_profit_from_sugar_canebased_ethanol/i
ndex.html]
"Ethanol in the U.S. has struggled a lot because the high price of corn creates a lot of food vs. fuel
pressures," said Tim Lavender, president of TruEnergy. "Sugar cane doesn't have that." Ethanol from
sugar cane could lower food prices, Mr. Lavender said. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke says
foreign ethanol can take the pressure off the U.S. corn crop and has recommended that Congress drop a
54-cents-a-gallon tariff on Brazilian ethanol. Brazil is expecting global demand for its ethanol to surge.
Companies have announced plans for 75 ethanol plants. International investors are soon expected to
account for more than 15 percent of Brazil's ethanol production. Starting in September, TruEnergy plans
to build three ethanol plants in the Brazilian state of Goias. They will be fed by farmers promising to grow
148,000 acres of sugar cane.
Brazil looking to supply the US with their more sustainable ethanol which trade barriers like subsidies
are blocking.
Orlando Sentinel 7/4- (Jerry W. Jackson, July 4, 2008, “Need cheaper fuel? Cane do, Brazil says,” Orlando
Sentinel, http://www.orlandosentinel.com/business/orl-cane0408jul04,0,7545751.story)
With sky-high gas prices soaking motorists and wreaking havoc with the economy, Brazilian
sugar-cane growers are launching a
multimillion-dollar radio and print campaign today in Orlando and elsewhere to promote their country's ethanol. The
ads are aimed at generating support for a big cut in the U.S. tariff on imports of ethanol fuel
produced from the giant South American nation's vast cane fields. The campaign comes just as Florida's largest cane
grower, U.S. Sugar Corp., is planning to shut down and get out of the business if the state's taxpayers are willing to shell out more than $1 billion for its land in
the Everglades. U.S. corn growers, meanwhile, are reaping record revenue trying to grow enough for food and
for ethanol's growing use as a gasoline extender. They can't keep up, and recent Midwest flooding has killed entire
cornfields, adding to the supply crunch. Representatives of Brazil's sugar-cane industry, in announcing the ad
campaign this week, said the time is right because an increase in ethanol imports would help hold down
soaring U.S. fuel costs by making the total U.S. supply stretch further. "Eliminating or even reducing the tariff on
cane ethanol could provide immediate relief, particularly in California and Florida, where this form of fuel is already in use," said
Joel Velasco, the Washington, D.C.-based chief spokesman for the Brazilian Sugarcane Industry Association.
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Jean Chemnick, July 7, 2008 ([Chemnick is a reporter for Politico], “Stopping Tariff on imports of Ethanol Would Aid US Market,
Producers: Lugar,” Inside Energy, pg 10, d/l: LexisNexis)
A senior Republican senator says eliminating the tariff on ethanol imports while maintaining other
government support for US ethanol production would give Americans access to relatively inexpensive
foreign fuel while still encouraging the growth of the domestic biofuels industry. Senator Richard Lugar of
Indiana,
a strong advocate for the US ethanol industry, is virtually alone among farm-state lawmakers in calling for an end to the 54 cent/gallon tariff. Lugar told reporters
and other countries are in a better position to supply
outside an American Enterprise Institute conference last week that he believes Brazil
ethanol to America's coastal states than the US heartland can do, because there is not a pipeline infrastructure
for ethanol.
Ethanol imports, including ethanol imported directly from Brazil, are taxed at a specific rate of
US$0.1427 per liter and also carry an ad valorem import tariff of 2.5 percent for undenatured and 1.9 percent for denatured ethanol (20 percent for
countries that do not have a most favored nation status, now called normal trade relations, with the United States). The specific tariff was
instituted in the 1980s to prevent foreign producers from benefiting from the fuel excise tax
incentive for ethanol. It was intended to be a temporary tariff, but it has been revised and extended
several times. The current tax credit, which was scheduled to expire in September 2007, has been extended to January 2009. According to the U.S.
International Trade Commission, the total volume of undenatured and denatured ethanol imported into the United States surged from 0.8 billion liters in 2005
to 2.7 billion liters in 2006 (USITC 2007). In 2006, the United States bought 1.77 billion liters of ethanol directly from Brazil, or 52 percent of the record 3.4
billion liters of ethanol Brazil shipped out, according to the Brazilian agricultural ministry. The United States also bought 475 million liters of Brazilian ethanol
via the Caribbean, accounting for another 14 percent of Brazilian exports (Dow Jones Commodities Service 2007c).
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Ethanol Aff
Brazil continues to invest in better technologies to improve efficiency and productivity of sugarcane
ethanol. Technology is being developed to also use the bagasse and straw of sugarcane plants, and it is expected that hydrolysis of such cellulosic
materials will drive future growth in ethanol production. Furthermore, the expansion of sugarcane cultivation in Brazil will
have a negligible impact on the country’s agriculture, as compared with the expansion of corn
production in the United States. Brazil currently grows sugarcane for ethanol on 7 million acres of
land out of a total 790 million acres of arable land in the country. Increased sugarcane production
will not crowd out other crops, such as soybeans, corn, or oranges, Jank insisted, but will most likely expand into
lands currently used as pastures (of which there are currently 440 million acres, with many acres close to existing ethanol plants).
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Ethanol Aff
Reuters on July 30, 2008 (“Biofuels major driver of food price rise - World Bank,” Reuters, d/l:
http://www.waltainfo.com/walnew/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1680&Itemid=48)
Brazil's ethanol production did not push food prices appreciably higher because Brazilian sugar cane output has
increased rapidly and sugar exports have nearly tripled since 2000, Mitchell said. The increase in cane production
has been large enough to allow sugar output to rise from 17.1 million tons in 2000 to 32.1 million tons in 2007
and exports to increase from 7.7 million tons to 20.6 million tons.
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Ethanol Aff
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Ethanol Aff
Brazil Relations
Eliminating the tariff on foreign ethanol would improve relations with Brazil
Jean Chemnick, July 7, 2008 ([Chemnick is a reporter for Politico], “Stopping Tariff on imports of Ethanol Would Aid US Market,
Producers: Lugar,” Inside Energy, pg 10, d/l: LexisNexis)
The US government also supports domestic ethanol production through a 51-cent credit available to blenders for each gallon of
ethanol that they blend into gasoline. That credit, which once stood at 54 cents, is scheduled to decline to 45 cents next year, under a
provision in a farm bill passed by Congress this spring. With the credit reduced, the tariff amounts to a trade barrier,
according to Lugar and other critics of the levy. Eliminating the tariff would improve trade relations with Brazil
at the same time, Lugar said, which in turn would benefit American farmers and other businesses.
US Brazilian relations are key to expanding the use of biofuels and energy cooperation.
Budny 07- (Daniel Budny, April 2007, "The Global Dynamics of Biofuels: Potential supply and demand for
ethanol and biodiesel in the coming decade," Brazil Institute Special Report from the Woodrow Wilson Center
for Scholars Issue No. 3, http://www.wilsoncenter.org/topics/pubs/Brazil_SR_e3.pdf)
Emerson Kloss, a diplomat at the trade policy sector desk for agricultural issues at the Embassy of Brazil
in Washington, argued that the U.S.-Brazilian partnership is one of many important joint ventures
being pursued by the Brazilian government to expand the production and consumption of ethanol.
Only with a truly international market for biofuels will Brazil and the United States have the structural
market conditions necessary to develop and expand their own internal market and increase the
participation of biofuels within their own energy matrix. Partnerships such as the U.S.-Brazilian one
reflect the importance that Brazil places upon international cooperation on energy, as well as
Brazil’s desire to bring alternative development to poor countries by creating an international
market for biofuels
Numerous requests from developing nations hoping to cooperate in the field of ethanol have led to
Brazil’s recent reassessment of the importance of energy, as seen in departmental and ministerial restructuring efforts to better coordinate
energy issues among Brazilian agencies. Current partnerships with countries in the Caribbean, Africa, and Asia
seek to replicate Brazil’s positive experience with the production of ethanol. Brazil’s experience has provided a
good source of income for rural populations and encouraged development in the country’s underdeveloped Northeast. Even more promising in terms of
development has been the production of biodiesels through palm oil and castor beans, although this industry is only in the initial phases and is thus relatively
small in Brazil. The joint U.S.-Brazilian strategy of energy cooperation is a key step in this direction.
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Brazil Relations
US ethanol subsidies hurt the Brazilian ethanol industry, and threaten to destroy the cooperation between
the two nations.
Biofuels Digest 07-(Jim Lane, December 4, 2007 “Brazilian ethanol exports plummet 31 percent as US ethanol
glut dampens trade,” Biofuels Digest, http://www.biofuelsdigest.com/blog2/2007/12/04/brazilian-ethanol-
exports-plummet-31-percent-as-us-ethanol-glut-dampens-trade/)
In Brazil, ethanol exports fell to 60 million gallons in November, a drop of 31 percent from October and a fall off of 17
million gallons, or 22 percent, compared to November 2006. Excess US ethanol supplies were blamed for the drop. In addition
to falling export levels, prices also fell to $1.47 from $1.83 last year and $1.50 last month. Total export income from ethanol fell from $141 million to $86
million, a loss of $55 million or 39 percent. Overall, Brazilian ethanol exports for 2007 will be 800 million gallons, down 20 percent from
2006 owing to oversupply in the US market. Last month, consultant Jonathan Kingsman estimated a world surplus of ethanol at 658
million gallons, compared to a small shortage in 2006. He projected that, with the rise in ethanol feedstock prices, Brazil would find excellent export potential
in Europe in 2008. “Demand is disappointing for ethanol due to logistic problems, resistance, political
issues,” he said. Brazil is expected to ask the World Trade Organization to investigate U.S. ethanol
subsidies. If the WTO takes on the case, it will be the first time the organization has ruled on energy subsidies. Last month, Florida governor Charlie
Crist said that he opposed the Brazilian ethanol tariff and would lobby the state’s Congressional delegation to reduce it. The 54 cent per gallon tariff is
scheduled to expire in 2009, and Crist warned that it was unlikely that the tariff would be repealed in 2008 due to the US Presidential elections. Recently, the
UN Dispatch reported comments by the head of the Global Bioenergy Partnership that trade in biofuels and biofuel
feedstocks is too low. The report says that European and US subsidies for domestic production and tariffs
for imported feedstocks and biofuels are reducing biofuel production in tropical and subtropical
climates, where biomass productivity is significantly higher.
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Ethanol Aff
Brazilian entrepreneurs are investing large amounts into the sugarcane industry to increase productivity.
Estimates place investments over the next six years at 14.6 billion dollars. No less than 77 new plants are
currently being planned, while some of the 335 existing plants are scheduled for upgrades or expansions.
The number of plants is estimated to reach 412 by 2012, increasingly with the help of foreign investors.
Overall, however, the sugarcane industry is predominantly run by domestic companies. But by 2012 it is
estimated that 16 plants will be foreign owned and operated, accounting for 6.5 percent of total sugar cane
processing in the country (compared to approximately 4.5 percent today).
Brazil can handle supplying us with cane ethanol. They’ve already started.
Jerry W. Jackson July 4, 2008 . “Need cheaper fuel? Cane do, Brazil says.” The Orlando Sentinel.
http://www.orlandosentinel.com/business/orl-cane0408jul04,0,7545751.story
With sky-high gas prices soaking motorists and wreaking havoc with the economy, Brazilian sugar-cane growers are launching a
multimillion-dollar radio and print campaign today in Orlando and elsewhere to promote their
country's ethanol. The ads are aimed at generating support for a big cut in the U.S. tariff on imports of ethanol fuel produced from the giant South
American nation's vast cane fields. The campaign comes just as Florida's largest cane grower, U.S. Sugar Corp., is planning to shut down and get out of the
U.S. corn growers, meanwhile, are
business if the state's taxpayers are willing to shell out more than $1 billion for its land in the Everglades.
reaping record revenue trying to grow enough for food and for ethanol's growing use as a gasoline
extender. They can't keep up, and recent Midwest flooding has killed entire cornfields, adding to the
supply crunch. Representatives of Brazil's sugar-cane industry, in announcing the ad campaign this
week, said the time is right because an increase in ethanol imports would help hold down soaring U.S.
fuel costs by making the total U.S. supply stretch further. "Eliminating or even reducing the tariff on cane ethanol
could provide immediate relief, particularly in California and Florida, where this form of fuel is
already in use," said Joel Velasco, the Washington, D.C.-based chief spokesman for the Brazilian Sugarcane Industry Association. The tariff on imported
ethanol, enacted in 1980 to help the fledgling U.S. ethanol industry develop, has been extended through the years. It's now 54 cents a gallon. U.S. ethanol backers
say that importing more Brazilian ethanol would do little or nothing to reduce high gas prices. Moreover, eliminating the tariff would make the U.S. more reliant on
a foreign fuel supplier -- the exact opposite of what the nation is trying to accomplish by weaning itself from imported oil, said Matt Hartwig, a spokesman for the
Renewable Fuels Association. "We have already outsourced too much of this nation's future," Hartwig said. Most Brazilian motorists run
their cars and trucks on ethanol made from domestic sugar cane, which produces more ethanol than
corn does on a per-unit basis, reducing production costs. The United States does not grow enough
sugar cane to divert much, if any, to ethanol; the recent decision by U.S. Sugar to sell its land to the state for Everglades restoration
further reduces the chance that domestic cane would ever be a viable source of commercial fuel production. Even with the tariff, the U.S.
imported 189 million gallons of ethanol directly from Brazil last year. Another 245 million gallons
from Brazil was imported through Caribbean nations -- an approach that eliminates the tariff but
adds to shipping, processing and handling costs.
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AT Brazil Defo
Jank also dispelled fears that the expansion of sugarcane cultivation will encroach upon the
Amazon rainforest. The Amazon region does not have the climate or soil conducive to growing
sugarcane, nor does it have the technology or infrastructure in place to support cultivation and then
ethanol production. Sugarcane and ethanol plants are predominantly located in the Centerwest and
Northeast regions of the country. Furthermore, fears that increased sugarcane cultivation will displace
soy or beef producers into the Amazon are likewise unfounded. The main concern over sugarcane
expansion in Brazil is not land availability, negative environmental repercussions, or crop
displacement, but logistics: Brazil lacks ample transportation and production infrastructure for a dramatic increase in sugarcane cultivation.
Furthermore, Jank insists that expansion of the sugarcane crop will be based upon increased land
productivity.
Cattle Ranches, not corn farms, are responsible for encroachment on Amazon forest, new farms would
replace degraded cattle ranches
The Economist, June 28, 2008 (“Lean, Green and not Mean; Biofuels in Brazil,” The Economist, d/l: LexisNexis)
For those worried about climate change, Brazilian ethanol is worth buying only if it is as green as it claims to
be. It is certainly much greener than its corn-based rival in America: it packs 8.2 times as much energy as is
used in its production, compared with just 1.5 times for corn ethanol, according to the Woodrow Wilson Centre, a Washington
think-tank. Some greens say that the spread of sugar is deforesting the Amazon. That is not true. The vast
majority of the sugar crop is grown thousands of miles away from the forest, in São Paulo state or the north-
east. Some 65% of new planting of sugar cane has been on land that was previously pasture; the rest was
previously used for other crops, according to Conab, a government agency. But might ethanol be indirectly responsible for lifting food prices and
for pushing cattle ranchers into the Amazon? Such concerns look premature. Sugar cane occupies only 7m hectares (17m acres) of
Brazil?s farmland (and only about half of the crop is distilled into ethanol). This compares with some 200m
hectares devoted to cattle ranching, much of which is extensive (a Brazilian cow enjoys, on average, a lordly
hectare of grazing). Sugar could expand on degraded pasture with little or no effect on beef prices. Besides,
the ethanol industry may be poised for a leap in productivity. "The sugar-cane plant is now where corn was at the beginning of the
20th century," reckons Fernando Reinach, a biologist turned venture-capitalist at Votorantim, a conglomerate. His fund has backed two start-ups in Campinas in
São Paulo state.
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AT Brazil Defo
Sugar ethanol expansion will not cause Amazon deforestation, nor will it displace other agricultural
producers.
Budny 07- (Daniel Budny, April 2007, "The Global Dynamics of Biofuels: Potential supply and demand for
ethanol and biodiesel in the coming decade," Brazil Institute Special Report from the Woodrow Wilson Center
for Scholars Issue No. 3, http://www.wilsoncenter.org/topics/pubs/Brazil_SR_e3.pdf)
Jank also dispelled fears that the expansion of sugarcane cultivation will encroach upon the
Amazon rainforest. The Amazon region does not have the climate or soil conducive to growing
sugarcane, nor does it have the technology or infrastructure in place to support cultivation and then
ethanol production. Sugarcane and ethanol plants are predominantly located in the Centerwest and Northeast regions of the country. Furthermore,
fears that increased sugarcane cultivation will displace soy or beef producers into the Amazon are
likewise unfounded. The main concern over sugarcane expansion in Brazil is not land availability,
negative environmental repercussions, or crop displacement, but logistics: Brazil lacks ample transportation and
production infrastructure for a dramatic increase in sugarcane cultivation. Furthermore, Jank insists that expansion of the sugarcane crop will be based upon
increased land productivity.
Brazilian ethanol expansion would not threaten the Amazon rainforest- the climate is not desirable for
sugar growth.
Oakland Tribune 07- (Alan Clendenning, July 10, 2007, “Brazil: Ethanol farming won't impact Amazon rain
forest,” Oakland Tribune, http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4176/is_20070710/ai_n19354074)
Brazil's president said Monday that his nation's booming ethanol business won't hurt the Amazon rain
forest, dismissing criticism that increased production of the alternate fuel could lead to
deforestation. Silva, referring to concerns raised during his European visit last week, said it is unjustified to think that
increased production of sugar cane for ethanol could prompt more jungle clearing. He said that
Amazon weather conditions aren't favorable for the sugar cane used to produce ethanol and
suggested critics are trying to prevent Brazil from advancing economically by taking advantage of
rising demand for biofuels.
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AT Brazil Defo
Growth of Brazilian sugar ethanol production and exportation will continue to expand- enough land
and resource to continue.
Elobedi and Tokgoz 06 (Amani Elobeid and Simla Tokgoz,October 06, “Removal of U.S. Ethanol Domestic
and Trade Distortions: Impact on U.S. and Brazilian Ethanol Markets” Center for Agricultural and Rural
Development
Iowa State University)
In 2005, production of sugar and ethanol in Brazil totaled 28.2 million metric tons and 4.8 billion gallons,
respectively, continuing a record trend for the past few years. The record production has resulted in the export of 18 million metric
tons of sugar and 0.6 billion gallons of ethanol in 2005. Ethanol production is expected to increase by 48.5 percent while
ethanol exports are expected to nearly double by 2015. If both sugar and ethanol prices remain competitive in the near future,
Brazil is expected to continue to increase sugarcane production for both sugar and ethanol. The
country has enough land to significantly increase sugarcane area harvested
Brazil has enough land to grow for the world in response to high food prices, without having to intervene
into the forest
The Montreal Gazette, April 30, 2008 (“Amazon Squeezed By Shift in Food Prices; Brazil one of world’s bread baskets;
Rainforest Deforestation Accelerating as Farmers Cash in on Greater Profits,” from the Montreal Gazette, Pg A4, d/l: LexisNexis)
Brazil has become one of the worlds’ breadbaskets, a leading exporter of foods such as soybean and beef,
fueled by strong demand from Europe and developing giant China. The demand has helped feed the destruction of the world’s largest rainforest for cattle
With up to 50 million hectares in degraded farm land that could be reused – an area
ranching and crop production.
bigger than California – experts sat Brazil could raise its farm production without making further inroads
into the forest. “We are trying to get farmers and producers to have access to new technologies so that they don’t have to advance into new areas,’
Environment Minister Marina Silva said when asked about Maggi’s comments.
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Ending the tax subsidy should be easy. Ending the mandate will be tougher, though some members of Congress are showing buyer’s remorse. One reason is
the worldwide spike in food prices. That has been driven largely by a huge increase in demand and rising energy costs. The diversion of American
corn from food to fuel — about one-fourth of the crop — has not helped. The other reason is a spate of studies suggesting that some
biofuels — corn ethanol in particular — could accelerate global warming. Environmentalists had long regarded corn ethanol
as at least carbon-neutral, emitting greenhouse gases when burned but absorbing those gases while growing. But rising demand for corn, for fuel
and food, can have a profoundly negative effect if it causes farmers to clear previously untouched land, in
turn releasing more carbon into the atmosphere. Congress’s guiding principle should be to tie federal help to environmental performance.
The goal is not just to stop the headlong rush to corn ethanol but to use the system to bring to commercial
scale promising second-generation biofuels — cellulosic ethanol derived from crop wastes, wood wastes,
perennial grasses. These could provide environmental benefits and reduce dependence on oil without
displacing food production. Though Congress is unlikely to undo the mandate, the administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency can.
Unfortunately, President Bush is an ardent corn ethanol supporter, and Stephen Johnson, the E.P.A. administrator, is nothing if not a Bush loyalist. Without
reform, rising food prices and increasing damage to the climate could provoke a reaction that could be
the undoing of the entire biofuels industry. That would not be helpful to the industry or the planet.
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Ethanol Aff
Welcome to the ethanol boom, the closest America's farmers may get to an investment bubble. Since the pro-
ethanol State of the Union address in January, shares of Fresno-based Pacific Ethanol Inc. (PEIX ) have
doubled, to 37. Green Plains Renewable Energy has risen 40%, to 46, since it began trading in MarchBut ethanol is
far from the sure moneymaker its boosters say it is. In fact, some of the very forces behind the boom might undermine ethanol's prospects as an investment over the
next few years. The fuel, renewable and more environmentally friendly than gasoline, is already being used as a gas additive, replacing another additive that was
found to pollute groundwater. The result: a squeeze on supplies that has doubled ethanol's wholesale price, to $2.75 a gallon, about what gasoline costs at
wholesale. With corn prices low and gas prices high, ethanol's profit margin per gallon is at a record of more than $1. "You don't need Willie Nelson organizing
concerts for these farmers," jokes Tom Kloza, an analyst for the Oil Price Information Service.Last year's energy bill requires gas marketers to sell at least 4 billion
gallons of ethanol-blended fuel this year, rising to 7.5 billion gallons by 2012. That sparked a surge of investment. In April, Goldman Sachs (GS ) Group took a
$26.8 million stake in Canadian outfit Iogen Corp. Archer Daniels Midland Co. (ADM ), meanwhile, tapped Patricia Woertz, a career oil woman (page 38), as its
new CEO. Two U.S. companies recently filed for initial public offerings to finance more plants, while Spanish energy company Abengoa and Connecticut private-
equity firm J.H. Whitney & Co. raised almost $300 million to do so. SURPLUS AHEAD? But all the new money might create an ethanol
glut. On Apr. 11, California projected that U.S. capacity required by 2009 would be online in under a year. Since that projection, at least four more companies
have announced plans to build plants. That's because a typical 50-million-gallon-a-year plant costs just $75 million or so to build, with banks willing to lend up to
70% of the cost, says Tom Murray, co-head of loan and debt capital markets at German bank WestLB. A new gasoline refinery costs $1 billion or
more.Investors in ethanol plants will find themselves at the mercy of two commodity cycles: corn and gas.
According to simulations run by the University of Missouri's Food & Agriculture Policy Research Institute,
corn prices over the next six years are likely to rise and ethanol prices to fall, resulting in a 25% or more drop in
producers' profits. "The industry has outstripped our expectations and grown a lot faster than we thought," says institute program director Patrick
Westhoff.What of the promise of ethanol replacing gas? Don't count on it. General Motors Corp. (GM ) and Ford Motor Co. (F ) have made a push this year to
promote vehicles that can run on gas or E85, a fuel that's 85% ethanol and 15% gasoline. But E85 gets worse mileage than gas, a problem if ethanol is costlier. And
right now there are only about 600 E85 pumps nationwide.Ethanol's fans say the fuel is a blessing in this time of high gas prices and global warming.
But
energy is a cyclical business. Prospecting in the cornfield might prove as risky as prospecting in an oil
field.
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Government Subsidies are inflating A dangerous investment bubble. The market needs to decide not the
government.
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Ethanol subsidies keep investment high until corn prices choke it.
Tyner 6/27- (Wally Tyner, June 27, 2008, “Biofuels, Energy Security, and Future Policy Alternatives,”
BioEnergy, Purdue University, http://www.ces.purdue.edu/bioenergy/)
Staying with the current fixed 51 cent per gallon subsidy would likely result in markets keeping the
corn price high and stimulating investment in ethanol until the corn price chokes off profitability
There would be some food cost increases due to higher corn prices Global impacts are very important and quite
difficult to estimate
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Price Stability
High Corn prices are reducing corn ethanol’s chances of being a viable alternative to foreign oil and
diminishing the US’s hopes of becoming energy independent, which was small to begin with; a more cost-
efficient alternative needs to fill the gap
Anthony Jaffee, July 17, 2008 ([Jaffee is a reporter for the Washington Times] “Corn Prices Threaten Ethanol; Analysts Doubt
Costs Will Fall Anytime Soon; Brazil May Export Sugar-based Fuels to U.S.” Washington Times, Plugged In section, National
Security pg B01, d/l: LexisNexis)
Spiraling corn prices have squeezed profits and stressed the U.S. ethanol industry in recent months - a
phenomenon that threatens to destroy hope that American farmers could help end the country's dependence on
oil imported from hostile nations. In June, VeraSun Energy, one of the country's largest ethanol producers, recently delayed opening three new ethanol
plants because of "volatility in the market," and a Citigroup analyst predicted last month that nearly three-quarters of U.S. ethanol plants could face a possible shutdown
in coming months as profit turns negative. "One of the main reasons for high ethanol prices is that the cost of the feed stock has been soaring," said Jerry Taylor, senior
policy analyst at the D.C.-based Cato Institute. "When
corn prices go up, its going to make it more expensive for an ethanol
processor to make ethanol from corn." Corn prices this week fell below $7 a bushel for the first time in a month after peaking above $7.80 on July 2.
As recently as March, President Bush reiterated his support for ethanol as a means to reduce reliance on foreign energy supplies. "If you're dependent on oil from
overseas, you have a national security issue," Mr. Bush said at the International Renewable Energy Conference in Sao Paulo, Brazil. "The vast majority of ethanol is
coming from corn, and that's good. That's good if you're a corn grower. And it's good if you're worried about national security. I'd rather have our corn farmers growing
energy than relying upon some nation overseas that may not like us." The
government spends roughly $7 billion in ethanol subsidies
annually. Yet as food prices skyrocket, the prospect of corn ethanol becoming a significant alternative to foreign
oil is diminishing. Analysts say the price of corn is unlikely to fall any time soon. A Chicago Board of Trade report released in
May said that despite increased planting tight supply is likely to continue into next year. Alex Moglia, president of Chicago-based
Moglia Advisors, which helps biofuel companies restructure, said 12 biodiesel and ethanol plants have declared bankruptcy in recent
months and that the problems facing the ethanol industry are more profound and long-term than just corn and
fuel costs. Difficulty finding financing, high costs of building new plants and general problems with the
business model are taking there toll on the U.S. ethanol industry, he said. "I think the ethanol industry as a whole will have to re-
examine its entire financial model and determine how it can make money," he said. "Many of these [ethanol] plants never met the objectives that they were designed
and built to achieve." Many experts say corn has limited potential for securing America's energy independence in the
first place. They say energy independence rests more on experimental cellulose-based ethanol made from switch grass, wood or other nonedible parts of plants.
"We're already seeing problems with corn prices and so forth at these levels, and its only going to get tougher from here," Mr. Taylor said. "It's hard to imagine any huge
breakthroughs with corn yields or the ethanol production process because this is not something that was created yesterday." Available
land for growing
more corn in the United States is limited, and while yield increases from existing farms are expected, corn has
the potential to supply only a fraction of U.S. energy needs.
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A global recession could easily lead to a drastic drop in crude oil prices, greatly diminishing the
profitability of ethanol and deterring future investments in the industry. Even now, investments in
alternative energy sources are risky given the lack of policy measures that insure against major oil
price drops. For this reason, explained Tyner, alternative energy policies that protect against hydrocarbon price volatility, promote technological
research, and stimulate investment can lead in the direction of less reliance on hydrocarbons and lower greenhouse gas emissions.
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Sugar, maize, wheat, rapeseed, and soybeans are in the human food chain or used as animal feeds.
As such, their prices depend on supply and demand on the food or animal feed market, making
these feedstocks both relatively expensive and their prices highly variable. Because crop and crude
oil prices do not necessarily move together— although transportation costs do increase with
increasing crude price and, in the 1970s and 1980s, fertilizer prices moved with energy prices, both
pushing up crop prices—in times of high crop and low crude oil prices, biofuels become
uncompetitive. When crop prices are high, farmers have a much greater incentive to sell crops at
the high crop price on the domestic or international market than to sell them at discounted prices to
biofuel producers. This phenomenon has in the past led to periodic shortages of ethanol in Brazil,
damaging the fuel ethanol market and the reputation of the industry.
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Cellulosic Shift
ALTERNATIVE BIOFUEL SOURCES EXIST BUT DON’T HAVE GOVERNMENTAL SUPPORT
RUNGE AND SENAUER 07 (C. Ford Runge and Benjamin Senauer, “How Biofuels Could Starve the Poor,”
Foreign Affairs, May/June 2007, C. Ford Runge is Distinguished McKnight University Professor of Applied
Economics and Law and Director of the Center for International Food and Agricultural Policy at the University
of Minnesota. Benjamin Senauer is Professor of Applied Economics and Co-director of the Food Industry
Center at the University of Minnesota)
The benefits of biofuels are greater when plants other than corn or oils from sources other than soybeans
are used. Ethanol made entirely from cellulose (which is found in trees, grasses, and other plants) has an
energy ratio between 5 and 6 and emits 82 to 85 percent less greenhouse gases than does gasoline. As corn
grows scarcer and more expensive, many are betting that the ethanol industry will increasingly turn to grasses, trees, and residues from field crops, such as wheat and
rice straw and cornstalks. Grasses and trees can be grown on land poorly suited to food crops or in climates hostile
to corn and soybeans. Recent breakthroughs in enzyme and gasification technologies have made it easier
to break down cellulose in woody plants and straw. Field experiments suggest that grassland perennials could become a promising source
of biofuel in the future. For now, however, the costs of harvesting, transporting, and converting such plant
matters are high, which means that cellulose- based ethanol is not yet commercially viable when
compared with the economies of scale of current corn-based production. One ethanol-plant manager in the Midwest has calculated that
fueling an ethanol plant with switchgrass, a much-discussed alternative, would require delivering a semitrailer truckload of the grass every six minutes, 24 hours a day.
subsidies and politics currently favoring the use
The logistical difficulties and the costs of converting cellulose into fuel, combined with the
of corn and soybeans, make it unrealistic to expect cellulose-based ethanol to become a solution within
the next decade. Until it is, relying more on sugar cane to produce ethanol in tropical countries would be
more efficient than using corn and would not involve using a staple food.
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If you think you are spending more each week at the supermarket, you may be right. The escalating share of the U.S. grain harvest
going to ethanol distilleries is driving up food prices worldwide. Corn prices have doubled over the
last year, wheat futures are trading at their highest level in 10 years, and rice prices are rising too. In
addition, soybean futures have risen by half. A Bloomberg analysis notes that the soaring use of corn as the feedstock for fuel
ethanol “is creating unintended consequences throughout the global food chain.” The countries
initially hit by rising food prices are those where corn is the staple food. In Mexico, one of more than 20 countries
with a corn-based diet, the price of tortillas is up by 60 percent. Angry Mexicans in crowds of up to 75,000 have taken to the streets in protest, forcing the
government to institute price controls on tortillas. Food
prices are also rising in China, India, and the United States,
countries that contain 40 percent of the world’s people. While relatively little corn is eaten directly
in these countries, vast quantities are consumed indirectly in meat, milk, and eggs in both China
and the United States. Rising grain and soybean prices are driving up meat and egg prices in China. January pork prices were up 20 percent above
a year earlier, eggs were up 16 percent, while beef, which is less dependent on grain, was up 6 percent. In India, the overall food price index in January 2007
was 10 percent higher than a year earlier. The price of wheat, the staple food in northern India, has jumped 11 percent, moving above the world market price.
In the United States, the U.S. Department of Agriculture projects that the wholesale price of chicken in 2007 will be 10 percent higher on average than in 2006,
the price of a dozen eggs will be up a whopping 21 percent, and milk will be 14 percent higher. And this is only the beginning. In the
past, food price rises have usually been weather related and always temporary. This situation is
different. As more and more fuel ethanol distilleries are built, world grain prices are starting to
move up toward their oil-equivalent value in what appears to be the beginning of a long-term rise.
The food and energy economies, historically separate, are now merging. In this new economy, if the
fuel value of grain exceeds its food value, the market will move it into the energy economy. As the
price of oil climbs so will the price of food. Some 16 percent of the 2006 U.S. grain harvest was used to produce ethanol. With 80 or so
ethanol distilleries now under construction, enough to more than double existing ethanol production capacity, nearly a third of the 2008
grain harvest will be going to ethanol. Since the United States is the leading exporter of grain,
shipping more than Canada, Australia, and Argentina combined, what happens to the U.S. grain
crop affects the entire world. With the massive diversion of grain to produce fuel for cars, exports
will drop. The world’s breadbasket is fast becoming the U.S. fuel tank. The number of hungry
people in the world has been declining for several decades, but in the late 1990s the trend reversed
and the number began to rise. The United Nations currently lists 34 countries as needing emergency food assistance. Many of these
are considered failed and failing states, including Chad, Iraq, Liberia, Haiti, and Zimbabwe. Since
food aid programs typically have fixed budgets, if the price of grain doubles, food aid will be
reduced by half. Urban food protests in response to rising food prices in low and middle income
countries, such as Mexico, could lead to political instability that would add to the growing list of
failed and failing states. At some point, spreading political instability could disrupt global economic
progress.
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LEADING EXPERTS HAVE CONCLUDED THAT FUEL PRICES ARE THE ROOT CAUSE OF
INCREASED FOOD PRICES AND CORN ETHANOL WILL BE VIABLE WITHOUT SUBSIDIES
BIOTECH BUSINESS WEEK 08 (July 14, 2008, “BIOTECHNOLOGY INDUSTRY ORGANIZATION
BIO; Setting Aside the Renewable Fuel Standard Will Not Reduce Corn Prices,” SECTION: EXPANDED
REPORTING; Pg. 1394)
Biofuels are needed to help reduce fuel prices, which are the root cause of higher food prices, according to
the available evidence. The Biotechnology Industry Organization today submitted comments to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
opposing Texas Gov. Rick Perry's (R) request for a waiver of 50 percent of the Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS) mandate for production of ethanol from grain (see also
Biotechnology Industry Organization BIO). BIO President and CEO Jim Greenwood said, "Texas has not demonstrated in its petition to the EPA that the higher costs
for corn currently impacting its livestock and agriculture industries are the result of biofuel production. In fact,
Texas' own study of the problem
shows that the soaring cost of oil is the primary cause of higher agricultural costs and food prices and
that relaxing the RFS will not lower corn prices. "The RFS is designed to move the United States as rapidly as possible toward sustainable
production of advanced biofuels. Abandoning the RFS today would send a signal to the market that could undercut ongoing research and development in biotechnology
An April study by the Agricultural & Food Policy Center at Texas A & M
that is vital to achieving that goal."
University, cited by Texas in its petition to the EPA for a waiver, demonstrates that higher energy costs have had the most
significant impact on food and grain prices by increasing the cost of production. Further, the study clearly shows that
demand for biofuels is outpacing the Renewable Fuel Standard's mandate, due to increased fuel prices and state and federal requirements for clean fuels. The
analysis concludes that relaxing the new RFS and reducing production of biofuels would not lower grain
prices. The study is available at http://www.afpc.tamu.edu/pubs/2/515/RR-08-01.pdf. That conclusion is supported by further
evidence, such as the testimony of Bruce A. Babcock of Iowa State University's Center for Agricultural
and Rural Development before the U.S. Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Government Affairs on May 7, 2008. Babcock testified
that eliminating the RFS would produce a 1 percent drop in the price of corn. He presented two general
findings to the committee, saying that the price of corn will continue to rise and fall directly with
transportation fuel prices and that "if high gasoline prices signal that we need alternative fuels, the corn
ethanol industry will be there to contribute substantial amounts of transportation fuels even without
government subsidies." The testimony is available at http://hsgac.senate.gov/public/_files/050708Babcock.pdf. Both U.S. Agriculture
Secretary Ed Schafer and Council of Economic Advisors Chairman Ed Lazear have stated that ethanol
production accounts for less than 3 percent of the increase in global food prices. Further, a Merrill Lynch
analyst recently estimated that U.S. oil and gas prices would be 15 percent higher without biofuel
production. The Advanced Biofuels & Climate Change Information Center presents the latest commentary and data on the environmental and other impacts of
biofuel production. Drop in and add your comments, at http://biofuelsandclimate.wordpress.com/.
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The industry's growth has meant that a larger and larger share of corn production is being used to feed the
huge mills that produce ethanol. According to some estimates, ethanol plants will burn up to half of U.S.
domestic corn supplies within a few years. Ethanol demand will bring 2007 inventories of corn to their
lowest levels since 1995 (a drought year), even though 2006 yielded the third-largest corn crop on record. Iowa may soon become a net corn importer.
The enormous volume of corn required by the ethanol industry is sending shock waves through the food
system. (The United States accounts for some 40 percent of the world's total corn production and over half of all corn exports.) In March 2007, corn
futures rose to over $4.38 a bushel, the highest level in ten years. Wheat and rice prices have also surged
to decade highs, because even as those grains are increasingly being used as substitutes for corn, farmers
are planting more acres with corn and fewer acres with other crops. This might sound like nirvana to corn producers, but it is
hardly that for consumers, especially in poor developing countries, who will be hit with a double shock if both
food prices and oil prices stay high. The World Bank has estimated that in 2001, 2.7 billion people in the
world were living on the equivalent of less than $2 a day; to them, even marginal increases in the cost of
staple grains could be devastating. Filling the 25-gallon tank of an SUV with pure ethanol requires over
450 pounds of corn -- which contains enough calories to feed one person for a year. By putting pressure
on global supplies of edible crops, the surge in ethanol production will translate into higher prices for
both processed and staple foods around the world. Biofuels have tied oil and food prices together in ways that
could profoundly upset the relationships between food producers, consumers, and nations in the years ahead, with potentially devastating
implications for both global poverty and food security.
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The above results for the U.S. domestic market are important for international trade and food prices
because the United States remains the world’s largest exporter of maize and wheat throughout the
projection period, and of soybeans in 2006–08. Rapid expansion in global production of biofuels changes the
price relationships among various agricultural commodities in the next three to four years. The U.S.
share of world maize trade falls from 60– 70 percent to 55–60 percent. Ethanol demand is expected to be inelastic in
the range of prices projected in the study. With a greater share of the maize market captured by inelastic demand
that is also tied to the world oil market and much smaller stock levels in the United States, the study
forecasts increased price volatility, especially in response to weather variability. Global expansion of
biodiesel will result in prices of vegetable oils rising more than those of oilseeds and protein meals.
FOR as long as most people can remember, food has been getting cheaper and farming has been in
decline. In 1974-2005 food prices on world markets fell by three-quarters in real terms. Food today is so cheap that
the West is battling gluttony even as it scrapes piles of half-eaten leftovers into the bin. That is why this year's price rise has been so
extraordinary. Since the spring, wheat prices have doubled and almost every crop under the sun—maize,
milk, oilseeds, you name it—is at or near a peak in nominal terms. The Economist's food-price index is
higher today than at any time since it was created in 1845 (see chart). Even in real terms, prices have jumped
by 75% since 2005. No doubt farmers will meet higher prices with investment and more production, but dearer food is likely to persist for years (see article).
That is because “agflation” is underpinned by long-running changes in diet that accompany the growing wealth of emerging economies—the Chinese consumer who ate
the
20kg (44lb) of meat in 1985 will scoff over 50kg of the stuff this year. That in turn pushes up demand for grain: it takes 8kg of grain to produce one of beef. But
rise in prices is also the self-inflicted result of America's reckless ethanol subsidies. This year biofuels will
take a third of America's (record) maize harvest. That affects food markets directly: fill up an SUV's fuel
tank with ethanol and you have used enough maize to feed a person for a year. And it affects them
indirectly, as farmers switch to maize from other crops. The 30m tonnes of extra maize going to ethanol
this year amounts to half the fall in the world's overall grain stocks.
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The subsidies lavished on ethanol are politically irresistible, but they have the knock-on effect of taking
land out of food production, thereby limiting supply, thereby pushing up prices. Farmers also switch
from other crops to corn, again reducing supply and driving up prices. The wealthy countries, led by those of the European
Union, Japan, South Korea, the United States and Canada (to a lesser extent) have stymied world free trade for decades with outrageous agricultural subsidies.
Farmers now account for a maximum of 4 per cent of the work force in these countries, yet their political
influence has been, and remains, enormous. Now, some of them have found a new way of being subsidized, and governments have been
unable to resist. Advanced industrial countries blocked the importation of cheaper food from developing countries - try getting milk or poultry into Canada, or rice into
Now, the
Japan and South Korea, or sugar into the United States - that could have raised those countries' standards of living and helped consumers at home.
combination of factors, including soaring energy bills, has heightened demand. The rush to corn-based
ethanol is driving up food prices in countries where the share of daily income on food greatly exceeds the
share in developed countries.
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With almost a fourth of the corn crop now diverted to ethanol, it's costlier to feed the chickens, the hogs
and the grain-fed cattle. Egg prices are up. Corn meal, corn syrup, and even my personal favorite (popcorn!) are pricier. So is almost all food,
as other grains are in higher demand as a substitute for corn. Bottom line: America pays $9 billion a year
more for our food because of ethanol policy. The problem is growing faster than any crop. A recent U.S.
Department of Agriculture report says farmers are planting more corn rather than other grains,
constantly reducing the supply and thus raising the price for those crops. High grain costs are
discouraging farmers from raising cattle and other animals, thus further increasing meat and egg prices.
The food industry has a website outlining the ripple effect on our groceries.
With the price of raw materials at such highs, the biofuel craze would place significant stress on other
parts of the agricultural sector. In fact, it already does. In the United States, the growth of the biofuel
industry has triggered increases not only in the prices of corn, oilseeds, and other grains but also in the
prices of seemingly unrelated crops and products. The use of land to grow corn to feed the ethanol maw is
reducing the acreage devoted to other crops. Food processors who use crops such as peas and sweet corn
have been forced to pay higher prices to keep their supplies secure -- costs that will eventually be passed
on to consumers. Rising feed prices are also hitting the livestock and poultry industries. According to
Vernon Eidman, a professor emeritus of agribusiness management at the University of Minnesota, higher
feed costs have caused returns to fall sharply, especially in the poultry and swine sectors. If returns
continue to drop, production will decline, and the prices for chicken, turkey, pork, milk, and eggs will
rise. A number of Iowa's pork producers could go out of business in the next few years as they are forced
to compete with ethanol plants for corn supplies.
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THE RECENT ETHANOL SURGE HAS INCREASED FOOD PRICES FOR AMERICAN
HOUSEHOLDS AND HAS LED TO FOOD RIOTS AROUND THE WORLD
LIEBERMAN 08 (April 2, 2008, “Time for Second Thoughts on the Ethanol Mandate,” Ben Lieberman,
Senior Policy Analyst for Energy and Environment in the Thomas A. Roe Institute for Economic Policy Studies
at The Heritage Foundation, Heritage Foundation)
Not surprisingly,
diverting corn from food to fuel use has raised food prices. At a little over $2 per bushel when
the 2005 law was signed, the price of corn has surged above $5, primarily because a quarter of the crop is
now used to produce energy. A host of corn-related foods, such as corn-fed meat and dairy, have seen
sharp price increases. Wheat and soybeans are also up, partly as a result of fewer acres being planted in
favor of corn. There's talk of inflation rising to levels not seen in decades as renewable mandates have
conspired with other factors to drive up food prices. For corn farmers, the mandate has exceeded their wildest dreams, but for
consumers, it has been an expensive double-whammy—higher costs to drive to the supermarket and
higher prices once you're there. A recent study from Purdue University puts the added food cost from the
renewable mandate at $15 billion in 2007—about $130 per household.[2] And that was from ethanol
usage at a fraction of what will be required in the years ahead. Globally, with nearly a billion people at
risk for hunger and malnutrition, the costs are far higher. Several anti-hunger organizations have weighed in heavily against current
policies. An August 2007 United Nations report warns of "serious risks of creating a battle between food
and fuel that will leave the poor and hungry in developing countries at the mercy of rapidly rising prices
for food, land, and water."[3] There is evidence that this may already be happening, including food-
related rioting in Mexico, Indonesia, Egypt, and the Philippines.
Subsidies on corn-based ethanol, mainly in the US are hurting poor countries and is the main cause for
higher food prices
Reuters on July 30, 2008 (“Biofuels major driver of food price rise - World Bank,” Reuters, d/l:
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High prices do not necessarily mean profitable ethanol production. Babcock explained that because
there was a negative dry mill margin over total cost (i.e. ethanol plants were not recouping construction and operating costs)
there has been a sharp decline in plant construction. Few new ethanol plants will be constructed in 2007 or 2008 in the
United States because costs incurred would outweigh probable benefits. Nonetheless, U.S. ethanol
production is set to triple by 2010 through increased productivity and capacity utilization. Higher
corn prices—due in large part to the increasing demand for ethanol—will lead to a steep increase in
corn planted acreage, according to the models. The number of acres set aside for corn is set to increase 20 percent from 2006 to 2008, expanding
to approximately 93 million acres. This land will come from farms previously producing soybeans (as well as
conservation land), leading to a roughly 10 percent decrease in soybean planted acreage in the
United States. The result will be a smaller supply of soybean and thus higher prices, paving the way
for soybean producers such as Brazil and Argentina to meet the ensuing demand by greatly
expanding their own production.
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ALTERNATE CAUSALITY ARGUMENTS AREN’T ENOUGH HERE. YES, THERE ARE OTHER
FACTORS CONTRIBUTING TO HIGH FOOD PRICES, BUT THE ETHANOL MANDATE IS WHAT
HAS THE MOST LASTING IMPACT.
Cohen, 1 July 08 Bonner R. Cohen is a senior fellow at the National Center for Public Policy Research in
Washington, DC. The Heartland Institute. Environment & Climate News. “Ethanol Comes Under Fire for
Rising Food Prices.”
"There are many factors that contribute to rising food prices, including government-induced demand for
ethanol, rising oil and gasoline prices, strong economic growth in poorer countries, and a general
weakening of the U.S. dollar against other currencies," Murphy noted. "But when 20 percent of U.S. corn
production is being diverted from the dinner table to the gas tank, we can confidently say that the ethanol
mandate has had--and will continue to have--a lasting impact on the price of food," Murphy said.
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Environment – Generic
Ethanol does more harm than it does good, supporting it only advocates a substance that destroys the
environment and costs society more money
Ted Williams, March 11, 2005 ([For more than 30 years Ted Williams has been hailed as one of the foremost nature writers in the
United States, with articles and columns that appear in a wide range of national magazines, from Fly Rod & Reel to Audubon] “Drunk
on Ethanol,” Audubon Magazine, d/l: http://www.audubonmagazine.org/incite/incite0408.html)
Ethanol Crop farming results in harmful soil erosion and nutrient pollution of the water supply.
Science Daily 2007. Increase in Ethanol Production from Corn could Significantly Harm Water Quality.
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/10/071010120538.htm
Nutrient and sediment pollution in streams and rivers could also both be attributed to soil erosion.
High sedimentation rates carry financial consequences as they increase the cost of often-mandatory
dredging for transportation and recreation. The committee observed that erosion might be minimized
if future production of biofuels looks to perennial crops, like switchgrass, poplars or willows, or prairie
polyculture, which could hold the soil and nutrients in place better than most row crops. The
committee also identified other ways that farming could be improved, such as conservation tillage and
leaving most or all of the cornstalks and cobs in the field after the grain has been harvested.
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Soybeans and especially corn are row crops that contribute to soil
Should corn and soybeans be used as fuel crops at all?
erosion and water pollution and require large amounts of fertilizer, pesticides, and fuel to grow, harvest,
and dry. They are the major cause of nitrogen runoff -- the harmful leakage of nitrogen from fields when
it rains -- of the type that has created the so-called dead zone in the Gulf of Mexico, an ocean area the size
of New Jersey that has so little oxygen it can barely support life. In the United States, corn and soybeans
are typically planted in rotation, because soybeans add nitrogen to the soil, which corn needs to grow. But
as corn increasingly displaces soybeans as a main source of ethanol, it will be cropped continuously,
which will require major increases in nitrogen fertilizer and aggravate the nitrogen runoff problem.
Increased production of corn to meet ethanol demands threatens oxygen levels in Gulf of Mexico
Liz Marshall, a senior economist at the World Resources Institute, 2007 Thirst For Corn: What 2007 Plantings
Could Mean For The Environment
Downstream coastal areas have been grappling with the impacts of agricultural nutrient runoff for decades. Nutrient
runoff from
agricultural lands in the Mississippi River Basin is the prime culprit in driving the size and
duration of the annual “Dead Zone”—a seasonal phenomenon in which oxygen depletion causes an
area of the Gulf of Mexico the size of Massachusetts to become uninhabitable to marine organisms. Although the dead zone no
longer captures the national headlines it occupied when it was discovered in the early 1990s, the phenomenon persists and continues
to grow, with adverse impacts on marine fi sh populations and coastal fi sheries. Despite regional efforts to
advance nutrient management objectives, progress has been slow in encouraging adoption of best management practices to reduce nutrient runoff, and
increased production of corn to meet ethanol demand threatens to signifi cantly exacerbate this
issue.
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Water supply is at severe risk from Ethanol production because of the high levels of pesticides and fertilizer use
on the crops which run off into the water supply.
Science Daily 2007. Increase in Ethanol Production from Corn could Significantly Harm Water Quality.
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/10/071010120538.htm
The quality of groundwater, rivers, and coastal and offshore waters could be impacted by increased
fertilizer and pesticide use for biofuels, the report says. High levels of nitrogen in stream flows are a
major cause of low-oxygen or "hypoxic" regions, commonly known as "dead zones," which are
lethal for most living creatures and cover broad areas of the Gulf of Mexico, Chesapeake Bay, and
other regions. The report notes that there are a number of agricultural practices and technologies
that could be employed to reduce nutrient pollution, such as injecting fertilizer below the soil
surface, using controlled-release fertilizers that have water-insoluble coatings, and optimizing the
amount of fertilizer applied to the land. A possible metric to gauge the impact of biofuels on water
quality could be to compare the amount of fertilizers and pesticides used on various crops, the
committee suggested. For example, corn has the greatest application rates of both fertilizer and
pesticides per acre, higher than for soybeans and mixed-species grassland biomass. The switch from
other crops or noncrop plants to corn would likely lead to much higher application rates of highly
soluble nitrogen, which could migrate to drinking water wells, rivers, and streams, the committee
said. When not removed from water before consumption, high levels of nitrate and nitrite --
products of nitrogen fertilizers -- could have significant health impacts.
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Environment – Fertilizers
Demand for ethanol leads to high levels of nitrogen and phosphorus runoff into waterways
Liz Marshall, a senior economist at the World Resources Institute, 2007 Thirst For Corn: What 2007
Plantings Could Mean For The Environment
Most of the increased corn production is met through scaling up continuous corn and corn-soybean rotations. The
water quality impacts of
these changes in production are considerable, with aggregate nitrogen and phosphorus loss into
waterways increasing at a rate faster than the rate at which acreage is brought into production (Figure
2). Under scenario 2, acreage in production increases by only .7%, but nitrogen runoff increases at more than three times that rate nationwide (2.3%), and by a
much higher percentage in some parts of the northern plains, lake states, and Appalachian/mid-atlantic regions. Even under the best-case production scenario
(Scenario 1), nitrogen and phosphorus runoff increase by up to 9% in some regions of the Northern Plains. These fi gures may be conservative estimates, as
well; raising
corn prices relative to the price of nitrogen fertilizer provides an incentive for farmers to
increase their use of N fertilizer in an effort to produce greater yields.
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Environment – Monocultures
CORN FARMERS ARE CREATING VULNERABLE MONOCULTURES AND DAMAGING WATER
SOURCES WITH CHEMICALS AND IRRIGATION
ALTIERI AND BRAVO 07 (“The ecological and social tragedy of crop-based biofuel production in the
Americas,” March 20th, 2007, Miguel A Altieri, Professor of Agroecology University of California, Berkeley,
Elizabeth Bravo)
The scale of production needed to yield the projected crop mass will encourage industrial methods of
monoculture corn and soybean production with drastic environmental side effects. Corn production leads
to more soil erosion than any other US crop. Farmers throughout the Midwest have abandoned crop
rotations to grow corn and soy exclusively, increasing average soil erosion from 2.7 tons per acre annually
to 19.7 tons (Pimentel et al 1995). Lack of crop rotation has also increased vulnerability to pests, and therefore necessitates higher
inputs of pesticides than most crops (in the U.S., about 41% of all herbicides and 17% of all insecticides are applied to corn—(Pimentel and
Lehman 1993)). Specialization in corn production can be dangerous: in the early 1970s when uniform high-yielding maize hybrids constituted 70% of all corn grown, a
crop vulnerability can be
leaf blight that affected these hybrids led to a 15% loss in corn yields throughout the decade (Altieri 2004). . This sort of
expected to grow in our increasingly volatile climate, causing ripple effects throughout the food supply.
We should be considering the implications of tying our energy economy to that same fluctuating and
volatile food system. Corn cultivation generally involves use of the herbicide atrazine, a known endocrine
disruptor. Low doses of endocrine disruptors can cause developmental harm by interfering with hormonal triggers at key points in the development of an
organism. Studies show that atrazine can result in sexual abnormalities in frog populations, including hermaphrodism (Hayes et al 2002). Corn requires
large amounts of chemical nitrogen fertilizer, a major contributor to the ground and river water pollution
responsible for the “dead zone” in the Gulf of Mexico. Median rates of nitrate application on US
farmland range from 120 to 550 kg of N per hectare. Inefficient use of nitrogen fertilizers by crops leads
to nitrogen-laden runoff, mostly in surface water or in groundwater. Aquifer contamination by nitrate is
widespread and at dangerously high levels in many rural regions. In the U.S., it is estimated that more
than 25% of drinking water wells contain nitrate levels above the 45 parts per million safety standard
(Conway and Pretty, 1991). High nitrate levels are hazardous to human health, and studies have linked nitrate intake to
metahemoglobinemia in children and gastric, and bladder and esophageal cancer in adults. Expansion of corn into drier areas, such as
Kansas, requires irrigation, increasing pressure on already depleted underground sources such as the
Ogallala aquifer in the Southwestern US. In parts of Arizona, groundwater is already being pumped at a
rate ten times the natural recharge rate of these aquifers.
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The current method of corn production generates significant amounts of excess soil erosion. Soil
loss robs land of productivity (requiring more fertilizer inputs) and, when soil runs off farm fields,
it has serious impacts on aquatic life and shortens the useful life of hydroelectric dams and drinking
water reservoirs. According to the latest USDA National Resources Inventory (2003), the average
rate of erosion for cropland was 4.9 tons per acre. With 2006 national average corn yields at 149
bushels per acre and average ethanol production at 2.7 gallons of ethanol per bushel of corn. It is
estimated that soil losses from corn-ethanol production will be about 24 pounds (lbs) of soil per
gallon of ethanol produced.
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The presence of ethanol in groundwater may exacerbate problems with the existing soil pollution
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We are also concerned that farmers in some areas will be expanding corn acreage at the expense of
wildlife habitat. Corn requires large amounts of fertilizers and pesticides, which, when coupled with its
weak root system, make it highly susceptible to erosion. The subsequent results are environmentally
damaging on several fronts. Sedimentation blocks sunlight needed by plants, clogs fish gills, and buries
spawning grounds and food supplies for aquatic creatures. Pollutants, such as phosphorous and nitrogen,
used in fertilizer can cause eutrophication, or reduced oxygen levels which kill or weaken many fish and
crustacean species. Furthermore, land in crop production is much less likely to provide adequate nesting
grounds for a variety of birds. A recent study by Farrand and Ryan found nesting on CRP lands to be ten
times higher than on land in crop production.
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Ethanol pesticides
Ethanol production increases herbicide and insecticide pollution.
More corn has also resulted in the use of more toxic chemicals in general, and weed killers, in
particular. Again, water utilities will bear the cost of cleaning up this water. NASS estimated the
2005 corn crop consumed 157 million lbs of herbicides and 4.8 million lbs of insecticides. Though we
do not have chemical loss factors, if corn from existing corn land is used as feedstock for the 2007
ethanol capacity, then 26 million lbs of herbicides and 821,000 lbs of insecticides use could be
attributed to ethanol. This represents roughly 15% of the estimated 171 million pounds of
herbicides and 5.3 million lbs of insecticides applied to the 2007 corn crop. That will include
millions more pounds of Atrazine, a hormone-disrupting potential carcinogen, which water utilities
across the Midwest now routinely pay to remove from drinking water.
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Lore, Michael. JD candidate, American University, Washington college of law. EXPLORING HOW
TODAY'S DEVELOPMENT AFFECTS FUTURE GENERATIONS AROUND THE GLOBE:
FEATURE: SUBSIDIES FOR CORN-DERIVED ETHANOL MAY LEAVE US THIRSTY. American
University/Sustainable Development Law & Policy. 2007
A new report from the National Research Council ("NRC") indicates that ethanol from corn
production may have a substantial negative impact on the U.S. water supply. n1 The U.S. ethanol
subsidy program, $ 0.51 per gallon, is designed to help wean domestic dependence on foreign oil.
However, subsidies for corn-derived ethanol may accelerate a domestic and global water crisis n2
without establishing national energy independence. Congress should eliminate inefficient subsidies
for corn-derived ethanol in the upcoming Energy Bill because the over-production of corn for corn-
derived ethanol will likely accelerate the depletion of U.S. water quality and quantity. According to
NASA and the World Health Organization, severe water shortages will affect four billion people by
2050 and southwestern states in the U.S. will face severe freshwater shortages by 2025. n3 U.S. corn
production has several externalities that contribute to freshwater scarcity and environmental
degradation. For instance, it creates more soil erosion and uses more herbicides and insecticides
than any other U.S. crop. n4 These inputs become residues in well water. n5 These pesticides are
arguably the cause of the Gulf of Mexico "dead zone," an ever-increasing seasonal phenomenon
where nutrient runoff causes oxygen depletion in an area the size of Massachusetts, causing
harmful impacts on marine and coastal fish populations. n6 Moreover, ethanol itself is likely to leak
into ground water and cause harm to our drinking supply because ethanol will mainly be stored
underground and there have been over 400,000 reports of leaks in the last few decades. n7 The
NRC has taken alarm to statistics like these and undertook an extensive study to find answers to
potential water concerns related to corn-derived ethanol. The NRC suggests alternative subsidies to
reduce impacts of biofuels production on water use and quality, policies to encourage best
agricultural practices and policies to encourage biofuels produced from some cellulosic alternatives
rather than from corn. n8
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Science Daily 2007. Increase in Ethanol Production from Corn could Significantly Harm Water Quality.
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/10/071010120538.htm
For biorefineries, the water consumed for the ethanol production process -- although modest
compared with the water used growing biofuel crops -- could substantially affect local water
supplies, the committee concluded. A biorefinery that produces 100 million gallons of ethanol a year
would use the equivalent of the water supply for a town of about 5,000 people. Biorefineries could
generate intense challenges for local water supplies, depending on where the facilities are located.
However, use of water in biorefineries is declining as ethanol producers increasingly incorporate
water recycling and develop new methods of converting feedstocks to fuels that increase energy
yields while reducing water use, the committee noted.
Corn Ethanol would consume a significant amount of the drinking water supply.
Lore, Michael. JD candidate, American University, Washington college of law. EXPLORING HOW
TODAY'S DEVELOPMENT AFFECTS FUTURE GENERATIONS AROUND THE GLOBE:
FEATURE: SUBSIDIES FOR CORN-DERIVED ETHANOL MAY LEAVE US THIRSTY. American
University/Sustainable Development Law & Policy. 2007
The perfect storm of high oil prices and record-breaking U.S. corn yields has allowed the powerful
corn lobby to dictate many policies in the renewable energy debate. The Energy Policy Act of 2005
established the Renewable Fuel Standard ("RFS") that requires the use of 7.5 billion gallons of
renewable fuels by 2012, with most of the renewable fuel originating from subsidized corn ethanol.
n9 President Bush suggested a thirty-five billion gallon domestic ethanol target during his 2007
State of the Union Address. n10 Last June, the Senate voted 65-27 to expand the production of
renewable fuels to thirty-six billion gallons by 2022, with fifteen billion to come from corn-derived
ethanol. n11 The U.S. House of Representatives is in the process of negotiating an Energy Bill but
House and Senate Democratic leaders intend to avoid the conference committee process and instead
plan to bounce versions of their bills back and forth. n12 Therefore, critical debate over the impact
of corn-derived ethanol subsidies on water supplies must occur immediately. The ethanol debate is complex and it
is perpetually evolving because new environmental externalities periodically emerge and prices of energy and food commodities perpetually change. Congress
has the duty to include all future costs associated with ethanol in their energy and environmental impact analysis when developing federal policy related to
subsidies that promote corn ethanol production. Over-farming to produce ethanol from corn will significantly erode drinkable water quantity and overused
pesticides, herbicides, and fertilizers will eventually ruin the general quality of our water. Only a diligent analysis of all environmental factors and wise policy
choices in the Energy Bill can supply the United States with its greatest needs while reflecting the country's highest values.
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Avery, dennis, 2005. U.S. Environment Can’t Afford big Ethanol. Center for Global Food Issues.
http://www.cgfi.org/2005/07/07/us-environment-cant-afford-big-ethanol/
Worst of all, the Washington State bioscientists say it takes about 2.4 acres of land growing corn to
support a car driving for a year on E85—gasoline with 15 percent ethanol mixed in. If we ran even
10 percent of our cars on the ethanol mix, that would take about 48 million more acres of good
cropland away from Nature—or 100 million acres of poor cropland. U.S. national forests total only
191 million acres. Why would we have to take land away from Nature to grow ethanol? Because meat and feed demand is rising
rapidly in densely-populated Asian countries where the alternative to imported corn is clearing
highly-erodable tropical forests full of irreplaceable wild species. That’s a big reason why the World Trade Organization
and the Bush White House are right now negotiating to open the farm trade barriers which have kept American corn out of such massive markets as China,
India and Indonesia. Farmers
like to say there’s a farm surplus, but in fact the market last year took all of
the record corn yield from 79 million U.S. acres and wanted more. We paid the corn farmers far less
subsidy on their feed corn than we did no their ethanol corn.
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Neither should current biofuel support policies be championed for their supposed capacity to
reduce GHGs or improve energy security. The cost of obtaining a unit of CO2-equivalent reduction
through subsidies to biofuels is extremely high, well over $500 per tonne of CO2-equivalent avoided
for corn-based ethanol in the United States, for example, with other researched countries not
performing much better (Table A). The score is also not very favourable in terms of displacing fossil
fuels. In most cases the use of biofuels roughly doubles the cost of transportation energy for
consumers and taxpayers together.
Ethanol-in-gasoline seriously pollutes the air. The reactivity of the combined exhaust and evaporative emissions using the ethanol-
blended reformulated gasoline is estimated to be about 17% larger than those using the MTBE-blended reformulated gasoline (NRC, 1999). Ethanol
does reduce the carbon monoxide emissions, but increases those of nitrogen oxides (NOx),
acetaldehyde, and peroxy- acetyl-nitrate (PAN) (Rice et al., 1999). Finally, all the energy contained in corn-
ethanol comes from fossil fuels, with their own emissions. In Appendix B it is shown that carbon dioxide sequestration by
corn disappears when ethanol is produced from it, and there is no difference between the corn ethanol fuel and gasoline
in CO2 emissions.
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However, a tax credit with a binding mandate always generates an increase in gasoline consumption, the
extent to which depends on the type of mandate. If it is a blend mandate (as in most countries outside the United States), the tax credit acts as a fuel
consumption subsidy. Ethanol producers only gain indirectly with the increased ethanol demand resulting from the increase in total fuel consumption. Most of
the market effects are due to the mandate with the tax credit only exacerbating the ethanol price increase and causing an increase in the gasoline price but a
decrease in the consumer fuel price. For
a consumption mandate (as in the United States), the tax credit is even
worse as it acts as a gasoline consumption subsidy. Market prices of ethanol do not change, even as
the price paid by consumers for gasoline declines (while gasoline market prices rise). A tax credit is
therefore a pure waste as it involves huge taxpayer costs while increasing greenhouse gas emissions,
local pollution and traffic congestion, while at the same time providing no benefit to either corn or
ethanol producers (or in promoting rural development) and fails to reduce the tax costs of farm subsidy programs
but generates an increase in the oil price and hence wealth in Middle East countries. These social costs are
huge because the new mandate calls for 36 bil. gallons by 2022, to cost over $18 bil. a year in taxpayer monies alone. Even if the mandate is not
binding initially, the
elimination of the tax credit will cause the mandate to bind or the mandate can be
increased so our results still hold.
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One of the main arguments of biofuel advocates is that these new forms of energy will help mitigate
climate change. By promoting large-scale mechanized monocultures that require agrochemical inputs
and machinery, an overall increase in CO2 emissions is more likely to be the end result. As carbon-
capturing forests are felled to make way for biofuel crops, CO2 emissions will increase, not decrease
(Bravo 2006, Donald 2004). As countries in the Global South enter biofuel production, the plan is to export
much of their production. Transport to other countries will greatly raise fuel use and gas emissions.
Moreover, turning plant biomass into liquid fuels at the refineries produces immense quantities of
greenhouse gas emissions (Pimentel and Patzek 2005). Global climate change is not going to be remedied by the
use of industrial biofuels. There will need to be a fundamental shift in consumption patterns in the Global North The only way to stop
global warming is to transition away from large-scale, industrial farming to small-scale and organic
agriculture, and to decrease worldwide fuel consumption through conservation.
Scientific evidence shows that burning ethanol actually increases GHG rather than reduce it
Douglas Auld, July 7, 2008 ([Auld is a journalist for the Toronto Sun] “Ethanol Experiment should end now,” The Toronto Sun, d/l:
LexisNexis)
That ethanol will reduce GHG emissions at all is by no means certain; scientific evidence suggests the
production and burning of a litre of wheat and corn ethanol may create more GHGs than a litre of conventional
gasoline. It all depends on how the ethanol is made. One positive analysis suggests current policy supporting corn and wheat
ethanol production will not significantly reduce GHG emissions, reducing output by perhaps 30 kilograms per year per Canadian.
Initial studies on energy use and GHG emissions from ethanol failed to take into account all aspects of the
production cycle, such as emissions from transportation or the effect of turning uncultivated land into farmland.
Even taking the optimistic assumption that wheat and corn ethanol reduce GHG emissions, the total subsidies
per tonne of CO2 offset from gasoline by ethanol will be over $300 per tonne, 10 times what the European
Union carbon trading system is paying for the same reductions. Canada stumbled into this policy partly because of pressure on
governments to do something to reduce increasing GHG emissions. Ethanol seemed like a simple solution, but a second look has shown that this was an illusion. The
Senate wisely encouraged the government to conduct a thorough cost benefit analysis of its ethanol plans before implementing any regulations. It is unlikely any food-
based ethanol subsidies and mandates could pass such a test. It will take a courageous politician to admit a mistake has been made, but courage and a better plan are
exactly what Canada needs.
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Liz Marshall, a senior economist at the World Resources Institute, 2007 Thirst For Corn: What 2007 Plantings
Could Mean For The Environment
Our analysis suggests that, as corn production increases to meet ethanol demand, GHG emissions
from the agricultural sector also increase at a rate that is faster than the rate at which land is
brought into production. (Figure 3) GHG emissions from the agricultural sector are expected to rise due
to increases in both the extent of agriculture (i.e. new land being brought under production) and in
the average GHGintensity of agriculture (because, on average, corn production is more GHG-
intensive than the cropping practice that it is replacing). The analysis predicts, for instance, a decline in continuous soybean
production, with its minimal nitrogen fertilizer demand, and an increase in more input-intensive corn-soybean and continuous corn rotations.
The researchers said that past studies showing the benefits of ethanol in combating climate change
have not taken into account almost certain changes in land use worldwide if ethanol from corn —
and in the future from other feedstocks such as switchgrass — become a prized commodity. "Using good
cropland to expand biofuels will probably exacerbate global warming," concludes the study published in Science magazine. The researchers said
that farmers under economic pressure to produce biofuels will increasingly "plow up more forest or
grasslands," releasing much of the carbon formerly stored in plants and soils through
decomposition or fires. Globally, more grasslands and forests will be converted to growing the crops
to replace the loss of grains when U.S. farmers convert land to biofuels, the study said.
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It is not true that ethanol is environment friendly, studies shows that it will increase more greenhouse gasses
than gasoline usage
During the recent congressional debate over energy legislation, lawmakers frequently cited
estimates that corn-based ethanol produces 20% less greenhouse gases in production,
transportation and use than gasoline, and that cellulosic ethanol has an even greater benefit of 70%
less emissions. The study released Thursday by researchers affiliated with Princeton University and
a number of other institutions maintains that these analyses "were one-sided" and counted the
carbon benefits of using land for biofuels but not the carbon costs of diverting land from its existing
uses. "The other studies missed a key factor that everyone agrees should have been included, the
land use changes that actually are going to increase greenhouse gas emissions," said Tim
Searchinger, a research scholar at Princeton University's Woodrow Wilson School of Public and
International Affairs and lead author of the study. The study said that after taking into account
expected worldwide land-use changes, corn-based ethanol, instead of reducing greenhouse gases by
20%, will increases it by 93% compared to using gasoline over a 30-year period. Biofuels from
switchgrass, if they replace croplands and other carbon-absorbing lands, would result in 50% more
greenhouse gas emissions, the researchers concluded.
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Avery, dennis, 2005. U.S. Environment Can’t Afford big Ethanol. Center for Global Food Issues.
http://www.cgfi.org/2005/07/07/us-environment-cant-afford-big-ethanol/
Some of the Green die-hards say we could make ethanol at less cost from the cornstalks and sell the
corn. They don’t realize that the cornstalks are left on the field to maintain soil nutrients level—and
to minimize soil erosion. Taking the stalks for ethanol plants would be an environmental sin—and
we’d have to burn up still more liquid fuel to gather huge tonnages of them into an ethanol facility.
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Switching to biofuels means getting our energy only from what we can grow in the present day, and that's not much. In
the course of a year, an
acre of corn yields only as little as 60 gallons of ethanol, after you subtract the fossil fuels used to
cultivate, harvest and refine the crop. So let's flash forward five years. Twice a month you swing by the biofuels
station to fill the 25-gallon tank in your sporty flex-fuel econo-car. (Pretend you've kissed the SUV goodbye.) Even
this modest level of energy consumption will require a ten-acre farm to keep you on the highway for
a year. That might not sound too bad. But there are more than 200 million cars and light trucks on
American roads, meaning they would require two billion acres' worth of corn a year (if they
actually used only 50 gallons a month). The country has only about 800 million acres of potential
farmland.
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David Pimentel and Tad W. Patzek, January 30, 2005 ([Pimentell is from the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences at
Cornell University and Patzek is from Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of California, Berkeley]
“Ethanol Production Using Corn, Switchgrass, and Wood;Biodiesel Production Using Soybean and Sunflower,” Natural Resources
Research, Vol. 14, No. 1, March 2005, d/l: http://www.springerlink.com/content/r1552355771656v0/fulltext.pdf)
The United States desperately needs a liquid fuel replacement for oil in the future. The use of oil is projected to peak
about 2007 and the supply is then projected to be extremely limited in 40–50 years (Duncan and Youngquist, 1999; Youngquist and Duncan, 2003; Pimentel
and others, 2004a). Alternative liquid fuels from various sources have been sought for many years. Two
panel studies by the U.S.
Department of Energy (USDOE) concerned with ethanol production using corn and liquid fuels from
biomass energy report a negative energy return (ERAB, 1980, 1981). These reports were reviewed by 26 expert U.S. scientists
independent of the USDOE; the findings indicated that the conversion of corn into ethanol energy was negative and
these findings were unanimously approved. Numerous other investigations have confirmed these findings
over the past two decades. A review of the reports that indicate that corn ethanol production provides a
positive return indicates that many inputs were omitted (Pimentel, 2003). It is disappointing that many of the
inputs were omitted because this misleads U.S. policy makers and the public.
And for what? Limited environmental benefits at best. Although it is important to think of ways to develop renewable energy, one should also carefully examine the
Ethanol and biodiesel are often viewed as environmentally friendly because they
eager claims that biofuels are "green."
are plant-based rather than petroleum-based. In fact, even if the entire corn crop in the United States
were used to make ethanol, that fuel would replace only 12 percent of current U.S. gasoline use. Thinking
of ethanol as a green alternative to fossil fuels reinforces the chimera of energy independence and of
decoupling the interests of the United States from an increasingly troubled Middle East.
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Dedicating all present U.S. corn and soybean production to biofuels would meet only 12% of the
country’s gasoline needs and 6% of diesel needs. Agricultural land area in the US totals 625,000 square
acres. At present rates, meeting oil demand from biofuels would require 1.4 million square miles of corn
for ethanol or 8.8 million square miles of soy for biodiesel (Korten 2006). South Dakota and Iowa already
devote more than 50% of their corn to ethanol production, which has led to a diminishing supply of corn
for animal feed and human consumption. Though one fifth of the US corn harvest was dedicated to
ethanol production in 2006, it met only 3% of the US’s total fuel needs (Bravo 2006).
Ethanol production is extremely energy intensive. To produce 10.6 billion liters of ethanol, the U.S. uses
about 3.3 million hectares of land, which in turn requires massive energy inputs to fertilize, weed and
harvest the corn (Pimentel 2003). These 10.6 billion liters of ethanol only provide 2% of the gasoline utilized by
cars in the U.S. per year. Despite the studies of Shapouri et al (2004) from the USDA that report a net
energy positive return for ethanol production, Pimentel and Patzek (2005), utilizing data from all 50 states
and accounting for all energy inputs ( including farm machinery manufacture and repair and
fermentation-distillation equipment) conclude that ethanol production does not provide a net energy
benefit. Rather, they claim it requires more fossil energy to produce than it produces. In their
calculations, corn ethanol production requires 1.29 gallons of fossil fuels per gallon of ethanol produced,
and soy biodiesel production requires 1.27 gallons of fossil energy per gallon of diesel produced. In
addition, because of the relatively low energy density of ethanol, approximately three gallons of ethanol
are needed to displace two gallons of gasoline.
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"When you first consider ethanol, it feels like you're being progressive and environmentally
friendly," said Jason Lee, an undergraduate at UC Berkeley who helped author the paper. "But, if you dig underneath, you find
that it's really misleading. The amount of fuel and oil needed to use ethanol is greater than the value
of energy ethanol provides. It's ridiculous to think it would decrease our dependence on oil." É
Patzek said that studies showing energy gain do not take into account the amount of energy stored
in the corn. "The energy stored in the corn is not free," he said. "To grow the corn, you've used up
soil and water. We must also account for the disposal of waste water polluted by nitrogen and
phosphate fertilizers, as well as by pesticides and herbicides." When calculating the net energy loss, Patzek and his
students took into account the energy equivalent contained within one bushel of corn. According to the report, it takes a total of
0.87 gallons of gasoline equivalent to grow one bushel of corn, which itself contains 3.17 gallons of
gasoline equivalent energy. That calculation includes the fossil energy expended from the use of
fertilizer, pesticides, machinery, irrigation and other inputs in corn production. After the corn is
produced, it then takes another 0.89 gallons of gasoline equivalent to ferment and distill one bushel
of corn into 2.66 gallons of ethanol, Patzek's team calculates. In addition, ethanol does not pack as
much energy as gasoline because of its lower heating value. The paper points out that the energy of
2.66 gallons of ethanol is equivalent to 1.74 gallons of gasoline. So, the energy input of 4.93 gallons
of gasoline equivalent leads to an energy output of 1.74 gallons of gasoline equivalent, or a net
energy loss of 65 percent.
Ethanol is not cost efficient and only yields 10 percent more energy that it costs to produce.
Avery, dennis, 2005. U.S. Environment Can’t Afford big Ethanol. Center for Global Food Issues.
http://www.cgfi.org/2005/07/07/us-environment-cant-afford-big-ethanol/
The Energy Bill passed by the Senate would require the U.S. to produce 8 billion gallons of ethanol
per year. That’s a bad idea, for America and our environment. The ethanol lobby told Congress that
subsidizing 8 billion gallons of ethanol “would replace 2 billion barrels of imported crude oil.”
Actually, it would take 156 billion gallons of ethanol to replace 2 billion barrels of crude oil, since
there are 42 gallons in a barrel of crude, and ethanol yields 25 percent less energy per gallon than
gasoline. Worse, a new study by Washington State University researchers—just published in
Bioscience—says that U.S. ethanol yields only about 10 percent more energy than it takes to make
it. That means most of the effort and cash invested in the ethanol plants is wasted. To get even that,
we’re having to subsidize the ethanol to the tune of 50 to 70 cents per gallon, or 60-80 percent more
cost per mile of driving than a gallon of gasoline before the recent oil price spike.
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Figure 1 summarizes the overall energy balance of ethanol production from corn. Our calculations are based on the following three
assumptions. The low heating values of gasoline and ethanol are 116,000 and 76,000 Btu/gal,
respectively, cf. Table I and references therein. The calorific value of moist corn grain is (Pimentel and Dazhong, 1990) 6,500
Btu/lb. Note that this value is much lower than the calorific value of dry corn flour (Ramos et al., 1999): 8,470 Btu/lb. Table III summarizes the
net energy gain or loss from corn ethanol according to different sources. It was first published in (Shapouri et al.,
1995), amended in (Shapouri et al., 2002), and here. The last column of this table shows the net energy balance of ethanol production. The negative numbers
mean that more energy is used to produce ethanol than can be gained by burning it, and the positive numbers mean the opposite. We
have critically
reviewed and checked for consistency the various estimates listed in Table III. The three papers by
Pimentel and others (Pimentel, 1991, 2001, 2003), and the paper by Keeney and DeLuca (Keeney and DeLuca, 1992)
report negative net energy for ethanol. The conference paper by Ho (Ho, 1989) is not quite complete, but it also
estimates the net ethanol energy to be negative. All others, most notably the USDA, report net
energy gain from ethanol. We have found Pimentel’s numbers to be consistent and reliable. The
USDA uses the unjustified high heating value for ethanol and omits some of the energy inputs. The
2002 USDA report builds upon the 1997 Argonne National Laboratory Report (Wang et al., 1997), which is analyzed in more detail in Appendix A.
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Increasing biofuel production from a particular crop could also link that crop’s prices to petroleum
fuel prices. For the foreseeable future, biofuel production will remain small relative to petroleum fuel
production, and biofuels largely will continue to be price takers rather than drivers of transportation
fuel prices. One study suggests that diverting more than about 10 percent of a given crop to the
biofuel market could link the price movement of that crop to the world petroleum market (LMC
International 2006). Thus, large-scale production of biofuel would not protect consumers against high
petroleum prices for long, because feedstock prices would rise and reduce the price gap between
petroleum and biofuel. As such, biofuels are unlikely to become the answer to high crude oil prices.
Another potential benefit cited in replacing petroleum fuels with biofuels is lower exposure to the
volatility in the world oil market. In a liberalized market, biofuel prices will track petroleum fuel prices as
long as biofuels represent a fraction of the total petroleum fuel consumption. Where there are barriers to
free trade of biofuels (which is the current situation) or where the government controls biofuel pricing,
biofuel and petroleum fuel prices may be de-linked to an extent, but these restrictions introduce problems
of their own. Further, where there is non-market allocation of biofuels and consequently biofuel prices do
not track petroleum fuel prices, biofuel prices are subject to volatility of agricultural output and crop
prices. As chapter 5 shows, the volatility of world raw sugar prices has not been any smaller than that of
gasoline prices in recent decades. In assessing this category of benefits and costs, the economic analysis
should be conducted over a range of years using actual and forecast data and should take advantage of risk
and uncertainty and related modeling techniques.
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The American corn ethanol industry is a prime example of this same isolationist, something-for-
nothing worldview. Promoters of corn ethanol, who seem to be multiplying by the day, argue that
their fuel reduces U.S. dependence on foreign oil and therefore increases America’s national
security. But exactly which foreign oil producers are so dangerous? Does the crude that comes from
such notoriously belligerent terrorist havens as Canada and Mexico – respectively, the largest and
second-largest suppliers to the U.S. market – pose a threat to American security? That same ethanol crowd
prefers to ignore the fact that surging ethanol fuel production has led to a dou-bling of the price of corn. Thus, while America gorges itself on
etha-nol, impoverished citizens in Mexico are marching in the streets because their tortillas now
cost twice as much. My favorite example of the free lunch viewpoint: a service station in Omaha
that claims to be selling “terror-free” gasoline. The sta-tion, which opened in mid-February, is funded by a group of opera-tives on
the East Coast who refuse to reveal their business ties or backgrounds. The station claims to sell only oil that comes from
outside the Middle East. A placard above its fuel pumps declares that customers can “rest assured”
that the fuel they are buying is “assisting in the global war on terror.” Ah, but the devil’s in the
details. The station owners say they only buy gasoline from Sinclair Oil, which gets most of its oil
from the U.S. and Canada. But Sinclair also admits that it buys some of its oil on the New York
Mercantile Exchange, which, of course, sells oil from all over the world. All of this shows that purity
in the gasoline business, just like that free lunch, is awfully hard to find.
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High prices are also pinching food aid. According to Rising Food Prices Intensify Food Insecurity in
Developing Countries, a February 2008 report from the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA)
Economic Research Service, the global food aid budget would need to rise about 35% over the next
decade in order to maintain the 2006 level of 8 million tons of food aid
Complacency in the face of famine is murder, there is more than enough food to feed every hungry
person.
Africa News, June 30 2007 “Africa: Food for 12 billion. So why did 854 million go without?”
http://www.africa-interactive.net/index.php?PageID=5038 accessed July 2, 2007 SS
"As you are suffering from over-consumption, I am suffering from under-consumption. We need to strike a
balance," said Mary Wahu Kaara from the Kenya Debt Relief Network with reference to the North and the South. Her words were echoed by Hilkka Pietila,
honorary president of the World Federation of United Nations Associations: "We are wasting food in the North. We are eating too much,
burning grain as fuel, and growing grain to feed pigs to slaughter for ham." Their contributions were part of a heated debate
over the past two days about the eradication of hunger, this at the Civil Society Development Forum. The three-day meeting is being hosted by the Conference of
Non-governmental Organisations in Consultative Relationship with the United Nations (CONGO) and the United Nations Millennium Campaign. It ends Saturday.
Jean Ziegler, U.N. special rapporteur on the right to food, alerted the more than 500 delegates that while 854 million people went without food
in the world last year, enough food was produced to feed 12 billion people. "This is why a child that dies from
famine is murder," Ziegler said.
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Protectionism Add-on
Support for biofuels must not include subsidies- it not only devastates developing nations, but it ensures
that they will continue to be used in the future and expand protectionism.
World Development Report 2008 (‘Biofuels: The Promise and the Risk,” World Trade Organization,
http://econ.worldbank.org/WBSITE/EXTERNAL/EXTDEC/EXTRESEARCH/EXTWDRS/EXTWDR2008/0,,c
ontentMDK:21501336~pagePK:64167689~piPK:64167673~theSitePK:2795143,00.html)
To date, biofuel production in industrial countries has developed behind high protective tariffs on biofuels, in
conjunction with large subsidies paid to biofuel producers. Such policies are costly to developing countries
that are, or could become, efficient producers in profitable new export markets. Poor consumers
also pay higher prices for food staples as grain prices rise in world markets, a rise that is largely
induced by distortionary policies. Can developing countries, apart from Brazil, benefit from developing biofuel industries? The favorable
economic conditions and the large environmental and social benefits that justify significant subsidies are probably uncommon for first-generation technologies.
In some cases, such as with landlocked countries that import oil and that could become efficient producers of sugarcane, the high costs of transport could make
biofuel production economically viable even with current technologies. The much higher potential benefits of second-generation technologies, including
technologies for small-scale biodiesel production, justify substantial privately and publicly financed investments in research. The
challenge for
governments in developing countries is to avoid supporting biofuels through distortionary
incentives that might displace alternative activities with higher returns—and to implement
regulations and to devise certification systems that will reduce environmental and food security
risks from biofuel production. Governments need to carefully assess economic, environmental, and
social benefits and the potential to enhance energy security. Reducing potential environmental risks from large-scale
biofuels production could be possible through certification schemes to measure and communicate the environmental performance of biofuels (for example, a
green index of GHG reductions). But the effectiveness of certification schemes requires participation from all major producers and buyers as well as strong
monitoring systems.
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Trade Add-on
Ethanol opens up jobs and options for fair trade.
<Robert Zubrin, senior engineer with the Martin Marietta Astronautics company, author, Energy Victory,
Prometheus Books, 2007>
But we actually have a labor shortage in America right now, as shown by the
fact that we need to bring in millions of immigrants to do the work
available. So rather than exercise our alcohol option for energy autarchy, it would behoove us to create
jobs south of the border by buying much of our methanol and ethanol
abroad. Because, unlike oil, the sources of alcohol are so diverse, we can
allow ourselves to count upon importing a significant fraction of our supply
without impacting our safety. The advantage of doing this is that by allowing the tropical
agrarian countries to produce some of our alcohol, we will put money in
their hands that they can use to buy our manufactured goods, such as
tractors and harvesters to grow the fuel crops, trucks to transport them,
and equipment to process the biomass into liquid fuel. It's called fair trade,
and it benefits everyone. The hydrogen economy offers no possibility for enhancing world trade, because
hydrogen cannot be transported economically. But alcohol can. By opening up the world trading
system, the alcohol economy offers the prospect a new age of global
development. Half the world's people need not remain imprisoned in
poverty: their aspirations crushed, their creative gifts strangled. They can escape. To do so, they don't need charity, expert
advice, or conde- scending coercion. What they need is a piece of the action. The alcohol economy will make
that possible.
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The link between ethanol mandates and higher food prices has been demonstrated amply in the media.
What has received scant media attention is the fact that the increased ethanol mandate proposed by
President Bush, passed by the Senate, and now before the House, is a budget buster; it would cost
American taxpayers almost a quarter trillion dollars or more over the next 15 years. Given that
entitlement spending is set to skyrocket as baby boomers retire, the enormous costs of ethanol
mandates threaten to become an unmanageable budget liability.
Pay-go means the taxpayers pay the greatest burden of this policy.
William Yeatman 2007 Energy Policy Analyst at the Competitive Enterprise Institute. Compet i t ive
Enterprise Inst i tute July 31, 2007 No. 118 Ethanol is a Budget Buster Increased Mandate and Subsidies Would
Raise Food Prices and Strain Federal Budget
The federal budget implications of ethanol production quotas are not widely known because ethanol supporters in Congress have proven adept at hiding the
total budget costs by adopting a piecemeal strategy. Instead of one omnibus ethanol bill, they have advanced ethanol-
related legislation on a number of fronts. The Senate alone has acted on seven separate bills pertaining to ethanol, and the subsidies
have been extended or authorized several times every few years. With all this activity, one would have expected that
Congress had prepared a comprehensive budget estimate of the costs of federal support for biofuels
—but ethanol backers have ensured that no such report exists. When all the budget costs of ethanol
mandates are added up, it comes out to about $200 per American household. Under pay-as-you-go
(Paygo) rules, this money has to come from somewhere, and that means either reducing funds from
other programs or raising 3 taxes. Increased taxes to support ethanol production create a curious
scenario whereby the American public is taxed for the privilege of paying more for its food and
gasoline!
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THE ETHANOL SUBSIDY MAKES THE SPLASH AND DASH SCAM POSSIBLE, COSTING
AMERICAN TAXPAYERS $600 MILLION THIS YEAR.
Rus Thompson June 16, 2008. “ ‘Splash and Dash’ Biofuel Scam Costs Americans Millions, Lawmakers Say.”
Albanys Insanity.
When the Clinton administration mandated that every gallon of gasoline would contain 10% deathanol, the oil industry (refiners, distributors,
retailers) said that by doing so, the costs of a gallon of gasoline would increase by 65 cents. I suspect that by now, that figure has increased
considerably. Plus, that does not take into account the huge subsidy that we also pay to the deathanol producers. Congress has legislated the
American public into a surreal world of energy dependence on foreign governments; they have successfully crippled the only partially “free
market” economy in the world. And now, the law of “unintended consequences” takes effect with soaring food prices world-wide. Bowing to the
“greens” will eventually starve millions to death, thus my name for mandated dependence on ethanol: DEATHANOL. In 2007 this
subsidy cost the American taxpayer $300 million, and it’s projected to cost the American taxpayers
$600 million next year,” said Rep. John Shadegg, R-Ariz. The scam — as Shadegg and others call it —
is known as “splash and dash.” It stems from an existing $1 subsidy for every gallon of biodiesel fuel
blended with regular diesel in the United States. Here’s how it works: Biodiesel is produced abroad
using South American sugar cane or Asian palm oil and shipped to the United States, where it’s
blended with just a “splash” of regular diesel. A typical tanker-load of about 9 million gallons of
biodiesel requires just 9,000 gallons of American diesel to make it qualify for the subsidy. But every
gallon in the shipment garners a buck. The ship then makes a “dash” for Europe, where its fuel is sold
below market rates. That means each tanker-load that makes the dash nets importers about $9 million
dollars in tax credits from the IRS. Lawmakers have estimated its cost to Americans at tens — or even
hundreds — of millions each year. Shadegg wants to end “splash and dash” by eliminating the subsidy
for any biodiesel exported from the United States, which he says harms energy independence. Shadegg is
pushing his bill in the House, which has already passed measures to stop the scam. “Taxpayers should be outraged because
they are subsidizing foreign consumers of biodiesel,” said Shadegg. “That is insane, and it’s a
ridiculous burden to put on American taxpayers.”
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SPLASH AND DASH IS SO BAD THAT PEOPLE THINK EVEN DOMESTICALLY PRODUCED
BIOFUELS SHOULDN’T GET TAX CREDITS ANYMORE.
Ian Swanson June 19, 2007. “Finance panel set to close ‘splash and dash’ loophole.” The Hill.
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Ten states have some form of a purchase mandate for ethanol or biodiesel (Alternative Fuels and Advanced
Vehicles Data Center, 27 August 2007; Pew Center on Climate Change, 9 August 2007). The cost impacts will vary depending on the region and the specific
mandates. In some cases they are expected to trigger incremental price distortions to the federal mandate, effectively creating an additional level of price
support. The
U.S. Energy Information Administration estimates that the ethanol mandate in Minnesota
(currently 10 percent) has no impact on prices since fuel ethanol is currently competitive; but that the
Hawaiian mandate (85 percent of ethanol must be E10) does drive up prices since both imported ethanol and local feedstock are more expensive than gasoline
(EIA, AEO 2007: 24). The MPS subsidy in Hawaii would be above the subsidies the state already provides to ethanol consumption by exempting E10 or
higher from the state sales tax on gasoline.
States mandating higher blend ratios than commonly available (Iowa at
25 percent; Minnesota at E20 percent if allowed by regulators by 2013) will also likely induce local
price distortions. Mandates focusing only on small market segments, such as a B5 mandate for
government and school usage in New Mexico, may drive up operating costs for the related
government entities, but are unlikely to affect enough volume to skew market prices.
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As the above study illustrates, liberalizing biofuel trade is likely to increase demand for biofuels by reducing
prices in previously protected markets, especially if the subsidies for consumption, mandates, or
both are maintained. An immediate effect of trade liberalization would be similar to that of higher
biofuel production: an increase in feedstock prices and a drop in by-product prices on the world
market. Domestic biofuel prices in those markets that heavily protect domestic producers would fall. More generally, biofuel and
agricultural trade liberalization is expected to increase world prices of agricultural commodities.
Higher agricultural crop prices would benefit many of the poor engaged in agriculture in developing countries. However, food security in those
developing countries that are net food importers would be negatively affected. Prices are expected
to rise more steeply for the food products that developing countries import than for the
commodities they export. The poorest countries, very few of whom export products on which there
are currently high tariffs, would generally be worse off (FAO 2003). Lowering tariffs in developing countries could partially
mitigate these adverse effects by lowering prices of imported food items and by creating opportunities for regional trade.
Removing both the tariff and subsidies is necessary to reduce food prices.
Masami Kojima of the Oil, Gas, and Mining Policy Division, World Bank; Donald Mitchell of the
Development Prospects Group, Development Economics, World Bank; and William A. Ward 2007, Professor
and Director, Center for International Trade, Clemson University. 2007 Energy Sector Management Assistance
Program Considering Trade Policies for Liquid Biofuels
The first study found that removal of the U.S. import tariffs on ethanol from Brazil would reduce
ethanol production in the United States, reduce ethanol consumption in Brazil and increase its
consumption in the United States, increase ethanol exports from Brazil to the United States, lower
ethanol prices in the United States, and raise world ethanol prices. Predictably, it would also eliminate ethanol trade
between the Caribbean and the United States through the CBI (Elobeid and Tokgoz 2006). In the first scenario, the study assumed that the U.S. government’s
domestic biofuel policy would remain in place, including the federal tax credit of US$0.51 per gallon, but that the specific import tariff of US$0.54 per gallon
would be eliminated (with all other support measures remaining in place). Between
2006 and 2015, elimination of the tariff
results, on average, in an increase of 24 percent in world ethanol prices, an increase of 1.8 percent in
world sugar prices, and a decline of 1.5 percent in world maize prices (because less maize in the United States is
diverted to the ethanol market). In the United States, ethanol production declines by 7 percent, but consumption increases by 4 percent. Net imports triple, and
domestic ethanol prices fall by 14 percent.
In Brazil, ethanol production increases by 9 percent but domestic
consumption falls by 3 percent, and net exports rise by 64 percent. In the second scenario, the study
assumed that the federal tax credit of US$0.51 per gallon would be eliminated in addition to the
removal of import tariffs. In that case, U.S. consumption of both ethanol and gasoline would fall
relative to the base case (which has both the import tariffs and tax credit for ethanol blenders in place). U.S. ethanol prices; world
ethanol, sugar, and maize prices; Brazilian ethanol production; and net Brazilian exports of ethanol
would all be lower than in the first scenario.
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Biofuel trade liberalization would increase competition, which should in turn help improve
efficiency, bring down costs, and enable the world’s most efficient producers to expand their market
share. Removal of high tariffs would bring down prices in highly protected markets and increase
consumption. While efficient producers would gain, those developing countries with duty-free
access to the EU and U.S. markets today might lose their trading opportunities altogether. On the
other hand, removing border barriers to biofuel trade while continuing the agricultural and biofuel
policies that distort biofuel markets could prolong and even worsen those distortions, as additional
markets for subsidized agricultural outputs and biofuels would be created. These considerations
underscore the importance of dealing simultaneously with the full range of trade reforms defined
broadly by the WTO. Failing that, trade in ethanol and biodiesel might be liberalized as a first step, which could also force governments to address
openly the question (and the costs) of what objectives their biofuel support policies are actually pursuing.
There is one caveat concerning the benefits of reducing and eventually eliminating border barriers. If biofuels continue to require very
large subsidies, lowering their import tariffs may merely serve to enlarge an industry that cannot
stand on its own, and make future adjustments even more painful should subsidies be substantially
curtailed or withdrawn. Biofuel trade liberalization coupled with continued agricultural and biofuel
policies that distort markets for biofuels could prolong and even worsen those distortions, as
additional markets for subsidized agricultural outputs and biofuels would be created. The three sets of
policies listed on the previous page are closely interwoven, and the theory of second best (Lipsey and Lancaster 1956–57) suggests that it would not
necessarily improve overall welfare to address biofuel trade separately from other distortions
affecting biofuels and biofuel feedstocks.
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Classifying ethanol as a industrial good doesn’t solve the case, it takes too long and doesn’t actually
reduce market distortions.
Masami Kojima of the Oil, Gas, and Mining Policy Division, World Bank; Donald Mitchell of the
Development Prospects Group, Development Economics, World Bank; and William A. Ward 2007, Professor
and Director, Center for International Trade, Clemson University. 2007 Energy Sector Management Assistance
Program Considering Trade Policies for Liquid Biofuels
To increase market access more rapidly, some have proposed that ethanol be reclassified as an industrial good or
an environmental good. The latter is a relatively new concept that is still being formulated, and is unlikely to affect market access for ethanol in
the near to medium term. But because this proposal has received some attention, it is covered in some detail in appendix A. The Doha Ministerial
Declaration of 2001 specifically refers to environmental goods and services as an area that could be
targeted for faster liberalization. The declaration also has a paragraph on the desirability of increasing market access for non-agricultural
products, highlighting products of export interest to developing countries—which biofuels could very well be. In practice, reclassification is
unlikely to have near-term policy consequences. The WCO Council considers amendments in four-year cycles. The most
recently completed review occurred in June 2004, with the amendments implemented on January 1,
2007. Amendments under the next review cycle are not scheduled for implementation until 2012
(Steenblik 2005b). Waiting for reclassification with a view to quickening the pace of liberalization thus
does not seem practical in the near term. More importantly, reclassification is not a requirement for
liberalizing market access. Being classified as an agricultural product does not bind the good to
high tariff rates, nor is reclassification necessary to take a good out of annex 1 of the Agreement on
Agriculture (which spells out which products are included under the agreement). However, classifying ethanol as an agricultural good does enable
governments to protect domestic producers longer, and, in the extreme, declare ethanol a sensitive or special product (see appendix A) to shield it further from
external pressure for liberalization.
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Cellulosic good
Switch Grass is the best alternative fuel to Corn Ethanol, It isn’t a food crop, and can be farmed on 35
million acres of land unusable for food crops, escaping all of the food price impacts, while being 94%
better for the environment in its production and consumption.
Midwestern farms prove switchgrass could be the right crop for producing ethanol to replace gasoline GRASS GAS: Turning fields of switchgrass like this one in
northeastern Nebraska into ethanol produces 540 percent more energy than the amount consumed growing the native perennial. COURTESY OF USDA-ARS Farmers
in Nebraska and the Dakotas brought the U.S. closer to becoming a biofuel economy, planting huge tracts of land for the first time with switchgrass—a native North
American perennial grass (Panicum virgatum) that often grows on the borders of cropland naturally—and proving that it can deliver more than five times more energy
than it takes to grow it. Working with the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), the farmers tracked the seed used to establish the plant, fertilizer used to boost its
growth, fuel used to farm it, overall rainfall and the amount of grass ultimately harvested for five years on fields ranging from seven to 23 acres in size (three to nine
hectares). Once established, the fields yielded from 5.2 to 11.1 metric tons of grass bales per hectare, depending on rainfall, says USDA plant scientist Ken Vogel. "It
fluctuates with the timing of the precipitation,'' he says. "Switchgrass needs most of its moisture in spring and midsummer. If you get fall rains, it's not going to do that
year's crops much good." But yields from a grass that only needs to be planted once would deliver an average of 13.1 megajoules of energy as ethanol for every
megajoule of petroleum consumed—in the form of nitrogen fertilizers or diesel for tractors—growing them. "It's a prediction because right now there are no
biorefineries built that handle cellulosic material" like that which switchgrass provides, Vogel notes. "We're pretty confident the ethanol yield is pretty close." This
means that switchgrass
ethanol delivers 540 percent of the energy used to produce it, compared with just roughly 25
percent more energy returned by corn-based ethanol according to the most optimistic studies. The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) is
partially funding the construction of six such cellulosic biorefineries, estimated to cost a total of $1.2 billion. The first to be built will be the Range Fuels Biorefinery in
Soperton, Ga., which will process wood waste from the timber industry into biofuels and chemicals. The DOE is providing an initial $50 million to start construction.
"Cost competitive, energy responsible cellulosic ethanol made from switchgrass or from forestry waste like sawdust and wood chips requires a more complex refining
process but it's worth the investment," Energy Secretary Samuel Bodman said at the Range Fuels facility groundbreaking in November. "Cellulosic
ethanol
contains more net energy and emits significantly fewer greenhouse gases than ethanol made from corn." In fact,
Vogel and his team report this week in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA that switchgrass will store enough carbon in its
relatively permanent root system to offset 94 percent of the greenhouse gases emitted both to cultivate it and
from the derived ethanol burned by vehicles. Of course, this estimate also relies on using the leftover parts of the grass itself as fuel for the
biorefinery. "The lignin in the plant cell walls can be burned," Vogel says. The use of native prairie grasses is meant to avoid some of the
other risks associated with biofuels such as reduced diversity of local animal life and displacing food crops with
fuel crops. "This is an energy crop that can be grown on marginal land," Vogel argues, such as the more than 35
million acres (14.2 million hectares) of marginal land that farmers are currently paid not to plant under the terms
of USDA's Conservation Reserve Program.
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Cellulosic Good
A switch to grass based ethanol is an alternative that doesn’t displace food crops and saves the gulf of
Mexico by eliminating a 8000 mile of dead zone due to nitrogen runoff from corn fertilizer
Within five to seven years fast growing trees and grasses might become economically viable alternatives to corn as a
source of renewable fuel ethanol, reducing the need for pollutants that now cause a massive "dead zone" in the
Gulf of Mexico. "Ethanol from cellulose, whether from trees or other sources, will be the way to go in the very
near future," says Dr. Gopi Podila, a University of Alabama in Huntsville (UAHuntsville) biologist who has been conducting research on high-yield
trees for more than a decade. "Trees are cheaper to raise than corn, have a competitive yield and they don’t need as much
of the fertilizers that are causing all of the problems in the Gulf. "These trees also offer the U.S. a realistic option for producing enough
renewable energy to make a meaningful dent in fossil fuel imports." Due to the rising demand for ethanol, farmers in the U.S. planted more corn this year than in any
corn crop is fertilized with millions of pounds of nitrogen-based fertilizer. An estimated 210
year since World War II. The
million pounds of those nitrates are not absorbed by the corn, run off into streams and rivers, and are carried to
the Gulf of Mexico each year, where it causes a massive "bloom" of algae. When the algae dies it sinks to the
bottom, where it absorbs oxygen as it decays. In recent years that oxygen depletion has created an aquatic "dead
zone" covering about 8,000 square miles in which shrimp, fish, oysters and crabs cannot survive. Growing high-
yield trees might have several economic and environmental advantages over corn, said Podila, who chairs UAH's
Biological Sciences Department. "For one thing, there are some trees like poplar and aspen, where you could get a harvest every five or six years but you would only
have to plant once every 30 to 40 years because they grow back from the roots. That is a significant cost savings, if only for the fuel used for planting and harvesting
every year. "Many of these trees and grasses like switchgrass will grow on land that might have marginal value for
farming. Maybe it is too steep for planting or too dry for farming, but that wouldn't be as much of a problem for trees. You could have an extra crop
growing on land that isn't presently productive. There are vast areas of marginal land in the U.S. that could be
used for this purpose without having an impact on other crops."
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Scott Sklar, September 12, 2006 (President of The Stella Group in Washington, DC, a distributed energy
marketing and policy firm. Scott, co-author of "A Consumer Guide to Solar Energy,")
http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/news/ate/story?id=45946
There has been little to no effort to promote butanol as an alternate fuel because of historically low yields and
low concentrations of butanol compared to those of ethanol; that is, for each bushel of corn you would garner
(1.3) gallons of butanol (0.7) gallons of acetone and (0.13) gallons of ethanol with concentrations of 1-2%.
Butanol is presently manufactured from petroleum. Historically (early 1900s - 1950s) it was manufactured from corn and molasses in a
fermentation process that also produced acetone and ethanol known as an ABE (acetone, butanol, ethanol) fermentation. However, as demand for butanol increased,
production by fermentation declined mainly because the price of petroleum dropped below that of sugar when the U.S. lost its low-cost supply from Cuba around 1954.
If you compared ABE yield to that of the yeast ethanol fermentation process, the yeast process yields 2.5
gallons of ethanol from a bushel of corn; with concentrations of 10-15% it becomes very clear why ethanol is
considered a better alternative fuel source over butanol.
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