1/20/2007 5:13:38 PM
Aren't we heavily subsidizing corn growers as well, which is what leads to the cheap high fructose corn syrup found in all our food that causes us to get fat and unhealthy. Or is that something not related here?
1/20/2007 5:20:04 PM
Not exactly related. The Corn syrup we use is not much cheaper than outside the country. The reason we use it is because Cane Sugar is quota'd and taxed to hell at the border. So, it's cheaper to refine corn into sugar than it is to just import sugar from the caribbean. Yes, eliminating the tariff on sugarcane would bankrupt the "high fructose corn syrup" industry and reduce corn usage, helping to stabilize corn prices. But that is not any more politically viable than eliminating the Ethanol tariffs.
1/20/2007 5:24:55 PM
this makes me wanna go buy some ears of corn.
1/20/2007 5:43:52 PM
^^ Gotcha, I knew there was some reason that we use the cheap corn syrup.
1/20/2007 5:50:27 PM
sad thing is there is a weed that grows on about the 10th of effort/price of corn we could use to make ethanol but the corn lobby won't have that. I'm a farmer and think great of farmers but honestly this lobby/protectionist crap sux first tobacco and now corn all the same...
1/20/2007 9:04:42 PM
If ethanol catches on we will move away from using corn to produce it
1/20/2007 9:27:46 PM
1/21/2007 2:40:29 AM
two words: cellulosic ethanolhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cellulosic_ethanol[Edited on January 21, 2007 at 11:23 AM. Reason : .]
1/21/2007 11:02:01 AM
this is almost as silly as hydrogen as a replacement for gasoline
1/21/2007 12:34:58 PM
Hopefully people will come to their senses and start making ethanol from sugarcane, which might help America's obesity problem.IEEE is critical of subsidizing corn for ethanol production:http://www.spectrum.ieee.org/jan07/4832
1/21/2007 1:27:55 PM
If we start buying sugar cane ethanol, then it will come out that the US/US companies are subsidizing the destruction of thousands of acres of rainforest.And if we stick with plain ol' gasoline, then we aren't breaking our dependency on mid-east oil.
1/21/2007 2:00:43 PM
Well, it's thousands of acres of rainforest or tens of thousands of acres of midwest. Cost benefit analysis:Ethanol for sugarcane:Jobs, wealth, and prosperity for poor South Americans eager to fill America's need for energytens of thousands of acres of America's mid-west saved for natural habitatCheaper fuel at the gas-pumpEthanol from corn:Jobs, wealth, and prosperity for some American Corporationsthousands of acres of rainforest saved for natural habitat (ploughed under anyway since many South Americans remain poor and need to eat)Starving Mexicans (and others) since corn is now too expensive to eatExpensive fuel at the gas-pumpGasoline from Oil:Even higher world oil prices, OPEC rakes in the moneythousands of acres of rainforest saved for natural habitat (ploughed under anyway since many South Americans remain poor and need to eat)tens of thousands of acres of American midwest saved for natural habitatExpensive fuel at the gas-pumpIf I forgot anything let me know.
1/21/2007 4:29:39 PM
Doesn't sweetgrass offer a much more substantial Ethanol yield than corn?(It is not often used because people don't want to drink a sweetgrass liquor but we are not looking to drink it, we are looking to burn it.)
1/21/2007 5:00:50 PM
switchgrass?from wikipedia:
1/21/2007 5:02:08 PM
1/21/2007 5:04:37 PM
1/21/2007 5:05:24 PM
From what I understand, switchgrass can be grown on marginal land that is not good for growing most crops for consumption and switchgrass actually is a carbon negative plant, meaning that it sequesters more carbon in the soil then is released from the burning of the ethanol derived from it. It is not a silver bullet by any means, but it should help keep the price of corn low and might even be a significant catalyst to areas in need of economic development.
1/21/2007 5:31:03 PM
eh, this is bullshit.It's a disaster when we subsidize farmers, but it's also a disaster when we don't sell our grain dirt cheap? Make up your minds, you poor, stupid 3rd world people.
1/21/2007 6:17:09 PM
i watched a show in ethanol and i thought the ethanol was derived from the waste parts of the corn plant.
1/21/2007 10:30:03 PM
1/21/2007 11:49:42 PM
how about biomass, wood, or any plant materialdoes anyone ever even click links?
1/21/2007 11:58:41 PM
^^ There is a cost in everything we do. But it sounds like you would ban Ethanol and go with straight gasoline to save both the rainforest and the midwest, right?Revised benefit list:Ethanol from sugarcane:Jobs, wealth, and prosperity for poor South Americans eager to fill America's need for energytens of thousands of acres of America's mid-west saved for natural habitatA few American corporations go BankruptCheaper fuel at the gas-pumpReduced World Hunger since corn is now cheap enough to eatEthanol from corn:wealth and prosperity for some American Corporationsthousands of acres of rainforest saved for natural habitat (ploughed under anyway since many South Americans remain poor and need to eat)Gasoline from Oil:Even higher world oil prices, wealth and prosperity for OPECthousands of acres of rainforest saved for natural habitat (ploughed under anyway since many South Americans remain poor and need to eat)tens of thousands of acres of American midwest saved for natural habitatReduced World Hunger since corn is now cheap enough to eat[Edited on January 22, 2007 at 8:35 AM. Reason : revised list]
1/22/2007 8:31:09 AM
youre still forgetting one
1/22/2007 8:58:06 AM
then why don't you kindly enlighten us...
1/22/2007 9:09:51 AM
ive already even posted a link
1/22/2007 9:21:15 AM
1/22/2007 10:10:47 AM
ive already even posted a link[Edited on January 22, 2007 at 10:46 AM. Reason : and someone mentioned one kind]
1/22/2007 10:43:17 AM
^ There is only so much compatible biomass waste to go around. Plus, it has been subsidized as much as any other Ethanol but production is still relatively small... Why?
1/22/2007 10:50:46 AM
http://www.harvestcleanenergy.org/enews/enews_0505/enews_0505_Cellulosic_Ethanol.htm
1/22/2007 10:58:43 AM