In America , we call it a “water sucking corn” based fuel supplement. Corn is one sixth as efficient in producing ethanol than say, Brazilian sugar cane, and you simply have to look at a juicy kernel of corn to see how much water it absorbs. Since most of that corn is raised in the Mid-West, and most of the water for that corn comes from the giant Ogallala Aquifer, which was once the size of Lake Huron and sits underground from the Dakotas to Texas, it isn't comforting to know that many experts believe that massive grain-growing source of water may run dry in 25 years.
And taxpayers are bearing the burden of all this? We're adding ethanol to gasoline to reduce our dependence on oil, after all. According to a January 24, 2008 story in U.S. News and World Report: “The federal government gives preferential treatment to domestic, corn-based ethanol in the form of a 54-cent-per-gallon tax on imported ethanol, which largely affects Brazilian producers of ethanol from sugar cane. That tax comes on top of a 51-cent exemption from the federal excise tax on gasoline that goes to fuel mixed with ethanol.”
So the federal government is subsidizing farmers to grow an inefficient crop that is decimating the most vital water table in the West – the very life blood of grain farmers – to burn as fuel? We already know that lots of corn fields were planted (and most farming is large corporate industrial farming), that feed grain has sky-rocketed (feed represents about 40% of the cost of raising livestock), and that there has been a direct and immediate impact (not good for consumers!) on food costs as a result. But wait, there's more!
With all that federal subsidy money – that fat tax exemption for American corn-growers and that stupid “equalizing” tax on sugar-cane-based ethanol – you'd think it would be a great business opportunity for farmers, huh? Well aside from the processing plants that aren't getting finished on schedule and the number of American ethanol and biodiesel firms teetering on the brink of bankruptcy, today’s thedeal.com provides us with this handy list of such companies that have already “tanked” under bankruptcy laws:
- Beatrice Biodiesel LLC of Beatrice , Neb. (Aug. 21);
- Wyoming Ethanol LLC of Boise , Idaho (June 19);
- Ethanex Energy Inc. of Bashor , Kan. (March 27);
- BioEnergy of America Inc. of Edison , N.J. (Jan. 3);
- Central Illinois Energy LLC of Canton , Ill. (Dec. 13, 2007);
- E3 BioFuels-Mead LLC of Shawnee , Kan. (Nov. 30, 2007);
- Earth Biofuels Inc. of Dallas (July 11, 2007).
Did I mention that ethanol isn't even efficient – that it gets fewer miles-per-gallon than gasoline? Can't our government get anything right?
I’m Peter Dekom, and I approve this message.
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