Days of Promise Fade for Ethanol
From The New York Times:
Five years ago, rural America was giddy
for ethanol.
Backed by government subsidies and mandates, hundreds
of ethanol plants rose among the golden fields of the Corn Belt, bringing jobs
and business to small towns, providing farmers with a new market for their crops
and generating billions of dollars in revenue for the producers of this
corn-based fuel blend.
Those days of promise and prosperity are vanishing.
Nearly 10 percent of the nation’s ethanol plants have
stopped production over the past year, in part because the drought that has
ravaged much of the nation’s crops pushed commodity prices so high that ethanol
has become too expensive to produce.
A dip in gasoline consumption has compounded the
industry’s problem by reducing the demand for ethanol.
The situation has left the fate of dozens of ethanol
plants hanging in the balance and has unsettled communities that once prospered
from this biofuel.
Thousands of barrels of ethanol now sit in storage
because there is not enough gasoline in the market to blend it with — and blends
calling for a higher percentage of ethanol have yet to catch on widely in the
marketplace. Advanced biofuels
from waste like corn stalks and wood chips have also yet to reach
commercial-level production as some had predicted they would by now.
Congress set out to create an ethanol industry that
would produce enough to make up 10 percent of every gallon of gas pumped into a
car, but the lawmakers assumed that demand for fuel would grow. Instead, it has
shrunk to 8.7 million barrels a day from 9.7 million in 2007, said Larry
Goldstein, an economist and a director of the Energy Policy Research Foundation. And with
corporate average fuel economy rules now in place to double
the number of miles that the average car gets per gallon by 2025, “you know
we’re on a trend,” he added.
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