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Bipartisan Senate bill would end wasteful corn ethanol subsidies this summer

Sasha Lyutse

Posted May 3, 2011 in Moving Beyond Oil, Solving Global Warming

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Today, Senators Dianne Feinstein and Tom Coburn have joined forces across the aisle to introduce legislation that will completely eliminate the main corn ethanol tax credit—known as the Volumetric Ethanol Excise Tax Credit or “VEETC”—before year-end, as well as end the import tariff on foreign ethanol. Their effort speaks to the strong bipartisan consensus on ending subsidies to old, polluting corn ethanol, will save taxpayers billions, and finally force the mature corn ethanol industry to compete in the marketplace after three decades of government support.

As we’ve written about extensively, the VEETC is wasteful and redundant, paying oil companies billions in scarce taxpayer dollars each year—nearly $6 billion this year alone—to blend more and more ethanol into our gasoline supply, despite the fact that they are already required to do so by law. In exchange we’ve gotten little in additional domestic ethanol production or jobs. And because the VEETC was not tied to any environmental performance requirements, subsidizing the best and worst gallons of ethanol alike, these billions have come at the expense of developing the new and cleaner advanced biofuels that we need.

Corn ethanol lobbyists used to sell ethanol as a bridge to these better fuels, but now they try to dismiss them as fantasies making it clear they’re not really interested in competition.

With rising oil prices, we can now expect these same lobbyists to argue that we need more corn ethanol because it reduces the price of gasoline at the pump. But with corn prices breaking records, this impact is marginal at best. And it is certainly not worth billions in subsidies, the costly air and water pollution that corn production results in, or the ethanol industry’s devastating impacts on global food prices.

To get biofuels on the green and narrow path and quickly transition to new, better-performing advanced biofuels, we must first stop investing billions in the dirty biofuels of the past. Ending the VEETC and ethanol import tariff is a critical first step and we applaud Senators Feinstein and Coburn for their leadership.

Next, Congress must resist attempts by the corn ethanol industry to push for what amounts to more government support by a different name—infrastructure investments. Billions in additional giveaways to the corn ethanol industry, whether they come in the form of tax credits or costly loan guarantees for ethanol-specific pipelines and gas station pumps will just lock more old, dirty corn ethanol into the market at a time when advanced biofuels are being developed to drop right into our current fueling system.

Finally, Congressional lawmakers must put in place smart energy policies that reward the best performing biofuels—those that deliver substantial reductions in life-cycle greenhouse gas emissions, improved fossil energy balance, more sustainable farming practices that lead to cleaner water and healthier soils, less effect on food prices, and therefore more energy security. The Greener Biofuels Tax Credit we’ve proposed is one way they could do just that.

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Comments

Charlie PetersMay 3 2011 10:46 PM

Fuel ethanol stinks

Audit the fed, support HR 459 Paul

Charlie PetersMay 3 2011 10:50 PM

GOOGLE: (510) 537-1796

Enchanting EthanolMay 4 2011 02:34 PM

So much corruption surrounding ethanol! Newt Gingrich has taken ethanol money. Gore supported ethanol when he was running for president and recently admitted his folly. B.Clinton who had money invested in an ethanol plant in Brazil that engaged in slave labor, recently rejected ethanol. Bush put the high levels of ethanol mandate in place. It goes on and on.

The sad thing is it looks like this problem is going to continue with the new trend in reporting on ethanol. Finally, most news outlets are reporting that corn ethanol has problems— inefficiency, land use issues, waterway pollution, food security/inflation, etc. The new narrative is that cellulosic ethanol is the real answer and corn ethanol has been sucking up all the subsidies. If we just give cellulosic “the capital” we will have cheap “homegrown” energy for all.

Cellulosic ethanol has received subsidies and has been unsuccessful. Look at Vinod khosla’s Range Fuels and Cello Energy. Range Fuels has gotten about 162 million in tax-payer dollars and about the same in private funding, but has not produced the cellulosic ethanol it promised. WSJ reported that the Range Fuels CEO says that no one has figured out how to produce commercially viable portions of cellulosic ethanol. And Cello Energy is bankrupt. (See WSJ 2/10/11 The Range Fuels Fiasco) (enchantingethanol.blogspot.com)

HelmutMay 10 2011 03:49 PM

Are there effective environmental performance requirements for any other form of energy? Really sad but hopeful. No one who's car I've repaired in the past year is looking to finance a new Hybrid or Electric. Combustion engines will continue to be mass produced and they can run cleaner on bio-fuels. Ethanol CAN be cleaner and it is renewable. Was Cello Energy the company that had a pilot plant in S. Dakota making 200,000 gallons a year from corn stalks? I wasn't dreaming , I read about them,somewhere. Most of these auto makers that are still pushing v-6 engines, and finally offering more 2 litre and smaller engines for the US, make flex-fuels for a lot more countries than Brazil. Saab's Hybrid for Sweden is flex-fuel.
It's just alcohol, hard to believe we can't make it green even without Cell tech. Personally I'd rather have a corn field in my backyard over an NG condensate tower.

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