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Tuesday, November 13, 2007
David Strom :: Townhall.com Columnist
Biofuels: Poison for the Poor?
by David Strom
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With unemployment at 10.2%, what will happen by the end of Obama's first term?



Two years ago, Ethanol and Biodiesel were being touted as the solution to our “addiction” to oil.

After all, wouldn’t it be better to grow our fuel than simply pump it out of the ground at exorbitant rates?

Appealing as that idea sounded, it has turned out to be a big mess threatening to get bigger by the day. A new coalition of—believe it or not—environmentalists and advocates for the poor have started raising tough questions about the tax breaks, subsidies and mandates that have fueled the growth of the Ethanol and biodiesel industry.

Ethanol, it turns out, may be great politics in Midwestern corn growing states, but it is terrible environmental and economic policy. As more and more food is diverted from human consumption to producing fuel, prices for basic food are skyrocketing around the world. Deforestation is on the rise as third world countries try to cash in on the boom, and violence has broken out as small landholders are being kicked off their land to make way for large palm oil farms.

A coalition made up of Oxfam, the World Wildlife fund, and other groups is raising concerns about the current rush to replace fossil fuels with biofuels. Increased Ethanol production has led to a spike in corn prices that has caused food shortages in third world countries, including our neighbor to the South, Mexico. African and Asian countries that are currently unable to produce enough food for their own populations are clearing cropland to supply Ethanol for Europe’s new mandate of 10% Ethanol in all their gasoline.

The environmental benefits of using Ethanol are miniscule to non-existent—some estimates even show that it takes more fossil fuel to make a gallon of Ethanol than it yields as a fuel. Water resources are being stretched to the point of disaster, and food prices are spiking across the world. The Japanese car companies warn consumers to avoid biodiesel as it lowers the life-span and efficiency of their engines.

Politicians and other ethanol advocates have argued that government mandates and subsidies and mandates were needed to “jump-start” the ethanol industry—that someday, some way all these government subsidy will pay off in better and more efficient fuels. After 30 years of government subsidies and mandates, Ethanol production is as inefficient today as it was then—only now it’s hurting more people.

A new cost-benefit analysis jointly produced by the Brookings Institution and the American Enterprise Institute estimates that eliminating the subsidies and mandates would save taxpayers and consumers billions of dollars over the next decade.

The solution to this problem is simple: lift the subsidies and mandates and let consumers choose the fuel they want to put in their cars. Better yet, lift the restrictions on domestic oil production that limit drilling in Alaska and the Continental shelf that artificially distort the market and drive fuel prices up.

Subsidies and mandates hurt not help by driving investment where it otherwise would not go. Artificial restrictions on oil production have driven prices higher than they otherwise would be, and have made America much more dependent upon foreign oil sources than it otherwise would be.

As usual, government “solutions” to our woes have made things worse, not better for the average person. When government gets into the job of picking winners and losers, you can almost be certain that the loser will be you.

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About The Author

David Strom is the President of the Minnesota Free Market Institute. He hosts a weekly radio show on AM-1280 "The Patriot" in Minneapolis-St. Paul, available on podcast at Townhall.com.

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It's not about the environment stupid
Remember the Clintonesque slogan "It's the economy stupid"? Well all this "Green" is not about the environment but who controls the resources, so the new slogan is "It's not about the environment stupid."
If you take the time to notice You will see the trend in the leftist evironmentalists rhettoric Big Oil, Big Logging, Big this and Big that. As opposed to what, little oil or little logging? Get a grip people, all this green is about who controls the green in your pocket.

andrews
Thanks for trusting my data. All of it comes from a conference by the Minnesota Economics Association, at which the industry leaders (several from the University of Minnesota, the state with the highest penetration of E-85 in the country) on environmental and energy economics discusses the true cost of ethanol. Nobody left that conference feeling anything other than sickened by the road our political system has led us down, and wondering if anything can be done about it. The following week, a colleague at my university received a call from someone behind the current Farm Bill in Congress. They wanted us to do an economic analysis of the impact of the Farm Bill. Given that we are not the University of Minnesota, but a smaller university in the state, it seemed a little weird to me that they would want us to do it. We soon discovered why: when we told them that we would do an objective analysis and could not guarantee them that our conclusions would be favorable to their cause, they said they did not want us to do the study.
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