Enviros Say U.S. Is "Addicted to Crystal Eth" -- Then Propose Moral Equivalent of Ethanol Methadone Treatment
The Vermont Law School's Institute for Energy and the Environment and the D.C.-based activist group Food & Water Watch has issued a new report, "Crystal Eth: America's Crippling Addiction to Taxpayer-financed Ethanol," [here to download] which according to the press release…
…concludes that corn-based ethanol is unlikely to significantly reduce America's dependence on imported oil, has a negligible ability to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, contributes to environmental degradation in coastal waters and has been an economic boon for agribusiness giants managed in absentia rather than small and medium-size, locally owned farms, farm cooperatives and ethanol refineries. …
The report examines the political contributions and lobbying efforts of some of the largest corporate ethanol refiners to garner ever-larger subsidies, and how the growth of corporate consolidation in the corn-based ethanol sector has been an unintended result of America's renewable transportation fuel politics, policies and subsidies. The report estimates that ethanol refiners have received at least $22.8 billion in total government financial support between 1999 and 2008.
It's better late than never I suppose. Reason has long understood the public choice dynamic (the iron circle of corporate lobbyists, politicians, and bureaucrats) that channels taxpayer dollars into subsidies and, of course, has been against subsidizing ethanol for quite some time now.
All too predictably, the activists behind the report immediately turn around and advocate mandates and subsidies for the biofuels they prefer:
Corn-based ethanol subsidies should be phased out completely over the next few years in favor of subsidies to biofuel alternatives that are more efficient, economically feasible and environmentally friendly, such as cellulosic and algae biofuel refiners. …
Renewable fuel standards [mandates] should be increased for second- and third-generation biofuels such as cellulosic ethanol and algae-based biodiesel, which should only receive support if they meet sustainability criteria to qualify for subsidies. These could include a net energy gain for cellulosic or other biodiesel fuels, reduced water utilization, limiting the indirect land use impact on food production and eschewing emerging higher-risk technologies such as nanotechnology and synthetic biology.
Sadly, the activists have a almost touching and truly naive faith that they are so smart that this time top/down centralized energy planning will avoid environmentally deleterious unintended consequences! Sigh.
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Fish gotta swim, birds gotta fly, activists gotta act. There's no thinking involved in any of it.
"Sadly, the activists have a almost touching and truly naive faith that they are so smart that this time top/down centralized energy planning will avoid environmentally deleterious unintended consequences! "
But, but this time they really do have TOP MEN on the job!
Corn-based ethanol subsidies should be phased out completely over the next few years in favor of subsidies to biofuel alternatives that are more efficient, economically feasible and environmentally friendly, such as cellulosic and algae biofuel refiners. ...
Ummm, if they really are economically feasible, THEY DON'T NEED TO BE SUBSIDIZED, YOU RETARDS.
Yes, but until we truly capture the non-quantifiable costs of existing energy sources, we must level the playing field. Speaking of which, I have some hand written equations showing that cellulosic ethanol actually produces energy out of thin air.
The environmentalists' faith in governmental solutions goes against the available data. They are the Creationists of biology departments everywhere.
Renewable fuel standards [mandates] should be increased for second- and third-generation biofuels
And, of course, when "fourth-generation" fuels come along, they will require more lobbyists and extensive analyses by non-profit groups dedicated to getting their clients a fair share of the government dole.
This report came from a law school, after all.
Isn't oil a second or third generation fuel? Wood -> Coal -> Oil?
Forth or fifth
food -> animal skins(for heat) -> wood -> wax(for light) -> coal -> oil
hydro with water wheels, wind with wind mills and hay/grain to power horses and oxen could also be added in there.
Never really thought about it like that before. Makes sense dude.
http://www.complete-privacy.edu.tc
Subsidizing corn didn't work, but subsidizing algae will!
Geniuses, all of them.
ALL WILL BE MULCHED!
Mmmmm - tasty, delicious high-fructose corn syrup...
*takes giant swig of omnipresent Mountain Dew*
Have you had a Throwback Dew? Much better with real sugar.
...but subsidizing algae will!
Does this mean I can stop cleaning my damn fish tank?
The fact that the enviromorons changed their minds regarding corn-based ethanol does not mean they had an epiphany. They remain as ignorant of economics as a cactus.
Way to hate on cacti, OM!
Re: Almanian,
Cacti can get back to me when they finally receive their human rights from Cass Sunstein.
hey!!
"eschewing emerging higher-risk technologies such as nanotechnology and synthetic biology"
What the hell does this mean?
Eschew obfuscation
It means that these greens are technophobes.
They are afraid of the white-coats' magic.
It's not clear what they mean by "higher risk". If it's higher risk to taxpayers, any eschewing is probably good. if it's higher risk to the environment, are they going nitpick any advances that come along to death?
What the hell does this mean?
The singularity is dangerous and if we don't invest in it it will destroy us....or something
CAPTION
"OH! I thought he said, 'Stick that corncob in your GAS!"
They believe in the future of cellulosic and algae biofuel so much they are investing their own money in a new company to produce them.
Just kidding.
I want somebody to get to work on a poison ivy -based fuel. It's plentiful, and cheap, and there is no current competitive demand.
Of course, there's always the Holy Grail alternative: fuel made from lawyers.
Kudzu. Even goats can barely keep up with kudzu.
Apparently this has been done, at least with the roots.
I do recall reading about it. I'm going back to grad school to work with a department who are attempting to model cellulostic breakdown by cellulase accurately. By this time next year, I'll be completely fluent in every cockamamie scheme ever created to turn plants into go juice.
"Of course, there's always the Holy Grail alternative: fuel made from lawyers."
Lawyers have no energy content.
That's why they suck the life out of others.
eschewing emerging higher-risk technologies such as nanotechnology and synthetic biology.
Yeah, shut down research into the areas most promising to deliver advanced results.
IMHO, the only subsidies that should be done in the biofuels area is on basic research. Production will follow if the techniques are economically viable. Why subsidize research? Because the basic research is one of the few "investments" that truly is an investment as opposed to a giveaway.
Subsidized research is too politically motivated and concentrates too much power at the rent seeking university system.
emerging higher-risk technologies such as nanotechnology and synthetic biology
OMG FRANKENFUEL!!!!!
What the fucking fuck.
It's ridiculous that they realize how damaging ethanol is to food prices, but they think the same principal applied to biofuels won't also be bad? Definition of insanity....
http://www.intellectualtakeout.....ble-energy
While the ethanol scam certainly involves myriad players... the enviros really have no place pointing fingers at anyone, since this baby was very much part of their whole idea of getting the Government into "Mandating Green" for our own good... caring little for the details of whether any of the popular 'green' ideas had any actual practical merit or not, or (gasp! the horror) might actually be in the interests of their nominal nemesies - the Big Evil Corporashuns!! The irony being that their own enthusiasm helped enlarge and expand what was already a slimy boondoggle between the Gov and Ag-business, and turned it into something that had an air of *legitimacy*. Frankenstein indeed. They don't recognize their own children
So that's what Chad has been up to, writing this report.
Ok first we had a dollar bill jammed into a cars gas tank now we have an ear of corn jammed into it.
Can we just cut to the chase and have a photo of some dude with his dick in it?