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Maize of Deception: How Corn-Based Ethanol Can Lead To Starvation and Environmental Disaster
Political Affairs Magazine ^ | 6-14-07 | Council On Hemispheric Affairs

Posted on 06/14/2007 7:08:30 AM PDT by E. Pluribus Unum

Ethanol Fuels Are Not Necessarily The Universal Cure

As the Bush administration continues to push its alternative fuels agenda, it has become increasingly evident that corn-based ethanol could be as much the global villain as a boon to society. Instead of improving the environment and moderating oil prices, corn-based ethanol could result in mass deforestation, strained land and water resources, increased food prices, augmented poverty and swarms of farmers uprooted from the land. While the negative effects of corn-based biofuels are obvious, Washington continues to emphasize their importance, while increasing the size and number of subventions to the ethanol industry. This is being done despite the adverse ramifications that its cultivation is having on the sites where it already is being produced, with the situation likely to further deteriorate in the near future.

The Emergence of Ethanol

Ethanol is a substance created by the fermentation of simple sugars. In the United States, corn is the main source for ethanol production, while other countries like Brazil rely on a sugar cane process as well as other plants and byproducts to be used in making alternative energy sources. Typically, ethanol is mixed into gasoline creating “gasohol,” resulting in higher octane ratings, improved combustion, and is viewed as more environmentally friendly. Currently, around 30% of gasoline in the United States contains some ethanol, and U.S. initiatives indicate the possibility for much larger concentrations in coming years.

Before corn-based ethanol became prominent in U.S. industries, lead was used as a performance enhancer when added to gasoline. It was not until the 1970s and 1980s that corn-based ethanol began to replace lead—a very toxic substance—mostly due to the oil embargo that the Oil and Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) imposed in 1974. Amid the clamor of American voices calling out for energy independence, President Jimmy Carter gave his memorable speech on April 18, 1977, ushering in a new era in U.S. economic history. From this point on the U.S. would try to cater to its high energy demand from its own domestic resources. To Carter, this decision was the “moral equivalent of war” between the U.S. and OPEC. Thirty years later, it seems that America is losing its own self-designated “war” and is likely to continue to suffer unnecessary loses in this conflict unless it pursues a fundamental change in its economic policy.

An Economic Giant

Over the past few years, a combination of increasing oil prices and generous government subsidies has resulted in the continued expansion of the U.S. ethanol industry. According to the Council on Foreign Relations, as of 2006, 110 ethanol refineries have been built in the U.S., with 73 more under construction. It is estimated that by the end of 2008, ethanol production will have reached 11.4 billion gallons a year. In his 2007 State of the Union address, President George W. Bush set out goals to produce over 35 billion gallons of ethanol fuel by the year 2017. He added that the U.S. also plans to cut petroleum consumption by 20% over a ten year time span.

The tumultuous ethanol industry receives Midas-like support as a result of direct government subventions which equaled about $8.9 billion in 2005. These include tax cuts, grants, and government loans in order to encourage production and remain economically competitive with conventional gasoline. The federal government for example already has established a tax credit of 51 cents for every gallon the industry produces. Although accompanied by severe consequences, with continued government support at such a high level, it is quite possible that Bush’s consumption goals could be fulfilled within the stipulated time period.

Feeding Cars and Starving the Poor

On March 29, 2007, Cuban leader Fidel Castro berated Bush’s economic initiatives for ethanol production in the Cuban Communist party newspaper Granma, stating that using corn, or any food source, to produce ethanol could result in the “premature death” of upwards of three billion people. He explained that the drive to produce corn-based ethanol would hike up food prices around the world, adversely effecting poverty in developing countries. Castro then restated his beliefs in a second article, also published in Granma, on April 3. Although the ailing Cuban president is known for adamantly and automatically opposing U.S. foreign policy initiatives, it would be foolhardy for the U.S. to ignore his foreboding message on this subject.

As a result of the Washington-backed initiatives, an enormous volume of corn is being consumed for ethanol production. Consequently, the decreasing availability of it as a food crop and for livestock has contributed to the rise of corn futures from $2.80 to $4.38 a bushel. This recent price hike occurred over the course of several months and is said to be the sharpest increase in the past ten years. Thus, fewer low income consumers are able to purchase corn-based products, which is a very serious detriment to countries where corn is a staple of a population’s diet.

Mexico already has been significantly affected by the rising costs of corn. Because 107 million Mexicans rely on corn as their main source of sustenance, its soaring increase has sent shockwaves throughout the country’s corn-related industries. The price of tortillas in Mexico has risen by 100%, resulting in mass protests by tens of thousands of enraged consumers last January. Recently inaugurated Mexican President Felipe Calderon stated that the price increase of corn is unjustifiable and “threatens the economy and millions of families.” In response to the strike, Calderon signed an accord that limited the price of tortillas to 8.50 pesos per kilogram, and increased the quota of duty-free corn products imported from the United States. Despite Calderon’s efforts to regulate corn prices, the situation remains unresolved, since the accord expired in May.

The rapidly changing international corn market also has affected the prices of other produce. Due to the high demand for corn, farmers in the U.S. are now planting more acres of the commodity. This has decreased the production of other crops, such as wheat, soy and rice, making them more expensive and less available. Beer prices also have risen due to the substitution of barley for corn. Even the price of meats and poultry such as turkey, chicken, pork, beef as well as eggs and dairy products are beginning increase due to the high cost of feeding farm animals. Fidel Castro may have a point; current U.S. economic policy seems to indicate greater interest in fueling cars than feeding people.

Is Ethanol Really Better For The Environment?

In May of 2007, the United Nations issued a report warning the world against the production of ethanol. The report stated that thus far, the production of ethanol has resulted in “the destruction of endangered rainforests, contamination of soil, air and water and the expulsion of rural populations from their homes.” Because more acreage needs to be cultivated in order to produce the amount of corn, sugarcane and other foodstock needed for ethanol production, farmers around the world are wantonly cutting down forests to make way for new plantations. In the long term, the Amazon Rainforest, for example, will experience vast deforestation due to Brazil’s increased sugarcane production in order to meet its ethanol export goals. This inevitably will result in the slow degradation of one of the Americas most precious and fragile ecosystems.

The UN also added that “where crops are grown for energy purposes, the use of large scale cropping could lead to significant biodiversity loss, soil erosion, and nutrient leaching.” Fidel Castro warned the U.S. that corn-based ethanol production will not only damage the environment, but will also put increasing pressure on the world’s already dwindling water supplies, possibly resulting in future water wars.

In a COHA interview with Boston University’s International Relations professor Kevin P. Gallagher, he asserted that we have found ourselves in a “climate constrained insecure world,” where we must shift our dependence away from fossil fuels and have a more climate friendly energy policy. Moreover, Gallagher stresses that “corn-based ethanol is not a panacea to solve a country’s climate and security problems.” He emphasized that currently the U.S. has the opportunity to develop a more efficient energy path, but with its present, poorly managed corn-based energy policy, the U.S. is “taking one step forward and two steps backward.”

Gallagher also pointed out that the corn, wheat and soy sectors are highly concentrated, meaning that at times “only two or three firms can control 75% to 85% of the market.” This raises possible concerns that these firms are manipulating the price of their products, thereby artificially impacting the commodity market to their advantage, but not necessarily to society’s benefit. Because these mega-firms face so little competition, it is relatively easy for them to drive up the price of their products in order to generate greater profits. At the present time, corn-based ethanol production is benefiting mainly the larger firms.

In Mexico there are only a relatively small handful of tortilla makers whose prices, as mentioned above, have rapidly shot up. Yet it is very important to note that these tortilla prices increased somewhat faster than the price of corn in general. While the situation in Mexico is currently under investigation, its present fate illustrates the importance of rapidly addressing this issue.

It is evident that while ethanol, as an alternative to fossil fuel, may be beneficial to the general population by reducing and stabilizing fuel prices, its consequences may far outweigh such advantages. As Food Rights Coordinator Celso Marcatto at ActionAid in Brazil stated, “The benefits of biofuels cannot be achieved at the expenses of increased food shortages, environmental degradation and poverty.” Unfortunately, that is what the U.S. is inadvertently setting itself up for in the future.

Alternatives To Corn-Based Ethanol

The U.S. currently uses more energy per unit of GDP than do most other countries in the world. Yet there are many ways the U.S. could utilize its energy more efficiently. For example, steel mills in the U.S. use more energy per dollar than their equivalent in Germany or Japan. The Japanese car company Toyota is currently using its hybrid technology to manufacture more fuel efficient cars. Germany uses energy efficient light bulbs from which it derives huge savings. The U.S. needs to use the eco-technology which now exists to mirror these countries by adapting them to its own use.

Wind and solar energy, a function of geography, should be a key component in the U.S.’s quest for energy efficiency. Professor Gallagher suggests that former President Carter’s energy policy had the U.S. “perfectly positioned to, by now, be the world leader.” Yet because the succeeding administrations strayed away from Carter’s path, the U.S. is now far behind. “We have engineers and ingenuity but the current administration has locked itself into a specific framework and is resistant to change,” says Gallagher. The U.S. still has time to alter its course toward a more energy efficient arrangement. Hopefully, the White House will acknowledge its current unwise economic policy and join other governments that value the use of eco-friendly energy.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: energy; ethanol; shootfirstaimsecond
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1 posted on 06/14/2007 7:08:32 AM PDT by E. Pluribus Unum
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

There is a website devoted to this issue, sponsored in part by the American Meat Industry. I read an article but they didn’t give the name of the web site but believe it’s for consumers and businesses. Does anyone have the name?


2 posted on 06/14/2007 7:10:46 AM PDT by sarasota
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

Cellulosic ethanol is another possibility that’s being researched.


3 posted on 06/14/2007 7:11:57 AM PDT by MplsSteve
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To: sarasota
AMI, Producers, Industry Voice Concern Over Quintupling of Ethanol Mandate
4 posted on 06/14/2007 7:12:40 AM PDT by E. Pluribus Unum (http://www.imwithfred.com/)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

No one is going to like this, but my sense is that we have to use incentives (e.g. tax policy) to encourage capital investment in the US. For instance, changing a) depreciation lives and b) taxes on profits, provide more economic reasons for companies to improve their capital plant. Reducing the burden of regulations should also be on the table. What companies have to do to build the most basic products here in the US is insane. High energy prices are here to stay and we need to respond intelligently.


5 posted on 06/14/2007 7:14:35 AM PDT by RKV
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

Starvation is good for the planet. It keeps the population down (the global climate change crowd of today is the global climate change crowd the 1970s is the ZPG - Zero Population Growth crowd of the 1970s is the pro-abortion anti-DDT crowd of the 1960s).

Death is good business for them.

And we have a policy now to accept refuges from these poorer nations where people might starve so we do have a generous side. And while they have few marketable skills (and thus work in “unskilled labor”), we do have an expanding social safety net ready to catch them.

Of course they could grow the food they need back home and thrive but liberal do-gooders want that food for fuel.


6 posted on 06/14/2007 7:14:50 AM PDT by weegee (Libs want us to learn to live with terrorism, but if a gun is used they want to rewrite the Const.)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

Thanks for the post.


7 posted on 06/14/2007 7:15:27 AM PDT by sarasota
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

We can always go to “soilent green” when food becomes scarce. /sarc


8 posted on 06/14/2007 7:17:14 AM PDT by 50mm (Inside every cynical person, there is a disappointed idealist - G. Carlin)
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To: 50mm

Oops. Should be “Soylent Green.”


9 posted on 06/14/2007 7:18:33 AM PDT by 50mm (Inside every cynical person, there is a disappointed idealist - G. Carlin)
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To: RKV
Reducing the burden of regulations should also be on the table.

Bad legislation is never repealed, and any new legislation with the word "reform" in its title means just the opposite.

10 posted on 06/14/2007 7:19:46 AM PDT by E. Pluribus Unum (http://www.imwithfred.com/)
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To: weegee
The Mexican corn problem is simple ~ with NAFTA far cheaper American corn could be imported. This drove local subsistence farmers out of business. Supposedly they all came to El Norte to earn money to feed their starving children back in Mexico.

Now, with the price of corn rising due to its use as fuel (ethanol), the more expensive Mexican corn can probably be easily marketed.

Time for the Mexican corn farmers to return home to raise corn to feed their kids.

See, everything becomes quite a bit simpler when you close the loops.

11 posted on 06/14/2007 7:22:15 AM PDT by muawiyah
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

Don’t burn your food for fuel...............


12 posted on 06/14/2007 7:24:58 AM PDT by Red Badger (Bite your tongue. It tastes a lot better than crow................)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

Bullcrap...........If ethanol makes the big time based on corn, scientists will figure a way to make corn produce a dozen ears per stalk instead of 1 or 2 like now.


13 posted on 06/14/2007 7:25:01 AM PDT by weezel
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

The only thing is that within 15 years, the very idea of growing corn/sugar cane/sugar beets for ethanol will be obselete. That’s because by then we’ll be growing oil-laden algae on a huge scale in special tanks to make biodiesel fuel/heating oil, and the “waste” from that processing can be processed into ethanol rather easily. Also, by then new enzymes will be widely available to break down cellulose into ethanol, which means plentiful plant waste can be used for this purpose.


14 posted on 06/14/2007 7:25:11 AM PDT by RayChuang88
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To: weezel
Bullcrap...........If ethanol makes the big time based on corn, scientists will figure a way to make corn produce a dozen ears per stalk instead of 1 or 2 like now.

Oh shut up! It's more fun to whine and moan.

Meanwhile, the largest corn crop in more than 2000 years is growing in the Midwest as we speak.

15 posted on 06/14/2007 7:30:13 AM PDT by Balding_Eagle (If America falls, darkness will cover the face of the earth for a thousand years.)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum
Anything that is good for mankind is bad for the devil.

Oil is only as dangerous for the world as the controversial subject of “fire” was for the ancient Greeks. Fortunately for Western thought and the rest of the world, the Greeks learned that fire was at most a two-edged sword chaotic in the wild but could be mastered. The responsibility lays in the hands of those who wield it and must tame it. Ignoring fire (for example preparing against lightning strikes) was inexcusable neglect. Oil is no different a subject. Neglecting the build up of me thanes and tar pits are as deadly as pollution (and we still have to control burn forestry as protection from lightning strikes).

All other energy fuels share the same “controversy”. It’s the devil’s influence to not want mankind to stay warm or cook his food or power his industry. Let’s expand this maddening absurdity to expose it’s ill-conceived logic:

The use of so-called “clean” energy like “wind” is bad for the environment. All wind deflected to produce energy to be used by that hideous creature, Jewish Christian God-centered “man” plague upon this planet, means that pollen won’t have enough wind to detach it from the beautiful (real meaning of life) flowers. Thousands, millions, billions of flowers will DIE because the eff’n mankind wind machine is taking away the natural resources that keeps this world beautiful. Just like solar energy being so key to keep the surface of the earth hot enough to reproduce the winds and ocean currents. When solar energy is absorbed away from heating the oceans...what a catastrophe!!! The eff’n world will eff’n end because of the eff’n mankind is trying to better his condition not only for himself, but for his eff’n offspring #*$&&*# !!!!!!

16 posted on 06/14/2007 7:30:43 AM PDT by SaltyJoe ("Social Justice" for the Unborn Child)
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To: muawiyah

Their tortilla price problem went away when the two makers of tortillas that together control 70% of the market decided they did not like the government attention they got. Then prices mysteriously fell.


17 posted on 06/14/2007 7:40:23 AM PDT by P-40 (Al Qaeda was working in Iraq. They were just undocumented.)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum
Cuban leader Fidel Castro

I think this article was written by friends of Castro...
18 posted on 06/14/2007 7:41:22 AM PDT by P-40 (Al Qaeda was working in Iraq. They were just undocumented.)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

Frankly, food based fuels...all of them...are one of the top 5 stupid ideas I’ve ever heard of.


19 posted on 06/14/2007 7:43:40 AM PDT by Psycho_Bunny (When's MY turn? What crimes may I commit and recieve amnesty for?)
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To: Balding_Eagle

Every field I see here in Anson co of NC is in corn too. Makes me wish I were still able to coon hunt, used to have a lot of fun chasing them outa corn fields.


20 posted on 06/14/2007 7:43:46 AM PDT by weezel
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