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The Alcohol Cure - How to break the oil monopoly in this decade.
National Review Online ^ | December 13, 2007 | Clifford D. May

Posted on 12/13/2007 12:06:48 PM PST by neverdem







The Alcohol Cure
How to break the oil monopoly in this decade.

By Clifford D. May

“We are financing a war against ourselves,” writes Robert Zubrin, nuclear engineer and author of a new book responding to the distressing fact that Americans and Europeans are sending trillions of dollars to militant Islamists whose goal is our destruction.

But in his new book, Energy Victory, Dr. Zubrin does not just complain. He proposes a way to break free of dependence on a resource controlled by those who have declared themselves our mortal enemies. The technology already exists. It’s not expensive. All that is lacking is for voters to make this a priority — and to communicate that to the political class.

Right now, 97 percent of the cars on America's roads run on gasoline. Only three percent are Flexible Fuel Vehicles (FFVs) — automobiles that can be powered by either gasoline or alcohol fuels, or any mixture of the two. The additional cost to make a new car an FFV is only about $100 per vehicle

For the sake of individual security, the government mandates that all cars have seat belts. For the sake of national security, Dr. Zubrin proposes, the government should mandate that all new cars be FFVs.

In three years, the change would put 50 million FFVs on the road. The free market would then mobilize to do what it does best: Entrepreneurs would compete to produce alternative, non-petroleum fuels for these potential customers.

Dr. Zubrin expects those fuels to be made from alcohol: ethanol and methanol. Ethanol is made from agricultural products, from plants of all kinds. Methanol can be made from biomass — even biodegradable garbage — as well as from natural gas or coal.

Ethanol can be produced right now for $1.50 a gallon; methanol for 93 cents a gallon. Dr. Zubrin expects the first generation of alternative fuels would be high alcohol-to-gasoline mixtures. These would provide better mileage while still dramatically reducing dependence on petroleum.

The key is you'd be free to choose: You could buy gasoline as you do now or you could buy fuels made mostly of alcohol, giving less money — and hence less power — to Iranian mullahs, Saudi clerics, and Venezuelan despots.

As they say in those television ads: Wait! There's more! Substituting alcohol for gasoline also would mean cleaner air and reduced carbon dioxide emissions. Since alcohol fuels are water soluble and biodegradable, a spill would not have the harmful environmental impact that oil spills bring.

Were America to lead, the world would follow. “If all cars sold in the United States had to be flexible-fueled, foreign manufacturers would also mass-produce such units,” Dr. Zubrin writes. That would create “a large market in Europe and Asia as well as the United States for methanol and ethanol - much of which could be produced in America.”

”Instead of being the world's largest fuel importer, the United States could become the largest fuel exporter. A larger portion of the money now going to the Middle East would instead go to the United States and Canada,” with the rest going to impoverished tropical nations where a wide variety of crops could be raised to produce new alcohol fuels. “This would reverse our trade deficit, improve conditions in the third world, and cause a global shift in world economic power in favor of the West.”

So what is holding up progress? Obviously, there are special interests determined to keep oil king. And there are those dogmatically opposed to government mandates for any reason — even to win a war.

But mandates are required to solve the chicken-and-egg dilemma. Dr. Zubrin writes: “Filling stations don't want to dedicate space to a fuel mix used by only three percent of all cars and consumers are not interested in buying vehicles for which the preferred fuel mix is extremely difficult to find.” This is one of those very rare problems that actually can be solved just by passing a law. Build the cars. The non-petroleum fuels will come.

Other transportation innovations can and should follow. In particular, it makes sense to encourage the development of FFVs that also are plug-in hybrids — cars that can run on electricity, too. Such cars could be recharged by plugging into a standard wall socket. (In America today most electricity is not generated from petroleum.)

Someday perhaps there will be automobiles powered by more futuristic means. But right now we can utilize FFVs and alcohol to stem what has been our growing dependence on a commodity controlled by regimes, movements and individuals waging war against us. Will one — or both — of the presidential candidates in 2008 make this a priority? That’s up to you and other voters to decide, isn’t it?

— Clifford D. May, a former New York Times foreign correspondent, is president of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, a policy institute focusing on terrorism.

© Scripps Howard News Service
Clifford D. May, a former New York Times foreign correspondent, is the president of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies , a policy institute focusing on terrorism.



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: alcohol; energy; ethanol; feasibility; foodpriceimpact; methanol; oil; zubrin
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To: neverdem

Makes sense on the face of it. It certainly makes more sense than the non-solutions they’re squabling about in Bali.


41 posted on 12/13/2007 1:24:45 PM PST by PsyOp (Truth in itself is rarely sufficient to make men act. - Clauswitz, On War, 1832.)
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To: Mr. Lucky
They are both delivered by truck to the stations, however ethanol is much more corrosive than gasoline. That prevents using pipelines to transport the fuel from where it is produced to distribution points where it is put in tankers. It also means the tankers must be more corrosion resistant.

Basically you need to produce the ethanol close to where you will sell it, or your transportation costs rise quickly.

42 posted on 12/13/2007 1:37:12 PM PST by untrained skeptic
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To: MNJohnnie
To solve this problem you need leadership with a broad vision, not one fixated on appeasing this or that special interest group.

That's why I wrote to let the NAS hash it out in comment# 1. Demand from China and India is not going away. No one is doing any favors for the U.S. We need energy independence.

43 posted on 12/13/2007 1:41:11 PM PST by neverdem (Call talk radio. We need a Constitutional Amendment for Congressional term limits. Let's Roll!)
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To: topher

Alcohol is much more expensive than gasoline,

Take away the tax on alcohol and, you will find it to be much cheaper then gas. :-)


44 posted on 12/13/2007 1:46:28 PM PST by buck61
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To: topher

” The effect of going to alcohol would be to rise the price of food everywhere in the world. “

Not just. The real effect will be widespread famine, and it will be called Bush’s fault.


45 posted on 12/13/2007 1:57:17 PM PST by Humble Servant (Keep it simple - do what's right.)
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To: untrained skeptic
Well, yeah, but the pipeline thing is sort of a canard because alcohol is produced near where it is consumed. Were the US to import a substantial majority of its ethanol, as it does with petroleum, pipelines would present a logical mode of transportation, but being homegrown, the points of production are comparatively spread out and near the points of consumption, particularly here in the Midwest.
46 posted on 12/13/2007 2:01:29 PM PST by Mr. Lucky
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To: neverdem

And of course everyone on the thread goes immediately to the usual knee-jerk attacks on ethanol. I noticed that only one person on the entire thread bothered to mention methanol.

Apparently there is nothing to whine about with methanol. so I take that as an endorsement.


47 posted on 12/13/2007 2:07:32 PM PST by denydenydeny (Expel the priest and you don't inaugurate the age of reason, you get the witch doctor--Paul Johnson)
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To: Mr. Lucky
Were the US to import a substantial majority of its ethanol, as it does with petroleum, pipelines would present a logical mode of transportation, but being homegrown, the points of production are comparatively spread out and near the points of consumption, particularly here in the Midwest.

That works ok in the Midwest, especially where fresh water is plentiful.

It doesn't work so well out West or in population centers that are already stretching the supply of fresh water, which does include parts of the Midwest.

You can't grow crops efficiently without irrigation in much of the country, and producing ethanol on a large scale is going to require a lot of crops.

Transporting fuel across a state by truck isn't too bad. Transporting it across the country is a completely different story. If you want to deliver a significant portion of our nations fuel needs from places where crops can be grown, to where it is needed by truck, you'd better start expanding the capacity of our interstate highway system, because that will take time.

So will building pipelines, but at least they are vastly more efficient, and less expensive.

48 posted on 12/13/2007 2:10:04 PM PST by untrained skeptic
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To: untrained skeptic
The vast majority of field corn grown in the US in not irrigated. Corn based fuel ethanol is not the silver bullet. It is one of several viable sources of transportation fuel which can be produced without the necessity of funding islamo-terrorist regimes.
49 posted on 12/13/2007 2:30:44 PM PST by Mr. Lucky
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To: untrained skeptic; Mr. Lucky

You have to make 100% ethanol first, which can’t be done with simple distillation, and then blend it with gasoline at the refinery. From there you haul it by truck to a gas station.


50 posted on 12/13/2007 3:26:10 PM PST by neverdem (Call talk radio. We need a Constitutional Amendment for Congressional term limits. Let's Roll!)
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To: sand88; neverdem
Right, is this after a big taxpayer subsidy. . .

The direct subsidy and tariff (to protect us from low cost sugarcane derived ethanol from Brazil) is just over a dollar per gallon.

The whole ethanol boondoggle is nothing more than payola to farm interests and their congress-critters. We sit on literal mountains of coal and pools of oil off our shores, as our government deliberately drives up food costs by burning it.

Domestic ethanol, while not in our national interest is in the political interest of some. It is another example of narrow political interests that work directly against our national interest.

51 posted on 12/13/2007 3:51:26 PM PST by Jacquerie (Government Schools - Madrassas of the Left.)
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To: Mr. Lucky

Ethanol is heavily subsidized and gets lower mileage. Ethanol also requires plenty of fossil fuel in its production.

Mandates will lead to boondoggles. With the high price of oil and gasoline, we do not need any mandates or subsidies. If alcohol based fueld becomes viable, people will demand it and the market will produce it along with vehicles that use it.


52 posted on 12/13/2007 3:54:04 PM PST by businessprofessor
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To: <1/1,000,000th%

I agree. Instead of forcing Detroit to lower gas mileage Congress should be mandating nuclear plants. If states don’t want them they can be built on government land.


53 posted on 12/13/2007 4:05:58 PM PST by Brad from Tennessee ("A politician can't give you anything he hasn't first stolen from you.")
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To: businessprofessor

Ethanol also requires plenty of fossil fuel in its production.
********************************************
While this thread is moving along rationally I’d like to point out a pet peave of mine ,,, Fossil Fuels? That would be COAL ,,, when we are talking about oil/gasoline/natural gas we are talking about methane/heptane etc. etc. that gravity pulled into this planet from space and formed various compounds based on heat and pressure.. The universe contains methane clouds so vast we could never hope to measure... When I hear people refer to “synthetic” oils and “Dino” oils it drives me nutz!


54 posted on 12/13/2007 4:07:33 PM PST by Neidermeyer
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To: Neidermeyer

Right. Titan has oceans of oil stuff and there were never dinosaurs there. Jupiter is mostly methane, which is natural gas and there was never ocean alga there.
On another note: Zubrin is also correct about the 1967 UN Outer Space Treaty, which he mentioned in the same interview on Coast.


55 posted on 12/13/2007 4:13:52 PM PST by RightWhale (anti-razors are pro-life)
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To: Neidermeyer
While this thread is moving along rationally I’d like to point out a pet peave of mine ,,, Fossil Fuels? That would be COAL ,,, when we are talking about oil/gasoline/natural gas we are talking about methane/heptane etc. etc. that gravity pulled into this planet from space and formed various compounds based on heat and pressure.. The universe contains methane clouds so vast we could never hope to measure... When I hear people refer to “synthetic” oils and “Dino” oils it drives me nutz!

Oil-eating bacteria make light work of heavy fuel

There's more than one way to skin a cat.

56 posted on 12/13/2007 4:39:59 PM PST by neverdem (Call talk radio. We need a Constitutional Amendment for Congressional term limits. Let's Roll!)
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To: Mr. Lucky
The vast majority of field corn grown in the US in not irrigated.

But how much more farmland is there to grow corn on without it effecting other crops as well as our supply of corn for food and feed?

We aren't talking about needing a small increase in the amount of corn, and producing ethanol from corn is not very efficient.

The location of where that corn can be grown without irrigation also brings us back to the issue of delivering it to market. The country's main population centers aren't in the Midwest.

57 posted on 12/13/2007 8:41:34 PM PST by untrained skeptic
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To: untrained skeptic
The historic increase in corn production has come from yield improvement not the expansion of tillable acres.

There is far less land in the US under cultivation today than 100 years ago and that trend will continue indefinitely. The average corn yield in the US in 1970 was 70 bushels per acre; this year it was over 150 and in my part of the mid-west yields of over 200 bushels per acre are common.

58 posted on 12/14/2007 7:27:45 AM PST by Mr. Lucky
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To: neverdem

Well, these discussions are driving me to drink.....

Using food for fuel is NOT an energy solution!

Try moving electrical production to NUCLEAR!

Move fuel cell production along at a meaningful pace, for transportation.

Open up ANWR and oil shale production, to fill the gap.


59 posted on 12/14/2007 7:34:01 AM PST by G Larry (HILLARY CARE = DYING IN LINE!)
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To: businessprofessor
OK, but domestic oil production is also heavily subsidized. You'll recall that the ethanol "subsidies" are not paid to the ethanol producers, but are given in the form of tax credits to oil companies, and oil companies have been forgiven the payment of royalties for drilling in public waters.

All subsidies distort the marketplace.

60 posted on 12/14/2007 7:38:00 AM PST by Mr. Lucky
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