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Tripling America’s Fuel Production - Most alternatives to oil are pipe dreams. This one is not.
NATIONAL REVIEW ONLINE | July 27, 2011 | Robert Zubrin

Posted on 08/01/2011 2:23:33 PM PDT by neverdem

Tripling America's Fuel Production
Most alternatives to oil are pipe dreams. This one is not.

The United States currently produces 8 percent of the world’s liquid fuel but uses 25 percent, making up the difference by importing 5 billion barrels of oil annually. With prices currently near $100 per barrel, this dependency will cost us $500 billion this year, an amount equal to the nation’s entire trade deficit. Furthermore, at a time when Congress is seeking to keep taxes light in order to boost job creation, our dependency will impose a tax on our economy equal to 20 percent of what Americans pay the IRS. Except, of course, that these revenues will go to the treasuries of foreign governments instead of our own.

During the 1940s, the United States produced 60 percent of the world’s liquid fuel. This advantage proved to be a major factor in securing the Allied victory in World War II. Had we been as weak in energy security then as we are today, we might well have lost the war, as enemy submarines could have collapsed our economy, and with it our war effort, simply by cutting off our oil supply.

If we are to break free of the crushing economic burden and national-security threat that oil dependency imposes, we need to triple our liquid-fuel production. There is no realistic way that this can be done through expanding domestic drilling for oil, multiplying the yield of corn ethanol (which now accounts for 20 percent of domestic liquid-fuel production), or a combination of the two. Rather, we need a new source of liquid fuel, one that can be produced easily and economically, from resources available to us, and on the vast scale required to address the deficiency.

Fortunately, such a fuel is available. It is methanol, also known as wood alcohol. In contrast to algae oils and cellulosic ethanol, methanol is not a futuristic pipe dream touted by researchers seeking funding. Rather, it is one of the world’s top five chemical commodities, with an operating global annual production capacity of 27 billion gallons, and a current spot price, without any subsidies, of $1.28 per gallon. While methanol contains only about half the energy per gallon of gasoline, its excellent octane rating of 105 allows it to be burned more efficiently, making $1.28-per-gallon methanol equivalent to $2-per-gallon gasoline. All in all, a very competitive price.

The resources available to support expanded methanol production are vast. In contrast to gasoline — which can be made economically only from petroleum — or ethanol — whose mass production requires the use of sugars or starches — methanol can readily be made from any carbon-containing material. To list a few of methanol’s potential sources: oil, natural gas, coal, urban garbage, or any kind of biomass without exception.

The United States possesses around 4 billion metric tons (29.5 billion barrels) of proven oil reserves. This would barely be enough to support a fully fuel-independent America for four years. In contrast, our proven coal reserves exceed 270 billion tons, and our natural-gas reserves may be nearly as great. North America currently produces about 40 billion metric tons per year of biomass, of which 2 billion tons are harvested as farm and forestry products and 1 billion tons discarded as agricultural and forestry waste. We also discard approximately a quarter-billion tons per year of carbonaceous urban trash. Thus, taken together, our resources for methanol production not only are up to fully replacing our current oil imports, but are up to supporting the growing demands of an expanding economy for decades or centuries to come.

Methanol burns cleaner than gasoline, causing much less particulate pollution. It is also safer — it is much less likely to catch fire in the event of a crash, and its fumes contain none of gasoline’s rich mixture of carcinogens. While, unlike ethanol, methanol is not edible, it is not especially toxic. In fact, windshield-wiper fluid is one-third methanol, and, because it is readily biodegradable, it has been handled by the public and released onto roads worldwide in vast quantities for decades without any impact on public health or the environment.

If we could convert our auto fleet to run on methanol, the $500 billion per year we are now paying foreign potentates for oil could go instead to American businesses and workers to produce our fuel right here at home. On average, it takes $100,000 of GDP to create one job. At that rate, the $500 billion spent here instead of abroad would create 5 million American jobs directly, and millions more indirectly from the construction, retail, and service industries that would be supported by the methanol workers’ paychecks. This would help address our critical national and state deficits as well, as millions of people would go from the unemployment rolls to the tax rolls.

But can we readily open our vehicle-fuel market to methanol? The simple answer is yes, and quickly. The large majority of cars sold in the U.S. today (and for at least the last five years), including all GM and Ford vehicles, have been equipped with computers and chromated fuel lines that make them potentially capable of flex-fuel operation. If provided with the right software, and with methanol-impervious Buna-N rubber seals (costing less than 50 cents per vehicle) for their fuel system, every new car sold in the U.S. could be fully flex-fuel, capable of running equally well on methanol, ethanol, or gasoline.

There is currently a bill before Congress — the Open Fuel Standard bill (HR-1687), co-sponsored by a bipartisan group including Reps. John Shimkus (R., Ill.) and Eliot Engel (D., N.Y.) — that would require flex-fuel capability of the majority of new cars sold in America. If the bill passes, a market for methanol would be created that would very quickly call into being expanded production and distribution facilities, both in the U.S. and elsewhere. This would force gasoline into competition with methanol at the pump worldwide, thereby putting in place a permanent global competitive constraint on the price of oil. Thus owners of older cars, which are incapable of methanol operation, would also benefit, since their gasoline would be cheaper. And once methanol pumps become widely available, many drivers would see the benefit of spending a few hundred dollars to have their seals replaced and cars reprogrammed to obtain fuel choice. The switch to a predominantly methanol-fueled vehicle fleet could thus take place very rapidly.

The Open Fuel Standard bill would unchain the Invisible Hand, creating a true free market in vehicle fuels. Those reluctant to embrace it need to answer the following question: In whose interest is it that Americans should continue to be denied fuel choice?

We can break our fatal dependence on foreign oil, but Congress needs to act.

— Robert Zubrin is the president of Pioneer Astronautics, a fellow with the Center for Security Policy, and the author of Energy Victory: Winning the War on Terror by Breaking Free of Oil.



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: alternativeenergy; energy; methanol
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To: HiTech RedNeck
Wouldn’t methane make more sense than methanol?

Maybe, if you don't mind a huge compressed gas tank taking up your trunk. I like this idea because methanol will oxygenate yourr gasoline, it's not subsidized, increases the ooctane rating, it's fairly cheap and it's fairly energy dense.

41 posted on 08/01/2011 5:30:36 PM PDT by neverdem (Xin loi minh oi)
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42 posted on 08/01/2011 6:28:09 PM PDT by neverdem (Xin loi minh oi)
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To: neverdem

Something not being considered is that alternate vehicle fuels like methanol needn’t be used nationwide. The Eastern Seaboard, for instance, contains one third of the US population and ample amounts of coal and natural gas. Methanol fuel could be produced and consumed in many places along the Eastern Seaboard and that consumption could greatly reduce the national consumption of gasoline and diesel fuels.


43 posted on 08/01/2011 7:25:17 PM PDT by decimon
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To: neverdem

And it’s a water soluble poison. Fumes are more irritating to eyes than those of conventional gasoline. Gasoline spills want to stay above water and eventually evaporate.

But anyhow I think the biggest problem with algae-ols is their copious thirst for fresh water. This harvest of biomass carbon isn’t a dry process. If an algae could be engineered that would be happy drinking sea water, that could change the picture. I hope it wouldn’t get loose and cover the oceans however.


44 posted on 08/01/2011 9:58:01 PM PDT by HiTech RedNeck (There's gonna be a Redneck Revolution! (See my freep page))
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Comment #45 Removed by Moderator

To: HiTech RedNeck

Nothing is perfect. If we want cheap energy to get out of this economy, lets go for anything that works. We can’t used subsidized stuff.

The Great Depression was caused by bad debt too. All the banks have to write off their bad loans. Propping up housing prices from the bubble is dumb. But everyone can use cheap energy from one of the world’s top five chemical commodities. It’s not the only idea, but it shouuld help.


46 posted on 08/01/2011 11:40:53 PM PDT by neverdem (Xin loi minh oi)
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To: neverdem

I fear it won’t be cheap to gobble up great volumes of fresh water in fermentation farms. The question isn’t one of perfection but of practicality.

In the meantime, the US is turning into the Middle East of natural gas. It’s actually being exported, there is so much. Known reserves are now around a century.


47 posted on 08/02/2011 12:38:12 AM PDT by HiTech RedNeck (There's gonna be a Redneck Revolution! (See my freep page))
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To: neverdem

“The United States possesses around 4 billion metric tons (29.5 billion barrels) of proven oil reserves. This would barely be enough to support a fully fuel-independent America for four years.”

That’s a god damned lie!!!!

The US has hundreds of years of oil reserves just in California not counting Alaska and the Rockie mountain states!

According to Union Oil, they alone have 400 years of US supply in California.


48 posted on 08/02/2011 1:00:36 AM PDT by dalereed
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To: neverdem
Methanol/ethanol is crap fuel, kill it completely!!!
49 posted on 08/02/2011 1:03:27 AM PDT by dalereed
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To: Orbiting_Rosie's_Head

I’ve read that the only major stumbling block with algae is figuring out how to harvest it. That the algae is really good at fouling any equipment designed to suction it from whatever liquid medium it’s in.


50 posted on 08/02/2011 2:58:16 AM PDT by gogogodzilla (Live free or die!)
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To: neverdem

No insult to you but this to is BS !

Drill for oil here ! Refine the oil here and shoot the EPA in the ass there.

We have to be secure in our energy sources an policies as we develop new sources of energy. We’re exploring new sources without having a secure domestic source in hand first.

All for development of better an cheaper but you can’t kill the milk cow off before you try to learn to milk a rock for a same product....

EPA has to go....fire em all sn offer em jobs in oil industry or thorium based nuclear power plants.

My opinion...


51 posted on 08/02/2011 6:02:15 AM PDT by Squantos (Be polite. Be professional. But have a plan to kill everyone you meet)
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To: neverdem
During the 1940s, the United States produced 60 percent of the world’s liquid fuel. This advantage proved to be a major factor in securing the Allied victory in World War II. Had we been as weak in energy security then as we are today, we might well have lost the war,..

"Might have lost?"
'Heck' we would have been Japan or Germany.

That's why Japan attacked us. FDR set up a Blockade so Japan couldn't get at OIL and other mineral sources it needed to survive. FDR knew what he was doing and knew War would result. So Pearl Harbor was no shock.(1)

Not to mention that lack of OIL was also the reason Hitler lost. He needed the oil fields in Romania and the Refineries at Ploiesti. And was a reason for the Nazi's last gasp effort called The Battle of The Bulge. To continue fighting, Hitler needed to get at our Oil-Gas depots. But as we know, 'luck' broke our way, the SS had to retreat and literally ran out of gas on the way back.(2)

(1) FDR may as well have spit on Superman's Cape or thrown sand on the 'Bully at the beach'. (old ref)
(2) That part was when some of the fiercest fighting in 'The Battle of The Bulge' occurred. Patton's 3rd Army took very heavy casualties then. Most by his 'best' men - the 4th Armored Division (aka: 'Name Enough'). Who were also the first into Bastogne to relieve the 101st Airborne.

52 posted on 08/02/2011 6:17:41 AM PDT by Condor51 (The difference between stupidity and genius is that genius has its limits [A.Einstein])
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To: neverdem
To list a few of methanol's potential sources: oil, natural gas, coal, urban garbage, or any kind of biomass without exception.

Is he talking about those flash mobs? Who knew they were good for something?

53 posted on 08/02/2011 6:24:12 AM PDT by tnlibertarian (Don't mend SS, end it.)
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To: dalereed
Methanol/ethanol is crap fuel, kill it completely!!!

Why don't you read? Gasoline must be oxygenated to reduce pollution. Methanol is not subsidized. Ethanol is subsidized.

Get a president and 60 votes in the Senate plus a majority in the House who agrees with drilling for oil, then you can stop ranting.

Other than that, the economy still needs cheap, unsubsidized energy of all kinds.

54 posted on 08/02/2011 12:07:28 PM PDT by neverdem (Xin loi minh oi)
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Comment #55 Removed by Moderator


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