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Cruz enlightened, forward-thinking on ethanol
Carroll Iowa Daily Times Herald ^
| 12/24/2015
| Dave VanderGriend
Posted on 12/30/2015 5:05:11 PM PST by iowamark
The recent editorial by Douglas Burns on the Texas connection between Ted Cruz and Congressman Steve King missed the mark on several important points as it relates to ethanol.
Senator Cruzâ opposition to the Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS) is, as the author points out, based on âideological rigidity, an unbudging conservatism and refusal to break from his own established boundaries of where the government should and shouldnât go.â Does that make him anti-ethanol? I suppose if the RFS was the sole measuring stick, then perhaps.
But a fundamental misunderstanding regarding Cruz is the accusation that he completely dismisses ethanol and has not taken the time to understand it. Mr. Burns states the senator wonât even meet with industry leaders. As an Iowa native directly involved in the industry and having built many of the plants in Iowa, I have had numerous personal meetings with Senator Cruz in an effort to get him to support ethanol. From those meetings a different picture emerges, and it is not the anti-ethanol demon he has been cast as.
Anti-RFS? Yes.
Anti-ethanol? Not at all.
Anyone who thinks the two are inseparable may not be seeing the big picture for ethanol, or understand what is really going to determine our fate.
In fact, I have had numerous positive discussions with the senator helping him to see that the real challenge for ethanol is getting access to the consumer through a fair and open market.
The RFS began that process to some degree, but the true obstacles lie within the Environmental Protection Agency and the regulatory roadblocks they have put before us. Mr. Burnsâ observation that Senator Cruz has a vision of what the government should and shouldnât do is accurate, but at the same time Senator Cruz has agreed that the government shouldnât limit our access to the market through unfair and arbitrary regulations. Similarly, he opposes oil subsidies and is pushing for their elimination.
Eliminating unreasonable and unfair caps on the blend rate. Removing government restrictions that artificially limit market demand for E15 and E30 blends. Ending Catch-22 regulations that nonsensically prevent mid-level blends from serving as test fuels. These are all ideas Cruz has indicated a willingness to work with us on.
The fact of the matter is that the RFS is not going to drive demand from here on.
We are at 96 percent of the allowable volume for corn ethanol under the RFS, and we simply must create new values and pathways.
All we want to do is be able to compete in a free market and allow the consumer to choose the fuels they would like.
The RFS from here on does nothing to ensure that.
Eliminating the regulations that are holding us back opens a market three times bigger than the RFS, and I submit that Senator Cruz just may be the most enlightened, forward-thinking ally ethanol has.
TOPICS: Business/Economy; Canada; Editorial; Politics/Elections; US: Iowa; US: Texas
KEYWORDS: 2016election; canada; canadian; cruz; election2016; ethanol; ineligible; iowa; rfs; rfsra; steveking; tedcruz; texas
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The author is CEO of a company in the ethanol business.
Dave VanderGriend is CEO of Colwith, Kansas-based ICM Inc., which provides innovative technologies, solutions and services to sustain agriculture and advance renewable energy, including food and feed technologies that will increase the supply of world protein. By providing proprietary process technology to 102 facilities with a combined production capacity of approximately 6.8 billion gallons of annual ethanol production, ICM has become a world leader in biorefining technology.
1
posted on
12/30/2015 5:05:11 PM PST
by
iowamark
To: iowamark
The free market economy benefits all. A statist economy hurts almost all. Ted Cruz is the only major candidate supporting a free market economy.
2
posted on
12/30/2015 5:07:51 PM PST
by
iowamark
(I must study politics and war that my sons may have liberty to study mathematics and philosophy)
To: iowamark
Eliminating the regulations that are holding us back opens a market three times bigger than the RFS, and I submit that Senator Cruz just may be the most enlightened, forward-thinking ally ethanol has.
That's what happens when you look at the big picture.
3
posted on
12/30/2015 5:10:36 PM PST
by
cripplecreek
(Pride goes before destruction, and a haughty spirit before a fall.)
To: iowamark
True. Ethanol should have to compete on the free market. Sink or swim. IMO, corn is for food, not energy.
4
posted on
12/30/2015 5:11:06 PM PST
by
mtrott
To: iowamark
He has a long row to hoe. Mr. Lincoln’s legacy lives long..!
To: iowamark
So he supports ethanol and he doesn’t. Graaaaaate.....
6
posted on
12/30/2015 5:13:59 PM PST
by
The Iceman Cometh
(Proud Teabagging Barbarian Terrorist Hobbit Crazy Cracker Son-of-a-Bitch!)
To: The Iceman Cometh
Ted Cruz moonwalk soon to follow . . .
7
posted on
12/30/2015 5:16:34 PM PST
by
Rashputin
(Jesus Christ doesn't evacuate His troops, He leads them to victory.)
To: mtrott
I think that’s the way most of us feel about these things. If they can make a successful go of it without taxpayer support, more power to em.
8
posted on
12/30/2015 5:17:54 PM PST
by
cripplecreek
(Pride goes before destruction, and a haughty spirit before a fall.)
To: iowamark
Using:
Replace smart quotes with regular straight quotes
The recent editorial by Douglas Burns on the Texas connection between Ted Cruz and Congressman Steve King missed the mark on several important points as it relates to ethanol.
Senator Cruz' opposition to the Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS) is, as the author points out, based on "ideological rigidity, an unbudging conservatism and refusal to break from his own established boundaries of where the government should and shouldn't go." Does that make him anti-ethanol? I suppose if the RFS was the sole measuring stick, then perhaps.
But a fundamental misunderstanding regarding Cruz is the accusation that he completely dismisses ethanol and has not taken the time to understand it. Mr. Burns states the senator won't even meet with industry leaders. As an Iowa native directly involved in the industry and having built many of the plants in Iowa, I have had numerous personal meetings with Senator Cruz in an effort to get him to support ethanol. From those meetings a different picture emerges, and it is not the anti-ethanol demon he has been cast as.
Anti-RFS? Yes.
Anti-ethanol? Not at all.
Anyone who thinks the two are inseparable may not be seeing the big picture for ethanol, or understand what is really going to determine our fate.
In fact, I have had numerous positive discussions with the senator helping him to see that the real challenge for ethanol is getting access to the consumer through a fair and open market.
The RFS began that process to some degree, but the true obstacles lie within the Environmental Protection Agency and the regulatory roadblocks they have put before us. Mr. Burns' observation that Senator Cruz has a vision of what the government should and shouldn't do is accurate, but at the same time Senator Cruz has agreed that the government shouldn't limit our access to the market through unfair and arbitrary regulations. Similarly, he opposes oil subsidies and is pushing for their elimination.
Eliminating unreasonable and unfair caps on the blend rate. Removing government restrictions that artificially limit market demand for E15 and E30 blends. Ending Catch-22 regulations that nonsensically prevent mid-level blends from serving as test fuels. These are all ideas Cruz has indicated a willingness to work with us on.
The fact of the matter is that the RFS is not going to drive demand from here on.
We are at 96 percent of the allowable volume for corn ethanol under the RFS, and we simply must create new values and pathways.
All we want to do is be able to compete in a free market and allow the consumer to choose the fuels they would like.
The RFS from here on does nothing to ensure that.
Eliminating the regulations that are holding us back opens a market three times bigger than the RFS, and I submit that Senator Cruz just may be the most enlightened, forward-thinking ally ethanol has.
9
posted on
12/30/2015 5:19:04 PM PST
by
Ragnar54
(Obama replaced Osama as America's worst enemy and Al Qaeda's financier)
To: cripplecreek
Absolutely. Let the market decide.
10
posted on
12/30/2015 5:19:19 PM PST
by
TADSLOS
(A Ted Cruz Happy Warrior! GO TED!)
To: The Iceman Cometh; Rashputin
So what’s wrong with his stance?
This should be very interesting.
11
posted on
12/30/2015 5:20:38 PM PST
by
cripplecreek
(Pride goes before destruction, and a haughty spirit before a fall.)
To: cripplecreek
Geez. Great question for the obtuse among us. I’ve seen more depth from potholes.
12
posted on
12/30/2015 5:22:35 PM PST
by
gov_bean_ counter
(Trump to McCain - "Pass the strawberries".)
To: TADSLOS
As long as I don’t have to burn it in my mower or pay for it, I don’t care what they do.
They can grow corn and dump it down a mineshaft for all I care as long as it doesn’t impact me.
13
posted on
12/30/2015 5:24:57 PM PST
by
cripplecreek
(Pride goes before destruction, and a haughty spirit before a fall.)
To: cripplecreek
So whatâs wrong with his stance?Does he have one?
14
posted on
12/30/2015 5:25:30 PM PST
by
The Iceman Cometh
(Proud Teabagging Barbarian Terrorist Hobbit Crazy Cracker Son-of-a-Bitch!)
To: mtrott
ethanol can now be made from corn cobs.
it took a while.
but in the fight
against OPEC, al-Queda and al-Exxon,
you have to start somewhere.
15
posted on
12/30/2015 5:26:12 PM PST
by
RockyTx
To: The Iceman Cometh
His stance is exactly the opposite of Donald Trump’s.
Ted Cruz opposes the renewable fuel standards and opposes ethanol subsidies.
So enlighten us, what is wrong with his stance?
16
posted on
12/30/2015 5:27:33 PM PST
by
cripplecreek
(Pride goes before destruction, and a haughty spirit before a fall.)
To: cripplecreek
Easy money never is. Someone pays the freight. Time to de-rail the ethanol party train that runs on taxpayer steam.
17
posted on
12/30/2015 5:29:14 PM PST
by
TADSLOS
(A Ted Cruz Happy Warrior! GO TED!)
To: iowamark
All that corn... I bet the hillbillies could teach them how to make a buck... What’s a quart of good shine worth nowadays?
18
posted on
12/30/2015 5:30:19 PM PST
by
roamer_1
(Globalism is just Socialism in a business suit.)
To: iowamark
Ethanol bad, butanol good.
19
posted on
12/30/2015 5:31:11 PM PST
by
taxcontrol
( The GOPe treats the conservative base like slaves by taking their votes and refuses to pay)
To: cripplecreek
20
posted on
12/30/2015 5:31:44 PM PST
by
cripplecreek
(Pride goes before destruction, and a haughty spirit before a fall.)
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