Posted on 01/21/2016 2:17:48 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
One of the most destructive environmental subsidies in the United States has found an enthusiastic supporter in Donald Trump.
"The EPA should ensure that biofuel ... blend levels match the statutory level set by Congress," he said yesterday in Iowa, adding that he was "there with you 100 percent" on continuing federal support for ethanol. "You're going to get a really fair shake from me."
The ethanol lobby has rigorously courted Trump since April, arranging to speak at least weekly, including at least three in-person meetings, in addition to an ethanol-plant tour, the Wall Street Journal reports.
Trump's support for ethanol may win him votes in Iowa, but federal support for ethanol is a bum deal for Americans.
Under the 2007 Independence and Security Act, Congress mandated that the United States use 36 billion gallons of biofuels, including corn ethanol and cellulosic biofuel, by 2022.
And the federal government not only requires the use of ethanol; it also subsides it. Tax credits between 1978 and 2012 cost the Treasury as much as $40 billion. Moreover, numerous other federal programs, spanning multiple agencies, allot billions of dollars to ethanol in the form of grants, loan guarantees, tax credits, and other subsidies.
Taxpayers suffer in other ways, too. Vehicles can drive fewer miles per gallon using ethanol blends than they would with pure gasoline. So Americans end up spending an extra $10 billion per year for fuel, the Institute for Energy Research estimates.
Ethanol also guzzles 40 percent of the U.S. corn crop, and the resulting scarcity drives up the price of food. This year alone, the Congressional Budget Office estimated, American consumers will spend $3.5 billion more on groceries because of the ethanol mandate.
Rising prices of corn feed have even put some small feedlots and ranches out of business. And as grocery prices increase, so does federal spending on programs like the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program.
In a further hallmark of terrible policy, it's probably not even possible for Americans to meet the ambitious ethanol goals Congress and the bureaucrats at the EPA have envisioned.
Ethanol-intensive fuel blends can wreak havoc on car, lawnmower, and boat engines. In fact, many vehicle manufacturers will no longer offer warranties when ethanol comprises 10 percent or more of fuel; engine erosion simply becomes too common.
So, we can't really increase the total amount of ethanol mixed into our gasoline much more, but - especially as vehicles become more fuel efficient - Americans aren't consuming enough gasoline to meet the Renewable Fuel Standards with a 10 percent ethanol blend. The EPA acknowledged this inconvenient mismatch last spring, setting three-year ethanol-use requirements at 3.75 billion gallons below the legal minimums.
Ethanol's green benefit is also far from certain, explaining why even many within the environmentalist Left question - or outright oppose - the federal government's support.
It takes about 29 percent more energy to refine a gallon of ethanol than gasoline, and that process is often fueled by dirty sources like coal. Factor in the emissions generated during this production process, and ethanol sometimes comes in less green than old-fashioned gasoline. On top of that, burning ethanol also emits higher quantities of the chemical compounds that produce smog.
Then again, perhaps it's not surprising that Trump likes federal support of ethanol. After all, the real-estate mogul's business model has historically hinged on using tax abatements and other subsidies to make his building projects profitable.
(An example: As we reported in August, Trump Tower - which features a Gucci store Trump claimed was "worth more money than Romney" - has received a $163.775 million tax break from the city of New York.)
Many of Trump's constituents have rejected the so-called Republican establishment because of its corrupt preferential treatment for Wall Street and Big Business. But Trump's support for ethanol belies his populist Main Street rhetoric. In reality, he's just another rich, East Coast politician who would prop up special interests at the expense of the taxpayer.
-Jillian Kay Melchior writes for National Review as a Thomas L. Rhodes Fellow for the Franklin Center. She is also a senior fellow at the Independent Women's Forum and the Tony Blankley Fellow at the Steamboat Institute.
Not for cars in California.
And yes people like you are forcing me.
This might not be a left wing forum, but yours is surely a left-wing post. Millions and millions of small businesses in all kinds of fields out there don’t receive tax breaks. And very few industries receive outright tax subsidies, governmental price fixing, and the like.
Farmers should keep the money they earn in the free market—other than the taxes that they, like all Americans, have to pay.
Being against government subsidies and price supports is in no imaginable way a an attack against private enterprise.
For those who want to put ethanol in their gas tanks: knock yourselves (and your engines) out. Just donât force the rest of us to do so, and to pay for the âbenefitâ.””
No one is forcing you. Prove me wrong. Cars last far longer and get better MPG then ever. Why are you making up facts. This is not move on.org
I was simply saying that I don’t think you’ll find my ox gets gored by cutting federal spending... Cut baby cut...
No reason to take God’s name in vain, no matter the cause.
Government subsidies pick winner’s and losers. The government has no business doing that.
My local Kroger has milk for $2.19/gal, peanut butter for $1.50/lb, chicken at $.87/lb, 6 poacks of 16.9 oz pepsi and coke products for $2.00, ham for $1.79, and typically has beef roasts for around $2.60 /lb if you buy one and get one free; a loaf of kroger bread is like $.89. good multigrain bread is %$2.00/loaf. I could go on. I am not seeing any kind of food inflation in Toledo, Ohio.
What does the latest electronic gadget cost now? Which is of more value? What was milk when you were a kid? What does govern,net cost now?
“Prices need to be supported?” What is a Soviet economist like you doing at FR?
And lower gas prices help the economy far more than they hurt it.
Wow. Look at allthe newly minted socialists on this thread.
on FreeRepublic no less
unfrigginbelievable.
Most reasonable Americans want US agriculture to be a winner.
Here we go, again. The subsidy one receives is based on acreage. The perversion is that it forces small farmers out of business.
-— Wow. Look at allthe newly minted socialists on this thread.
on FreeRepublic no less
unfrigginbelievable. -—
Trump will get the trains running on time. Yes, it is unbelievable.
Brave new world, comrade.
You could have fooled me.
Have you been watching the stock market? This is but one of the many wonders of inflation.
If Trump would say... we need to punish the rich, and just spread the wealth around.
The Trump fans would say, hey that’s a great idea, poor people are struggling too much and life just isn’t fair.
Have you been watching the stock market? This is but one of the many wonders of deflation.
So millions of barrels from the Middle East enemies is very little. We built their industry and we buy this oil.
Second, who is forcing you to buy ethanol. Do you drink it too?
You are currently paying less per gallon than at anytime in history in terms of real dollars. What is cheap? Should you have gas for free, maybe food too?
Ever heard of a thing called technology?
It changes. Engines get better. Does ethanol make your computer last longer?
here’s a list of gas stations in California that don’t have ethanol, a state with more than 30 million people:
http://pure-gas.org/index.jsp?stateprov=CA
And yes people like you are forcing me.”
Just curious, what was you driving for a car in 1967?
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