Thomas Friedmans 9/20/06 column in the New York Times on taxing ethanol imports highlights the political and structural obstacles to common sense.
Friedman writes:
Thanks to pressure from Midwest farmers and agribusinesses, who want to protect the U.S. corn ethanol industry from competition from Brazilian sugar ethanol, we have imposed a stiff tariff to keep it out. We do this even though Brazilian sugar ethanol provides eight times the energy of the fossil fuel used to make it, while American corn ethanol provides only 1.3 times the energy of the fossil fuel used to make it. We do this even though sugar ethanol reduces greenhouses gases more than corn ethanol. And we do this even though sugar cane ethanol can easily be grown in poor tropical countries in Africa or the Caribbean, and could actually help alleviate their poverty. Yes, you read all this right. We tax imported sugar ethanol, which could finance our poor friends, but we dont tax imported crude oil, which definitely finances our rich enemies. Wed rather power anti-Americans with our energy purchases than promote antipoverty.
Editor comments: Who gets Fat? Who Gets Fuel?
We can all win Bio-Diesel gives everyone involved a real chance.
- 20-30% more energy than any "alternative"
- 10-20% reduction in emissions
- Can survive without subsides
End the politics, scare tactics, government subsides... Bio-Diesel.