LET PEOPLE STARVE TO SUPPORT OBAMA’S GREEN AGENDA

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Posted on 11th February 2013 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

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We are currently in the midst of the worst drought in 70 years and we turn 39% of our corn into a fuel that reduces mileage, hurts engines and has a negative EROEI. This is all done in the name of green energy solutions. The world depends on the U.S. corn crop to keep from starving. The price of ethanol is up 13% YTD. As this drought continues and/or worsens in the coming year, the result will be peasants starving to death in the Middle East, Africa, and Asia. That is a fact. As food prices rise, poor peasants cannot afford to eat. The Arab Spring occurred when food prices spiked. Revolution and death will be the result of these ridiculous green Federal Obama mandates. Obama will blather on tomorrow night about green energy and the ignorant masses will nod their heads in agreement. We’re doomed with the idiocracy engulfing this country.

 

Corn shortage idles 20 ethanol plants

Fuel is plentiful, but long drought could cut supply

By Jim Salter

 |  Associated Press    February 11, 2013

ST. LOUIS — The persistent drought is taking a toll on producers of ethanol, with corn becoming so scarce that 20 ethanol plants have halted production.

The Renewable Fuels Association, a trade group, provided data showing that of the nation’s 211 ethanol plants, 20 have ceased production over the past year, including five in January. Most remain open, with workers performing maintenance-type tasks. But ethanol production probably won’t resume until after 2013 corn is harvested in late August or September.

Industry experts don’t expect a shortage — millions of barrels are stockpiled and the remaining 191 plants are still producing. Still, there is growing concern about what happens if the drought lingers through another corn-growing season.

America’s ethanol industry has taken off in the past decade. Plants in 28 states produce more than 13 billion gallons of ethanol each year, said Geoff Cooper, vice president for research at the association. By comparison, in 2002, the industry produced 2.1 billion gallons. Today, roughly 10 percent of the US gasoline supply is made up of the biofuel.

 

About 95 percent of US ethanol is made from corn. The National Corn Growers Association estimates 39 percent of the US corn crop is used in ethanol production.

The drought began before planting and never stopped. Even though more acres were planted in 2012 compared to 2011, about 13 percent less corn was harvested.

Cooper said the 20 plants employ roughly 1,000 workers combined, but it wasn’t known how many have been laid off.

The production stoppages are cutting into ethanol production. The 770,000 gallons per day produced in the last full week of January were the fewest since the Energy Information Administration began tracking weekly data in June 2010.

That’s not much of an issue for consumers, at least for now, because there are plenty of stockpiles of ethanol.

A Purdue University agricultural economist, Chris Hurt, said the nation has more than 20 million barrels of ethanol in stock, slightly more than a year ago, largely because Americans are driving less and are driving more fuel-efficient cars. Cooper said, though, that stockpiles are expected to dwindle in the spring and summer.

Officials at the nation’s leading ethanol makers, Archer Daniels Midland and POET, declined to speculate about whether additional plants will close.

EPA THROWS ETHANOL ON THE FIRE OF SOARING FOOD PRICES

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Posted on 18th September 2012 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

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Food prices in 2013 were already poised to soar because of the drought and lowest supply of corn in decades. Revolutions and turmoil are breaking out all over the world. And what does Obama’s EPA do? They mandate a 20% increase in the usage of bio-fuels next year. They are mandating that more of our limited supply of corn be converted to a fuel that reduces gas mileage and requires more energy to produce than it provides. This mandate will drive prices higher, reduce supply, and result in people in other countries dying from starvation. This decision is so idiotic and foolish, it’s almost as if Obama is trying to create a worldwide shitstorm.

EPA Raises 2013 Biofuels Target

WASHINGTON, D.C. — The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) on Friday increased 2013 biofuel targets.

The EPA is requiring refiners to blend 1.28 billion gallons of biodiesel into traditional transportation fuel next year, vs. a 1-billion gallon requirement for 2012.

According to EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson, the new biofuel blending requirement meets goals set forth by Congress and is “another step that strengthens America’s energy security by reducing dependence of foreign oil.”

According to Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack, the new blending requirements will also create more rural jobs. “Over the past three years, we have doubled generation from renewable energy and today’s announcement by the EPA will ensure that we are continuing to utilize biodiesel to help meet our energy needs, create jobs and strengthen the rural economy,” he said, as reported by The Hill.

Although the EPA believes the increased blending requirement, part of the renewable fuel standard (RFS), is crucial to the growth of alternatives fuels, not everyone is convinced. Republicans have criticized the move as a way to prop up the biofuels industry, the website reported.

In addition, the American Petroleum Institute (API) has sued the EPA in regards to the RFS. “EPA’s mandate will unnecessarily raise the cost of making diesel fuel,” Bob Greco, API’s downstream group director, said in a statement. “By picking energy winners and losers, the EPA takes away consumer choice and further threatens public acceptance of biofuels.

DROUGHT SILVER LINING

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Posted on 12th August 2012 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

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Leave it to the mainstream media to try and spin the positives from the worst drought since the 1930s. Food prices for produce and meat are headed much higher. Ethanol prices are soaring and will result in higher fuel prices at the pump. Poor people around the world will starve as they cannot afford to pay the higher prices. This will lead to revolutions and riots.

But at least there aren’t any tornadoes and with no rain there is less toxic runoff into the Gulf of Mexico. We got that going for us. See. It ain’t so bad.

Woe and opportunity: Tales from historic drought

(AP)  The United States is in the midst of the worst drought in decades, and the dry  weather and soaring temperatures are taking a toll on people living  and working in Ohio west to California and Texas north to the Dakotas. Farmers  have watched their corn wither and their cattle go hungry. Homeowners have seen  their lawns turn brown and gardens wilt. Communities  in the Midwest that rarely experience water shortages have enacted restrictions,  and businesses are looking for ways to stay afloat as sales fall off. Here are a  few of their stories:

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WATER  FOR QUARTERS

The  creeks and ponds that Cimeron Frost’s 300 cows and calves drink from in central  Illinois are almost dry.

So  each day, he takes rolls of quarters to what amounts to water vending machines  in nearby towns. He drops in the coins, collects the water in metal and plastic  tanks and tows it on trailers to his pastures around the town of Tallula. He  hauls 4,000 gallons a day in four separate trips, dumping or piping the water  into big, galvanized-steel troughs for his herd to drink.

Even  at 40 to 50 gallons per quarter, it adds up.

“It  takes a little over two rolls of quarters a day, plus probably $40 in gasoline a  day, to water all our cows in all our locations,” Frost, 65, said. At $10 a  roll, that’s about 60 bucks a day, or $420 a week, and he’s been hauling every  day since mid-June.

He  estimates he has spent about $2,700 so far. But he worries more about what could  lie ahead.

“If  we don’t have a wet fall and a wet spring, we could be in trouble for another  year,” Frost said.

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BUY  NOW, PLANT LATER

Jeff  Gatewood has never seen a summer this bad in 36 years at Allisonville Nursery in  the Indianapolis suburb of Fishers.

Indianapolis  had its hottest July on record, with temperatures topping 90 degrees on 28 days,  and less than an inch of rain fell in June and July.

“We’ve  now gone where nobody’s gone before. Hot, dry, hot, dry, record-setting all the  time,” Gatewood said.

With  business down 20 percent to 30 percent because of the weather, he quit ordering  new plants in June and cut hours and staff. Then he decided to get creative.

The  nursery held a “heat stroke” sale in late July, offering customers a chance to  buy plants and pick them up later, once cooler temperatures arrive and local  watering bans are lifted. That brought people in and helped business some, he  said.

“We’re  seeing a pent-up demand like a dam wanting to break. I think once we see cooler  temperatures in the lower 80s, get a little rain shower  that’s going to help,”  he said.

The  nursery has clustered plants in shaded areas to protect them. Gatewood said  hydrangeas are especially vulnerable.

“Even  in the shade, when it’s 95 or 100, they hate it,” he said.

–Jeni  O’Malley in Indianapolis

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CREATIVE  FORECASTING

Facing  three minutes to fill on the nightly newscast, a TV station blog to update and a  forecast reading something like “sunny and 102″ for the umpteenth day in a row,  meteorologist Todd Yakoubian doesn’t sweat. He pulls out a meat thermometer.

“I  try to keep it as interesting as possible,” said Yakoubian, a meteorologist with  KATV in Little Rock, Ark. “You can’t do the same thing day in and day out.”

To  illustrate just how hot it has been in Arkansas, and for how long, Yakoubian  recently filled a sink in his home with water from the “cold” tap and measured  it at a not-very-refreshing 84 degrees. He also has fried eggs on a sidewalk and  baked cookies in a car, but admits everybody does that. He’s on a quest to find  other ways to show just how doggone hot the dog days are.

“I  put a wireless thermometer in the attic and hooked up a webcam and streamed it  for “How Hot Is It In Todd’s Attic?”

The  answer: 138.6 degrees.

He  also took temperature readings in his wife’s car to show viewers how dangerous  it was to leave children or animals in vehicles that can reach 130 degrees.

“I  used a meat thermometer because it was the only one I had that would go that  high,” Yakoubian said.

–Kelly  Kissel in Little Rock, Ark.

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A  SILVER LINING

There  may be a silver lining to the drought: The so-called “dead zone” in the Gulf of  Mexico is shrinking and the summer has seen fewer tornadoes.

The  dead zone is an area of low oxygen in the waters that is a long-standing environmental problem, which experts say is  caused by farm pollution running into the Mississippi River and then the Gulf of  Mexico. But with less rain, there is less runoff.

Nancy  Rabalais, a dead zone expert with the Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium,  found the dead zone was the fourth smallest in 80 years of records. It measured  only 2,889 square miles in July, compared to a five-year average of 5,695 square  miles.

Tornado  Alley also has been quiet this summer. In mid-April, the U.S. looked like it was  on pace to set a record with the number of tornadoes this year. Then the storms  stopped coming.

In  June, there were about 100 tornadoes, the second fewest in more than 60 years of  recordkeeping. Then in July it got even slower, with a preliminary count of 24.  Before this year, the fewest tornadoes the U.S. had in July was 73.

The  heat wave and drought are the primary reason for fewer twisters, said Harold  Brooks, a research meteorologist at the National Severe Storm Laboratory in  Norman, Okla.

In  a drought, there are fewer thunderstorms from which tornadoes can form. But  there’s also less wind shear, which storms need to get rotation for tornadoes,  said Jeff Masters, meteorology director at Weather Underground.

But  exchanging tornadoes for drought and extreme heat is not a good trade. Tornadoes  typically kill one or two people each July, but the heat waves are killing  dozens.

“I  think heat waves are the most dangerous weather phenomena out there,” Masters  said.

–Seth  Borenstein in Washington, D.C.

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WEEPING  WILLOWS

The  limbs of the weeping willows gracing banks of a lake at the Chicago Botanic  Gardens drooped more than usual, and the leaves  normally plush and green   wilted and began to fall after several weeks of unusual heat.

Weeping  willows are water-loving trees, said Tim Johnson, horticulture director for the  botanic gardens: “When things dried down, they responded. The leaves yellowed up  and some dropped.”

Many  of the gardens’ 2.5 million plants have required extra watering during the  summer’s triple-digit heat, but the willows were a special case.  Groundskeepers  have been excessively watering the willows about once a week for about a month,  drawing water from several lakes on the property to deluge the roots for about  30 minutes.

One  tree that was in particularly bad shape required 850 gallons of water, an amount  that usually hydrates several miles on the 385-acre reserve, during one watering  alone.

Still,  the foliage wilts.

“The  damage has been done,” Johnson said.

–Michelle  Nealy in Chicago

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RESOURCE  RATIONING

Randy  Pettinghill buys water from the city of Morrilton for his farm in the Arkansas  River Valley, but this year, the city put a cap on what he could have. It turns  on the spigot every third night from 7 p.m. to 7 a.m., and Pettinghill collects  as much as he can in lagoons on his property in Arkansas’ Conway County.

He  tries to ration the water, but with the temperature regularly over 100 degrees,  he’s losing a lot to evaporation.

He  has wells on his property too. He spent $25,000 to have the second one drilled  in July because the first was producing half its normal amount of water. He  connected the two, and they still aren’t producing enough to keep his corn and  soybeans irrigated. He left about two-fifths of his 1,700 acres unplanted this  year, and he’s been pumping water onto the rest, spending $22,000 a month for  fuel.

“If  I run out of water, they’ll be dead in two weeks,” he said.

–Charles  Bartels in Little Rock, Ark.

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CASHING  IN

For  some, the drought will likely be a money-maker  especially those who fall  outside the dry-weather zone.

One  of those farmers is Harlan Anderson.  The rainfall on his 800-acre farm near  Cokato in southern Minnesota has been normal, maybe a bit more. That means he’ll  have alfalfa, corn and soybeans to sell when others don’t, and he’ll benefit from rising prices.

But  demonstrating what he described as his Scandinavian sense of reserve, Anderson  said he feels a little guilty when talking about how he expects to profit from  the misfortune of other farmers in the Upper Midwest.

“My  projection is that our gross profits for the year will double,” Anderson said.  “The drought has certainly been good to me. Don’t say that too loud.”

He’s  started getting frequent calls in recent weeks from livestock farmers around the  country. Some usually grow their own feed, while others buy it from farmers like  Anderson. All are starting to worry about their supply.

“Looking  ahead, they’re trying to decide if there’s a sufficient supply of feed, can they  afford it and are they going to keep feeding their dairy cow or their horse  or  are they going to shoot them?” Anderson said.

–Patrick  Condon in Minneapolis

Read More http://timesleader.com/stories/Woe-and-opportunity-Tales-from-historic-drought,189867#ixzz23LR5qCsO

BAD CASE OF GAS

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Posted on 7th August 2012 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

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The price at the gas station near my house spiked from $3.69 a gallon yesterday to $3.79 today. The story below describes the situation in the Midwest. It was written before the refinery fire in California. With the corn crop in the U.S. dying, ethanol is up 30% this year. I would call this a perfect storm. Bernanke would call it moderating inflation. I wonder what would happen if a couple Level 3 hurricanes were to enter the Gulf of Mexico this summer? Aren’t you glad we’re practically energy independent with that 100 years of shale oil? 

U.S. Midwest hit by Perfect Gasoline Storm

Retail gasoline prices in the U.S. Midwest were as much as 50 cents higher than in the rest of the country. By Monday, the price of a gallon of regular unleaded jumped 13 cents from last week in Detroit to settle at $3.99.  The spike in retail gasoline prices follows a series of pipeline spills in Wisconsin and refinery shutdowns in Chicago and elsewhere. The impact of the string of industrial incidents on consumers in the region may be short-lived, but retail prices rarely decline as fast as they increase.
 
The American Automobile Association, in its daily gasoline report, states a gallon of regular unleaded gasoline in Detroit cost $4.05, up from the $3.69 average just one week ago. Chicago drivers, meanwhile, were paying on average $4.39 per gallon, a 10 percent increase from last week. According to AAA, the national average for a gallon of regular unleaded is $3.62.  While that’s a far cry from the national spikes early this year, the regional blow has irked many area residents wary of high consumer prices and pipeline incidents.
 
An industry analyst said much of the region was hit by “a cluster of bad luck.” Last month, pipeline company Enbridge reported a leak on a pipeline in Wisconsin. A section of the Lakehead oil pipeline system ruptured there, cutting off oil supplies to Chicago-area refineries. U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray Lahood said the incident was “absolutely unacceptable” and forced Enbridge to keep the line closed until authorities review a restart plan for the entire 467-mile pipeline.
 
In Michigan, the state’s governor last month issued a fuel emergency in response to the rupture of pipeline that released 1,000 barrels of unleaded gasoline in eastern Wisconsin. Gov. Rick Snyder’s emergency declaration lifted the restrictions placed on long-haul truckers so they could deliver retail petroleum products. Less than two weeks later, Enbridge confirmed that 1,200 barrels of oil spilled from Line 14 in central Wisconsin. A nearby resident said the pipeline “blew like an oil well.”
 
Enbridge maintains that “better than 99.999 percent” of the time, there are no problems with its vast network of oil pipelines in the United States. When accidents do happen, however, they’re costly. Last year’s oil spill in Michigan, on the same network as the Wisconsin leak, was the costliest onshore incident in U.S. history and EPA authorities are still reporting sheen in some of the waterways soiled by the release. Refineries, meanwhile, have shut down at a time when the region is using “summertime gasoline,” a blend not manufactured very much outside of the Midwest.
 
Patrick DeHaan, a petroleum analyst at reporting Web site gasbuddy.com, told a Chicago newspaper that the regional spike in gasoline prices is temporary and likely “the last hiccup” for the summer. Nevertheless, gasoline prices rarely experience a 10 percent decline overnight.
 
“As we all know, (retail prices) only move down by pennies per day,” he said.

By. Daniel Graeber of Oilprice.com

OBAMA – THE GREEN ENERGY PRESIDENT

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Posted on 6th July 2012 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

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I wonder how many more ethanol plants will go belly up when corn reaches $8 or $9 per bushel? What would we do without our green energy president?

 

Long List of Failed Obama Green Energy & Solar Companies in the Billions

This is just the short list of energy companies backed by President Barack Obama that have failed.  President Obama has wasted tax payer money on these companies and he wants you to re-elect him so he can give you more of the same.

Being the ideologue that he is, he WONT back down from funding more fake (meaning they have never proven themselves profitable or actually have made a product that works)

Can the United States of America REALLY afford FOUR MORE YEARS of this president?

List Of Failed Green Energy Jobs – By Obama

  • Solar Trust of America: FAIL
  • Bright Source: FAIL
  • Solyndra: FAIL
  • LSP Energy: FAIL
  • Energy Conversion Devices: FAIL
  • Abound Solar: FAIL
  • SunPower: FAIL
  • Beacon Power: FAIL
  • Ecotality: FAIL
  • A123 Solar: FAIL
  • UniSolar: FAIL
  • Azure Dynamics: FAIL
  • Evergreen Solar: FAIL
  • Ener1: FAIL