HOW MANY SENATORS DOES IT TAKE TO SCREW A TAXPAYER? (Featured Article)

 

“Today, the government decides and they misdirect the investment to their friends in the corn industry or the food industry. Think how many taxpayer dollars have been spent on corn [for ethanol], and there’s nobody now really defending that as an efficient way to create diesel fuel or ethanol. The money is spent for political reasons and not for economic reasons. It’s the worst way in the world to try to develop an alternative fuel.” Ron Paul

When bipartisanship breaks out in Washington DC, check to make sure your wallet is still in your pocket. Every time you fill up your car this winter you are participating in the biggest taxpayer swindle in history. Forcing consumers to use domestically produced ethanol is one of the single biggest boondoggles ever committed by the corrupt brainless twits in Washington DC. Ethanol prices have soared 30% in the last year as the supplies of corn have plunged. Only a policy created in Washington DC could drive up the prices of gasoline and food, with the added benefits of costing the American taxpayer billions in tax subsidies and killing people in 3rd world countries.

The grand lame duck Congress tax compromise extended a 45-cent incentive to ethanol refiners for each gallon of the fuel blended with gasoline and renewed a 54-cent tariff on Brazilian imports. The extension of these subsidies, besides costing American taxpayers $6 billion per year, has the added benefit of driving up food costs across the globe, causing food riots in Tunisia, and resulting in the starving of poor peasants throughout the world. This taxpayer boondoggle is a real feather in the cap of that fiscally conservative curmudgeon Senator Charley Grassley. He was joined in this noble effort by another fiscal conservative, presidential hopeful John Thune. It seems these guys hate wasteful spending, except when it benefits their states. The bipartisanship in this effort was truly touching, as Democrats Kent Conrad and Tom Harkin also brought home the pork for their states.

A bipartisan group of 15 senators signed a letter in late November demanding an extension of U.S. ethanol subsidies. I wonder if the fact they have received hundreds of thousands of dollars in campaign contributions during the past six years from pro-ethanol companies and interest groups like ADM, Monsanto, the National Corn Growers Association, and the Iowa Renewable Fuels Association had anything to do with this demand. You can always count on a Senator to do what’s best for his re-election campaign rather than what is best for the country. These symbols of political integrity will always spout the standard talking points:
  • Promoting ethanol reduces our dependence on foreign oil
  • Ethanol is green renewable energy
  • Ethanol is cheaper than gasoline

As we all know when dealing with a politician, “half the truth, is often a great lie.”

Amaizing 

Corn is the most widely produced feed grain in the United States, accounting for more than 90% of total U.S. feed grain production. 81.4 million acres of land are utilized to grow corn, with the majority of the crop grown in the Midwest.  Although most of the crop is used to feed livestock, corn is also processed into food and industrial products including starch, sweeteners, corn oil, beverage and industrial alcohol, yogurt, latex paint, cosmetics, and last but not least, fuel Ethanol. Of the 10,000 items in your average grocery store, at least 2,500 items use corn in some form during the production or processing. The United States is the major player in the world corn market providing more than 50% of the world’s corn supply. In excess of 20% of our corn crop had been exported to other countries, but the government ethanol mandates have reduced the amount that is available to export.

This year, the US will harvest approximately 12.5 billion bushels of corn. More than 42% will be used to feed livestock in the US, another 40% will be used to produce government mandated ethanol fuel, 2% will be used for food products, and 16% is exported to other countries. Ending stocks are down 963 million bushels from last year. The stocks-to-use ratio is projected at 5.5%, the lowest since 1995/96 when it dropped to 5.0%. As you can see in the chart below, poor developing countries are most dependent on imports of corn from the US. Food as a percentage of income for peasants in developing countries in Africa and Southeast Asia exceeds 50%. When the price of corn rises 75% in one year, poor people starve.

The combination of an asinine ethanol policy and the loosest monetary policy in the history of mankind are combining to kill poor people across the globe. I wonder if Blankfein, Bernanke, and Grassley chuckle about this at their weekly cocktail parties while drinking Macallan scotch whiskey and snacking on mini beef wellington hors d’oeuvres. The Tunisians aren’t chuckling as food riots have brought down the government. This month, the U.N. Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) reported that its food price index jumped 32% in the second half of 2010 — surpassing the previous record, set in the early summer of 2008, when deadly clashes over food broke out around the world, from Haiti to Somalia.

Let’s Starve a Tunisian

“What is my view on subsidizing ethanol and farmers? Under the constitution, there is no authority to take money from one group of people and give it to another group of people for so called economic benefits. So, no, I don’t think we should do that. Besides, bureaucrats and the politicians don’t know how to invest money.” Ron Paul

The United States is the big daddy of the world food economy. It is far and away the world’s leading grain exporter, exporting more than Argentina, Australia, Canada, and Russia combined. In a globalized food economy, increased demand for corn, to fuel American vehicles, puts tremendous pressure on world food supplies. Continuing to divert more food to fuel, as is now mandated by the U.S. federal government in its Renewable Fuel Standard, will lead to higher food prices, rising hunger among the world’s poor and to social chaos across the globe. By subsidizing the production of ethanol, now to the tune of $6 billion each year, U.S. taxpayers are subsidizing skyrocketing food bills at home and around the world.

The energy bill signed by that free market capitalist George Bush in 2008 mandates that increasing amounts of corn based ethanol must be used in gasoline sold in the U.S. This energy legislation requires a five-fold increase in ethanol use by 2022. Some 15 billion gallons must come from traditional corn-blended ethanol. Nothing like combining PhD models and political corruption to cause worldwide chaos. Ben Bernanke and Charley Grassley have joined forces to bring down the President of 23 years in Tunisia. People tend to get angry when they are starving. Bringing home the bacon for your constituents has consequences. In the U.S. only about 10% of disposable income is spent on food.  By contrast, in India, about 40% of personal disposable income is spent on food. In the Philippines, it’s about 47.5%.  In some sub-Saharan Africa, consumers spend about 50% of the household budget on food. And according to the U.S.D.A., “In some of the poorest countries in the region such as Madagascar, Tanzania, Sierra Leone, and Zambia, this ratio is more than 60%.”

  

The 107 million tons of grain that went to U.S. ethanol distilleries in 2009 was enough to feed 330 million people for one year at average world consumption levels. More than a quarter of the total U.S. grain crop was turned into ethanol to fuel cars last year. With 200 ethanol distilleries in the country set up to transform food into fuel, the amount of grain processed has tripled since 2004. The government subsidies led to a boom in the building of ethanol plants across the heartland. As usual, when government interferes in the free market, the bust in 2009, when fuel prices collapsed, led to the bankruptcy of almost 20% of the ethanol plants in the U.S.

People fed by US ethanol grain

The amount of grain needed to fill the tank of an SUV with ethanol just once can feed one person for an entire year. The average income of the owners of the world’s 940 million automobiles is at least ten times larger than that of the world’s 2 billion hungriest people. In the competition between cars and hungry people for the world’s harvest, the car is destined to win. In March 2008, a report commissioned by the Coalition for Balanced Food and Fuel Policy  estimated that the bio-fuels mandates passed by Congress cost the U.S. economy more than $100 billion from 2006 to 2009. The report declared that “The policy favoring ethanol and other bio-fuels over food uses of grains and other crops acts as a regressive tax on the poor.” A 2008 Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (O.E.C.D.) issued its report on bio-fuels that concluded: “Further development and expansion of the bio-fuels sector will contribute to higher food prices over the medium term and to food insecurity for the most vulnerable population groups in developing countries.” These forecasts are coming to fruition today.

It Costs What?

The average American has no clue about the true cost of ethanol. They probably don’t even know there is ethanol mixed in their gasoline. The propaganda spread by the ethanol industry and their mouthpieces in Congress obscures the truth and proclaims the clean energy mistruths and the thousands of jobs created in America. The truth is that producing ethanol uses more energy than is created while driving costs higher. The jobs created in Iowa are offset by the jobs lost because users of energy incur higher costs and hire fewer workers as a result. It takes a lot of Saudi oil to make the fertilizers to grow the corn, to run the tractors, to build the silos, to get the corn to a processing plant, and to run the processing plant. Also, ethanol cannot be moved in pipelines, because it degrades. This means using thousands of big diesel sucking polluting trucks to move the ethanol – first as corn from the fields to the processing plants, and then from the processing plants to the coasts.

The current ethanol subsidy is a flat 45 cents per gallon of ethanol usually paid to the an oil company, that blends ethanol with gasoline. Some States add other incentives, all paid by the taxpayer. On top of this waste of taxpayer funds, the free trade capitalists in Congress slap a 54 cent tariff on all imported ethanol. Ronald R. Cooke, author of Oil, Jihad & Destiny, created the chart below to estimate the true cost for a gallon of corn ethanol. Cooke describes a true taxpayer boondoggle:

It costs money to store, transport and blend ethanol with gasoline. Since ethanol absorbs water, and water is corrosive to pipeline components, it must be transported by tanker to the distribution point where it is blended with gasoline for delivery to your gas station. That’s expensive transportation. It costs more to make a gasoline that can be blended with ethanol. Ethanol is lost through vaporization and contamination during this process. Gasoline/ethanol fuel blends that have been contaminated with water degrade the efficiency of combustion. E-85 ethanol is corrosive to the seals and fuel systems of most of our existing engines (including boats, generators, lawn mowers, hand power tools, etc.), and can not be dispensed through existing gas station pumps. And finally, ethanol has about 30 percent less energy per gallon than gasoline. That means the fuel economy of a vehicle running on E-85 will be about 25% less than a comparable vehicle running on gasoline.

Real Cost For A Gallon Of Corn Ethanol

   
Corn Ethanol Futures Market quote for January 2011 Delivery $2.46
Add cost of transporting, storing and blending corn ethanol $0.28
Added cost of making gasoline that can be blended with corn ethanol $0.09
Add cost of subsidies paid to blender $0.45
Total Direct Costs per Gallon $3.28
   
Added cost from waste $0.40
Added cost from damage to infrastructure and user’s engine $0.06
Total Indirect Costs per Gallon $0.46
   
Added cost of lost energy $1.27
Added cost of food (American family of four) $1.79
Total Social Costs $3.06
   
Total Cost of Corn Ethanol @ 85% Blend $6.80

 

Multiple studies by independent non-partisan organizations have concluded that mandating and subsidizing ethanol fuel production is a terrible policy for Americans:

  • In May 2007, the Center for Agricultural and Rural Development at Iowa State University released a report saying the ethanol mandates have increased the food bill for every American by about $47 per year due to grain price increases for corn, soybeans, wheat, and others. The Iowa State researchers concluded that American consumers face a “total cost of ethanol of about $14 billion.” And that figure does not include the cost of federal subsidies to corn growers or the $0.51 per gallon tax credit to ethanol producers.
  • In May 2008, the Congressional Research Service blamed recent increases in global food prices on two factors: increased grain demand for meat production, and the bio-fuels mandates. The agency said that the recent “rapid, ‘permanent’ increase in corn demand has directly sparked substantially higher corn prices to bid available supplies away from other uses – primarily livestock feed. Higher corn prices, in turn, have forced soybean, wheat, and other grain prices higher in a bidding war for available crop land.”
  • Mark W. Rosegrant of the International Food Policy Research Institute, testified before the U.S. Senate on bio-fuels and grain prices. Rosegrant said that the ethanol scam has caused the price of corn to increase by 29 percent, rice to increase by 21 percent and wheat by 22 percent. Rosegrant estimated that if the global bio-fuels mandates were eliminated altogether, corn prices would drop by 20 percent, while sugar and wheat prices would drop by 11 percent and 8 percent, respectively, by 2010. Rosegrant said that “If the current bio-fuel expansion continues, calorie availability in developing countries is expected to grow more slowly; and the number of malnourished children is projected to increase.” He continued, saying “It is therefore important to find ways to keep bio-fuels from worsening the food-price crisis. In the short run, removal of ethanol blending mandates and subsidies and ethanol import tariffs, in the United States—together with removal of policies in Europe promoting bio-fuels—would contribute to lower food prices.”

The true cost of the ethanol boondoggle is hidden from the public. The mandates, subsidies and tariffs take place out of plain view.  The reason blenders (and gas stations) will pay the same for ethanol is because they can sell it at the same price as gasoline to consumers. A consumer will pay the same for ten gallons of E10 as for ten gallons of gasoline even though the E10 contains a gallon of ethanol. Consumers pay the same for the gallon of ethanol for three reasons. (1) They don’t know there’s ethanol in their gasoline. (2) There is often ethanol in all the gasoline because of state requirements, so they have no choice. (3) They never know the ethanol has only 67% the energy of gasoline and gets them only 67% as far. The result is that drivers always pay much more for ethanol energy than for gasoline energy, simply because they pay the same amount per gallon. When gasoline prices are $3.00 per gallon, Joe Six-pack pays $4.50 for the same amount of ethanol energy.

You know a politician, government bureaucrat or central banker is lying when they open their mouths. Whenever evaluating a policy or plan put forth by those in control, always seek out who will benefit and who will suffer. Who benefits from corn based ethanol mandates and subsidies? The beneficiaries are huge corporations like Archer Daniels Midland and Monsanto, along with corporate farming operations (80% of all US farm production), and Big Oil. The mandated ethanol levels are set in law. By providing tax subsidies we are bribing oil companies with taxpayer dollars to do something they are legally required to do, resulting in a $6 billion windfall profit to oil companies.  The other beneficiaries are the Senators and Representatives from the farming states who are bankrolled by the corporate ethanol beneficiaries and their constituents who will re-elect them. The environment does not benefit, as many studies have concluded that it requires more fossil fuel energy (oil & coal) to produce a gallon of ethanol than the energy created. The jobs created in the farm belt at artificially profitable ethanol plants are more than offset by job losses due to the added costs in the rest of the economy. When subsidies are removed or oil prices drop, the ethanol plant jobs disappear, resulting in a massive capital mal-investment. 

Our supposedly wise PhD and MBA leaders have created a perfect storm. The unintended consequences of government intervention in the markets are causing havoc, food riots, starvation and intense suffering for the poor and middle class. Brazil produces sugar cane ethanol in vast quantities and can export it to the U.S. much cheaper than we can produce corn ethanol. Fuel prices would be lower without tariffs on Brazilian ethanol imports. The average cost of food as a percentage of disposable income for an American is 10%. Averages obscure the truth that the cost is probably .0001% for Lloyd Blankfein, Ben Bernanke and Chuck Grassley, while it is 30% for a poor family in Harlem. America’s horribly misguided ethanol policy combined with Ben Bernanke’s Wall Street banker subsidy program are resulting in soaring fuel and food prices across the globe. Poor people around the world suffer greatly from these policies. Below are two assessments of ethanol.     

 “Everything about ethanol is good, good, good.”Senator Chuck Grassley, Iowa

“This is not just hype — it’s dangerous, delusional bullshit. Ethanol doesn’t burn cleaner than gasoline, nor is it cheaper. Our current ethanol production represents only 3.5 percent of our gasoline consumption — yet it consumes twenty percent of the entire U.S. corn crop, causing the price of corn to double in the last two years and raising the threat of hunger in the Third World.”Jeff Goodell

Who do you believe?

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121 Comments
Steve Hogan
Steve Hogan
January 15, 2011 1:09 pm

You’d have to be a moron to think that the government’s ethanol policies are productive. It’s a bribe to agri-business, pure and simple.

It would be better to just give ADM $6 billion dollars and let the rest of us power our machines with regular gasoline. It would improve the environment and not starve the Third World.

Grassley ought to be ashamed of himself. What a crook.

Jmarz
Jmarz
January 15, 2011 1:21 pm

Jim great article. Where did you get the data for the real cost for a gallon of corn ethanol?

Smokey
Smokey
January 15, 2011 1:29 pm

Charles Grassley for POTUS 2012.

Iowan
Iowan
January 15, 2011 2:15 pm

Haha eat shit American Taxpayers. The farmers in Iowa thank you for subsidizing their new trucks and their sparkling new GPS enabled, climate-controlled farm equipment. Grassley is universally loved in this state. The other side doesn’t even put up a competition. This year they ran Roxanne Conlin, a big socialist Democrat. I think she got 25% of the vote. He will be in office until he dies or retires (though those farmer types die on the job most of the time rather than retire).

Really the subsidies, as Steve Hogan mentions, benefit the corn processors like ADM and Cargill. It kind of fucks the farmers in my family over, since they grow hogs and some cattle, making the high price of grain an issue. However, they mostly use their own grain to feed their livestock. And the Big Business model of raising livestock really screwed things up things when you really had to get big or become a cog in the machine. One of my uncles got big and another didn’t have the resources and had to sign all kinds of shitty contracts with the Cargill etc.

But cheap American grain has other consequences. With globalization when prices are low and their isn’t a market it gets dumped around the world on markets like Mexico. Which was doing okay on its own without NAFTA. The irony is that the areas in Mexico where people first domesticated maize, the small farmers can’t make it and are forced off the land by the fascist state/corporate interest. See Michael Pollan for a discussion of this.

Ethanol is a boondoggle. I agree. Foreign dependence on oil is a bigger boondoggle. The real cost of a gallon of gas is what? $11?

See: http://www.catalystmagazine.net/component/content/article/45/1128-pay-at-the-pump-uncovering-the-true-cost-of-gasoline

http://www.icta.org/doc/Real%20Price%20of%20Gasoline.pdf

My favorite is the “Ethanol Plants will create all these jobs” BS. They are damn nearly autonomous and probably need 30 or so staff to operate. The cost/benefit per job for the taxpayer sucks. Most of the jobs are in the temporary construction. I was driving up to Minneapolis a couple months ago and couldn’t help but see the irony in the fact that I drove by a coal power plant and 2 miles down the road there was an ethanol plant. The ethanol plants are easy to spot because they smell like shit.

Has anyone seen “The Informant!” with Matt Damon about ADM price fixing? It is worth watching. I believe it is a true story.

StuckInNJ
StuckInNJ
January 15, 2011 2:17 pm

I am quite surprised only 2% of corn is used in food stuffs … considering the fact that corn or some derivitive thereof is in virtually everything we eat … including meat since corn makes up most of the animal’s diet. Nevertheless, facts are facts.
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There was an ethanol plant near South Bend, IN that used HP computers. We made a lot of money off them. They never ever questioned ANY pricing we gave them whether for hardware, software, or consulting services. No dickering ever. They simply paid. Their plant manager pretty much told our salesman that they don’t have to worry about revenue or profitability. Not kidding.
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Nice reference to Tunisia. That may be a bigger story than most people realize. Tunisia COULD be the Black Swan/Tipping Point for Islamic nations in that neck of the woods. How many times have the muslim people (not some military coup or small armed faction) actually overthrown a government? None that I can think of off the top of my head. If it spreads to neighboring countries …. look out!!

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It goes without saying … another great article.

Iowan
Iowan
January 15, 2011 2:23 pm

Stuck – Only 2% is used directly in foodstuffs. Something like 55% goes into feeding livestock.

a cruel accountant
a cruel accountant
January 15, 2011 2:32 pm

Screw gas and ethanol. I have seen more bike riders(not motorcycles) this winter since 1982. And I am not talking about those spandex wearing moving billboards on racing bikes I am talking about J6P. I just saw a bike ride past my house and its 19 degrees outside

Jmarz
Jmarz
January 15, 2011 2:42 pm

Iowan

Thanks for the interesting input. The ethanol scam is ridiculous. It has resulted in higher prices for the basic necessities in life. We have sacrificed the struggles of a majority of Americans for the sake of tremendous profits for a small group of specials interests who are in bed with big government. Government intervention always ends in failure. When will we learn this? These flawed policies will continue to hinder any sound transformation for our country. Americans are beginning to wake up but at a slow pace. Big government is the problem not the solution. Regulations and taxes are not the answer. A smaller government with limited power is the answer. How can someone not be outraged when the facts are presented and it makes no economic or common sense but yet we continue to pursue these practices?

Kill Bill
Kill Bill
January 15, 2011 3:03 pm

Ben Bernarchy is more like it

Kill Bill
Kill Bill
January 15, 2011 3:07 pm

Smokey says: Charles Grassley Sarah Palin for POTUS 2012.

What you really meant.

KaD
KaD
January 15, 2011 3:25 pm

This is actually FAR worse for the environment that people realize; most of that corn is genetically modified with Bt. Bt corn produces it’s own pesticide; one so powerful it actually sterilized the soil in which it is grown (soil is a combination of the organic and non organic matter AND the beneficial bacteria, fungi, and other microbes). The runoff is polluting streams and Bt corn has been implicated in the bee decline. I remember a story a few years back where a silo of Bt corn got mixed with a silo of normal corn and produced into cornflakes before anyone realized it; a thousand Americans were poisoned. Genetically modified crops have been linked to Morgellon’s disease. People who get this develop ‘threads’ that erupt from their skin among other neurological symptoms. The threads have been found to contain DNA from a fungus (the one that causes cankers on trees) which is used as a carrier gene in the genetic modification process.

Kill Bill
Kill Bill
January 15, 2011 3:53 pm

Now it is getting about 42 mpg. Thanks Charlie. -Admin

What does Chucky care when his political career [screwing Americans] is over and he gets millions a year to lobby his former sycophant congressional aides

Pirate Jo
Pirate Jo
January 15, 2011 4:35 pm

Iowan, I am from Iowa also. Where do you live?

I did a one-year contract assignment for a rural water district. One of their customers is an ethanol plant, and those things go through a TON of water – lots and lots of money spent on their water bill. Apparently, making ethanol gives off a lot of heat. Also a lot of pollution. Hell, I *live* in this state and I don’t want to see Iowa get those subsidies. It’s not good for us, any more than it is for anyone else. Back before corn became the government’s favorite crop, Iowa was a major grower of apples. Let us go back to apples, I say. Preferably honeycrisp.

AKAnon
AKAnon
January 15, 2011 4:35 pm

One upside: Ethanol has a really high octane rating. Hot rodders in the midwest can build very high compression (like 14:1 or 15:1) motors for their “street cars” that run on “pump gas”, as long as that “pump gas” is E-85. Subsidized by Uncle Sam, OMG. Hey, someone has to be a winner.

Pirate Jo
Pirate Jo
January 15, 2011 4:40 pm

You get poorer gas mileage with ethanol, which more than compensates for the cheaper price. I have only put ethanol gas in my car once, when the temperature was well below zero, because it doesn’t freeze as easily. (Of course a can of HEET would work just as well, but I didn’t have any.)

Bryan
Bryan
January 15, 2011 4:40 pm

What is continually left out of the equation is the alternative fodder for ethanol; corn is always chosen because of government subsidies. Corn is one of the least efficient crops for ethanol production, though it is not a net loss as this article suggests, it is simply a very slim margin. Non-food crops such as cattails product far more ethanol per acre and subsequently use less energy per gallon to produce. We have several projects that utilize constructed wetlands filled with cattails for tertiary sewage treatment; primary anaerobic digestion yields methane and the effluent goes to the wetlands where the cattails uptake excess nutrients and clean the water for use as irrigation. The cattails are harvested and processed into ethanol where the remaining wort is composted and used as fertilizer.

If we were to use more projects such as this we could reduce the amount of energy and resources spent on sewage treatment while yielding both a natural gas and a liquid fuel. This however is too hard for an oil company to monetize…

AKAnon
AKAnon
January 15, 2011 4:41 pm

Was anyone else told as a kid “clean your plate-there are starving children in India”? (or Africa, or whatever). I can see the next generation-“don’t drive excessively-there are starving children in Tunisia”. I wonder if the average Tunisian knows we are burning what they call food?

Randolph
Randolph
January 15, 2011 5:06 pm

Very good points taken.
Here in Europe (especially Czech Rep.) you drive through many many acres of Rape seed fields for Bio-Diesel. I do not know how the economics works out for Rape Seed, but it is thousands of acres not being used for food.
But to my main point, and I smell a large rat in a related field. And that is the over-abundance of natural gas, and what seems like a propaganda line that it is almost worthless for America. So it appears that we are going to be shipping it to Europe, (I am guessing at a rock bottom price), allowing the French and Germans and others to have a cheap competitor for Russian gas, and thus helop them hold their prices down.
Please remember, there is no central planning in America right? Free markets must be maintained, so a natural resource that could drastically reduce oil consumption here is being shipped out at a bargain price, while oil will be imported. What a shame in a free market we cannot force conversion to natural gas, in a strategic manner, to bring about the largest reduction of imported oil, for the lowest retooling costs. The Germans or the Chinese would never allow anything so absurd (in my opinion) . And to add insult to injury, I have to speculate that the lion’s share of the profits of the gas will land in the pockets of the Energy Internationals, while the normal US citizens are left with the cash outflows for oil imports.
This is all speculative, without figures to back it up, but it definitely deserves some serious research.

Iowan
Iowan
January 15, 2011 5:18 pm

Pirate Jo – I live in Iowa City. Federal policy has messed up Iowa agriculture for generations. Prohibition destroyed one of the largest grape growing industries in the nation (something like 3rd). Only now is it coming back to any extent, and who knows to what extent it will since the snobs have imbued a sense of superiority into the French/Californian grapes.

MuckAbout
MuckAbout
January 15, 2011 6:06 pm

They sure don’t make patriots like they did 250 years ago, do they?

Things are not bad enough in the FSofA (except to the insightful thinker types like TBP readers) to do more than make J6P uneasy and the ones’ out of a job and broke just collect all the freebies the FSofA makes sure continues to flow. I mean when you are so broke you’ll never pay it back to anyone, what’s a few hundred million more for food stamps, unemployment, subsidies for electricity, et al, ad nauseam ??.

The leaders of our fair used-to-be Republic will just keep printing to keep the beast at bay which will work until it doesn’t. Remember he/she who uses the printed trash-money first gets the most benefit from it.

We have passed the tipping point, IMHO, and what comes next is anybody’s guess. I think I’ll take a trip to the shooting range Monday and burn a few clips just to make me feel better. (Damn I wish I had a few 30 round clips – I could probably melt a barrel with a 3-4 of those!)

And yes, I have a Florida permit to carry and yes, I exercise it – especially when going to Orlando. With the dick-heads driving up here to rob banks now, I may have to exercise my carry rights here just to be safe in a Winn Dixie strip mall parking lot.

Now I feel better.. Thanks..

Pirate Jo
Pirate Jo
January 15, 2011 6:11 pm

Iowan, I live in West Des Moines. We call Iowa City the Island of Misfit Toys, but in a loving and affectionate way. I know lots of people with pleasant but hazy memories of that town, and it is where Team Ska congregates every year on Ragbrai.

I always thought farming seemed like a cool job. Of course it helps if you have a farm, and with the government essentially having nationalized the industry, I don’t think I would enjoy farming in its present state. Recently in the newspaper, they were as usual bemoaning the loss of young people from Iowa. One commenter said it would cost a young person $3.7 million to buy a farm and get started in the business. It’s certainly out of MY range. I really can’t afford to spend that much to buy myself a job, only to have to pander to the government for enough subsidies to remain competitive.

Kill Bill
Kill Bill
January 15, 2011 6:34 pm

So let me get this right.

The Fed keyboards currency into existence in the Treasuries credit account.

The Treasury then makes bonds, bills and notes to sell to investors and loan to the government.

The corn lobbyists wine and dine politicians for corn subsidies.

The corn lobbyists then buy legislation from the elected representative to make laws that ethanol must be used as an automotive fuel.

The taxpayer, liable for the money government borrowed, with interest, from the Treasury, then pays the corn industry to not grow so much corn to keep prices high under the guise it will keep prices low.

The private Fed is financing all this with money ex nihilis.

Is that really nationalizing the corn industry?

Seems to me, and I could be wrong, that the corn industry is exacting a tribute from the people putting the taxpayer in debt to the banksters.

FamilyFarmer
FamilyFarmer
January 15, 2011 6:39 pm

I find a lot of misinformation in this article troubleing. I wish I could address everything, but I will just address a few realities that I see from my farm.
1. Corn is a very efficient store of energy. In 2010 I collected 102million BTU’s of solar energy on EVERY acre of corn ground using nothing but natural rain as a hydrogen donor and pulling carbon (CO2) out of the air to bind with it. I use no nitrogen because It follows a legume crop, and I do not turn any soil. I make three trips accross my fields- Plant, Spray, Harvest. These trips combined take 3 gallons of diesel per acre or .013gal/bu. More than half the corn crop is stored in large piles on the ground, needing no silo. I transport corn 19 miles to the ethanol brewer hauling 1000 bushels burning 8 gallons of diesel or another .008 gal/bu. The plant brews 2.7 gallons of corn whiskey (ethanol) for every bushel that I haul in, and 40% of what is hauled in is hauled out as DG (Wet distillers grain) for feeding cattle, displacing corn that they otherwise would have been fed. So every acre on MY farm captures enought sunlight to provide 607.5 gallons of energy that is safe enough to drink (before added to gas), as well as 10,000pounds of feed for producing steaks and hambergers, while using .0078 gallons of Fossil Fuel diesel per gallon of ethanol end product (figuring nothing for the feed).
2. Ethanol’s effect on food prices
a. The enviornmental movement pays absentee owners of farmland to grow zero food on 30+ million acres of CRP contracts every year for “habitat” That could be growing a lot of food.
b. The enviornmental movement has turned thousands of acres of food production into desert in the Klamath baisin for suckerfish habitat. Same story in the California Central valley putting minnow habitat before food. Flooded farmland is expanding in North Dakota by a forced growth of Devils Lake. Imperial valley is getting water rights taken away…. etc…etc.. The stoppage of horse slaughter in this country has stopped an export of protien to france and other countries who eat horse meat, and have turned animals that used to have value into a liability that have to be buried instead.
c. The price of Corn was half of what it is now as recently as last July. Investment funds are record long while Commercials are record short.
d. We are exporting record amounts of grain. Export terminals cannot load out any faster. We are not withholding any from the rest of the world – we are supplying them even more. They just had bad growing conditions. It happens.
e. Farmers can’t grow below the cost of production. Costs are affected by a falling dollar just as corn prices are. I recieve less for corn now than my father did 30 years ago when adjusted for real inflation.
f. Americans dispose of 40% of our food. It just gets thrown out Think about that.
g. A family buys more gas than bread or corn-flakes. double corn add .04c to a box of corn flakes. double wheat add .04c to a loaf of bread. eliminate ethanol add .25c to the price of a gallon of gas. Which do you buy more of per month?

Kill Bill
Kill Bill
January 15, 2011 6:42 pm

If your growing corn purely for ethanol wouldnt it be easier to use switchgrass?

Kill Bill
Kill Bill
January 15, 2011 6:49 pm

Farmers in Nebraska and the Dakotas brought the U.S. closer to becoming a biofuel economy, planting huge tracts of land for the first time with switchgrass—a native North American perennial grass (Panicum virgatum) that often grows on the borders of cropland naturally—and proving that it can deliver more than five times more energy than it takes to grow it.
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=grass-makes-better-ethanol-than-corn

FamilyFarmer
FamilyFarmer
January 15, 2011 6:58 pm

Kill Bill,
No, it would be much harder. Harder to prepare seedbed, harder to plant, more labor, machinery, and fuel intesive to harvest, bale, stack, store, and less dense and more expensive to transport.
I grow alfalfa in rotation with my corn, and I have alot more time,machinery, fuel, and labor per acre with biomass than I do with corn.

I could never capture the amount of BTU’s with switchgrass as I can with corn, and I would loose the Nitrogen efficientcy of the crop rotation If I grew a nitrogen hungry perenial grass.

The last issue, is with corn you feed the plant as well as the soil. Grain for food, and residue to feed the biological life in the soil. Harvesting switchgrass for fuel is nothing like native prarie, because you are not returning any carbon/humus back to the earth. Biomass removal is less sustainable than grain removal.

P.s. I don’t grow corn because I want to. I would rather grow alflafa for dairies. But it works good in a rotation and prices encoraged me to. If prices were to drop for corn, I would not be growing any, and the supply would shrink.

Kill Bill
Kill Bill
January 15, 2011 7:07 pm

Thanks for the information FF. Its good to talk to an actual farmer.

But it seems as if we are looking at energy in two ways. The one being for you to produce it and energy which the consumer would get from it.

I read switchgrass produces 540x times more energy that was used to grow it.

But what your saying is that the price you get for it and the labor, and fuel costs, etc involved in farming it isnt viable for the farmers?

FamilyFarmer
FamilyFarmer
January 15, 2011 7:11 pm

Also Kill Bill,

If anyone is paying tribute to me, I must have missed it because I grow crops worth almost 1million dollars, and live on 40K while paying Uncle Sam over 180K on Federal income tax, State Income tax, Alternative minimum tax, twice the SS & Med tax, property taxes on both land and machinery, sales taxes on repairs, parts, exise taxes on trucks and trailers. They do pay me back 6K (included in the 40k) for following their rules and reporting, The rest goes to expenses.

Good luck to you and your family.

FamilyFarmer
FamilyFarmer
January 15, 2011 7:14 pm

Oh, and I forgot the Heavy Vehicle Use Tax (2290) well as the Corn Checkoff (tax) that my state tried to sieze to balance it’s budget shortfall.

Kill Bill
Kill Bill
January 15, 2011 7:18 pm

If anyone is paying tribute to me – FF

No, I mean that subsidies are like a tribute exacted from the taxpayer =)

Kill Bill
Kill Bill
January 15, 2011 7:18 pm

Godspeed to you and yours FF.

Kill Bill
Kill Bill
January 15, 2011 7:25 pm

Oh, and I forgot the Heavy Vehicle Use Tax (2290) well as the Corn Checkoff (tax) that my state tried to sieze to balance it’s budget shortfall -FF

I dont think thats right just as I dont think states robbing private pensions to pay for states shortfall is right.

I read where the total shortfall for all fifty states debts is something like 140 billion.

Thats less than what AIG was bailed out for but for some reason there is a law that the Federal reserve cant bail out state debt.

Pirate Jo
Pirate Jo
January 15, 2011 7:38 pm

@Kill Bill,

“Is that really nationalizing the corn industry?

Seems to me, and I could be wrong, that the corn industry is exacting a tribute from the people putting the taxpayer in debt to the banksters.”

Interesting angle. Either way, it’s nothing I would remotely call a free market.

llpoh
llpoh
January 15, 2011 9:54 pm

The ethanol program is a debacle. Feeding 40 percent of corn grown to cattle is equally abhorent.

Kevin
Kevin
January 16, 2011 12:18 am

The US is full of sheeple. No matter what facts are placed in front of them, they will not learn. Now go watch your mind-numbing TV entertainment Id10ts….

Iowan
Iowan
January 16, 2011 12:34 am

What FamilyFarmer leaves out is the number of BTU’s used at the ethanol plant to A) mash the grain to convert starch to sugar (being a brewer myself–mashing takes a lot of energy), B) distill the beer to 95% ethanol, C) dry the ethanol to nearly pure 100% ethanol, D) dry the distillers grains, E) treat the wastewater effluent created by the ethanol creation process, F) transport to the ethanol to California from the grain belt, etc. The energetics are great from the seed to the farmers gate. It is the processing of the grain into ethanol that really sucks energy.

The Brazilians have the right idea. The sugar from the cane is used to make ethanol and the bagasse is used (with leftovers) to fire the whole ethanol creation process.

But in some sense, FamilyFarmer is right, if his acreage has a high CSR (thats Corn Suitability Rating for you non-Midwesterners) then he’s never going to grow cellulosic ethanol. It’d be a better use for him to grow corn. (This is assuming the status quo for oil.)

But its all still a philosophical argument… we need an EROEI of ~10. The modest, maybe 1.3:1 EROEI for ethanol isn’t going to cut it.

Reverse Engineer
Reverse Engineer
January 16, 2011 5:45 am

“FamilyFarmer” sounds like a Goobermint Plant to me. Congrats Jim, you have finally made the Big Time, you have your own Harry Wanger on Board here to tell everyone how really Ethanol from Corn is GOOD and all the nonsense your read that it has a Negative EROEI is FALSE!

I am no expert on this topic, but Iowan brings up some important points FF left out, but besides that in principle even with the best yields with the best water with the best soil you just cannot produce either ethanol or biodiesel at the rate it is being consumed at these days. Also clear is that every acre dedicated to Ethanol production for automotive transport is an acre taken away from Food consumption. Also obvious is it takes a whole lot more energy to move a 2 Ton SUV at 60MPH than it does a Homo Sapiens to move at 15mph on a Bicycle. So under no circumstances can you justify converting corn to ethanol for vehicle usage when the same corn would neable more people to live out their lives reasonably if most of the people burning gobs of energy in their SUVS would just give that up. Zero Sum Game there, every BTU of energy you use up is a BTU some starving person could use to stay alive.

Of course, right now this conflict hits only peole in Tunisia, not for the most part people here in the FSofA, not even the FSA who stay decently fed with SNAP Cards. Give it a little time though, and this conflict will hit your family also.

Coming Soon to a Theatre Near You.

RE

eugend66
eugend66
January 16, 2011 7:21 am
cosmo
cosmo
January 16, 2011 8:36 am

Is anyone surprised at this? No matter what the subject, it always results in spending your money for their interest. It has nothing to do with helping Americans anymore. People have to get passed the ideal that you have to be a Democrate or Republican or this will continue forever. Next time think about changing to independent and you will quickly start seeing things differently. When you see something being criticized by one party or the other, or by some government official it only mean they are afraid of it………..like maybe the TEA PARTY. These people are the only ones left that haven’t been bought!

Efarmer
Efarmer
January 16, 2011 8:50 am

Thanks to Family Farmer for putting some reality into this. It always stuns me when I read nonfarmers think that people actually eat corn that is used for ethanol. It is not the corn you buy in the store. It is not the corn used for chips and tacos. It is field corn used to feed livestock and for other purposes.

I do have to wonder how ethanol could stand on it’s own two feet if we pulled the troops and warships guarding the oilfields out of the mideast, or if this cost were just passed on in the cost of gasoline. What would it be then, $10/gallon?

BTW, in my opinion, switchgrass for ethanol will never really be feasable. The volume that will need to be handled is staggering, it is hard with corn, which is quite concentrated.

Ethanol is not evil and neither is Chuck Grassley.

Efarmer
Efarmer
January 16, 2011 8:55 am

eugend66,

I read the article and it makes no sense. China is worried about rising prices, so they cut the supply (imports) and draw down their stocks to an even tighter level??

Maybe someone could explain that one to me. Thanks for the link.

Punk in Drublic
Punk in Drublic
January 16, 2011 9:24 am

Read part of this article over at Naked Capitalism, Yves referenced it in one her articles. There may be personality differences between you two but she knows good information when she sees it.

eugend66
eugend66
January 16, 2011 9:34 am

Nah, Efarmer, I thank you! Cutting imports means less export. Living on what they grow
is not out of the question. There are monies, assets all to be given away to ppl.
One step closer to the capitalist dream will ease all the riots.
A newborn ‘ middle class ‘ , in those ghost cities will do the trick.

Kill Bill
Kill Bill
January 16, 2011 10:14 am

Interesting angle. Either way, it’s nothing I would remotely call a free market. -Pirate Jo

Yes, exactly! Its just Laissez Faire that floaters [think tanks] have re-branded to make it palatable for the general public and support such an irresponsible system.

specie
specie
January 16, 2011 10:21 am

I feel a certain synchronicity this morning.

Automatic Earth is my first read each day. ok so far.

Burning Platform is next. The article from Automatic Earth about zombie money is there.

Coming Depression is next. The article from Burning Platform about Ethanol is there.

I wonder how far i can go. Naked Capitalism is further down the list but maybe i should go out of order this morning.

Kill Bill
Kill Bill
January 16, 2011 10:34 am

Generally I go for the news first then head over to the science and physics sites to prepare and then to economical type sites such as TBP and FS in order to refill my napalm tank for the inevitable flame wars at the last stop,,,,political websites.

Im just glad Smokey is such a above the board guy, a lover of humanity and veritable bouquet of benevolence, a shining knight on an errant journey of peace else I would have died of the battle long ago.

specie
specie
January 16, 2011 10:40 am

Hi KB,

I’m trying so hard to maintain a big picture view of the world
so i start with the big picture economic views such as TBP
and THEN read the news to see if the news/noise flow supports
or contradicts my big picture view.

Kill Bill
Kill Bill
January 16, 2011 10:58 am

Hi KB, I’m trying so hard to maintain a big picture view of the world
so i start with the big picture economic views such as TBP -Specie

Same here, were just going about it in different ways, no argument there, but it is also why I stopped watching TV years ago as it tries to do just the opposite by cramming a big world into a little iluminated box in thirty minutes time + commercials while claiming that it was representative of the big view.

Kill Bill
Kill Bill
January 16, 2011 11:01 am

Everything was full price. Food prices are effectively increasing at an annualized rate excedeeding 10%. -admin

I do my own shopping and like you said have noticed the same thing especially with poultry and meats.

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