BEAUPREZ: The high price of ‘Frankenol’
Filling up with corn juice is a drain on the wallet
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This government-engineered, market-distorting fuel
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The RFS requires refiners to blend increasing amounts of ethanol into the nation’s fuel pool annually. Last year, they were responsible for blending a minimum of 13.2 billion gallons. This year, the figure stands at 13.8 billion gallons. By 2022, the RFS mandate will require 36 billion gallons.
To document compliance, refiners track the RINs (renewable identification numbers) applied to every gallon of ethanol purchased, or they buy paper RINs, which are credits paid to ethanol producers. In either case, refiners have to spend real money to comply with the law.
In creating the RFS program, the government assumed that gasoline demand would continue to rise. It was wrong. With more fuel-efficient vehicles
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As a result, refiners are stuck between the proverbial rock and a hard place: They have had to reduce fuel production because demand is down, yet they have to comply with the increasing ethanol mandate. This means they are buying more ethanol credits in the form of RINs but purchasing fewer gallons of ethanol. As a result, millions of gallons of corn-based ethanol are sitting in storage
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That’s just part of the renewable fuel standard’s market-distorting impact. Ethanol contains less energy than crude-oil-based gasoline, so motorists have to fill up more often and needlessly spend more money. Furthermore, an estimated 42 percent of the nation’s 2012 corn crop will be consumed to make ethanol. Artificially driving up corn prices — particularly when much of the farm belt was drought-stricken last summer — has resulted in more expensive meat, poultry and countless other food products, leaving consumers to bear the burden. Research by the Heritage Foundation conducted last year indicated that U.S. ethanol production was responsible for increasing the price of corn by up to 68 percent. Stanford University’s Center for Food Security and the Environment warned, “Poor households in the developing world, where [70 percent to 80 percent] of the budget is spent on food, [are] hurt the most.”
There’s more. Ethanol producers looking to create a larger market for their fuel have convinced the Environmental Protection Agency to allow the sale of E15, a fuel blend containing up to 15 percent ethanol. However, as AAA warns, E15 could “void car manufacturers’ warranties,” since 95 percent of the nation’s 240 million light-duty vehicles
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One would think the judges’ ruling would stop this regulatory insanity. It didn’t. A few days after losing in court, the EPA mandated that 62 percent more cellulosic ethanol be blended into motor fuel in 2013.
However well intended way back when, the RFS is another example of government
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Bob Beauprez is a former Republican member of the House of Representatives from Colorado.
Read more: http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2013/apr/2/the-high-price-of-frankenol/#ixzz2PR6M3pHN
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