| August 13, 2008
A New Environment for Biofuels
by Stephen Lacey, Staff Writer
New Hampshire, United States [RenewableEnergyWorld.com]
Gas prices may have gone down a bit in recent weeks, but interest in fuel
alternatives is reaching new highs. Now the big questions for both lawmakers
and consumers are: Where will the fuels come from and how economically and
environmentally sustainable will they be?
"But where were the skeptical scientists, politicians and
journalists earlier, when ethanol was first being promoted in Congress?"
-- Christine Russell, Columbia Journalism Review |
As election season approaches, politicians in Washington are trying to show
Americans that they will work to lower gas prices. Renewable fuels are seen
as an important part of the effort to bring down prices at the pump. But
political opinion has shifted in the past year, dramatically changing the
national conversation around renewable fuels such as corn-based ethanol.
Much has changed in the three years since the original Renewable Fuels
Standard (RFS) was signed into law in August of 2005. At that time
corn-based ethanol and soy-based biodiesel were the darlings of the
renewable energy movement. Concerns about the environmental and social
impact of food-based fuels were being vocalized by certain groups, but they
were largely drowned out by the exuberance from policy makers and consumers.
Within two years, as production levels ramped up ahead of schedule, the RFS
was amended in 2007 to increase the target to 36 billion gallons by 2022.
About the time that the new RFS was signed into law, climbing food prices
grabbed the nation's attention and turned exuberance into caution. According
to the research and analysis firm New Energy Finance, food staples rose 244%
from April of 2004 to April of this year. Corn was up 207%, soybean was up
136%, and palm oil was up 140%. Even though ethanol and biodiesel production
have played a relatively small role in those price increases compared with
other input costs, reports New Energy Finance, perceptions have certainly
changed.
This May, presumptive Republican presidential nominee John McCain and 22
other Republican Senators wrote a letter to the Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) calling for a waiver of the RFS. The letter followed a similar
letter in April from Texas Governor Rick Perry, who called the fuel mandate
a "well-intentioned policy" that will have the "unintentional consequence of
harming segments of our agriculture industry and contribute to higher food
prices." He requested that the RFS be cut in half.
Last week, the EPA denied the request, saying that the RFS is not a serious
detriment either to the U.S. or Texas economy. The 2005 legislation allows
the EPA to waive the standard if it considers the program to be causing
"severe harm" to the economy.
"After reviewing the facts, it was clear this request did not meet the
criteria in the law," said EPA Administrator Stephen L. Johnson in a
statement. "The RFS remains an important tool in our ongoing efforts to
reduce America's greenhouse gas emissions and lessen our dependence on
foreign oil, in aggressive yet practical ways."
The news was lauded by the renewable fuels industry, which has repeatedly
pointed to rising oil and natural gas prices as the leading factor in the
food price increase.
"Most economists now recognize the real severe economic harm is being done
by the skyrocketing price of oil and not by ethanol production," said
Renewable Fuels Association (RFA) president Bob Dinneen said in a statement
issued after the decision. "In fact, without ethanol production the damage
from high oil prices would be even worse."
Along with oil, the price of staples such as corn and soy have fallen
significantly since June. But they remain relatively high compared with the
last few years. Although it is been shown that ethanol is a fairly small
player in the rising price of staples, the food versus fuel debate has had a
lasting impact in Washington and in the media.
In 2005, when the Renewable Fuels Standard was being crafted, there was
overwhelming support from politicians and news outlets. But as Christine
Russell points out in the July/August issue of the Columbia Journalism
Review, the "biofuel ethanol was ballyhooed as a big win for U.S. energy
security, farmers, and the environment, but a funny thing happened on the
way to the fuel tank...Suddenly many elected officials want to cut back on
congressional mandates to produce far more ethanol...the public is left
wondering what happened."
Now, writes Russell, journalists have become far more critical of the role
that corn-based ethanol will play in the future fuel mix.
"But where were the skeptical scientists, politicians and journalists
earlier, when ethanol was first being promoted in Congress?" she asks.
Yet despite all the recent bad press and negative rhetoric from some
politicians, the RFA says that there is still widespread support for ethanol
in the U.S. According to a survey of 1,200 registered voters released by the
RFA last month, Americans still support ethanol by a 2 to 1 margin.
According to the study, 65 percent of respondents have heard something about
ethanol in the news, with 28 percent saying that they have heard a lot about
the fuel. Out of those respondents, 43 percent say their opinions about
ethanol were not changed, 30 percent say the debate made them feel more
favorably about ethanol and 23 percent feel less favorable toward the fuel.
"Over the last year as we've seen some of the sentiment about the domestic
ethanol industry shift, we still see great support," says Nathan Schock,
Director of Public Relations at POET, the world's largest ethanol producer.
"Americans realize that ethanol helps reduce gasoline prices and will help
enhance our domestic energy security."
But there's another non-domestic player in the ethanol industry that is
hoping to capitalize on the support for ethanol among American drivers:
Brazil.
Brazil is a net exporter of sugarcane ethanol. It is expected that the
country will send about 550 million gallons of sugarcane-based ethanol to
the U.S. this year. But if Brazil has its way and Congress lifts a US $0.54
tariff on imported ethanol, Americans will be burning a lot more sugarcane
ethanol in their gas tanks.
The US $0.54-per-gallon tariff on imported ethanol was created in 1980 to
ensure that foreign ethanol producers couldn't take advantage of the
$0.54-per-gallon blenders credit for domestic producers. Now that the credit
has been reduced to US $0.45 per gallon, the Brazilians argue that the
tariff should be reduced to that level, if not eliminated altogether.
In July, the Brazilian Sugarcane Industries Association (UNICA) launched a
media campaign against the ethanol tariff, saying that it was causing
American drivers to pay more at the pump. If the tariff were eliminated,
says UNICA Chief Representative Joel Velasco, it could reduce the price of
ethanol by 30%. Because there is a mandatory 10% blend of ethanol in every
gallon of gasoline, that reduction would then be passed on to consumers when
they fill up their vehicles, Velasco says.
"We're trying to educate Americans that we can diversify the fuel mix, lower
gas prices and help build the ethanol industry in the U.S.," says Velasco.
"We can help lower grain prices further and create a bigger market for
renewable fuels."
But POET's Schock says that there's currently no need to increase Brazilian
ethanol imports — there's already an oversupply of domestic ethanol.
The Energy Information Administration projects U.S. gasoline consumption to
be around 146 billion gallons next year. Although every gallon of gasoline
requires a 10% blend of ethanol (called E10), a more realistic projection is
that 90 percent of that gasoline will be blended, says Schock. That leaves a
market for around 13 billion gallons of ethanol.
According to the RFA, current ethanol capacity is at around 9.4 billion
gallons per year. If factoring in refineries under construction, capacity
will be at around 13.6 billion gallons sometime in 2009. That means that
there will be more ethanol than the market requires, says Schock.
"The elimination of the secondary tariff assumes that we are in an under
supply when actually the opposite is the case," he says. "Bringing in more
foreign ethanol will only make it harder to develop cellulosic ethanol
because that industry, which needs those early years of support to grow,
will be taken up by the foreign ethanol."
While the domestic ethanol industry is certainly concerned about the tariff
being lifted, it doesn't appear that the policy will change anytime soon. So
far, none of the bills that have come before the current Congress have been
voted on. In addition, politicians don't usually make such dramatic changes
in policy before an election.
"We're not really expecting anything to happen before the election cycle
ends. But we have brought this to the table and we foresee action in the
not-so-distant future," says Velasco.
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