Let’s be honest about ethanol.
It may be a good additive for gasoline but it won’t replace fossil fuels in America. And the reason is simple.
We
can’t convert all the existing food-crops and fertile land into fuel
producing assets without raising the price and availability of food.
Nor can we rely on ‘leftovers’ from crop production since the stalks
and chaff are presently used as fertilizer and animal feed, which again
would lead to higher prices for farm products down the line.
So where will Americans get the additional crops needed to produce ethanol? How about we grow it ourselves!
Now
let’s assume each person in the United States has a fertile yard and
they plant corn, sugarcane or beets in hopes of producing ethanol.
Assume also that each growing season provides ample rainfall with a
minimum of destructive weather and bug infestation.
Odds are
long, but let’s say everybody brings in a hefty crop. Now, where will
they ship their raw product for distillation into ethanol? And how much
fuel will be needed to send tons of beets and corn somewhere for
processing, and how much fuel will be needed to churn the harvest into
fuel? The experts say the best and most efficient systems of production
take more than three quarters of a gallon to make and distribute one
gallon of ethanol. Wow, it uses a lot of fuel to make ethanol.
Ok,
it’s not efficient to make ethanol, but it’s still better than the one
and a half gallons it takes to put a single gallon of gasoline in your
car (yes for every gallon of gasoline, you’re actually buying two and a
half gallons).
Humm … since everything is so inefficient, why
don’t we Americans show our can-do attitude and simply make ethanol in
our own side-yard distillery? After all ethanol is a gussied-up name
for moonshine and most of your rural stalwarts already own a boiler and
some coil tubing … so voila, a cottage industry is born that further
cements the relationship between alcohol and our addiction to driving.
Sure
we’d have to burn off the trees to heat up the mash but we’re stripping
the land bare anyway and nothing can stand in the way of fuel for our
two-ton vehicles. And the smoky pall across the nation from burning all
those trees might be a nuisance for a while but remember, ethanol burns
cleaner and besides science has shown people get used to pollutants
with only a slight increase in mortality rates.
But let’s come
back to Earth and get a reality check here: at the end of the day,
nobody can make enough white lightening in their back yard to supply
the fuel that their vehicles use in a year. In fact there are not
enough bark scraps, lawn clippings or leaf litter in the entire nation
to make what we consume in gasoline. And if we scrape up every piece of
mulch to make fuel, then where will tomorrow’s dirt come from?
So
unless we want food prices to skyrocket, or every stitch of vegetation
to disappear off our planet, America needs a new goal besides ethanol.
Gasoline
is good. Let that be our mantra, so instead of using common sense and
downsizing our vehicles as a national goal, we should continue on the
same path that got us here and focus first on slurping dry Canada’s oil
sands before we start chopping into the earth to mine our own rich
resources of oil shale.
Yes right here in the United States we
have vast quantities of oil reserves locked inside ordinary
grey-colored rock, and all we have to do is dig up whole areas like
Dallas-Ft Worth to pull it out of the ground. But when you need a
gallon of gas, anything goes and most folks understand that, especially
if you’re from Texas.
Gene Haynes