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Imports from Latin America May Help U.S. Meet Energy Goals

March 7, 2008   |   10 Comments

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"Even if imported, biofuels can improve our energy security by reducing oil imports and expanding our base of independent fuel sources. Best of all, American consumers could pay less at the pump during energy emergencies."

-- Paul Leiby, ORNL
10 Reader Comments
Comment
1 of 10
March 7, 2008
Not suprisingly, Robert Perlack is an author of the study.<br /><a href="http://greyfalcon.net/perlack" target="_blank">http://greyfalcon.net/perlack</a><br /><br />Also not suprisingly, they are tiptoing around the point that the US feedstock supply is insufficient.<br /><a href="http://greyfalcon.net/biolimits.png" target="_blank">http://greyfalcon.net/biolimits.png</a>
Comment
2 of 10
March 8, 2008
<div class="commentBody"><p>I'm sure a great deal of research and study went into the preparation of this report.&nbsp; One wonders if the several countries involved, themselves subject to oil prices, finite oil, and the whims of OPEC, might prefer simply to produce these biofuels for their own use, with limited, if any product designated for export to the US.&nbsp; Or do the authors suppose we will&nbsp;simply export our plantations as well as our jobs and factories....?&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</p></div>
Comment
3 of 10
March 9, 2008
<p class="MsoNormal">Using food crops for bio-fuels is a terrible idea. We are literally going to starve people in exchange for . . . . what?</p> <p class="MsoNormal">&nbsp;The critics of bio-fuels claim the process is energy and carbon inefficient. Some even claim there is a net increase in carbon out put.<span>&nbsp; </span>Further, do you hearing anyone claim the contrary side? There is total silence in response to bio-fuels criticisms on the environmental issues. Normally the only response from the bio-fuel side is that it will save us from the evils of oil &ndash; by starving people and creating more pollution?<br /><br />The poorest of the poor in our world are going to starve to death as inflation in food prices wipe out their ability to pay for their daily meals.<span>&nbsp; </span></p> <p class="MsoNormal">Anyone with a heart would support a total ban on crops being used for bio-fuels. </p>
Comment
4 of 10
March 12, 2008
<p>Has anyone read Alcohol Can Be A Gas?&nbsp; According to David Blume we have enough waste to generate an enormous amount of ethyl.&nbsp; </p><p>The dollar is crashing.&nbsp; We cannot pay for alcohol from elsewhere. &nbsp;</p><p>Meanwhile we have mesquite, kudzu, and other plant sources for alcohol here.&nbsp; It is disturbing, to say the least, to hear these destructive plans talked about while far less damaging alternatives are not being explored.&nbsp;</p>
Comment
5 of 10
March 12, 2008
<p>(Continued) While Brazil is a large ethanol producer it did not achieve independence from foreign crude oil imports by introducing ethanol in the early 1980s. That was a complete and utter failure. Brazil opened all areas for exploration and invested heavily in onshore and offshore projects. Today large oil deposits have been discovered, Brazil has major oil reserves and produces all of their petroleum needs which more than doubled in 25 years. I believe Brazil subsidizes ethanol production and now mandates the use of 25% ethanol in gasoline but that is primarily to insure an outlet for some part of their production.</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
Comment
6 of 10
March 12, 2008
<p><br /> Even after Scientific American published the following article, the biofuel advocates press on.<br /> &nbsp;http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=biofuels-bad-for-people-and-climate<br /> &nbsp;&quot;Biofuels Are Bad for Feeding People and Combating Climate Change&quot; February 7, 2008.<br /> &nbsp;&nbsp;Energy indepencence was the prime purpose for the ethanol craze, no more imports of crude from foreign sources, of course that meant Canada and Mexico the two largest suppliers and members of NAFTA. And now the ethanol advocates are proposing making the USA dependent on importing ethanol from Brazil and other Latin American countries. Dependency is dependency whether it is crude oil or ethanol. This is an indication of scientific, economic and environmental ignorance. (to be continued)<br /> </p>
Comment
7 of 10
March 13, 2008
<p>Part II</p><p>High prices&nbsp;will bring about &quot;demand destruction&quot; (conservation), and make pricey alternatives look more competitive.&nbsp; Higher fuel taxes twenty years ago would have put US well ahead of where we are now&nbsp;by reducing consumption, encouraging efficiency, and&nbsp;slashing&nbsp;imports while keeping dollars here at home.</p><p>It's probably necessary to consider four-day work-weeks (4 x 10 hrs instead of 5 x 8 hrs) to&nbsp;slash consumption, and help reduce&nbsp;traffic congestion.&nbsp; Also cut mail delivery by one day/week, etc.&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>
Comment
8 of 10
March 13, 2008
<p>E. Patrick Mosman -</p><p>Part I</p><p>DOE is desperately seeking the Midas touch for clean, sustainable fuels.&nbsp; Some on these boards would throw even more money at the problem (research, grants, etc.), when in fact no gold OR silver bullet is in the offing.&nbsp;&nbsp; </p><p>What is not acknowledged by politicians of&nbsp;EITHER party is that&nbsp;the domestic energy situation is worse than commonly thought.&nbsp; Only Presidents are elected by, and speak for, the nation as a whole.&nbsp; So unless the President says we're desperate, then (so the thinking goes), we're OK.&nbsp;&nbsp; We're not OK.&nbsp; The situation is untenable, and getting worse.&nbsp; Compounding the dilemma is that new drilling(offshore) is denied, while existing US oil fields are in decline.&nbsp; </p>
Comment
9 of 10
March 13, 2008
<p>What should make all taxpayers angry is that it is their tax money funding the DOE and its 'junk' science behind biofuels, ethanol in particular, which defy the basic laws of thermondynamics:</p> <p>First Law- Energy is neither created or destroyed, it changes from one form to another. <br /> Second Law- The energy available after a chemical reaction is less than that at the beginning of a reaction; energy conversions are not 100%.</p> <p>It is their tax dollars that are funding subsidies of hundreds of millions of dollars going to the DOE, agro-business corn growers and biofuel producers which produce less energy than than the process uses, increases the cost of fuels, reduces fuel economy and actually harms the environment. &nbsp; </p> <p>&nbsp;</p>
Comment
10 of 10
March 13, 2008
The reason why people started to use fossil fuels was that nature simply could not nearly supply the energy the early industrialisation required. Today - after having multipied energy consumption&nbsp; - those in the business try to make us believe that the least efficient of the bio-organic fuels will do it. It will help to some extent, some people in some countries during some time: until the most valuable human treasure, the tropical forests, are destroyed without us having seized the opportunity to transform our societies and economies for sustainability. &quot;Supply growth is derived from increasing the area cultivated ...&quot; Thanks a lot! Such words make any clear thinking person angry or puke.
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