Some US lawmakers want to lower the minimum amount of ethanol that is required to be blended into the domestic gasoline supply. The irony is that some ethanol advocates have a problem with the fact that better fuel economy may be to blame. The idea of House Resolution 5180 is to bring this year's annual target usage of renewable fuels down to 18.1 billion gallons from 22.3 billion, a drop of about 19 percent. This would bring the amount of ethanol blended into the national gasoline supply to under 10 percent.
Proponents say blending ethanol into gasoline cuts foreign-oil dependency and emissions. Opponents say ethanol production may actually increase pollution while tightening up the supply of corn that would otherwise be used for food stock. Also, some in the vehicle industry aren't convinced that ethanol doesn't damage engines, especially at higher blend levels like E15.
What can't be debated is that increased fuel economy is causing an overall decrease in gasoline use. That is great news for the environment but makes it harder and harder for the country to reach its ethanol mandates because they are largely based on flat numbers and not on a percentages of total fuel use. The current fleetwide fuel economy of more than 25 miles per gallon is about 25 percent more than it was when the Renewable Fuel Standard was first enacted. For more, take a look at the EPA's "rule summary" page on the Renewable Fuel Standard proposal here.
Earlier this year, the anti-ethanol camp received yet more ammunition after researchers at the Argonne National Laboratory estimated that ethanol production used about 12 times as much water as gasoline. So, basically, those folks could argue that more ethanol production is messing with both the country's food and water.
Proponents say blending ethanol into gasoline cuts foreign-oil dependency and emissions. Opponents say ethanol production may actually increase pollution while tightening up the supply of corn that would otherwise be used for food stock. Also, some in the vehicle industry aren't convinced that ethanol doesn't damage engines, especially at higher blend levels like E15.
What can't be debated is that increased fuel economy is causing an overall decrease in gasoline use. That is great news for the environment but makes it harder and harder for the country to reach its ethanol mandates because they are largely based on flat numbers and not on a percentages of total fuel use. The current fleetwide fuel economy of more than 25 miles per gallon is about 25 percent more than it was when the Renewable Fuel Standard was first enacted. For more, take a look at the EPA's "rule summary" page on the Renewable Fuel Standard proposal here.
Earlier this year, the anti-ethanol camp received yet more ammunition after researchers at the Argonne National Laboratory estimated that ethanol production used about 12 times as much water as gasoline. So, basically, those folks could argue that more ethanol production is messing with both the country's food and water.
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