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EPA Increases Amount of Renewable Fuel To Be Blended Into Gasoline (arstechnica.com) 351

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Last week the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced its final renewable fuel standards for 2017, requiring that fuel suppliers blend an additional 1.2 billion gallons of renewable fuel into U.S. gas and diesel from 2016 levels. The rule breaks down the requirements to include quotas for cellulosic biofuels, biomass-based diesel, advanced biofuel, and traditional renewable fuel. Reuters points out that the aggressive new biofuel standards will create a dilemma for an incoming Trump administration, given that his campaign courted both the gas and corn industries. While the EPA under the Obama administration has continually increased so-called renewable fuel standards (RFS), the standards were first adopted by a majority-Republican Congress in 2005 and then bolstered in 2007 with a requirement to incorporate 36 billion gallons of renewable fuel into the fuel supply by 2022, barring "a determination that implementation of the program is causing severe economic or environmental harm," as the EPA writes. Some biofuels are controversial not just for oil and gas suppliers but for some wildlife advocates as well. Collin O'Mara, CEO of the National Wildlife Federation, said in a statement that the corn ethanol industry that most stands to benefit from the EPA's expansion of the renewable fuel standards "is responsible for the destruction of millions of acres of wildlife habitat and degradation of water quality." Still, the EPA contends that biofuels made from corn and other regenerating plants offer reductions in overall fuel emissions, if the processes used to make and transport the fuels are included. "Advanced biofuels" will offer "50 percent lifecycle carbon emissions reductions," and their share of the new standards will grow by 700 million gallons in 2017 from 2016 requirements, the EPA says. Cellulosic biofuel will be increased by 81 million gallons and biomass-based diesel will be increased by 100 million gallons. "Non-advanced or 'conventional' renewable fuel" will be increased to 19.28 billion gallons from 18.11 billion gallons in 2016. Conventional renewable fuel "typically refers to ethanol derived from corn starch and must meet a 20 percent lifecycle GHG [greenhouse gas] reduction threshold," according to EPA guidelines. Other kinds of renewable fuels include sugarcane-based ethanol, cellulosic ethanol derived from the stalks, leaves, and cobs leftover from a corn harvest, and compressed natural gas gleaned from wastewater facilities.
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EPA Increases Amount of Renewable Fuel To Be Blended Into Gasoline

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  • by MachineShedFred ( 621896 ) on Monday November 28, 2016 @05:05PM (#53380491) Journal

    A bigger percentage of less energy-dense material per unit volume means more volume gets burned to create the same amount of energy. Add to that the amount of energy needed to create the ethanol, and does this actually make any difference whatsoever? Could it possibly actually make more total overall emissions?

    • by queazocotal ( 915608 ) on Monday November 28, 2016 @05:13PM (#53380567)

      The total amount of fossil fuels needed to produce one gallon of ethanol is (counting everything, like fertiliser, cultivation, water provision, ...) is quite close indeed to one gallon. Increasing the amount of renewables without specifying total efficiency is simply and purely a subsidy giveaway to farmers and with only negative consequences to the environment.
      https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/p... [nih.gov] - chinese paper.

      • by cryptizard ( 2629853 ) on Monday November 28, 2016 @05:17PM (#53380603)
        They did specify total efficiency, did you not read the summary? It says 20-50% reduction in lifecycle emissions, which include production and transportation of the fuel as well as burning it.
        • If that part of the mandate is true and enforced (including all "externalities") then it forces no ethanol to be used as none of it meets that target when costs of production as listed by queazocotal are included.

      • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Monday November 28, 2016 @05:50PM (#53380865)

        To understand the politics of ethanol, you only need to answer two questions.
        1. Which state benefits the most from corn subsidies?
        2. Which state holds the first presidential caucuses?
        This explains everything.

      • "The total amount of fossil fuels needed to produce one gallon of ethanol is (counting everything, like fertiliser, cultivation, water provision, ...) is quite close indeed to one gallon"

        Energy balance is 1.3 for corn ethanol specifically. Sugarcane ethanol, OTOH, is at 8 which is comparable to new oil discoveries.

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward

        Can we stop saying "farmers". Yes these are crops, grown on land, but these industries have as much in common with farmers as Apple has in common with George's BBQ in that both are businesses. Jim Bob growing 40 acres of cranberries is a far cry from Megaconglomerate Inc growing 40,000 acres of them. And just like with Apple and George, Jim Bob ain't getting shit for a subsidy while M Inc is getting billions.

        Its just another corporate subsidy aka businesses that don't need more money being given money while

      • Did you even read the link? It says corn-based fuel ethanol.

        It certainly isn't the case for all ethanol. Brazil was using ethanol back when they neither had oil nor the money to pay for it.

    • by zugmeister ( 1050414 ) on Monday November 28, 2016 @05:16PM (#53380601)
      Ethanol made from corn is good. It's what engines crave.
      Stop looking at the big picture, it messes with the black and white that makes up the world.
      • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

        by Anonymous Coward

        Ethanol The Engine Mutilator!
        It's What Cars Crave!

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by umghhh ( 965931 )
      It gets really funny when you take into account the impact has been made by clearing forest to make up for lost production capacity of food stuffs now when we produce all this bio gasoline. It may just be that indeed the Chinese were right all along - the only way to limit damage is contraception. The other population control measures are all human but usually in conflict with valid laws.
    • by Ranbot ( 2648297 )

      .... and food prices go up if the ethanol supply is coming from a crop (e.g. corn, soybeans, sugar cane, etc.).

  • by thomn8r ( 635504 ) on Monday November 28, 2016 @05:08PM (#53380515)
  • by FudRucker ( 866063 ) on Monday November 28, 2016 @05:10PM (#53380533)
    starts messing up fuel systems in cars & trucks, then what? they already did that once and had to cut back on the percentage of ethanol put in gasoline,
  • by mark-t ( 151149 ) <markt AT nerdflat DOT com> on Monday November 28, 2016 @05:11PM (#53380535) Journal

    .... when it's perfectly obvious how the choice will be made?

    Given the choice between any two options, Trump will invariably choose the one that generates more revenue. Like *absolutely* invariantly.... he might as well be a computer program with a single if statement and a loop.

    • He'll pick the option that generates short-term revenue. The costs in the medium and long term of basically allowing all emissions to run amuck with little in the way of federal regulations will be astronomical, but I guess for a 70 year old guy worth billions of dollars, who the fuck cares? His kids will never want for anything, so they can buy fresh spring water and move to nicer climes, so basically selling the future off in return for short term gains probably is a great idea.

  • by bwanagary ( 522899 ) on Monday November 28, 2016 @05:16PM (#53380599)

    So let me see if I understand the sheer genius of this move: we're going to be legislated into reducing millions of acres of food crops while millions the world over are starving, reduce those millions of food acres to fuel additives and then burn them to increase greenhouse gasses. Brilliant!

    • From the summary: "cellulosic ethanol derived from the stalks, leaves, and cobs leftover from a corn harvest, and compressed natural gas gleaned from wastewater facilities."
      • You mean the stuff that should be plowed back in or allowed to decompose in place in to become next year's fertilizer?

        • You mean the stuff that should be plowed back in or allowed to decompose in place in to become next year's fertilizer?

          Don't worry. The incoming president will make sure we have plenty of fertilizer.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday November 28, 2016 @05:20PM (#53380619)

    Ethanol costs more gasoline to make than energy it produces. It decays small engines and breaks things like weedwhackers. It lowers your gas milage. There is no positives at all in ethanol in our gasoline. It should have been banned a long time ago.

  • Dear EPA.... (Score:5, Informative)

    by Lumpy ( 12016 ) on Monday November 28, 2016 @05:24PM (#53380657) Homepage

    Force gas station to post in HUGE LETTERS the percentage and warnings against using it in cars older than 2003. 15% and higher will cause hell in older cars with shitty ECM's

    • by b0bby ( 201198 )

      I just this weekend saw my first 15% pump - it clearly had a warning that you should only use it in 2002 & later vehicles. It was only $1.49 a gallon, so I can see it would tempt some people to give it a try voluntarily.

  • This stuff is great for your motor...
  • Reuters points out that the aggressive new biofuel standards will create a dilemma for an incoming Trump administration, given that his campaign courted both the gas and corn industries.

    There's no dilemma. Corn prices already dropped [nasdaq.com] because the subsidies dried up. He can reverse the the standards as easily as Obama set them.

  • They're not energy efficient, they're expensive (when you count the subsidies), they lead to excessive levels of pesticide, and amount to nothing more than a stealth subsidy of agriculture.

    Brilliant policy, should do more.

  • A far cheaper solution which helps the economy transition from 17th Century fuels like gasoline, ethanol, and benzene is to just buy a plug-in electric car.

    Ranges tend to go up to 300 miles.

    They work everywhere.

    Maintenance is half that of fossil fuel old grandpa cars.

    Energy cost for an all electric car is either zero (if you put some solar panels or wind turbines on your roof and have any 2000 or more recent building, which in most cities has to be wired and built to handle these by zoning codes) or 1/10th

  • by Snotnose ( 212196 ) on Monday November 28, 2016 @06:45PM (#53381229)
    Let us buy blended fuel, or pure fuel for more $$$. I'm gonna guess 90% of the consumers will go with the unblended fuel because it doesn't harm their engines (gearheads), gets better gas mileage (coupon clippers), and realize that ethanol is a major waste of money (anyone with half a brain).

    The only reason burning food for fuel is a thing is because Iowa and other farm states ensure they vote early and often in primaries, so those for sale pander as hard as their pandering asses can pander to these 2-3 states. The rest of the country gets the shaft.

    Hopefully Trump will break this. I'm hoping the bull in the china shop will break more bad stuff than good stuff.
  • OMG, they are just determined to destroy as many engines as possible, aren't they? Ethanol has been such an utter failure it is unreal. And yes, I had a motorcycle engine pretty much destroyed due to ethanol. And my current one has constant issues with the gas cap corroding due to ethanol. It attracts water, it gives LOWER miles per gallon, it costs more, it eats up the fuel system in many vehicles, it currently pushes up food prices, actually doesn't reduce dependence on fossil fuels (fertilizer and pr

  • Why are these people further polluting my gasoline with this crap? Today's cars are designed for 10% ethanol in the gasoline. What's going to happen when they keep polluting the fuel? Broken seals? Broken fuel pumps? Outright degradation of the metals used in the engine?

    Fuck congress. Electing Trump was throwing an (figurative) (ethanol-polluted) Molotov Cocktail at the white house, now Congress must be cleansed as well.

  • or am I just stuck buying a new car? I know, I know, but it took me 8 years to recover from the horror show that was the 2008 economic collapse and my kid just hit college. A new car isn't something I can afford without eating shitty food or working a third job...

Two can Live as Cheaply as One for Half as Long. -- Howard Kandel

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