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The Real Cost of Ethanol

July/August 1995 Issue


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Though environmentalists point out that it takes as much energy to produce a gallon of ethanol as can be had by burning it, producers such as Archer Daniels Midland have long benefited from a 54-cent-per-gallon tax break. Recently ADM has pushed national politicians for further breaks, including laws that favor ethanol-based products in the nation's gasoline supply. During the 1992 presidential election, when George Bush was trailing Clinton, Bush proposed gasoline volatility standards that favored ethanol products as the additives to make the "reformulated gasolines" called for in the 1990 Clean Air Act. At about the same time Bush received a series of ADM payments culminating in a $400,000 check for a single fundraising dinner in April 1992.

When Bush's prospects began to fade, Andreas started shipping money to Clinton, discreetly at first, then more dramatically once he was elected. (His total contribution of $270,000, as of mid-1994, makes him one of Clinton's largest benefactors, according to Common Cause.) The largest installment, a $100,000 check for a presidential dinner, came in June 1994.

Clinton shied away from tampering with volatility standards, as Bush had. Instead, just days after receiving the $100,000 check, the Clinton administration simply ordered that 30 percent of the gasoline sold in America's nine most polluted cities contain ethanol-based additives by 1996. Without the mandate, refiners were inclined to choose a clean-air additive made from methanol, a form of alcohol distilled from natural gas. (The methanol additive is cheaper and easier to get to market.)

Last year, another friend-of-Dwayne, Bob Dole, had the dubious honor of defending the 30 percent mandate at the very time he was trashing Clinton's health care proposal for--yes--imposing mandates. In April, a federal appeals court blocked the implementation of the ethanol mandate, saying the Clinton administration lacked the statutory authority to discriminate between ethanol and methanol.

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If I went to a E-85 Station today what would a gallon of Ethanol cost me? Whi can no one answer this?
Posted by:Bill SheidowJune 25, 2007 4:39:05 AMRespond ^
Why is it always political with YOU PEOPLE? Two questions: 1. how much does it cost to produce a gallon of gas? 2. how much to produce a gallon of E-85 and which is more efficient?
Posted by:Jim ThrasherJuly 24, 2007 6:27:02 PMRespond ^
When gasoline wholesaled for $1.00/gal, ethanol producers received .54/gal subsidy which made ethanol cost effecient for producers. At wholesale prices at or over $2.00/gal, why is subsidy necessary, and where are our do good political watchdogs? By the way when Clinton wanted to mandate 30% of US gasoline would be ethanol, did anyone tell him that there was nowhere near enough ethanol to meet this mandate?
Posted by:Dave CowlesAugust 3, 2007 8:47:04 PMRespond ^
No one has ever given a real price or energy cost to produce a gallon of Ethanol. Why is this so hard? So much talk with no real answers.
Posted by:Carl MeyerOctober 8, 2007 4:21:15 PMRespond ^
E10 is about $2.29 a gallon. Not sure about E85
Posted by:GarrettOctober 30, 2007 2:40:08 PMRespond ^
i wanted to see the real cost of ethanol not some crap on bush and clinton
Posted by:nickNovember 23, 2007 9:47:52 PMRespond ^
you suck
Posted by:garyNovember 29, 2007 7:55:36 AMRespond ^
why cant you give the real value of cost of ethanol is it so difficult
Posted by:rajeJanuary 4, 2008 2:51:39 AMRespond ^
GAs is $3.17 a gallon and ethanol is about $2.50 to $3.00
Posted by:Dalton HammockJanuary 24, 2008 6:14:32 AMRespond ^
Something missing in the comments:
how much energy does it cost to produce a gallon of gasolne?
Posted by:smelldatFebruary 26, 2008 9:29:53 AMRespond ^
Ethanol is good for the enviroment
Posted by:heatherMarch 6, 2008 9:26:46 AMRespond ^
Ethanol SUCKS... Electric cars rock!!!
Posted by:Em7March 7, 2008 11:07:07 AMRespond ^
Who flippen cares?
Posted by:Em7March 7, 2008 11:09:28 AMRespond ^
Look, I'm not a political person, so seriously, this isn't about politics. We need another fuel, Ethaol or other, thats realy al that matters.
Posted by:Em7March 7, 2008 11:14:59 AMRespond ^
Here is an interactive web-site showing nation wide E-85 prices at the pump... easily found in the mid-west
Posted by:Brandon KnudsvigApril 29, 2008 2:07:00 PMRespond ^
I remember when a gallon of regular gasoline cost 15 cents at the pump. I also remember my father grumbling when it went up in price to 20 cents per gallon. Gasoline is commodity, produced from hydrocarbon fossil fuels, the intrinsic value of the components that make up gasoline are a relative constant. The actual value of the gasoline has not changed, what has changed is the buying power of our money. Our money is worth less today than it was when gas was 15 cents per gallon, therefor it requires us(the consumers) to pay more for the same product than it did for our grandparents.
Posted by:J.BollandJune 12, 2008 2:40:17 AMRespond ^
The so-called "BIG OIL" companies are not totally at fault for the high price we pay at the pump for gasoline. The real villins here are the bankers. In the Unites States we have what is known as the Federal Reserve Banking System. It is a PRIVATE BANK, solely owned and operated by PRIVATE intrests whose main goal in life is to CONTROL every aspect of the financial, economic and governmental function of the entire world. They are greedy despots who will not rest until you, me and the guy down the street are firmly crushed beneath their boot heels. So, high gas prices are just another weapon in their hands to enslave the masses. What better way to control freedom of movement than to make it too expensive for you to move. If you can't afford to buy gas for your car, then you can't drive to work. If you can't get to work then you wont have a job. If you don't have a job, you can't pay your bills... Eventually you will be homeless, broke, destitute and forced to seek public assistance. Essentially you become a SLAVE to social welfare. A SLAVE by any other name is still a SLAVE.
Posted by:J. BollandJune 12, 2008 3:02:34 AMRespond ^

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