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Alice in ethanol-landEdwards, Canada, and now South AfricaPosted by Ron Steenblik (Guest Contributor) at 11:03 AM on 21 Mar 2007Former Senator John Edwards (D-N.C.) -- now a presidential hopeful -- has just published his latest energy plan. One important plank of that plan foresees the nation producing (not just consuming, which would allow for imports) 65 billion gallons a year of ethanol by 2025. ("I'll meet your bid for 2030, Barack, and raise it by five billion!") If the 51 cents a gallon volumetric ethanol excise tax credit (VEETC) is extended beyond the end of 2010 -- as most commentators and even the USDA expect will happen -- here's what the cumulative cost to the U.S. Treasury would be from 2007 through 2025, assuming straight-line growth: Almost $350 billion (=$0.51 x 19 x [7+(65-7)/2]). And that's not counting any additional subsidies provided through the 10 cents a gallon small producers' credit (if it, too, is extended), or state-level production incentives, or loans or grants for the construction of new plants, or crop subsidies, or extra subsidies for E85 or lignocellulosic ethanol ... These kinds of proposals threaten to bust the budget not only of the United States. They have also, through example, strengthened the hand of ethanol producers in other countries, who are now busy lobbying for their own subsidies. North of the border, the pro-biofuels lobby has been arguing for at least a year that Canada: (a) needs biofuels; and (b) should not become dependent on imported, subsidized biofuels from its NAFTA partner, the United States. Their solution? Subsidize Canadian biofuels, of course! Thus, on Monday, the Federal Government of Canada announced a new, seven-year, C$1.5 billion (US$ 1.3 billion) program to support producers of "renewable" alternatives to gasoline (such as ethanol), and diesel (such as biodiesel). The government will be offering incentives of up to C$0.10/liter (US$0.325/gallon) for ethanol and up to C$0.20/litre (US$ 0.65/gallon) for biodiesel during the next three years (the rates are scheduled to decline thereafter). Bear in mind, the Canadian economy is about 1/10th that of the U.S.A.'s, so US$1.3 billion is a hefty chunk of change. Meanwhile, down in South Africa, a "windfalls tax team" ... ... has recommended investment incentives for the manufacture of biofuels. Again, this in an economy about 4.5 percent the size of the U.S.'s. That would be equivalent to a subsidy in the United States of around $10 billion a year. There are skeptics, such as James Blignaut, a professor of environmental economics at the University of Pretoria, but what country ever let such spoilsports influence biofuels policy, eh? Crops grown for fuel purposes impact on biodiversity, on food security and on the water supply. Maize is largely rain-fed, [Blignaut] says. There is one bright, albeit flickering light on in the international news front, however: Chile. According to Keith R's (Keith Ripley's) report on the situation: Shortly after the German firm Südzucker announced in October its interest in making a massive investment in biofuel production in Chile if the regulations and policy were adjusted, the Government created a public-private commission in order to develop a national biofuels policy for Presidential consideration. The commission was originally slated to deliver a report by year-end so that the President could draft a biofuels law by end-January 2007. I'll let any interested readers read the rest. While the Public-Private Commission on Biofuels does recommend a blending target, the caveats it mentions -- should not adversely affect the use of soil and water resources, should not lead to concentrating ownership, etc. -- suggest that wise heads may prevail. We shall see. As Keith R concludes: To her credit, President Bachelet did not immediately pounce on the report, pronounce biofuels to be Chile's energy salvation, and quickly release an already drafted biofuels bill. Given the "biofuel fever" that has been sweeping LAC [Latin America and the Caribbean] lately, and the pressure on this issue she has been getting from certain quarters, it would not have been a surprise if she had.
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