Dousing ethanol with truth
Phil Price
Issue date: 11/6/07 Section: Business
For many years, the environment was simply a political non-issue.
Environmentalists, on the whole, were seen as fringe interest groups, with little to no public support behind their proposed initiatives. In the past two years, thanks in part to inclement weather shifts, environmental disasters and Al Gore, environmental degradation has finally burst into the political limelight, and politicians are jumping on board.
Unfortunately, recent evidence suggests that, as always, politicians ought to look before they leap.
"I have a glass of ethanol every morning before breakfast," said John McCain, an Arizona Republican senator.
McCain made his remark to The Globe and Mail during a recent swing through Iowa, the corn-growing heart of America's booming ethanol industry. Of course, Senator McCain's recent conversion to the cause of ethanol likely had something to do with his presidential campaign, in which Iowa's presidential primaries are seen as the important first battlefield.
There are very few critics of ethanol's role as a sustainable, carbon neutral alternative to gasoline. In fact, its adoption by the automotive industries and private sector is a success story for the cause of environmentalism.
Unfortunately for the ethanol farmers of Iowa, simply being green won't be enough to displace the titan that is the oil industry. The reason that gasoline is falling out of vogue so quickly has as much to do with the business of oil as it does with its environmental impact.
As reported in the The Brock Press, the price of oil is hitting record levels, even in compared to the inflation-adjusted heights of the '70s and '80s oil crisis. Not only has oil seen a rapid increase in price, it is routinely regarded as one of the least reliable commodities on the market.
Speculation, new discoveries, and international cartels conspire to ensure that oil prices remain among the world's most arbitrary.
But it is not clear that ethanol is any more secure or reliable than gasoline, according to new research by James Eaves, a finance professor at the University of Laval in Quebec City, and engineer Stephen Eaves.
Environmentalists, on the whole, were seen as fringe interest groups, with little to no public support behind their proposed initiatives. In the past two years, thanks in part to inclement weather shifts, environmental disasters and Al Gore, environmental degradation has finally burst into the political limelight, and politicians are jumping on board.
Unfortunately, recent evidence suggests that, as always, politicians ought to look before they leap.
"I have a glass of ethanol every morning before breakfast," said John McCain, an Arizona Republican senator.
McCain made his remark to The Globe and Mail during a recent swing through Iowa, the corn-growing heart of America's booming ethanol industry. Of course, Senator McCain's recent conversion to the cause of ethanol likely had something to do with his presidential campaign, in which Iowa's presidential primaries are seen as the important first battlefield.
There are very few critics of ethanol's role as a sustainable, carbon neutral alternative to gasoline. In fact, its adoption by the automotive industries and private sector is a success story for the cause of environmentalism.
Unfortunately for the ethanol farmers of Iowa, simply being green won't be enough to displace the titan that is the oil industry. The reason that gasoline is falling out of vogue so quickly has as much to do with the business of oil as it does with its environmental impact.
As reported in the The Brock Press, the price of oil is hitting record levels, even in compared to the inflation-adjusted heights of the '70s and '80s oil crisis. Not only has oil seen a rapid increase in price, it is routinely regarded as one of the least reliable commodities on the market.
Speculation, new discoveries, and international cartels conspire to ensure that oil prices remain among the world's most arbitrary.
But it is not clear that ethanol is any more secure or reliable than gasoline, according to new research by James Eaves, a finance professor at the University of Laval in Quebec City, and engineer Stephen Eaves.
2008 Woodie Awards
Be the first to comment on this story