Rev Up Your Engines, Ethanol Promotion at Sturgis Was A Success

August 19, 2010

RFA staff attended the 70th Annual Sturgis Motorcycle Rally in Sturgis, SD, partnering with the Legendary Buffalo Chip to promote ethanol. With over 800,000 attendees, this was a great opportunity for the RFA to chat with motorcycle enthusiasts and talk about the benefits of using ethanol in their motorcycles, and every other vehicle they might have at home. Attendees were able to leave with an abundant amount of ethanol information that was handed out, along with 2010 RFA Sturgis t-shirts and koozies.

Posted in Ethanol, Fuel, Media

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5 Billion Gallon Challenge Isn’t As Clean as it Seems

August 19, 2010

The growth and commercialization of next generation biofuels is essential to the long term success of America’s ethanol industry. This success does not need to come at the expense of current technologies. The RFA does not believe that U.S. biofuel policy should be crafted in a manner that jeopardizes the tremendous advances that have come from the investment our nation has made in renewable fuels or causes cannibalization in the industry. It is true that we need to support and promote the growth of next generation biofuels in order to become energy independent and to combat global warming. However, this will not be achieved by pitting different sectors of the industry against one another or abandoning support for one sector of the industry for another when the entire industry needs support as long as we continue to provide permanent tax breaks to oil producers.

Posted in Agriculture, Ethanol, Energy, Fuel, Renewable Fuels, Renewable Fuels Standard, U.S Dept. of Energy, USDA, VEETC, Water

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Harvesting Corn for Local Chicago Area Shelters

August 16, 2010

Last week, community members including the Illinois Corn Growers Association, local Farm Bureau, Boy Scouts and Church groups harvested sweet corn from a family owned farm in Manhattan, Illinois to donate to local food banks in the under-served Chicago area.

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No Surprise Here - More Problems Emerge with RFS Greenhouse Gas Calculations

August 05, 2010

Despite the fact that real-world data and events have disputed the ILUC theory at every turn (e.g., grain and oilseed exports haven’t fallen off, soybean acreage hasn’t decreased, livestock feed use remains steady, Amazon deforestation is decreasing, etc., etc.), EPA’s final rule for the RFS2 institutes a severe ILUC penalty against corn ethanol and other biofuels. But there’s a major problem with how EPA derived its ILUC penalties: the agency based the penalties on modeling scenarios where each individual biofuel was isolated and volumes of that biofuel were increased while other biofuel volumes were held constant. Of course, that’s not how the RFS2 works—the regulation requires simultaneous increases of several types of biofuels. When EPA modeled a scenario in which all biofuels volumes were increased simultaneously in accordance with RFS2 requirements, the amount of land use change was half of what it was in the cases where EPA isolated individual biofuels. If EPA had used this modeling case to develop its LUC penalties, the hit to corn ethanol would have been 10.8 g CO2e/MJ, rather than EPA’s estimate of 28.4 g/MJ. Such a reduction in LUC emissions means overall lifecycle GHG emissions for 2022 average corn ethanol would be 38% less than baseline gasoline emissions, rather than the 21% estimate finalized by EPA.

Posted in Ethanol, EPA, Environment, Land Use, Renewable Fuels Standard, Research

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Senate to Adjourn with No Energy Bill…Not That Anyone is Surprised

August 04, 2010

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid has pulled even a scaled-back version of an energy bill from consideration before the Senate leaves this week for recess. This is disappointing, but not surprising.

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World Bank Reverses Course on Blame for 2007/2008 Commodity and Food Price Spike

July 30, 2010

Many will remember the "leaked" report from the World Bank that blamed biofuels for 75% of the run up in commodity prices a few years ago. Now, a new report from the Bank's Development Prospects Group comes to a different conclusion. The authors of the report find that "“…the effect of biofuels on food prices has not been as large as originally thought..". That sounds familiar.

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Environmentalist Expose Big Oil’s Record of Destruction…Finally

July 29, 2010

Many people, including me, have been puzzled by the silence, or at least perceived silence, of the environmental community over the oil spill in the Gulf. As millions of gallons of oil kill ocean life and ruin coastlines, many in the environmental community seem oddly muted in their protest. Finally, the National Wildlife Federation is exposing the record of spills, accidents and other incidences that have released countless gallons of oil into the environment all across the country since 2000…all while a new oil spill in Michigan highlights the risk of oil to all parts of the country.

Posted in Agriculture, E-Xchange, Ethanol, Energy, Environment

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Corn Commentary Takes on the Gray Lady

July 29, 2010

East Coast media has long had disdain for agriculture, and by extension, ethanol. Much of this dislike stems from a fundamental lack of understanding about the industries and issues important to rural America. While the Wall Street Journal has long been the standard bearer for such vitriol, when it comes to ethanol, the New York Times doesn't fall too far behind. The Times' latest anti-ethanol effort is disguised as a choice between good and bad energy subsidies. The Times argues that subsidies for wind and solar are critical to those industries' survival and our nation's goal of reduced oil consumption (we don't use oil to produce electricity, by the way). The Times then says investments in ethanol, which does replace oil directly in American gas tanks, is unworthy. To be clear, we should be increasing investments in all renewable energies, not picking and choosing winners. Supporting its position, the Times relies on many of the canards offered by ethanol critics about environmental concerns and land usage. My friends over at the Corn Commentary take exception with the Gray Lady's portrayal and perception of ethanol, and offer a rebuttal. Worth a read.

Posted in Agriculture, Ethanol, Energy, Environment, Fuel, Land Use, Media, VEETC

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Congress, Ethanol Industry Ask Similar Quesitons of EPA re: E15

July 29, 2010

The Chairman and Ranking Member of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, along with the Chairman and Ranking Member of the Energy and Environment Subcommittee, today asked EPA some very relevant questions concerning its deliberation on the E15 waiver - in particular the EPA's apparent decision to approve E15 for only those vehicles 2001 and newer. The RFA agrees with some of the line of questioning the members of Congress are pursuing, particularly given the importance of moving beyond E10 and the success of the Renewable Fuels Standard.

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RFA Attends Ag Media Summit

July 29, 2010

Earlier this week, I attended the 12th Annual Agriculture Media Summit which took place at the Crowne Plaza Hotel on the Riverfront in St. Paul, MN. Here, numerous journalists, editors, photographers, publishers and communicator specialists in agriculture gathered to network with those in their industry and promote and enhance the viability of agriculture media as an effective and efficient communications medium. This year seemed to have a large focus on the social media world. It was hash tag (#) galore at #AgMS with people tweeting to win prizes like the iPad, updating their followers of their location or highlighting the new skills and applications that had been discussed during the breakout sessions.

Posted in Agriculture, Media

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Farmers, Ethanol Producers Push for E12 Now, E15 As Soon As Possible

July 26, 2010

Three major farmer and ethanol groups today called on Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Administrator Lisa Jackson to formally approve the use of E12 (12% ethanol) in the nation’s gasoline supply. The groups – American Coalition for Ethanol (ACE), National Corn Growers Association (NCGA) and the Renewable Fuels Association (RFA) – in a formal letter to the EPA Administrator wrote, “based on the EPA’s delay in acting upon the full E15 waiver and on our concerns that the Agency will restrict the use of E15 to cars made in 2001 and thereafter, we encourage the EPA to formally approve the use of E12 for all motor vehicles as an immediate interim step pending any ongoing additional testing on E15.”

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Letter to the Editor: Wall Street Journal

July 26, 2010

Seeking even-handedness from the editors of The Wall Street Journal is like expecting a mama grizzly to forsake her cubs.

Posted in Ethanol

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Comic Relief Courtesy of Big Oil

July 21, 2010

Big Oil's lobbyists and their band of merry men are apparently launching a new ad to attack ethanol yet again. This time, as in some previous campaigns, they are calling for more testing of higher level ethanol blends and attempting to scare members of Congress about the boogeyman that would be E15. Getting a lecture from Big Oil is rich, indeed.

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Providing for Seamless E15 Transition

July 20, 2010

Moving to E15 will require cooperation between the ethanol industry and those in the business of bringing fuel to American drivers. Today, that cooperation was on display as the RFA joined representatives from the nation's major gasoline marketing trade associations to address some of the challenges a move to E15 may present.

Posted in E-Xchange, Ethanol, Energy, EPA, Fuel, Renewable Fuels, Renewable Fuels Standard

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Protecting Our Addiction to Oil Comes at a Cost

July 19, 2010

For years now, we have heard environmentalists and some in the government tell us that gasoline production and oil use don't have indirect greenhouse gas emissions. It is only biofuels like ethanol, we have been told, that must suffer penalties for these so-called indirect emissions. According the a new groundbreaking report to be published in Environmental Science, requiring our military to protect the free flow of oil comes with environmental consequences. And those impacts are potentially HUGE.

Posted in Ethanol, EPA, Environment, Land Use, Renewable Fuels, Research

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TGIF!

July 16, 2010

After a frenetic week in Washington for America's ethanol industry, all i have to say is Thank Goodness It's Friday!

Posted in Ethanol, Energy, Environment, Renewable Fuels Standard, Tariff , VEETC

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CBO, Ethanol, and the Rest of the Story

July 16, 2010

This week, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) released a report critical of ethanol tax incentives, but devoid of any comparisons to other energy tax incentives (like those for Big Oil). The report relied on what were, in large part, worst-case assumptions and also failed to give credit for co-products now an undeniable component of the industry that must be taken into account. After a thorough review, we have come up with some of key takeaways and criticisms of the report.

Posted in Ethanol, Environment, Renewable Fuels, Renewable Fuels Standard, VEETC

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Farmers, Ethanol Industry Reaffirm Support for Current Ethanol Tax Policies

July 15, 2010

Farmers and ethanol producers agree that extending current tax incentives for ethanol is the right policy. Read what leaders in the industry had to say in its entirety.

Posted in Ethanol, VEETC

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CBO, Chairman Bingaman and the Future of the Ethanol Tax Incentive (First Cut)

July 14, 2010

A new report from the Congressional Budget Office takes the issue of ethanol tax incentives completely out of context. Nowhere in the report does CBO compare ethanol incentives to those provided to fossil fuels. Neither does CBO give credit to America's ethanol industry for the environmental and efficiency improvements it has made or the production of coproducts such as livestock feed and corn oil.

Posted in Ethanol, Energy, Environment, VEETC

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Weekly Ethanol Report Ending 7/9/10

July 14, 2010

The Energy Information Administration (EIA) put out their weekly ethanol production statistics, this week showing that there was a drop in ethanol production. According to EIA data, ethanol production for the week ending 7/9/2010 was 821,000 barrels per day (b/d), or 34.5 million gallons daily. That is down 4% from 855,000 b/d from the previous week.

Posted in Ethanol, Production

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