By Paul Chesser on 4.9.09 @ 11:17AM
The Congressional Budget Office has now weighed in on ethanol
mandates so I guess now it makes it official: they drive up food
prices and do nothing for greenhouse gas emissions.
The Congressional Budget Office has now weighed in on ethanol
mandates so I guess now it makes it official: they drive up food
prices and do nothing for greenhouse gas emissions. The
Washington Times
reports:
Federal ethanol-fuel policies forced consumers to pay an extra
0.5 percent to 0.8 percent in increased food prices in 2008,
and the government itself could end up paying nearly $1 billion
more this year for food stamps because of ethanol use,
according to a new government report.
The report by the Congressional Budget Office helps answer
questions raised by Congress last year as food prices shot up,
and some lawmakers questioned the effects of government
policies, such as the ethanol mandate....
Also, government-sponsored subsidies and mandates for ethanol
to be mixed with gasoline are supposed to help foster U.S.
energy independence and to cut down on greenhouse-gas
emissions, but only have reduced greenhouse-gas emissions by
less than one-third of 1 percent.
CBO also noted that pushing for ethanol could actually increase
greenhouse gas emissions, with deforestation being one reason
among many for that consequence. Even the New York Times
figured that out a long time ago.
Cross-posted at
Globalwarming.org.
topics:
Global Warming