 Stories About: agriculture AND biofuels AND energy AND politics
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Author |
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Corn polls New surveys suggest changing views on biofuels |
Ron Steenblik |
11 Jun 2008 |
Gristmill |
| Biofuel policy has made it to the polls. Yesterday, the National Center for Public Policy Research, a nonprofit, non-partisan educational foundation based in Washington, D.C., released the results of a survey (PDF) conducted at the beginning of this month which claims to have found that most Americans -- 'including those in the Farm Belt' -- want Congress to reduce or eliminate the mandated use of corn ethanol. In response to the key question, 'What do you think Congr ... |
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| Topics: agriculture, biofuels, climate, energy, ethanol, European Union, politics (all these topics) |
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The farm bill ups the cellulosic ethanol ante Lost amid the crop-subsidy battle, a new biofuel regime |
Tom Philpott |
24 May 2008 |
Gristmill |
| Amid all the thunder and lightening about subsidies in the new farm bill -- which officially became law Thursday -- Congress made a major policy shift with regard to the goodies lavished on ethanol makers. Under previous policy, biofuel makers -- whether conventional or cellulosic -- benefit from a 51 cent a gallon tax credit conferred on gasoline blenders. No any more. According to a recent Environmental Law & Policy Center memorandum [PDF] summing up th ... |
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| Topics: ag policy, agriculture, biofuels, energy, ethanol, legislation, politics (all these topics) |
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Perry and Thrust U.S. should back off from biofuels to bring down food prices, says Texas guv |
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28 Apr 2008 |
News |
| Posted at 4:56 PM on 28 Apr 2008 Has the U.S. push for biofuels contributed to rising global food prices? Well, yes, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said Monday: "There has been apparently some effect, unintended consequence from the alternative fuels effort." But, she hastened to add, "biofuels continue to be an extremely important piece of the alternative energy picture" and & ... |
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| Topics: ag policy, ag subsidies, agriculture, biofuels, economy, energy, food, news, politics, state politics, Texas (all these topics) |
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Bush's bread man Baltimore baker takes on great quacking menace |
Glenn Hurowitz |
21 Apr 2008 |
Gristmill |
| Last week, The New York Times' David Streitfeld told the story of one J.R. Paterakis, a Baltimore 'baker' who opposes the Conservation Reserve Program, which provides incentives to farmers to set aside their land for wildlife, clean water, and (incidentally) massive carbon sequestration. Seemed like an opportunity to deploy my rye wit. The program has been a huge success -- protecting 35 million acres of land and partially restoring the 'duck factory' of the upper ... |
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| Topics: wildlife, energy, biofuels, Big Ag, politics, agriculture, food (all these topics) |
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Crop, Stop, and Roll E.U. likely to cut subsidies for farmers |
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13 Mar 2008 |
News |
| Posted at 1:11 PM on 13 Mar 2008 With crop prices through the roof and scientific concerns being raised about the greenness of biofuels, various European countries have cut back tax breaks and subsidies for farmers -- and now the European Union as a whole is planning to follow suit. source: The Wall Street Journal see also, in Grist: E.U. says it will be mindful of sustainability in boosting biofuels From ... |
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| Topics: ag subsidies, agriculture, biofuels, energy, European Union, news, politics (all these topics) |
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Bush: Not a Gristmill reader President hails cellulosic ethanol as a panacea |
Tom Philpott |
06 Mar 2008 |
Gristmill |
| I'm offended: President Bush evidently hasn't been following my string of posts about how cellulosic ethanol probably won't ever be viable. Addressing a renewable-energy conference, the president fretted that the ethanol boom he set in motion is 'beginning to affect the price of food.' He added: 'So we got to do something about it.' And what we 'got to do,' evidently, is throw more cash at cellulosic ethanol. Here's how The New York Times summed up his statement: ... |
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| Topics: agriculture, biofuels, cellulosic ethanol, energy, ethanol, George Bush, politics (all these topics) |
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Cellulosic ethanol: not likely to be viable New study from mainstream ag economists at Iowa State |
Tom Philpott |
03 Mar 2008 |
Gristmill |
| Cellulosic ethanol represents a beacon on the horizon -- the justification cited by wiseguys like Vinod Khosla for dropping billions per year in public cash to prop up corn ethanol production. Corn ethanol, you see, is a bridge to a bright cellulosic future. But the beacon is looking more and more like a mirage, a ghost, a specter; the bridge we're hurtling down may well lead to a chasm. A quiet consensus seems to be forming among people you'd think would know th ... |
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| Topics: ag policy, agriculture, biofuels, cellulosic ethanol, energy, ethanol, politics (all these topics) |
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Notable quotable
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David Roberts |
18 Dec 2007 |
Gristmill |
| 'I really would like to vote for this bill because we desperately need an energy bill. The world and particularly the United States faces a real challenge on energy in the future. But I cannot vote for this bill primarily because of the corn ethanol mandate. A recent article in The Economist noted that our use of corn for ethanol doubled the price of corn about a year ago. Farmers then moved lands from soybeans and what would have been in soybeans and wheat to corn. We ... |
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| Topics: quotables, politics, legislation, energy, agriculture, biofuels, ethanol (all these topics) |
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To those who are blasé about expanding the RFS Once in place, the RFS will be nigh impossible to eliminate |
Ron Steenblik |
13 Dec 2007 |
Gristmill |
| Several posts during the past week, and countless ones elsewhere, have asked people to support the Energy Bill making its way through Congress. Some people have no problem with one of its major provisions, which calls for substantially expanding the Renewable Fuels Standard (RFS) -- the regulation that requires minimum amounts of ethanol, biodiesel, or other biofuels to be incorporated into the volume of transport fuels used each year. Indeed, some would even welcome t ... |
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| Topics: agriculture, biofuels, energy, ethanol, legislation, politics (all these topics) |
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Will the energy bill bail out ethanol? The corn industry hopes Congress will pull its fat out of the fire |
Tom Philpott |
28 Nov 2007 |
Gristmill |
| I used to love to start my writing day by taking a poke or two at the corn-based ethanol industry -- you know, the biggest greenwash ever. Photo: mrobenalt These days, the debunking of corn fuel almost seems like it's piling on. Today, two major newspapers -- the LA Times and The Wall Street Journal -- ran front-page stories that essentially say: everyone hates government support for corn-based ethanol, except for people with a direct financial (or polit ... |
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| Topics: ag policy, ag subsidies, agriculture, biofuels, energy, ethanol, politics (all these topics) |
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Biofuels fueling conflict The need for good research |
Geoff Dabelko |
07 Aug 2007 |
Gristmill |
| The rush to put biofuels in our gas tanks has given people analyzing natural resources and conflict some work to do. How are European and American policy mandates to dramatically increase the use of biofuels affecting the places that grow biofuel inputs? It seems fair to say that little consideration has been given to the potential conflict and equity impacts of this surge in demand for palm oil, sugarcane, and corn. After President Bush's 2007 State of the Union ... |
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| Topics: agriculture, biofuels, energy, Indonesia, international politics, politics (all these topics) |
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A Bridge to Somewhere? What we've learned from the biofuels series |
Tom Philpott |
15 Dec 2006 |
Main Dish |
| Future or folly? Photo: iStockphoto After spending much of the last several months thinking about the biofuels boom and its implications in preparation for this special series, we've come to a few conclusions. Like other energy sources, biofuels have significant environmental liabilities. Boosters' rhetoric about "renewable energy" aside, topsoil -- from which biofuel feedstocks spring -- is ... |
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| Topics: ag policy, agriculture, biofuels, cellulosic ethanol, energy, ethanol, politics (all these topics) |
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By the People, For the People Toward a community-owned, decentralized biofuel future |
David Morris |
08 Dec 2006 |
Soapbox |
| President Bush visits the Virginia Biodiesel Refinery in 2005. Photo: whitehouse.gov Biofuels won't single-handedly solve the climate crisis, nor will they deliver energy independence. But a base of widely dispersed, farmer- and citizen-owned biofuel plants can displace significant amounts of fossil fuels -- while also building local economies. What follows is a strategy for tweak ... |
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| Topics: ag policy, agriculture, biofuels, energy, politics (all these topics) |
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Keep It Green To fulfill its environmental promises, biofuel policy needs a kick in the pants |
Ana Unruh Cohen |
08 Dec 2006 |
Soapbox |
| As war simmers in the Middle East and oil prices rise along with global temperatures, Midwestern farmers and politicians aren't the only ones banging the drums for biofuels. Now big-time investors, security hawks, environmentalists, and even George W. Bush have joined their ranks. But is environmentally responsible bioenergy a real possibility, or are we bio-fooling oursel ... |
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| Topics: agriculture, biofuels, energy, politics (all these topics) |
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The Big Three The numbers behind ethanol, cellulosic ethanol, and biodiesel in the U.S. |
Maywa Montenegro |
04 Dec 2006 |
Main Dish |
| America devours oil like no other country in the world. Representing 5 percent of the global population, the country consumes fully a quarter of the world's oil. Every year, to move ourselves and our goods around, we burn 140 billion gallons of gasoline and 40 billion gallons of diesel -- enough to propel the average U.S. car around the world 1.6 billion times. But rising price ... |
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| Topics: ag policy, ag subsidies, agriculture, biofuels, cellulosic ethanol, energy, ethanol, politics (all these topics) |
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Mikey Likes It Bush's pick to head the USDA is a big ethanol booster |
Amanda Griscom Little |
09 Dec 2004 |
Muckraker |
| At a White House ceremony last week announcing the nomination of Nebraska Gov. Mike Johanns (R) to succeed Ann Veneman as agriculture secretary, President Bush called his pick "a strong proponent of alternative energy sources, such as ethanol and biodiesel," later adding that "in a new term, we'll continue policies that are pro-growth, pro-jobs, and pro-farmer." Johanns ( ... |
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| Topics: agriculture, biofuels, cellulosic ethanol, Department of Agriculture, energy, ethanol, Muckraker, politics (all these topics) |
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