E15 truly is amazing — amazingly destructive, that is. It's pure poison for automobile engines. It can damage valves and drastically reduce fuel economy.
E15 truly is amazing — amazingly destructive, that is. It’s pure poison for automobile engines. It can damage valves and drastically reduce fuel economy.

Corn continues to thrive in the swamp

By Jeff Dunetz

Last month, President Trump directed the Environmental Protection Agency to allow the year-round sale of gasoline that contains 15 percent ethanol, or E15. The decision is a big win for politically connected corn farmers but a big loss for American drivers and the environment.

For more than a decade, the federal government’s Renewable Fuel Standard has required refineries to blend biofuels into their gasoline. The most popular biofuel by far is ethanol derived from corn. It has accounted for 87 percent of the RFS’s blending requirements since 2007.

The architects of the RFS claimed it would benefit the environment. When burned, ethanol produces fewer carbon emissions than traditional gasoline. So if car drivers started using ethanol blends en masse, America’s emissions would drop dramatically — or so corn lobbyists claimed.

In reality, ethanol blends have harmed, not helped, the environment. About 40 percent of the American corn supply is now devoted to ethanol. Farmers have converted previously untouched prairies into corn fields to meet demand for the crop. Ethanol’s total emissions, including those from corn production, are 28 percent higher than emissions from normal gasoline, according to the nonprofit Clean Air Task Force.

America has made historic environmental gains since the RFS was created. But the natural gas boom, not ethanol, deserves credit for this progress.

The adoption of fracking and other innovative drilling techniques has opened up huge underground natural gas reserves previously considered unreachable. The resulting production boom has enticed power plants to switch over from coal to natural gas, which burns much more cleanly. That transition has driven America’s annual greenhouse gas emissions to the lowest levels in decades.

Ethanol pollutes the air, too. Burning ethanol in a car engine on a hot day produces noxious ozone emissions that exacerbate smog. That’s why the federal government has severely restricted the sale of the high-concentration “E15” blend during the summer.

Until now, that is.

The White House changed that long-standing restriction with its mandate for E15 sales year-round. President Trump called ethanol “an amazing substance” and claimed to be “unleashing the power of E15 to fuel our country all year long.”

E15 truly is amazing — amazingly destructive, that is. It’s pure poison for many automobile engines. It can damage valves and drastically reduce fuel economy. Three out of every four cars on the road right now, some 155 million vehicles, can’t handle such a high-concentration blend.

Mercedes-Benz, Honda, Volvo, and Ford have all explicitly warned owners their warranties may be voided if they drive with E15. And this blend hasn’t been approved for motorcycles, boats, lawnmowers, and many other small engine vehicles.

So the natural question is, if E15 damages the environment and hurts drivers, why is President Trump championing it?

Pure partisan politics. Iowa Senator Chuck Grassley, who personally lobbied Trump for the E15 order, was downright giddy after the announcement, saying “everything about this is good, good, good.” His counterpart Sen. Joni Ernst congratulated the president for “fulfilling his promise.”

In reality, President Trump is breaking his promise to voters. He pledged he would drain the swamp and put ordinary Americans ahead of special interests. But this new ethanol order does the opposite; it’s a lucrative government handout to politically connected agricultural firms. Drivers will pay the price.

Jeff Dunetz is publisher of The Lid (LidBlog.com) and a political columnist at The Jewish Star and hosts the weekly Lid Radio Show.

The viewpoints expressed above are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of The Independent.

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