Members of the House and Senate are meeting in conference to
reconcile the differences between their versions of comprehensive
energy legislation (H.R. 4). An issue of significant concern is a
federal mandate in Title VIII of the Senate-passed version of the
bill that
would nearly triple the use of ethanol by 2012. Fuel ethanol is a
corn-based additive that serves as a fuel oxygenate. Fuel
oxygenates are required in certain areas of the country with
excessive carbon monoxide or ozone pollution, as mandated by the
Clean Air Act. In
short, this provision would grant ethanol a "captive" market.
Many feel the ethanol
provision is essentially a deal forged between oil companies and
the corn lobby that has won the support of the White House and
Senate Majority Leader Thomas Daschle (D-SD),
despite ethanol's economic and environmental drawbacks. Based on
the available evidence, it is clear that mandating additional
fuel-ethanol subsidies and use is entirely unnecessary.
There is no
justification for including any such provision in a national energy
policy, either now or in the future.
·
The chief reason for imposing an ethanol program on motorists is to
enrich farmers and food processors under the guise of environmental
enhancement.
·
Ethanol is not environmentally safe. Oxygenates such as ethanol may
reduce emissions of carbon monoxide (CO) and other volatile organic
compounds (VOCs), but can also result in increased emissions of
nitrogen oxides (NOx), a main precursor of smog pollution; and
ethanol-blended gasoline can lead to increased emissions of
acetaldehyde, a toxic pollutant.
·
A study by Cornell University scientist David Pimentel shows that
producing ethanol from corn actually requires more energy than the
fuel produces, making the United States more fossil-fuel-dependent,
not less.
·
The ethanol mandate amounts to blatant "corporate welfare." Only a
handful of large agribusinesses would gain from this ethanol
mandate.
·
Mandating an increase in the use of ethanol would burden both
taxpayers and consumers. Expensive production costs, lengthy
transportation times, further infrastructure construction, and
added blending/production procedures would be absorbed by consumers
paying higher prices at the pump.
A BURDEN ON
TAXPAYERS AND CONSUMERS
Ethanol is more expensive to produce
than gasoline and costs about twice as much as gasoline. Over
the years, the federal government has adopted various policies to
encourage its use, including a tax incentive that partially exempts
ethanol-blended fuels from the standard excise tax on gasoline.Currently, ethanol-blended fuels
receive a 5.3 cent per gallon exemption from the excise tax. This
represents a federal subsidy of 53 cents per gallon of pure
ethanol. Yet,
despite this preferential tax treatment, use of ethanol has failed
to expand significantly.
Clearly, ethanol's failure to penetrate the marketplace explains
the push by the ethanol industry and its friends in Congress to
award ethanol a guaranteed market share.
The
ethanol provision included in Title VIII of the Senate-passed
version of H.R. 4 would increase the price of gasoline by 4 to 10
cents per gallon throughout the United States, essentially
burdening consumers with a "new gas tax."
Mandating an increase in the use of ethanol would burden both
taxpayers and consumers. While taxpayer dollars would be used to
pay even higher subsidies to a handful of companies that control
the ethanol market,
consumers would be saddled with price increases at the pump.
SIPHONING
FUNDS FROM THE HIGHWAY TRUST FUND
Financing for the
Highway Trust Fund (HTF) is derived from a variety of federal
highway user taxes including excise taxes on motor fuels.
Under current law, an ethanol-blended fuel, gasohol, is
exempt from 5.3 cents of the federal excise tax on motor fuels.
This represents a more than 25 percent break from the standard 18.4
cent excise tax on gasoline. An additional 2.5 cents of the tax
received on each gallon is transferred to the General Fund instead
of the HTF.
Thus, the total loss to the HTF resulting from ethanol-blend fuels
as compared to gasoline is 7.8 cents per gallon.
In fact, in July 2002,
House Transportation Committee leaders sent a letter to energy bill
conferees, stressing the negative effect of ethanol subsidies on
the Highway Trust Fund. The
letter specifies that
Due to
ethanol's federal tax incentive, purchasers of
gasohol…contribute less to the maintenance and improvement
of the nation's highway and transit systems than do purchasers of
gasoline.… Currently, the combined effect of these separate
policies results in well over $1 billion per year in foregone
Highway Trust revenues.
Currently,
approximately 1.7 billion gallons of the 2.0 billion gallons of
ethanol produced in the United States each year are consumed.
Title VIII of the Senate-passed version of H.R. 4 would nearly
triple the use of ethanol by 2012, with increases of 2.3 billion
gallons by 2004 and 5.0 billion gallons by 2012.
While the current tax exemptions for ethanol-blended gasoline
already have a significant negative impact on the Highway Trust
Fund, this mandate to increase ethanol use by nearly 200 percent
would result in an even greater depletion of highway funds.
At a House Subcommittee
on Highways and Transit hearing on fuel taxes, Dr. Peter Ruane,
President and CEO of the American Road and Transportation Builders
Association, testified that ethanol exemptions would reduce funding
to the Highway Trust Fund by approximately $4 billion by 2012. Some
estimates are even larger. A comprehensive study by Hart Downstream
Energy Services reports that "The level of ethanol blended as
stipulated in [the Senate-passed version of H.R. 4] would reduce
[Highway Trust Fund] receipts by approximately $10 billion over the
aggregate cost associated with continued use of ethanol under
current regulations over the same period."
Others have warned of
the devastating impact of legislated market manipulation as well.
For example, Marlo Lewis, Jr., of the Competitive Enterprise
Institute predicts that
Starting in
2013, the mandate requires refiners to increase the 5 billion
gallon target to guarantee ethanol a fixed market share as the
nation's overall fuel usage expands…. [T]ripling the sale of
ethanol will diminish highway trust fund revenues…. States
will not be able to afford new roads, bridges, and other critical
infrastructure projects needed to relieve congestion and improve
auto safety.
The proposed ethanol
mandate will certainly leech needed funds from the Highway Trust
Fund, which enables states to keep our nation's critical
transportation infrastructure viable. This potential drain on the
Highway Trust Fund is yet another significant price that the nation
would pay for this irresponsible mandate.
LACK OF
INFRASTRUCTURE TO TRANSPORT ETHANOL FUEL
At present, the
infrastructure needed to produce, store, and blend more ethanol
does not exist. Given that it is most cost-effective to produce
ethanol close to its source-corn-approximately 90 percent of the
nation's ethanol is produced in five states: Illinois, Indiana,
Iowa, Minnesota, and Nebraska.
Likewise, the greatest use of ethanol-blended fuel is currently in
the Midwest.
Providing other regions
of the country with ethanol-blended gasoline would increase its
cost, since additional transmission and distribution lines would be
needed to transport blended fuel to these areas. Given that ethanol
cannot be transmitted through petroleum pipelines, the costs of
transporting ethanol to other regions of the country will be
high.
Ethanol will have to be transported to other regions by truck,
rail, or barge and then blended at a local production facility.
Nationwide use of fuel
ethanol would not be cost-effective. The availability and price of
ethanol-blended fuel would be affected by lengthy transportation
times, further infrastructure construction, and added
blending/production procedures. Consumers would be sure to pay more
per gallon at the gas station as a result of this legislation. The
California Energy Commission reports that states in which ethanol
is not produced, including California, could suffer gas prices as
high as $4.00 per gallon.
Thus, while large and profitable agribusiness gained from a
legislated demand for their byproducts, taxpayers and consumers
would bear the burden.
ETHANOL'S
ENVIRONMENTAL DRAWBACKS
Contrary to widespread
misconception, ethanol is not environmentally safe, nor does it
necessarily reduce poisonous emissions. While oxygenates such as
ethanol do reduce emissions of carbon monoxide (CO) and other
volatile organic compounds (VOCs), they can also result in
increased emissions of nitrogen oxides (NOx), a main
precursor of smog pollution. In
addition, ethanol can increase the likelihood that toxins found in
gasoline, such as benzene, will seep into groundwater.
During floor debate,
Senator Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) noted that the "evidence suggests
that…reformulated gasoline with ethanol produces more smog
pollution than reformulated gas without it."
Senator Feinstein also cited a 1999 National Academy of Sciences
report, which found that "[ethanol-blended gasoline] will lead to
increased emissions of acetaldehyde" (a toxic pollutant).
CORPORATE
WELFARE: SUBSIDIES AND PROTECTIONS
The greatest
beneficiaries of the ethanol mandate in the Senate-passed version
of H.R. 4 would be the handful of companies that control the
ethanol market. Many experts feel that the ethanol mandate in the
Senate legislation's Title VIII amounts to blatant "corporate
welfare."
Of the companies producing ethanol, the
top five produce 60 percent and the top 10 produce 75 percent of
the chemical. One
company alone, Archer Daniels Midland, currently produces 41
percent of the nation's ethanol.
Reacting to subsidies targeted to this industry, Senator Charles
Schumer (D-NY) declared, "Our citizens' health and the environment
are being held hostage to the desire of the ethanol lobby to make
ever larger profits."
Not only does Title
VIII of the Senate-passed version of H.R. 4 award these companies
more subsidies by means of a mandate that would almost triple
ethanol use, but it also awards them a "Renewable Fuels Safe
Harbor" provision that protects big agribusiness from environmental
liability by "protecting industry from suits arising out of
defective additives in gasoline…."
Senator Schumer states it best:
The Safe Harbor
provision gives unprecedented product liability protection against
consumers and communities that seek legal redress from the
manufacturers and oil companies that produce and utilize defective
additives in their gasoline. Not just ethanol; all of them.
INSIGNIFICANT CONTRIBUTION TO NATIONAL ENERGY
SECURITY
Mandating an increase
in the use of fuel-blended ethanol will not contribute to the
nation's energy security. Although ethanol has been touted as a
"renewable resource," this is not the case. In the course of its
production, fuel ethanol must be denatured through a process that
uses gasoline. This
raises production costs, significantly devalues ethanol as a
renewable resource, and contributes very little to the United
States' energy security.
According to the Congressional Research
Service, some studies suggest that
the amount of energy needed to produce
ethanol is roughly equal to the amount of energy obtained from its
combustion, which could lead to little or no reductions in fossil
energy use. Thus, if the energy used in ethanol production is
petroleum-based, ethanol would do nothing to contribute to energy
security.
Similarly, a recent study by Cornell
University scientist David Pimentel shows that producing ethanol
from corn actually requires more energy than the fuel produces,
thereby making the United States more fossil-fuel-dependent, not
less.
Professor Pimentel's study explains that the amount of energy
required to produce 1,000 liters of ethanol is approximately 70
percent more than the amount of energy that the ethanol
possesses.
CONCLUSION
As
Senate and House conferees meet to reconcile their respective
energy bills, they must be clear about what a mandate for increased
subsidies and use of ethanol-blended fuel would and would not do.
This mandate clearly defines its winners and losers. Ethanol use
neither helps the environment nor improves the nation's energy
security. Ethanol is not environmentally friendly and is not an
authentic renewable resource; its production may require more
energy than the fuel it produces.
Finally, ethanol is not economically advantageous. Mandated
increased use would entail additional production costs,
transportation costs, infrastructure costs, and environmental
costs, the burden of which would fall squarely on consumers.
The ethanol provision
in the Senate-passed version of H.R. 4 would simply subsidize a
small group of large ethanol producers at the taxpayer's expense.
Mandating the use of more fuel ethanol is both costly and
unnecessary. The evidence clearly shows that there is no
justification for including any such provision in America's
national energy policy, either now or in the future.
Erin M. Hymel is a research
assistant in the Thomas A. Roe Institute for Economic Policy
Studies at The Heritage Foundation.