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Illinois: the Land of Ethanol
Replacing imported oil is the nation's No. 1 energy priority. And few alternative fuels are more appealing than et Hanoi, derived from corn or other renewable sources. But there is no single replacement fuel. Ethanol, like other alternatives, can provide a modest but very significant part of our nation's liquid fuel diet. Illinois, the crucible of the nation's ethanol activity, is where the nation will learn if this resolutely American fuel is technologically, economically and politically feasible. ILLINOIS may be the Land of Lincoln to tourists, but to alternative energy advocates it is the Land of Ethanol. Until recently, Americans who used to put ethanol only into their cocktail glasses — ethanol is another name for the familiar grain alcohol used in beverages — have begun to put it into their gas tanks as well, in the form of the 90-10 gasoline-ethanol blend marketed as gasohol. No less than half of the fuel ethanol being made in the U.S. for gasohol blending is made in Illinois. There are commercial distilleries in 18 Illinois counties, with smaller on-farm stills in another 21. Thousands of Illinois motorists regularly run their cars on gasohol — including the State of Illinois, which in September announced that it had converted its 10,000-vehicle fleet to gasohol. Two years ago, however, scarcely anyone in Illinois knew what fuel ethanol was. Ethanol is merely another name for ethyl alcohol, one of a chemical family that has many members. Clear and sweet-smelling, ethanol can be made not only from grains such as corn but from beets, potatoes, corn stalks, wood chips, virtually any organic matter. In its pure form (200 proof, or anhydrous ethanol, which contains no water) ethanol can be blended with gasoline to make gasohol in less pure forms (down to 160 proof which contains 20 percent water) it can be burned by itself in specially modified engines. It is cleaner burning than gasoline, although it delivers less energy per gallon. Its most admired virtue, of course, is that it can be made from renewable resources. In the U.S., ethanol is being made from corn (Brazil, the largest producer of ethanol, uses sugar cane), which is processed using technology borrowed from distillers and sold using the existing distribution and sales systems of gasoline suppliers. The ethanol bandwagon has been rolling at top speed only since 1975, when the Nebraska legislature reduced its state gasoline tax on gasohol. Early gasohol boosters there, and later in the rest of the Midwest, were farmers. Their enthusiasm was both patriotic and pragmatic: not only would gasohol help reduce the nation's dependence on foreign oil, but it would open a new and potentially vast market for their farm products. Because of farmer advocacy, early sales of gasohol in Illinois were made almost exclusively in rural areas, and the first voice raised in the state bureaucracy on the new fuel's behalf came from an unlikely part of the choir occupied by the state Department of Agriculture's Division of Marketing and Agricultural Services. Major oil dealers did not begin selling gasohol until the summer of 1979 (Amoco was the first, in the Chicago area). Except in the work of crusading columnist Jack Mabley of the Chicago Tribune, who has written some 35 columns about gasohol and its parent ethanol since 1978, gasohol was a word seldom heard in Illinois cities. By commuters, oil companies and car manufacturers, it was dismissed as merely another rural curiosity, like the beefalo or burgoos. The Archer Daniels Midland Co. (ADM) of Decatur was more attentive. One of the world's largest grain processing firms, ADM had sensed a potential market for fuel ethanol as a gasoline substitute. By May of 1978 it had added an ethanol distilling plant to its existing wet corn milling plant at Decatur. The new plant was capable of producing 15,000 gallons a day of 200 proof ethanol for gasohol blending. Land of ADM The opening of ADM's plant was a seminal event in the gasohol movement in Illinois and in the nation. For a time virtually every gasohol pump in the nation was being filled with ADM's "power alcohol." Indeed, it has been claimed that the example of ADM's success in producing commercial quantities of fuel ethanol at a profit was crucial to U.S. energy secretary Charles Duncan's success in 1979 in persuading President Carter of the feasibility of a fuel ethanol industry. Since then capacity has been steadily increased, and now stands at more than 150,000 gallons a day, or more than 50 million gallons a year. It might be more accurate to describe Illinois not as the Land of Ethanol, but the Land of ADM. Although the motoring public and most of the auto industry remained skeptical, the U.S. Congress became seriously interested in ethanol about three years ago. Prodded by farm state constituencies and faced with the urgent political necessity of doing something about energy, many members of Congress quickly became gasohol converts. As early as 1977 Congress had authorized the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) to spend up to $60 million for four demonstration ethanol plants. In 1978, Congress set up a 19-member National Alcohol Fuels Commission. And, most important, Congress included in its Energy Tax Act of 1978 a provision exempting gasohol from the 4-cents per gallon federal gasoline excise tax. Sponsored by Illinois' Charles Percy in the Senate and 20th District Rep. Paul Findley in the House, this exemption is credited by ADM spokesmen with having made gasohol competitive enough at the pump to warrant that company's initial investment in production facilities. Indeed, Illinois' Percy emerged from the conservative sweep of the U.S. Senate as perhaps alcohol fuels' best friend in Congress. At his urging, the U.S. Postal Service chose Springfield as the site of one of two pilot projects (the other is in Denver) during which the Springfield post office will drive 10 vehicles powered by 100 percent ethanol and another 10 powered by 100 percent methanol. And although staff members say it is too early to know, speculation in Washington is that Percy is a likely choice to take over the chairmanship of the National Alcohol Fuels Commission being vacated by Indiana's Birch Bayh.
The executive branch made a less graceful jump onto the gasohol bandwagon. President Carter's energy speech of 1977 (the "moral equivalent of war" address) did not even mention alcohol fuels. It was not until the spring of 1979 that Carter began hinting of White House initiatives to expand ethanol use in the form of gasohol. The administration continued to regard ethanol as merely one of a variety of substitutes for imported oil, and not necessarily the most important one; in his national address in April 1979, Carter outlined his much-awaited "windfall profits" tax, but devoted only a single sentence to gasohol. But in 1979, the pressure was on Carter from oil companies who resisted ethanol and gasohol as competitors to their own products. It was oil companies who advanced the argument, since generally disproven, that it takes more energy to produce ethanol than January 1981/Illinois Issues/11 ethanol returns when burned in an engine (see box on page 13). But Carter did change his mind, a conversion dating roughly from the departure in 1979 of James Schlesinger, a vocal gasohol skeptic, from the directorship of the Department of Energy (DOE). Still, it was not until January of 1980 that Carter unveiled his ethanol plan for the nation. Eighteen months in the drafting, the plan set a goal of 500 million gallons of ethanol per year by the end of 1981, looking toward an annual production by the mid-1980's of some two billion gallons, which is six times the January 1980 output. Two billion gallons is enough to replace 2 percent of the current annual demand for gasoline nationwide. To do this, Carter proposed a multifaceted package of loan, tax and pricing measures. He proposed the permanent exemption of gasohol from the federal gasoline excise tax. (Originally due to expire in 1981, Congress had already extended the exemption to 1984; Congress ultimately agreed to extend it again, until 1992.) Carter wanted a 40-cents per gallon production tax credit for alcohol made for direct consumption, mainly on farms; congressional compromises led eventually to a credit for gasohol blenders, but the net effect of the credit was substantially as Carter wished. Carter also proposed a $3 billion, 10-year loan and loan guarantee program to be administered by DOE and USDA for the construction of ethanol plants; this part of the package later wound up in more modest form as Title II of the Energy Security Act. In addition to ratifying most of Carter's initiatives, Congress added several of its own. The result was that by midyear in 1980 farmers, cooperatives and commercial ethanol manufacturers could choose from a smorgasbord of federal assistance. Eight major agencies in five cabinet departments now have some ethanol programs. The fiscal 1980 budget for the Federal Non-nuclear Energy Research and Development Act of 1974, administered by DOE, alone provided for more than $3 billion in loans and guarantees for feasibility studies and construction. The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) and its Farmers Home Administration (FmHA), the Economic Development Administration of the Department of Commerce and the Small Business Administration all had something to offer ethanolics. Even the Internal Revenue Service got into the act. At Congress' request, the IRS began offering a 10 percent "energy investment" tax credit in addition to the existing 10 percent investment tax credit on the purchase of equipment to make or use alcohol fuels. Hodgepodge of programs There have been complaints that in the rush to make the world safe for ethanolics Congress and Carter threw together a hodgepodge of programs. Calmer observers complained that details were often lacking, that agency functions overlapped and that the allocation of resources to small, farm-size units made more political sense than production sense. As Richard Lyons of the New York Times noted when Carter unveiled his gasohol plan, "The Administration can punish the Soviet Union by withholding grain while keeping domestic grain prices high, thus placating the Farm Belt in an election year." There was more to come, courtesy of the oil companies. Congress and Carter collaborated on the biggest alcohol fuels development program to date, the Energy Security Act of 1980, the so-called synfuels bill. Title II of that act set an annual goal of 900 million gallons by 1982. To accomplish this goal it allocates $1.45 billion over two years for the development of fuel alcohol from corn, garbage and other biomass sources. DOE and USDA, which have never quite agreed whether agriculturally derived alcohol is a farm-based energy program or an energy-related farm program, each got a piece of this new federal pie: DOE has $850 million to fund projects which will produce more than 15 million gallons (including plants using municipal garbage as feedstock). USDA has $600 million to finance projects producing less than 15 million gallons annually (mostly from farm and forest feedstocks). The act also set up a new Office of Alcohol Fuels in DOE — a symbolically significant step — and extended the federal excise tax exemption for alcohol-blend motor fuels until 1992. Even so, the feds' bet on alcohol is modest compared to the $80 billion authorized for the development of synfuels from coal, tar sands and oil shale. Illinois ethanolics, however, have claimed that the federal alcohols effort has been crippled by bureaucratic bumbling and partisan politics. So numerous were the complaints that Sen. Percy convened the subcommittee on investigations of the Senate's Committee on Governmental Affairs at the Illinois State Fair last August to learn more. Illinois agriculture director John Block testified that federal delays had so slowed domestic production that suppliers were importing needed ethanol from Brazil. Of the millions in loan funds available from FmHA, only one loan had been made in Illinois for ethanol production, and it was a routine farm operating loan, not one of the newly authorized alcohol loans. Concluded Block, "Just think how far Illinois could go if we really had help from government agencies."
Of the $56 million DOE awarded for alcohol projects under the 1974 synfuels development act, only $25,000 will be spent in Illinois (by the Rochelle Energy Development Co. for an ethanol plant in Ogle County). Of $25 million available for cooperative construction projects under the same program, none had been spent in Illinois; nor had the USDA yet awarded any of its money to state projects. The Illinois Institute of Natural Resources (IINR) is paying for its own modest alcohol fuels program with $23,000 it got from DOE's Energy Extension Service bank account, but by late summer that was practically the extent of federal investment in the Land of Ethanol. Mavis, the Rochester farmer who is the president of the not-for-profit National Gasohol Commission, testified at the Percy hearing that the government's help was like a mechanical rabbit at a dog race. "It's out there to be seen, but it's always out of the reach of those trying to get their hands on it," 12/January 1981/Illinois Issues said Mavis, the "Ambassador of Gasohol" who left the Illinois agriculture department to help run his own ethanol equipment company. Since August the federal spigot has been opened up, and more and more money has been dripping out of it. The FmHA released a $20 million loan guarantee for a plant to be built in DeKalb County by Ethanol Motor Fuel Associates of Waterman, and DOE announced grants worth a total of $186,100 to six small-scale projects around the state. These announcements were all made within the final four weeks before the crucial fall elections — timing which few observers considered to be coincidental. Politics of the brew The feds, then, have become more generous. But the fact remains that the federal effort so far has been characterized, on the one hand, by the excessive haste of politicians eager to demonstrate their commitment to renewable energies, and, on the other, by the excessive caution of agencies which must administer programs which are ill-conceived or duplicative. In the rush for federal dollars some dubious schemes are certain to be advanced, and as one DOE consultant recently told a reporter, "We don't want too many Golden Fleece Awards just by handing out money right and left." The alcohol fuels effort at all levels of government is only now being set up, which is in part responsible for delays in processing of applications and issuing of guidelines. The very nature of bureaucracy is a further obstacle: one DOE application required 17 copies, each in a different color. But politics also is an ingredient of the ethanol brew. During the Carter administration, for example, Illinois was "the most toothless state in Washington when it comes to [ethanol] funding," according to one unhappy Illinois Farm Bureau staff member. Sen. Percy and Rep. Findley have been eloquent ethanol boosters, but their eloquence could not talk away the fact that they were Republicans in a Democratic administration. And the state's ranking Democrat, retiring Senator Adlai Stevenson III, has long been a gasohol unbeliever, dismissing it (with uncharacteristic hyperbole) as "the most inefficient and expensive means of energy production ever contrived." Partisan affiliations apparently have an effect on policy. In October the Chicago Sun-Times reported that the FmHA had unexpectedly dispensed $341.6 million in loan guarantees for 15 alcohol projects, most in key electoral states, less than a month before the elections. (The list included the $20 million guarantee to the Ethanol Motor Fuel Associates.) Whether the 1980 elections will put teeth back into Illinois' congressional delegation remains to be seen. It seems likely. Not only are Republican ethanolics like Percy likely to get a more sympathetic hearing from a Reagan administration, but Stevenson's successor, Alan Dixon, is a gasohol booster.
January 1981/Illinois Issues/13 Efforts by the state While Illinois farmers and business-people chafed at federal delays, the state of Illinois has been taking steps, albeit halting ones so far, to catch up with its sudden reputation as the Land of Ethanol. The state has converted its own auto and truck fleet to gasohol — a decision announced by Gov. James R. Thompson in the fall of 1979 at an "Alcohol Fuels Day" in Springfield described by one observer as an "orgy of promotion." More recently, three ethanol projects worth a total of $294,000 were funded out of the fiscal 1980 appropriations from the Illinois Coal and Energy Development Bond Act. The state, acting through the IINR, has also funded two other alcohol research projects — a statewide biomass inventory and a pilot ethanol plant using corn stover as a feedstock. The IINR in fact was named in May as the state's lead agency for alcohol fuels. Bureaucratic responsibility for such fuels remains as diffuse in Springfield as it is in Washington, however; it was to give some coherence to the state's efforts that the General Assembly approved a resolution directing the governor to set up an 8-member Interagency Alcohol Fuels Committee which meets monthly to (as one spokesman put it) "develop an appropriate role for the state" in the field. But the state's programs have been more successful at producing headlines than in producing ethanol. As of late 1980 Illinois' official alcohol fuels program, for example, still consisted of a single person on the IINR's payroll whose job consists mainly of providing information and technical assistance to mostly small-scale producers. Illinois, unlike neighboring states like Iowa which have exempted gasohol and/or ethanol from their state motor fuel taxes, has not committed its taxpayers to similar subsidies of ethanol producers. The explanation again is politics. The state is committed to the exploitation of its huge coal fields through construction of plants to synthesize gas and refinable liquids from coal, a commitment that goes back to the Ogilvie and Walker administrations. Coal syn-fuels are in many ways less desirable fuels than ethanol. As ecologist (and lately Citizens Party presidential candidate) Barry Commoner notes in his book, The Politics of Energy, "Producing synthetic fuels from coal would graft onto the Illinois economy a huge new but financially risky industry that would last only 25 years before the coal ran out. The alternative — producing ethanol from crops — would integrate the production of this fuel into the state's existing, well-established system of agriculture." Commoner, however, carries less weight in Springfield than the coal lobby.
It is also true that while farm groups and businesses like ADM are able to set their respective alcohol policies according to the single end — to sell more product, government must set its alcohol policy to meet a confusing profusion of ends. More than a dozen fuel alcohol bills emerged from the General Assembly last spring but only two minor ones were signed into law. Thompson vetoed two sales tax exemption bills because the lost revenue would leave a pothole in the state's road fund. S.B. 1810 would have exempted alcohol equipment. The legislature overrode his veto of S.B. 1511 which temporarily exempts gasohol from the four-cents-per-gallon state sales tax. The tax will be phased back in, however, at the rate of a penny a year, beginning July 1, 1982, so that the entire tax will be in effect again by July 1, 1985. The exemption cost the state an estimated $4.5 to $4.8 million in fiscal 1981. Economics of ethanol The government may propose, but in the end, it will be the marketplace that disposes. Economists have been arguing since the mid-1970's about how many ethanol plants would fit on the head of a pin. Calculating the probable effects of a sizable ethanol industry on grain prices, tax revenues, oil imports and pump prices at either the state or federal level is rather like calculating the cost of a cross-country jet ticket a few months after Kitty Hawk. One of the few things that is certain about the economics of ethanol is that production for the next few years will be limited by distillation capacity and raw materials rather than consumer demand. It would take 2,000 plants the size of ADM's Decatur plant to make enough ethanol to replace all the gasoline now burned by Americans every year, plants which would cost up to $20 million each to build. And if every kernel of Illinois' record 1979 corn crop were converted into ethanol, it would make 3.4 billion gallons of ethanol, enough to slake only 3.4 percent of the nation's annual 100 billion gallon thirst for gasoline. That fact alone will keep ethanol production as long as it is based on grain — far below demand. New processing breakthroughs and the use of other raw materials may change that picture in the future (see box on page 15). But right now, ethanol — like synfuels and other substitutes for imported oil— cannot provide the much desired single quick fix substitute for cheap liquid fuel to run our cars and trucks. What ethanol can provide is a modest but significant part of the nation's liquid fuel diet. That, at any rate, is the apparent conclusion of the private sector. In addition to boosting capacity at its Decatur plant tenfold since 1978, ADM bought and converted the Hiram Walker distillery in Peoria and added an ethanol plant to its Cedar January 1981/Illinois Issues/14 Rapids, Iowa, wet corn milling plant. The new plants will bring ADM's total production capacity to 250 million gallons a year. CPC North America, the nation's largest corn processor (makers of Mazola Oil), has joined Texaco in converting CPC's Pekin corn processing plant into a 60 million gallon a year ethanol factory, and Midwest Solvents has bought the closed American Distilling plant in Pekin and plans to have it running as a 18 million gallon a year ethanol maker by next summer. In addition to these giants, there are a half-dozen other major ethanol plants going up in Illinois. Being built by private entrepreneurs in Milledgeville, DeKalb, Christian County and East St. Louis, these plants will have annual capacities ranging from 5 to 12 million gallons, and will add another 23 million total gallons to the state's total capacity. All the ethanol from these new plants will find its way into gas tanks as gasohol. Because Illinois does not exempt gasohol from its motor fuel tax, its price remains several cents higher than the price of unleaded gasoline. Further, the number of sales outlets remains relatively small, especially in urban areas. Companies such as Texaco which promote gasohol report that it sells well; Texaco has 300 stations selling it in Illinois, where it accounts for 15 to 18 percent of Texaco's retail sales in Illinois. However, most major oil companies (most of which have extensive holdings of coal from which they hope to extract synthetic gasoline or methanol, ethanol's more volatile cousin) have been reluctant to handle gasohol. Comprehensive data for gasohol sales in Illinois is not available, but the 1INR estimates that gasohol accounts for only about 5 percent of all gasoline being bought in the state. Critics complain that even with corn prices at low levels, government subsidies were required to make gasohol competitive; the 4-cents per gallon federal excise tax exemption on 10 per-cent-ethanol gasohol is the equivalent of a 40-cents per gallon subsidy of ethanol. State tax exemptions such as Iowa's may add the equivalent of another 80 cents, or a total of $1.20 per gallon. An exhaustive USDA analysis shows that corn price is the biggest single determinant of ethanol production costs. Consequently the price of ethanol fluctuates with the price of corn which has been going up in the fall of 1980 due to a thin harvest.
The most cost-effective way to make 200 proof ethanol is in a large plant (up to 20 million gallons) which is part of a corn processing operation. Large plants can process and market all by-products, from carbon dioxide to leftover mash. Barring a breakthrough in production technology, the economics of smaller plants producing 200 proof ethanol for gasohol blending are much less certain. Nick Hall, manager of the IINR alcohol fuels program, reports that in recent months, there are "more people getting out than are going in" projects for plants producing less than 5 million gallons a year — a factor which Hall suspects may explain some of the feds' reluctance to fund them Debate over corn The impact of using corn for fuel instead of food has been a subject of continuing dispute among economists and ethanolics. Details differ, but analyses tend to reflect the general conclusions of a recent report of the Congressional Research Service (CRS). Though warning that its estimates were only tentative, the CRS estimated that a rate of growth high enough to push the state's ethanol production to 1.25 billion gallons a year by 1985 (roughly 20 times the 1979 output) would help double corn prices (to $5 a bushel) and double farmland prices (from $1,988 per acre to nearly $4,000). (All cost estimates presume an annual inflation rate of 9.7 percent.) CRS estimates that annual farm income in Illinois would jump (up 166 percent) as would corn production (up 84 percent) as farmers began farming now-marginal land or switched from the cultivation of less profitable crops to corn. Another benefit would be the creation of between 7,000 to 13,000 new jobs, most of them off the farm. But the rise in corn prices would help push gasohol prices to $2.42 a gallon even if the gasoline component of the blend remained at 1980 prices. A big ethanol industry clearly would be good for farmers. The broader economic effects are less clear. Illinois ethanolics argue that an ethanol industry would be good for everyone. This is partly because the ethanol would displace imported oil and partly because — and this is an argument so far seldom heard outside farm circles — 16/January 1981 /Illinois Issues grain for ethanol is a more efficient use of that commodity. Illinois ag director John Block has noted that 30 percent of Illinois' 1979 corn crop alone would produce nearly twice the 500 million gallons of ethanol set as a target by President Carter for 1981 — 900 million gallons to be exact, worth $1.6 billion. That corn also would produce by-products worth another $600,000: 576 million pounds of oil and protein leftovers. Adding the value of the 900 million gallons, or about 21 million barrels, of imported oil which this ethanol would displace, Block concluded that this corn would be worth $2.8 billion, or $1.7 billion more than if it were simply sold at prevailing prices as animal feed. Perhaps. But what about the effect of diversions of huge amounts of grain on export markets and domestic food prices? Ethanolics reply that U.S. farmers will no longer require massive exports to sustain prices if they can sell their grain at home. And while it is true that farm exports help balance the nation's yawning trade deficit, this deficit is caused in large part by imported oil, which would be reduced by the conversion of domestic grain into ethanol. Folke Dovring, a professor of agricultural economics at the University of Illinois, has calculated that in today's market (with oil selling at $28 a barrel and corn at $2.50-$2.75 a bushel) a bushel of corn sold for export "buys" less energy than it yields when it is converted into fuel ethanol. Competition for feedstocks between food and fuel might act to drive up corn prices (although the feed value of corn used for ethanol production is not wholly lost), but since farm prices account for such a small fraction of supermarket prices, any increase in consumer prices is likely to be modest. A study by the respected agricultural consulting firm of Schnittker Associates commissioned by the National Alcohol Fuels Commission concluded in September that domestic ethanol production from corn could be increased as much as 30 times present levels (up to four billion gallons a year by 1990) and still push up food prices only about 6.5 percent over the decade. Boosts in corn prices probably would encourage farmers to grow less soybeans, Illinois' other staple crop. U of I economist R. B. Schwart has predicted a bean-to-corn switch of some 25 million acres nationwide, or 35 percent. Ordinarily such a reduction in supply should boost prices of the remaining bean crop. But the massive production of ethanol would create equally massive quantities of cheap distillers' dried grains, which would capture much of soybeans' market as a protein feed supplement. Illinois farmers have survived such shifts in planting patterns before, and indeed have thrived on them. It should be recalled that for each acre of soybeans planted in Illinois 50 years ago, there are 43 acres planted today. Strain on corn A tougher question is whether farmers could keep up with the demand for corn. A couple of years ago, a General Motors executive implausibly warned that a switch to gasohol would require that three-fourths of the land of all the U.S. be planted in corn. So it might, gasohol were to replace all U.S. gasoline and if all that gasohol were to be made from corn, neither of which is being advocated by responsible ethanolics. Still, the strain on corn supplies of even a modest gasohol boom would be substantial. Assuming that corn remains the principal ethanol feedstock and that the U.S. meets the goal of four billion gallons of ethanol per year by 1990 set by the National Alcohol Fuels Commission, economist Dovring calculates that corn plantings would have to be increased 36 percent. Extrapolating, that means that Illinois farmers would have to plant nearly four million new corn acres.
Before coming to conclusions about any of the effects — good and bad — of an ethanol revolution, it should be recalled that ethanol still is what the IINR has officially dubbed an "emerging technology." Most bets on ethanol should be considered provisional. Only the most rabid ethanolic suggests that ethanol might soon supply all U.S. motor fuel needs. Most ethanol backers stress instead that corn ethanol is merely a transitional fuel until more efficient processes using nongrain feedstocks are perfected. They also assert that the food v. fuel objection is based largely on a misunderstanding of science, and that, in any event, it is no more immoral to use corn to run a car than it is to use it to fatten Western Europeans on beefsteak. An ethanol industry actually would make it easier to export American protein, by leaving its starch at home. The potential for instability in global export markets is no greater than the instability caused by the massive exports of dollars for oil. Finally, if an alternative to petroleum fuels must be found, the environmental and economic costs of ethanol are far less expensive than those of coal synfuels and oil shale. Whether or not ethanol transforms the global food economy, or America's energy habits, or even the Illinois farm economy, it already has transformed the way people think about agriculture. People now realize that farming produces more than food. It produces energy, of which food is only the most familiar form. Illinois agriculture is a vast solar energy collection system, and beef cattle, corn sweeteners and etha nol are all merely ways to convert that energy into usable forms. How efficiently it can be converted is one of several questions that will await further technological developments. All that can be said with certainty is that Illinois is likely to be the place where such questions will find answers. James Krohe Jr. is associate editor of the Illinois Times in Springfield; he specializes in planning, land use and energy issues. January 1981/Illinois Issues/18 |
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