Obama’s Ethanol Dilemma

Posted by Jonathan Williams on Jun 24th, 2008
2008
Jun 24

Obama seems to be in a little conundrum about whether or not to support ethanol subsidies. Better yet, he still hasn’t decided who these subsidies help: the nation which he wants to represent or corn-growing Illinois (my emphasis).

Today, in a New York Times article on Obama’s support for ethanol, Jason Furman, the Obama campaign’s new economic policy director, is quoted saying that Obama’s stance on the issue was based on the merits, a determination that ethanol subsidies are in the national interest. “That is what has always motivated him on this issue, and will continue to determine his policy going forward,” Furman said. The article continues: “Asked if Mr. Obama brought any predisposition or bias to the ethanol debate because he represents a corn-growing state that stands to benefit from a boom, Mr. Furman said, ‘He wants to represent the United States of America, and his policies are based on what’s best for the country.’”

 

It was the expected answer during a presidential campaign — except that it flies in the face of what Obama himself said on the issue a few months ago. Asked about his support for ethanol during a press conference at a gas station in Indianapolis in April, Obama was remarkably candid in explaining why he backed the subsidies: “Look, I’ve been a strong ethanol supporter because Illinois … is a major corn producer,” he said. He went on to say that he was concerned about reports that ethanol was helping drive up food prices, and that he saw ethanol as merely a transitional option that would eventually give way to biofuels that were more efficient and has less of an impact on food prices, such as ones made out of switchgrass.

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One Response

  1. Invest this! Says:

    Corn ethanol is the silliest political pandering that I’ve seen this entire campaign. Any good chemist will tell you that it’s terribly inefficient and not even much better for the environment. I hate it when politicians talk about Brazil’s success. Sugar cane ethanol is, if I remember correctly, around 30 times more efficient that corn. There’s no valid comparison there. What Obama, and others, should focus on is developing cellulose ethanol. But ethanol has been relegated to the realm of political pandering, so I doubt that it will ever become a viable alternative in the US.

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