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Ethanol Test For Obama On Climate Change
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Barack Obama’s commitment to take on climate
change and put science over politics is about to be tested as his administration
faces a politically sensitive question about the widespread use of ethanol:
Does it help or hurt the fight against global warming?
The Environmental Protection Agency is close to proposing ethanol standards.
But two years ago, when Congress ordered a huge increase in ethanol use, lawmakers
also told the agency to show that ethanol would produce less pollution linked
to global warming than would gasoline.
So how will the EPA define greenhouse gas emissions from ethanol production
and use? Given the political clout of farm interests, will the science conflict
with
the politics?
Environmentalists, citing various studies and scientific papers, say the
agency must factor in more than just the direct, heat-trapping pollution from
ethanol
and its production. They also point to “indirect” impacts on global
warming from worldwide changes in land use, including climate-threatening deforestation,
as land is cleared to plant corn or other ethanol crops.
Ethanol manufacturers and agriculture interests contend the fallout from
potential land use changes in the future, especially those outside the United
States,
have not been adequately proven or even quantified, and should not count when
the
EPA calculates ethanol’s climate impact.
“
It defies common sense that EPA would publish a proposed rule-making with harmful
conclusions for biofuels based on incomplete science and inaccurate assumptions,” complained
Republican Sen. Charles Grassley, who represents Iowa where corn is a major
crop.
He was one of 12 farm-state senators, both Democrats and Republicans, who
wrote EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson in March, urging the agency to stick to
assessing
only the direct emissions.
Ethanol, which in the future may come from cellulosic sources such as switchgrass
and wood chips, is promoted by its advocates as a “green” substitute
for gasoline that will help the U.S. reduce its reliance on fossil fuels, especially
foreign oil. That transition is a priority of the Obama White House.
In 2007, Congress ordered huge increases in ethanol use, requiring refiners
to blend 20 billion gallons with gasoline by 2015 and a further expansion to
36
billion gallons a year by 2022.
Congress said any fuel produced in plants built after 2007 must emit 20 percent
less in greenhouse gases than gasoline if it comes from corn, and 60 percent
less if from cellulosic crops.
Meeting the direct emissions would not be a problem. But if indirect emissions
from expected land use changes are included, ethanol probably would fail the
test.
Nathaniel Greene, director of renewable energy policy at the Natural Resources
Defense Council, an environmental advocacy group, said that would not mean
the end of ethanol.
Ethanol from existing production facilities is grandfathered and “there
are ways to produce advanced ethanols that would comply with the greenhouse thresholds,” even
using land use climate impacts if the industry chose to adopt them, Greene
said.
But farm interests and their allies in Congress are pushing to get the EPA
to at least postpone any consideration of the land-use impacts issue, arguing
the
science surrounding the issue is uncertain.
The senators’ letter said that an overreaching regulation by EPA on ethanol’s
link to climate change “could seriously harm our U.S. biofuels growth
strategy by introducing uncertainty and discouraging future investments.”
Environmentalists say there have been enough studies on the indirect impact
of ethanol on greenhouse pollution to justify the science.
Ignoring the indirect impacts “will undermine the environmental benefits” of
the renewable fuels program “ad set a poor precedent for any future policies
attempting to reduce global warming pollution,” 17 environmental groups
wrote Jackson in response to the senators’ plea.
Greene said the EPA’s handling of the ethanol rule will be a “test
of our ability to follow sound science” even when it conflicts with powerful
interests.
The environmental organizations noted that Obama has “vowed to make the
U.S. a leader on climate change” and put science over politics, and “now
is the time to uphold those pledges.”
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