Showing posts with label Sustainability. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sustainability. Show all posts

Friday, July 18, 2008

Is Ethanol Really a Problem?

John Cole points out the unintended consequences of the ethanol subsidy on the price of food. I see the upside to rising food prices. Maybe some the dollar hamburgers, bags of chips and 8000 ounce sodas will go away. Don't I hear and see reports on an almost daily basis that we're a bunch of fat slovenly pig boats who need to walk more and eat healthier food in smaller portions? The ethanol industry and its subsidies seem to have been quite the panacea with respect to weaning us off of the cheap processed food so many of us rely on.

I don't like the ethanol subsidy and the obvious pander it is to the voters in the corn growing states. But my distaste is an entirely different argument to the issue at hand. Most Democrats are for the subsidy, and it is difficult to find a Republic from a corn producing (ethanol) state who is against it. It is a convenient way to keep farmers employed. Unfortunately, most of those farmers are corporate agriculture conglomerates.

The charming and informative documentary King Corn covers the effects of the corn subsidy on the food supply. What and how we eat is directly impacted by the corn subsidy. The most profitable corn crop for farmers is yellow dent (a genetic hybrid) that is used to produce High fructose corn syrup. Add the ethanol subsidy and you have what some see as a disastrous impact on the price of food. To my mind this as an opportunity rethink how our food supply is managed. Sustainability should be a top priority.

More on this later.