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The New Ethanol Blend May Damage Your Vehicle

Hugh Pickens writes writes "About 80 percent of the gasoline consumed in the U.S. is blended with ethanol, primarily with a 10 percent mix of ethanol, generally derived from corn. Now Kate Sheppard writes that the Environmental Protection Agency has approved a new policy that will allow states to raise the blend to up to 15 percent ethanol (also known as E15), approved for use for cars and light trucks from the model year 2001 and later. A few weeks ago, AAA issued a statement saying that the EPA's new policy creates the 'strong likelihood of consumer confusion and the potential for voided warranties and vehicle damage.' AAA surveyed vehicle manufacturers, and found that only about 12 million of the 240 million vehicles on the roads today are built to use E15 gasoline. The EPA will require that gas pumps with E15 bear a warning sign noting the blend and that it is not recommended for cars older than the 2001 model year. But what happens if you accidentally use it? 'Nobody really knows what negative effects [E15 is] going to have on the vehicle,' says Brian Lyons, Toyota's safety and quality communications manager. 'We think that there needs to be a lot more study conducted to make sure there are no longer term effects on the vehicle. So far everything we've seen says there will be.' The concern is that repeated, long-term exposure could cause the higher-alcohol-content fuel to degrade engine parts like valves and cylinder heads — which could potentially cost thousands of dollars to replace. Gas station owners don't like it very much either, because they'd likely have to upgrade their equipment to use it. Nor are environmental groups big fans of the EPA's decision, arguing that increasing the use of ethanol can drive up food prices, and isn't the best means of reducing our reliance on foreign fuels. The ethanol lobby is the only group that really seems to like the new rule. 'We've force fed a fuel into every American's car that benefits a few thousand corn farmers and ethanol refiners at the expense of virtually every other American,' says Scott Faber."

259 of 375 comments (clear)

  1. A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by elashish14 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Politicians who make decisions based on the bribes they are going to receive, rather than what serves best the public interest causes people to suffer like this. This is why ignorance is one of the strongest poisons in a democracy.

    --
    I have left slashdot and am now on Soylent News. FUCK YOU DICE.
    1. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by mcgrew · · Score: 4, Insightful

      In this case it's probably not bribes (common as that is), but politicians putting their corn-growing state before the country. Corn is not a good source of ethanol but it's great for the economies of states like Iowa and Illinois.

      As to causing people to suffer, the pumps are labeled. Put E-15 in your '69 Mustang and you're just stupid.

    2. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't take this "article" too seriously. I followed a few links in the summary and the sources seemed about as legit as NRA.

    3. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 5, Insightful

      As to causing people to suffer, the pumps are labeled. Put E-15 in your '69 Mustang and you're just stupid.

      True enough, till they decide that not enough people are using the E15, and make it mandatory.

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    4. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by thegarbz · · Score: 3, Insightful

      This will only happen once a suitable alternative is found to keep running old vehicles. Washington isn't about to mandate a fuel 95% of car owners can't use. We had the same arguments when lead fuel was eliminated. Actually the very same "Oh but what about my '69 Mustang" arguments.

      Well here we are today, no lead in the fuel and a small additive on the market for owners of vehicles which required leaded gas.

    5. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by tompaulco · · Score: 1

      Put E-15 in your '69 Mustang and you're just stupid.
      Well, put anything besides 100% gasoline in your '69 Mustang and you're just stupid. Unfortunately, in some states, like Texas, you have no choice. Even the regular blended Ethanol is bad for cars and disastrous for small engines.

      --
      If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
    6. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, that is untrue. We've had E15 as the ONLY option here in Illinois for over a decade. (In reality, the pump label states that the percentage of corn ethanol may be "up to" 15%.) No amount of bitching about studies that show potential engine damage have made the slightest dent in State politicians' desires to boost corn sales (and therefore raise the price of most food products). It's true that the percentage of ethanol is lower in the higher-octane blends, but not many people are willing to spend $0.20 or even $0.30 more per gallon just to avoid the potential ill effects of ethanol.

    7. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I'll be using E0 for as long as possible. A few stations still have it.

    8. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by sjames · · Score: 2

      You and I may know that more than 10% ethanol can be a problem for some cars, but there's a lot of people who don't. If it was at least counterbalanced by a clear benefit and VERY PROMINENT warnings, it might be acceptable, but it's going to be more ethanol made using the least suitable feedstock available.

    9. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by sjames · · Score: 5, Insightful

      There were MUCH stronger reasons to take the lead out of the fuel.

    10. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by ifiwereasculptor · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Nonsense. Brazil has been using E20 and E25 for decades. All it requires is some small tweaks.

    11. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by TFAFalcon · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Just think of all the 'contributions' they'd get from the automobile industry if they did force-obsolete 95% of all cars.

    12. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by wkk2 · · Score: 2

      Don't put it in small engines either. The 10% stuff caused a leak in a generator fuel tank. It leaked at the shutoff valve/tank seal. The tank was almost empty or I might have lost the house.

    13. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by arth1 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      As several pointed out...this is a good example of the corruption you'd see in, oh, say, a Socialist country- because those central planners aren't even close to good let alone "pefect".

      Funny thing is that you don't see these problems in socialist countries. Part of this is that socialist countries tend to pass legislation that favor individuals over corporations, while in capitalist countries, it's the other way around.
      "Caveat emptor" is not a creed of socialism.

    14. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by stevew · · Score: 5, Informative

      Yep - this is right up there with the MTBE debacle in CA about 10 years ago.

      The Cal EPA (yes California has it's own set of idiot Environmental Regulators) decided that we needed Oxygenation in our fuel mix. The Refiners had this great additive that they had NO market for called MTBE that they claimed would do the job. A report was done describing the effect of use of the additive. CalEPA literally removed dozens of pages of negative results from the report documenting that the additive would corrode the neoprene used in Gas Hoses in most vehicles! Did I mention that MTBE is a major carcinogen!

      So the state merrily adopts the stuff!

      Well, sure enough, CHP starts to have a huge number of car fires in their patrol vehicles as proof that the original report (the suppressed part) was correct! The bureaucrats can't sweep that CHP fleet numbers under the rug.

      Then the stuff starts showing up in drinking water all over the place!

      The bureaucrats are running around in circles (think circular firing squads) pointing fingers at each other. Turns out that once MTBE enters the Ecosystem, it doesn't leave. The bureaucrats (without any scientific basis) start banning motorboats on reservoirs arguing that they must be all leaking the stuff. Nope - rain! The stuff is in the air, and the rain is bringing it down into the entire water shed.

      Finally tally - 20K drinking wells are polluted with the stuff.

      Next - it turns out that MTBE doesn't really do the original job it was claimed to!

      Well - the public is incensed! How could this all happen! This is about the time the rest of the original report shows up documenting the fact that MTBE destroys gas engines. Everything from lawn mowers to cars had problems with the stuff. A new form of gas hosing was invented to contain this mess.

      The public outrage grows and eventually the governor decrees that the stuff will not be allowed into CA gas.

      Final insult. The biggest manufacturer of the stuff sues CA for 1 billion dollars because of voided contract with them - and wins!

      Excuse me - I've seen this movie before and know how it ends.

       

      --
      Have you compiled your kernel today??
    15. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by arth1 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I'll be using E0 for as long as possible. A few stations still have it.

      Living where I do, between two states where all gasoline is E10 (because the politicos stupidly thought getting rid of MTBE justified it), the closest gas station that has ethanol free gas is 100 miles away. And they don't even have the octane rating I need.

      Yes, ethanol in the fuel is bad. Wicking and phase separation (where the alcohol sucks up moisture from the air and forms a sludge at the bottom of the gas station's tank) has stranded more than a few cars, and many a gasket has been eaten away too.

      You need engines designed for running on ethanol - in which case E10, E15 or even E85 is no problem. But what ethanol does is far more of a problem than the switch from leaded to unleaded was. Too bad many of us get railroaded and have to use it.

    16. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      ...and the auto unions

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    17. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

      Speaking as someone that lives in a socialist country, bills get passed that favor the politicians, not the corporations or the people.

    18. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by Iconoc · · Score: 1

      Elections have consequences.

    19. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by lightknight · · Score: 1

      Can we make it an executable offense for this level of stupidity?

      --
      I am John Hurt.
    20. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by lightknight · · Score: 1

      Why do we elect career politicians again? Has the country improved at all since this became status quo?

      --
      I am John Hurt.
    21. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by Smallpond · · Score: 1

      This will only happen once a suitable alternative is found to keep running old vehicles. Washington isn't about to mandate a fuel 95% of car owners can't use. We had the same arguments when lead fuel was eliminated. Actually the very same "Oh but what about my '69 Mustang" arguments.

      Well here we are today, no lead in the fuel and a small additive on the market for owners of vehicles which required leaded gas.

      Not just older vehicles. E-15 should also not be used in new motorcycles, lawnmowers, chain saws, ATVs and light-duty trucks. Anything not covered by auto regulations in 2001 to make engines more alcohol-safe.

    22. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by johnny+cashed · · Score: 1

      It's not hard to convert an automobile engine accustomed to leaded gas to unleaded. Getting a catalytic converter to work with leaded gas is very difficult.

      Aviation gas is still leaded. I think the aviation market is so small (comparatively) that the EPA is not so concerned, and the FAA doesn't want to go through the legwork to make piston aircraft unleaded capable.

    23. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by slackware+3.6 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      ethanol may cause engine damage from water content in older engines
      Ethanol destroyes all the little O-rings in your fuel pump, destroyes your fuel lines and injectors. Ethanol also reduces fuel economy so yes it does hurt the enviroment by introducing more co2 into our globally warmed atmosphere.

    24. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, that is untrue. We've had E15 as the ONLY option here in Illinois for over a decade. (In reality, the pump label states that the percentage of corn ethanol may be "up to" 15%.) No amount of bitching about studies that show potential engine damage have made the slightest dent in State politicians' desires to boost corn sales (and therefore raise the price of most food products). It's true that the percentage of ethanol is lower in the higher-octane blends, but not many people are willing to spend $0.20 or even $0.30 more per gallon just to avoid the potential ill effects of ethanol.

      What the hell are you talking about? I've not seen a single pump in northern Illinois that says any higher than 10% ethanol, not in the past decade nor in the past two days.

    25. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I don't think water in an engine cylinder is a problem. one of the main combustion products is water, and big diesel engines even inject water into the cylinder to keep it cooler and reduce NOx emissions.
      Too much water in injectors could be a problem, but with carburettors its not a problem.
      The biggest problem with ethanol is that it dissolves some type of rubber, which could damage fuel pumps and engine gadgets. Very old cars and cars newer than about 2001 have a type of rubber that does not dissolve, cars between that range need to have a few seals and gaskets replaced _once_ before they can be used with high-ethanol fuels, not every 30K. My 1991 VW Polo can handle it, but in my country it's taxed just as much as regular fuels, so there is no real market for it.

    26. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by CodeBuster · · Score: 1

      Put E-15 in your '69 Mustang and you're just stupid.

      Most gas station owners don't want to and aren't going to install separate underground tanks for E15 fuel. They'd have to install pump blending equipment that blends the fuels as they're pumped. So when the last person at the pump bought E15, there's still up to 1/3 gallon of E15 in the hose which means that your next E10 fillup is going to have about 11+% ethanol, at least for the first gallon or so. This might not be such a big deal if you're filling up your SUV, but its a huge deal if you're putting a gallon in your motorcycle or your two gallon can for use in your lawnmower. So now stations that offer E15 have to enforce a 4 gallon minimum purchase on ALL other blends of gasoline sold from the same pump. Can you think of a way to make this any less attractive for the average gas station owner? I will tell you right now that independent station owners won't offer E15 voluntarily. Almost nobody want's it and it forces expensive equipment upgrades and unpopular policies on other motorists (the 4 gallon minimum). It's time for the oil companies and gas station operators to tell the corn lobby to go stuff themselves.

    27. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by houstonbofh · · Score: 2

      Actually, it would mostly benefit repair shops. Both in repairs and conversions.

    28. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by houstonbofh · · Score: 1

      Well here we are today, no lead in the fuel and a small additive on the market for owners of vehicles which required leaded gas.

      And a lot of cars that had issues when they ran no-lead and did not have hardened valve seats.

    29. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by Kernel+Kurtz · · Score: 1

      I avoid ethanol blended gas like the plague. There really is nothing good about it.

      For like minded Canadians, it's worth noting "Shell V-Power premium gasoline in Canada does not contain ethanol".

      http://www.shell.ca/en/products-services/on-the-road/fuels/shell-vpower.html

      it's also rated as a top-tier gas. http://www.toptiergas.com/

       

    30. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by houstonbofh · · Score: 1

      We were speaking of an industrialised nation where your car is 8 years old max. When you have an engine for diesel it runs diesel, when you have an engine for E10 it runs E10 etc etc.

      We save a little fuel but throw away an entire car every 8 years? Yeah, that is real green.

    31. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      is it twenty or thirty cents more when you normalize for the lower fuel economy due to the lower energy density of ethanol?

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    32. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by quintus_horatius · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Making ethanol from the corn is more energy intensive than distillation of oil into gasoline. For every gallon of ethanol you produce, energy equivalent to more than one gallon is burned just to distill it (never mind farming, ferilization, and transportation). Distillation is done with, yup, petroleum products.

      Ethanol is nowhere near cabon neutral, given the way we produce it. We'd be closer if we used cane sugar, but tarrifs are so high that it's not economically viable. That's also the work of the corn lobby.

    33. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by JDAustin · · Score: 1

      But...Ethanol cannot be transported over pipelines like gas can. It needs to be moved via tanker trucks and those trucks use a heavy amount of diesel fuel.

    34. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by The+Grim+Reefer · · Score: 1

      Ethanol from corn and other plants is carbon neutral. An ethanol-burning vehicle consumes more fuel, but less fossil fuel, and therefore increases net atmospheric CO2 less than a petroleum-burning vehicle.

      That all depends on where the power comes from to refine it. It takes a lot of energy to farm corn, move it around, and distill it into ethanol. You may not emit as much CO2 from the tail pipe of each automobile, but it's probably producing just as much net CO2 as a whole if you factor in the entire process. If ethanol is such a viable option, why don't we legislate all new cars to burn 100% ethanol?

    35. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by slackware+3.6 · · Score: 1

      Just like EV's are considered zero emmisions by not including the co2 produced in the manufacturing or the electricity generated to run an EV.
      Now how is one gallon of ethanol carbon neutral when it takes two gallons of diesel to produce it never mind the fertilizers made from natual gas.
      Now I can get 40mi out of 2 gallons of diesel in my work truck. I heat my house with natual gas. Now if I replaced my diesel engine with a V-10 on ethanol that gets 10 mi per gallon. Well lets see I got to drive 10mi instead of 40mi and in the one scenario I have a warm house.
      Did I miss something?

    36. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by 517714 · · Score: 1

      You are correct, In Illinois the pump says "up to 10%"; the State mandates 10%, no less. So Illinois does have the highest ethanol content in the country.

      --
      The US government have made it clear that we have no inalienable rights; any we do not defend vigorously will be taken.
    37. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Approximately 0.14% of motor gasoline consumption.

      And dropping.

      That is AvGas mind you, not the more common Jet Fuel.

      But yes, there are plans in the works to eliminate lead from AvGas too, including 94UL, 100UL, and others.

    38. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by magic+maverick+ · · Score: 3, Informative

      Ethanol from plants may or may not be carbon neutral actually. It really depends on how much CO2 was used in the growing of the plants. If you use more fertiliser (from oil often), use heavy machinery to plant, grow and harvest the plants, etc., you may end up putting more CO2 into the air than you would otherwise if you had have just burnt the oil directly in your car. Check where your ethanol is coming from, and see whether or not subsidies are making the production inefficient and/or producing more CO2 than is otherwise saved.

      --
      HELP MY ACCOUNT HAS BEEN HACKED BY AN ILLIBERAL ART STUDENT SET TO DESTROY THE INTERWEBZ!
    39. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by Rob+Simpson · · Score: 1

      According to this study:

      If CO2 from fossil fuel combustion was the only GHG considered, a biofuel with NEB > 1 should reduce GHG emissions because the CO2 released upon combustion of the fuel had been removed from the atmosphere by plants, and less CO2 than this amount had been released when producing the biofuel. However, N fertilization and incorporation of plant biomass into soil can cause microbially mediated production and release of N2O, which is a potent GHG (13). Our analyses (see Table 11, which is published as supporting information on the PNAS web site) suggest that, because of the low NEB of corn grain ethanol, production and use of corn grain ethanol releases 88% of the net GHG emissions of production and combustion of an energetically equivalent amount of gasoline (Fig. 2 c). This result is comparable with a recent study that estimated this parameter at 87% using different methods of analysis (1). In contrast, we find that life-cycle GHG emissions of soybean biodiesel are 59% those of diesel fuel. It is important to note that these estimates assume these biofuels are derived from crops harvested from land already in production; converting intact ecosystems to production would result in reduced GHG savings or even net GHG release from biofuel production.

      Also,

      However, the NEB for corn grain ethanol is small, providing 25% more energy than required for its production. Almost all of this NEB is attributable to the energy credit for its DDGS coproduct, which is animal feed, rather than to the ethanol itself containing more energy than used in its production. Corn grain ethanol has a low NEB because of the high energy input required to produce corn and to convert it into ethanol. In contrast, soybean biodiesel provides 93% more energy than is required in its production.

    40. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by SteveFoerster · · Score: 2
      --
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    41. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by Rob+Simpson · · Score: 1
    42. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by mlts · · Score: 2

      Ethanol is very nasty stuff when it comes to small engines like generators. Because most of these are use carburetors, they are very sensitive to varnish and bad gas. In the past, one could leave gasoline in a tank over the winter and be OK. With E10, using stored gas of that length can result in a carb rebuild, or in some cases (newer Onans), a possible replacement.

      Yes, one can use Sta-Bil or other additives, but they are more of a band-aid solution than anything else.

    43. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by khallow · · Score: 2

      We were speaking of an industrialised nation where your car is 8 years old max.

      I agree with houstonbofh. If your industrialized nation is throwing away cars every eight years or less, then you're massively wasting resources. Mind you I don't really care about waste, but I find it deeply hypocritical to change the formula of gas in order to obsolete a large portion of your automotive fleet - all in the name of environmentalism no less.

    44. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by khallow · · Score: 1

      Nonsense. Brazil has been using E20 and E25 for decades. All it requires is some small tweaks.

      Sure... as long as you're paying!

    45. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      Agreed, but this is beside the point.

      Personally I don't agree with ethanol. This is merely an academic discussion of would the government mandate a fuel that could wreak 95% of cars with no alternative.

    46. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by sjames · · Score: 1

      I agree with you. I don't think the reasons for increasing the ethanol to 15% are at all sufficient to warrant the risk of damaging people's cars.

    47. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by gawbl · · Score: 2

      Not quite.

      The Federal EPA told CA "You're exceeding smog levels in some areas (e.g. Sacramento & Riverside County), so you must add oxygenate to your fuel."

      CA objected, saying "Let us deal with our smog in our own way, and judge us by our results. We think we can do it without oxygenate." EPA (under W. Bush) said "No, our rules say you must add oxygenate, and we're not granting you any exceptions" basically as a favor to MTBE and Ethanol interests.

      The original decades-old studies said adding oxygen to gasoline makes engines burn leaner. That's true, if your engine has a carburetor. Modern cars all have fuel injection with oxygen sensors in the exhaust; when the FI computer detects the lean mixture, it sprays in more gas, "fixing" the lean condition. Bottom line: slightly lower mileage, *no change* to smog, and a transfer of $$ from the consumer to the oxygenate producer.

      CA refiners used MTBE because it was cheaper than Ethanol; Ethanol couldn't be shipped via existing petroleum pipelines, because it's hygroscopic (water loving). MTBE is also hygroscopic, but you need less of it to oxygenate gasoline.

      So, CA refiners added MTBE, and the oxygenated gas leaked out of gas station tanks into the water table. It turns out that all underground gasoline tanks always leaked gasoline into the water table, but gas and water don't mix! This was never a problem, until MTBE got into it. Lots of aquifers (wells) were ruined this way; search for "Charnock MTBE" for a typical disaster.

      The boating thing was because the existing two-cycle marine engines (outboards and personal watercraft) were grossly inefficient; at part throttle, about 1/3 of the gas you put into those engines blows through the engine without burning. And most pleasure watercraft emit their exhaust underwater. All that raw gasoline in the lake wasn't a problem because gas and water don't mix!... Until you add MTBE. Rain had nothing to do with it; the MTBE put in car engines was generally burned properly; car exhaust has only traces of MTBE left.

      MTBE has never been proven to cause cancer. It's apparently very similar to several other chemicals that do, and it's widely believed to cause cancer, but nobody has funded the studies. The MTBE producers and gasoline refiners don't want to know. However, we do know that MTBE makes water taste like paint thinner.

      CA never wanted to use MTBE or Ethanol. EPA relented on CA oxygenate right after W. left office. CA gasoline has been essentially MTBE-free since.

      gawbl

    48. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by stevew · · Score: 1

      Some people can't seem to see the comparison between a state EPA making stupid decisions with poor science, or ignoring science and economics or even covering it up and perhaps the Federal EPA doing the same thing! THAT is the moral of the story.

      Most decisions by bureaucrats SUCK!

      To paraphrase Ronald Reagan - the most feared statement in the English language should be "I'm from the government and I'm here to help!"

      The MTBE story is about suppression of science that doesn't fit your political agenda. It's about screwing the public because of a political agenda.

      Also - the claims that Ethanol can harm engines (a similarity with MTBE) isn't something that's made up. It is why the manufacturers are saying it will void your warranties! Then there is the little bit about it is carbon neutral. BS! It takes more more energy to make it than you recover by using it in your car engine. If you don't accept those facts, then you have a promising career ahead of you as a bureaucrat!

      --
      Have you compiled your kernel today??
    49. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by pepty · · Score: 1

      In this case it's probably not bribes (common as that is), but politicians putting their corn-growing state before the country. Corn is not a good source of ethanol but it's great for the economies of states like Iowa and Illinois.

      Yup. California refiners wanted to meet the requirement by importing cheaper ethanol from South America, but the feds blocked it.

    50. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by RazorSharp · · Score: 2, Informative

      Speaking as someone that lives in a socialist country, bills get passed that favor the politicians, not the corporations or the people.

      1) Everyone who lives in a first-world nation lives in a socialist country. A better retort to the parent would be, "you're making a distinction without a difference" or something similar that highlights that there are no capitalist and socialist countries -- it's just the ones that are afraid to embrace policies that are construed as socialist limit their ability to run effectively. He happens to call the countries he views favorably as socialist but any government that subsidizes anything is socialist.

      2) Speaking as someone who lives in a country that pretends it's not socialist (because that's a dirty word here), there are also many bills that get passed here that favor the politicians. For instance, congressmen vote to determine their salaries/benefits. Congressmen can use any information gained on capitol hill for financial gain whereas a Wall Street guy can go to jail for doing something analogous in his industry. What you're describing is in no way unique to socialist countries. Those in power have a tendency to use that power to their own advantage.

      3) I find it hard to believe the parliament or whatever type of legislature your country has does nothing but pass bills that make things better for politicians and bureaucrats. Of course, your'e an AC who didn't even mention the socialist country you come from, so it could be any country in the world with a functional government. I'd guess that you're a lying American trying to slander the name of socialism -- using the spelling "favor" rather than "favour" exposes you. Non-Americans are taught British English like 95% of the time and Canadians also spell it "favour." Also, American English is obviously your first language considering that you said "Speaking as someone that lives" rather than "Speaking as someone who lives." The latter is more technically correct but the former is more common amongst Americans.

      Score one for the English nerd. -1 for the American libertarian pretending to be European. The main reason I went through this thorough explanation is because I see this pattern all the time on /. Anonymous Coward says: "I live in a socialist country and the healthcare system sucks" or something similar. It's always stuff like that and the language is always suspiciously American and the socialist country in question is never named (wouldn't want to expose your claims to real scrutiny, now would you?). You /. libertarians are so funny -- a minority group on the site yet consistently the most vocal.

      --
      "From the depths of my skeptical and rationalist soul, I ask the Lord to protect me from California touchie-feeliedom."
    51. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by flyneye · · Score: 1

      Ah, yes political problems will always be with us.
      But, for practical purposes, I will relate an illuminating story about the immediate problem with E-15.
      When I was in high school, I had a friend whose father fueled their farm implements with ethanol.
      His high school car ( a Pinto, it was the late 70s, early 80s) ran on moonshine as well.
      According to him the process to switch to pure ethanol involved adjusting the carb and SWITCHING THE GAS TANK to a plastic one because ethanol makes your gas tank rust through.
      I would think the problem with E-15 would be something along those lines.

      --
      *Repent!Quit Your Job!Slack Off!The World Ends Tomorrow and You May Die!
    52. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by flyneye · · Score: 1

      Dunno, I put Methanol in my Trans Am and made it go faster, a 69 Pony ,coming from the age of ethyl fuel, would probably handle enhanced alcohol fuel far better than current aluminum block builds.

      --
      *Repent!Quit Your Job!Slack Off!The World Ends Tomorrow and You May Die!
    53. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by Xyrus · · Score: 1

      ethanol may cause engine damage from water content in older engines
      Ethanol destroyes all the little O-rings in your fuel pump, destroyes your fuel lines and injectors.

      Not really. It depends on what they're made of. The big problem is rubber. Ethanol degrades rubber over time, but modern cars use very little ethanol sensitive materials. You can get a flex-fuel kit for most modern cars for pretty cheap, and it usually just contains a couple of parts you need to replace.

      Ethanol also reduces fuel economy so yes it does hurt the enviroment by introducing more co2 into our globally warmed atmosphere.

      Not really. It reduces MPG since ethanol is less energy dense than gasoline. It burns cleaner so there are less overall pollutants. As far as CO2 goes that depends on how the ethanol was produced to determine whether or not it's a gain or loss of CO2. Ethanol produces less CO2 when burnt, but ethanol from corn takes a lot of energy to make (tractors, electricity) so it omes out almost being a wash.

      --
      ~X~
    54. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by jellomizer · · Score: 1

      Down with lobby groups like the EFF!

      For good or bad, Lobbies are one of the few ways for minority groups to get their point across. Although we believe that our views are right and true, so do your political opponents. How can government fairly listen to the right side when both sides feel so strongly they are in the right.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    55. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by jellomizer · · Score: 1

      That is I am sure most of these countries don't want to import Corn from the United States, while they have interests in other countries for other fuels and foods.

      If you have a Capitalistic or a Socialistic country, you are going to see policies and regulations that favor the country the most.

      Corn is a major product from the United States, many countries have stronger ties with other countries or prefer to make their own products. So they will use corn alternatives.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    56. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by pnutjam · · Score: 1

      You misspelled corrupt.

    57. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      This will only happen once a suitable alternative is found to keep running old vehicles. Washington isn't about to mandate a fuel 95% of car owners can't use. We had the same arguments when lead fuel was eliminated. Actually the very same "Oh but what about my '69 Mustang" arguments.

      Well here we are today, no lead in the fuel and a small additive on the market for owners of vehicles which required leaded gas.

      Unfortunately, the additive for owners of vehicles which require E10 or less is gasoline without alcohol in it, which it will be illegal for them to put into the tank. Note that you can still get ethanol-free gasoline in California, but only at a small selection of locations, so for most people if E10 will destroy their vehicle, they've already destroyed it and had to replace the seals.

      This is NOT just an issue for gasoline drivers, either. I don't know WHAT they added to the diesel fuel LAST winter, but they did it all over the country, because last winter practically all the old 7.3 IDI Ford fuel pickup feet fell victim to chemical attack. I'm on a forum about them and saw it happen.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    58. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      It's not hard to convert an automobile engine accustomed to leaded gas to unleaded.

      You're going to want new valves, new seats, and new piston rings, so you are going to have to at minimum remove the heads and all the pistons. And you will also need to replace the fuel pump (if it's not new, those carter fuel pumps die all the time anyway) and rebuild the carburetor with synthetic seals, in sharp contrast to the bits of natural rubber and even leather — my 1960 Dodge had a 650 cfm carter with a leather diaphragm in the accelerator pump!

      Aviation gas is still leaded. I think the aviation market is so small (comparatively) that the EPA is not so concerned, and the FAA doesn't want to go through the legwork to make piston aircraft unleaded capable.

      Actually, leaded avgas is a significant pollutant. Also actually, there are now unleaded options for aircraft engines, for example dry-sumped subaru conversions. They are surprisingly affordable and have pretty excellent power-to-weight with a turbocharger. Heck, Subaru's new boxer diesel might even finally bring diesel to aviation, once someone has figured out a conversion on those.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    59. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Don't put it in small engines either. The 10% stuff caused a leak in a generator fuel tank.

      It murders chainsaw fuel lines too, and chainsaws are a super-bitch to work on. You have to pull the flywheel to replace the front side fuel line in my Echo and then you still have another line buried.

      On the other hand, you really need to locate your generator someplace that a fuel leak won't burn down your house.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    60. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

      > Speaking as someone that lives, bills get passed that favor the politicians, not the corporations or the people.

      FTFY

      The New Ethanol Blend May Damage Your Vehicle

      Ethanol blends also damage your liver and nose. WTF!

      --
      (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
    61. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by danaris · · Score: 4, Insightful

      But then I guess when you are dealing with the "religion" of Leftism that is controlling much of the government, irrational things are to be expected.

      A quick tip (which you ought to have been able to pick up from the summary, for Cthulhu's sake): This isn't something most left-leaning people in the US support. Note where it says that environmentalists are against it?

      It's important to remember that not every issue in this country is one of Left vs Right. Many of them, in fact, are issues of Politicians/Lobbyists vs Real People. This is one like that.

      Dan Aris

      --
      Fun. Free. Online. RPG. BattleMaster.
    62. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by funwithBSD · · Score: 1

      There is also a 4 gallon minimum requirement to get the blend to the right level and not end up over or under blended.

      There are no 4 gallon motorcycles out there, nor will there will be, space and weight issues will prevent that on anything that is not an interstate cruiser.

      As scooters and small motorcycles become more popular for commuting and small errand running this is going to be a serious issue.

      --
      Never answer an anonymous letter. - Yogi Berra
    63. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by triffid_98 · · Score: 1

      You're going to want new valves, new seats, and new piston rings, so you are going to have to at minimum remove the heads and all the pistons. And you will also need to replace the fuel pump (if it's not new, those carter fuel pumps die all the time anyway) and rebuild the carburetor with synthetic seals, in sharp contrast to the bits of natural rubber and even leather â" my 1960 Dodge had a 650 cfm carter with a leather diaphragm in the accelerator pump!

      My 1965 Dodge (D300 with a 318 and a Stromberg carburator) has had exactly none of those things done to it and it still runs like a champ.

      Actually I take that back, it did have a ring-job at one point, but that had nothing to do with ethanol, it had to do with it being a 45 year old engine.

    64. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by Reziac · · Score: 1

      The figures I've seen were 5 gallons of diesel to produce 4 gallons of ethanol. And as someone below notes, that doesn't account for the fact that it has to be trucked, it can't be moved by pipeline. So I'd guess the final tally is more like 6 or 7 gallons of diesel used to put 4 gallons of ethanol in your tank.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    65. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by Reziac · · Score: 1
      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    66. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      No valve job but rings? Unusual.

      My 1960 Chrysler (Saratoga with 383HD) had lead-free safe rings, valves and seats installed with the engine rebuild about 20 years ago.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    67. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      CA gas is still oxygenated, with ethanol same as the rest of the nation.

      The real reason that MTBE was removed is that it _revealed_ all those leaky gas tanks. The human nose can detect MTBE at about 10 ppb.

      I'd like a cite on the gas and water not mixing. Water settles out of gas but leaking gas tanks make huge messes in the water table.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    68. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by HornWumpus · · Score: 2

      Airports.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    69. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by lsatenstein · · Score: 1

      In this case it's probably not bribes (common as that is), but politicians putting their corn-growing state before the country. Corn is not a good source of ethanol but it's great for the economies of states like Iowa and Illinois.

      As to causing people to suffer, the pumps are labeled. Put E-15 in your '69 Mustang and you're just stupid.

      When you divert feed crops (corn, etc) to mix with gasoline, you actually raise the cost of corn syrup, and corn byproducts to food producers. The result is a very large increase in the price of food. Add to the diversion, the climate change impacts, and you should expect your foodbill to double from prices of 2009. In fact, it is probably already at 180% of the 2009 prices.

      The other negative impact is that surplus corn, when there was some, was given to nations or countries to ward off starvation. This surplus and more has dried up.

      --
      Leslie Satenstein Montreal Quebec Canada
    70. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by triffid_98 · · Score: 1

      For the most part, rings are rings. They're made out of cast iron, why would ethanol have any effect on them? Ditto for steel valves. Changing to new style hardened valve seats means sending the heads out to a machine shop vs $40 worth of rings. We may have changed guides and lapped, it's been long enough that I don't remember anymore.

      Also A. nice car and B. I'm sure a professional rebuild would have been better than my hillbilly job, but it's holding up fine. That truck's actually been stupid reliable.

    71. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by hubang · · Score: 1

      Comparison to MTBE makes perfect sense. Ethanol is the direct replacement for MTBE in gasoline. Both were added to, ostensibly, reduce smog.

    72. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      I don't know WHAT they added to the diesel fuel LAST winter, but they did it all over the country, because last winter practically all the old 7.3 IDI Ford fuel pickup feet fell victim to chemical attack. I'm on a forum about them and saw it happen.

      They may not have added anything to it. They may just have made a fuel that is better than spec (not beyond belief given the insane amount refiners in the USA are spending on upgrades at the moment). We had something similar in Australia about 10 years ago. There was going to be a mandated reduction in sulphur content for diesel. One of the refineries underwent a massive upgrade and their new kit absolutely annihilated the new sulphur requirements. Hit less than 5ppm despite the mandate saying it would slowly drop to 10ppm over the coming years.

      Many specs for fuel list only one end of the requirements and don't specify a range. There's a maximum spec for suphur in diesel but no minimum. Anyway most Ford Rangers in one state had some rubber seal die in them as sulphur was providing some kind of lubricity which prevented embrittlement. There was another set of vehicles involved too but I can't remember the make or model. All this from exceeding the requirements to make clean diesel.

    73. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      They may not have added anything to it. They may just have made a fuel that is better than spec (not beyond belief given the insane amount refiners in the USA are spending on upgrades at the moment). We had something similar in Australia about 10 years ago. There was going to be a mandated reduction in sulphur content for diesel.

      Well no. See, when they take out the sulfur they put other things in. And I live in California so the diesel has been low-sulfur for some time now.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    74. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by thegarbz · · Score: 2

      Errr, I work in a refinery. Diesel is either a cut straight from the crude tower, hydrotreated (which in our process requires sulphur removal to avoid poisoning the catalyst), separated in a fractionation column and then its run down to storage. The other way we make it is by feeding hydrocracked residue through the same hydrotreater and fractionation column and then run it down to storage.

      The only additive that is added to diesel is an antistatic additive. There was no requirements to do anything else, or allowance to do anything else as a result of the sulphur removal requirements. Actually where I live it was about 5 years before the government approved additional additives to be put into diesel and they were the solvents that are now found in BP Ultimate Diesel, Shell V-Power Diesel, etc.

      So yes they may put other things in, but it may have nothing to do with sulphur removal. To this day we don't add any lubricity additives to our fuel, and we're not required to by the government (and hence the Ford Ranger problem, the rest of our cars seem to have no problem with the low sulphur diesel). But hey world governments are strange beings, you may be in a different boat.

    75. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by ebvwfbw · · Score: 1

      Any proof of that? I never had any trouble with MTBE gasoline, not even in my 1947 Cessna 140 that had natural and neoprene seals. One tankful of Ethanol by mistake and my tanks were leaking that liquid gold. Alcohol and natural rubber don't mix. It melts it. It destroyed thousands of lawn mowers, chain saws, boats and so on. I think it very well helped put some out of business. My understanding as it happened was water contamination sealed the deal for MTBE. Alcohol in gasoline should be banned and the politicians that voted for it run out of Washington on a rail (if only we could hold them accountable, instead the sheep vote them back in. Both parties guilty of this). You use more gasoline to make the alcohol than you get out of it from the analysis I've seen.

    76. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by vandamme · · Score: 1

      Oh come on, it was like that even before Obama.

    77. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      >Yep - this is right up there with the MTBE debacle in CA about 10 years ago.

      Wasn't just California. It was a nationwide cockup.

      Ethanol has replaced MTBE since it is the only readily available fuel additive that can replace MTBE. There's federal laws that put a minimum consumption of ethanol on the books, but depending on what the price of corn and gas is, it is sometimes economically feasible to use more ethanol than the legislated minimum.

      That said, Ethanol is a major driver to food prices - most all the growth in corn consumption since 2007 has been due to increasing ethanol use in the US. This puts upwards pressure on the price of corn, and leads to food price shocks.

      This book digs into the issue in great detail:
      http://www.amazon.com/The-Economics-Food-Feeding-Fueling/dp/0137006101/

    78. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Nobody cared, but they could taste and smell the MTBE, then they cared. Which is my point, it's like oderizing natural gas. MTBE is no worse for you then other fractions of gasoline (benzine, toluene etc) human senses can just detect it at ppb.

      They should have cared all along. Leaking gas tanks should be a thing of the past, monitored double walled tanks now being required etc.

      Two strokes bigger then a few ccs are also, more or less over. That said, you'll get my 2 stroke Toro mower when you pull it from my cold dead fingers. I'm sure it will outlast me. Last time I took it in for service they offered me $400 for it, broken. There is clearly still demand.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    79. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by Wolfrider · · Score: 1

      --Okay, I agree with you - now how do we band together to get this reversed, and back to a sane state? (I'm talking about less than 10% ethanol in my gasoline, or preferably none at all.)

      / yes, I'm serious

      --
      .
      == WolfriderV6 == I'm willing to admit that *I just might* be wrong... Are you??
    80. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by stangdriver · · Score: 1

      There is not a gas station within a 2 hour drive for me that does not have E-10. You don't think they will do the same thing with E-15?

    81. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by rhalstead · · Score: 1

      Alcohol is bad for the environment and contains just 60% the energy of gas (BTU) it's also corrosive and hygroscopic meaning it's hard on Aluminum. There is no real good reason to use it while lots of reasons not to use it. Alcohol was supposed to be only an interim measure, not a permanent answer..BTW I own a farm that produces corn and I'm still against it!

    82. Re:A clear example of how lobbying hurts everyone by pjbgravely · · Score: 1

      In NY State, for example, one cannot legally dispense non-ethanol gasoline directly into an automobile fuel tank. it must first be dispensed into a legal fuel canister or into a boat. Thus people with classic cars must go to boat refueling stations with multiple gas cans and fill those up and then take them home before refueling their classic cars.

      Huh, I can pump E0 ( pure gas) into my tank every day in NY state. Fast track sells it at all their stations. Some of the Indian stations sell E0 too. I can pump there directly into my tank of my car. Perhaps you are confusing NY city for NY state.

      --
      Star Trek, there maybe hope.
  2. Recipe For Disaster? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Here in NJ we are not allowed to pump our own gas. That's right, we get Full Service whether we like it or not (it is very convenient on cold or bad weather days).

    Who is going to be responsible if they start putting this E15 into cars older than 2001? The attendant? The gas station owner?? The distribution company??? If we get E15 it is going to happen, the only question is how frequently and will our astronomical insurance rates cover it?

    1. Re:Recipe For Disaster? by ProzacPatient · · Score: 1

      It's been so long since I've been to a full service station that I thought they went way of the dinosaur. I guess this means I'll make to make a trip up to New Jersey just to satisfy my nostalgia. *DING* *DING*

    2. Re:Recipe For Disaster? by mpe · · Score: 1

      Here in NJ we are not allowed to pump our own gas. That's right, we get Full Service whether we like it or not (it is very convenient on cold or bad weather days).

      Who is going to be responsible if they start putting this E15 into cars older than 2001?


      I suspect it's going to be rather more complex than a 2001 cut off date. Newer cars could quite easily contain older parts and some older cars may have no problems with the fuel at all.

    3. Re:Recipe For Disaster? by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      Oregon is (maybe was, this was a couple of years ago) the same way.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
  3. It seems the real problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    is that we've lost the expectation that people need to think. There's no reason why denoting the blend on each pump and expecting drivers to understand what blend their vehicle requires isn't sufficient. Many of us have vehicles or boats that already experience damage if any ethanol blend is used. Simple solution - we know that and don't use it.

    Duh.

    1. Re:It seems the real problem by Runaway1956 · · Score: 1

      Which vehicles and boats do you speak of?

      I ride a 30 year old motorcycle, which was not designed with either unleaded gasoline or ethanol in mind. That old Honda fires up, first time, every time. The old 'Twisted Twin' just keeps going, and going, and going.

      --
      "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
    2. Re:It seems the real problem by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      2002 Jaguar XJS. Will misfire like crazy if I use ethanol.

      Re. boats? Any. Ethanol absorbs water and the stock fuel filters / water separators do not adequately remove the resultant water in the fuel.

      Huh? All the current fuel / water seperators I've seen are OK to use with ethanol blends. The water in the ethanol / gasoline mixture actually burns OK. I am sure that there are older bits of equipment that can't handle ethanol, but the new stuff has no issue with it.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    3. Re:It seems the real problem by RazorSharp · · Score: 1

      The problem is that adding ethanol to gasoline is pointless. Unless you grow corn or represent a corn-growing state in congress, that is. I can't imagine there are any benefits to ethanol fuel that aren't offset by the added requirements on the engine to deal with it.

      Unless the car is running on 100% ethanol, what's the point? 15% is just enough to fuck up my valves and seals but not enough to actually lower my carbon footprint. Just like combusting gasoline, combusting ethanol releases CO2. Perhaps one could argue that it's about making America energy-independent but there are better ways to go about doing that.

      The government should be doing everything it can to promote the availability of liquid hydrogen at filling stations and the production of bivalent liquid hydrogen cars. The only appeal to ethanol is that we make it from corn and a lot of corn is grown in the States.

      I couldn't care less about some idiot who puts the wrong fuel in their vehicle. I do care about the energy policies of this country. Just to shoot down your argument for the hell of it, though: If I go on a road trip and I'm about to run out of gas and I pull into the only filling station for miles, it would be real fucked up for me to not be able to fill up my tank because the station was given some incentive to use E15 gas (which, of course, many idiots will use). A boat or a lawnmower isn't something you take across the country dependent on random gas stations.

      --
      "From the depths of my skeptical and rationalist soul, I ask the Lord to protect me from California touchie-feeliedom."
    4. Re:It seems the real problem by Patch86 · · Score: 1

      The problem is that adding ethanol to gasoline is pointless. Unless you grow corn or represent a corn-growing state in congress, that is. I can't imagine there are any benefits to ethanol fuel that aren't offset by the added requirements on the engine to deal with it.

      If your car is designed with ethanol blends in mind (as a lot of modern cars are), then there is no extra demand on the engine. Those design changes usually just mean using different materials for the parts to resist corrosion.

      The alleged benefit of ethanol is that it is carbon neutral (or a lot closer to it than fossil fuels anyway). 15% of car fuel being carbon neutral is better than 0% (although, as you rightly point out, not as good as 100%; that's maths, that). That's more or less then entire argument for it. Assuming you're not just going to say "screw carbon neutral!", the only argument against it is if you have a better, more efficient, carbon neutral fuel.

      Ethanol's appeal over hydrogen or bio-LPG is that it can run (as a mix) in the same engines as pure petrol, making it compatible with existing cars. Bio-diesel has the same thing going for it, but has more or less the same arguments against.

    5. Re:It seems the real problem by RazorSharp · · Score: 1

      1) CO2 is a biproduct of burning ethanol. Not as much CO2 is produced as gasoline, but more ethanol needs to be burned for the same amount of energy. While it certainly is an improvement in this regard, it's not worth the effort.

      2) Growing corn isn't carbon neutral. Farm equipment, fertilizers, and transporting the product more than offset any benefits of the ethanol. Ethanol actually takes more energy to produce than we get out of it.

      3) A bivalent hydrogen engine can utilize both gasoline and liquid hydrogen. So if I'm in BFE I can just fill up on gas. This is the transition technology that will lead to actual positive change. Utilizing ethanol mixes doesn't prepare us for the future, it clings to the past.

      --
      "From the depths of my skeptical and rationalist soul, I ask the Lord to protect me from California touchie-feeliedom."
  4. Who cares about some damage to a few cars... by ericloewe · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The real issue here is that food is being used to make fuel.

    1. Re:Who cares about some damage to a few cars... by drinkypoo · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The real issue here is that food is being used to make fuel.

      Almost. The real issue here is that topsoil is being used to make fuel. Corn for ethanol is grown continuously, which means not only do they not let fields lie fallow, but they actually don't even practice crop rotation! This leads to rapid depletion of the soil, turning it into dirt. What's the difference? Soil is mostly organic material. Dirt is mostly minerals. Soil can support plants we like to eat, dirt can't. So the corn for ethanol is basically grown hydroponically, in a dirt medium, using oil for fertilizer.

      Nobody is starving because we make corn into fuel. You think that they are, but there's actually plenty of food to feed them, going to waste. People are starving because nobody cares.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    2. Re:Who cares about some damage to a few cars... by fufufang · · Score: 1

      The real issue here is that food is being used to make fuel.

      Well, even if those corns are not used to make ethanol, they probably will be turned into high fructose corn syrup.

    3. Re:Who cares about some damage to a few cars... by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      The real issue here is that food is being used to make fuel.

      That depends on what kind of corn is used - there's more than one kind and not all are really edible by humans.

    4. Re:Who cares about some damage to a few cars... by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      Corn for ethanol is grown continuously, which means not only do they not let fields lie fallow, but they actually don't even practice crop rotation!

      This is simply not possible as corn is very cold intolerant. And unlike winter wheat and some other crops, it doesn't go dormant when the air or soil temps go too low... it simply dies.

    5. Re:Who cares about some damage to a few cars... by ericloewe · · Score: 2

      Nobody is starving because we make corn into fuel. You think that they are, but there's actually plenty of food to feed them, going to waste. People are starving because nobody cares.

      Probably, but at the very least it's driving prices up for the benefit of a small group of individuals.

    6. Re:Who cares about some damage to a few cars... by Thunderstruck · · Score: 1

      Soil is mostly organic material. Dirt is mostly minerals.

      I think you have those two words defined exactly backwards.

      Also crops are still regularly rotated between soybeans, alfalfa, and corn even among farmers who sell corn for ethanol production.

      Beyond that, I suppose you're technically correct. Heaven knows most of us would benefit from eating a little less food.

      --
      Trying to use sarcasm in text-based forums does not work.
    7. Re:Who cares about some damage to a few cars... by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

      Food shortage is an economic issue. The problem isn't an inability to grow enough food - there's enough to around. It's just that the starving population of Elbonia can only afford to pay so much for the food they need to live, while the more wealthy populations of the world will happily spend far more on food for luxury purposes like producing far more meat than the human diet really needs. Or making ethanol.

    8. Re:Who cares about some damage to a few cars... by JustOK · · Score: 1

      Solyent Gas

      --
      rewriting history since 2109
    9. Re:Who cares about some damage to a few cars... by the+phantom · · Score: 1

      I think you have those two words defined exactly backwards.

      No, he has it almost exactly correct. Soil is a mixture of minerals, water, air, and organic material (e.g. organisms, living and dead). Soil develops over long periods of time, and lies in layers (horizons), each with its own composition and properties. Soil is alive and in situ---it has history and context. Dirt, on the other hand, is what you track into the house after playing in the soil.

    10. Re:Who cares about some damage to a few cars... by caseih · · Score: 5, Informative

      I actually farm, so I feel the need to step in here and correct you a little bit. The richest soils I know are only 5% organic matter. And while I share your concerns over ethanol production in general, you don't appear to know a whole lot about soil science in general. Continuous cropping of any kind does deplete the soil. But it doesn't deplete it in terms of organic matter (though it can affect that). It depletes the soil of macro and micro nutrients (minerals). And you are wrong about corn being produced by top soil. Crops can grow in soils without any organic matter at all (I know because I've done it), but without organic matter you have to provide 100% of the nutrients the plant needs. N, P, K, S, Cu, Bo, and a host of others. That's part of the core problem with corn ethanol in general: corn is produced by feeding the plants the vast majority of their required nutrients through synthetic fertilizers, which come from fossil fuels (natural gas is the main one).

      High organic matter soils are rich because they have a greater capacity to produce the fundamental nutrients by breaking down plant matter. But no matter how you cut it, if you aren't fertilizing in some way (synthetic or manure) you're just mining your soil of nutrients and eventually you'll run out.

      Crop rotation has little to do with organic matter or soil richness. Crop rotation is almost all about disease and weed management. Corn farmers do rotate for this reason. Usually it's corn, soybeans, wheat, repeat, which is not enough. There is a small benefit to the soil of doing rotation, particularly when you grow legumes, which fix their own nitrogen and replenish the soil's nutrient levels.

      I'm also in a position to comment on your thoughts on food production. The real problem with corn ethanol and food production is that it's driving up costs of all food commodities (wheat, beef, dairy) and inputs at a dramatic rate on a global level. This makes basic food more expensive all across the world. It's now cheaper in Africa to import grain than to grow it themselves, because of the input costs which are priced on a global market (yay for globalization). Not only is this an inflationary cycle, it also directly is affecting starvation in third-world countries who are now dependent on imports and handouts. So while starvation has nothing to do with the amount of food in the world, it's our practices that are directly contributing to it. Hence the criticisms of corn production replacing food production are indeed warranted.

    11. Re:Who cares about some damage to a few cars... by Nf1nk · · Score: 1

      The poor Elbonain farmer can then not find a market for his corn because the 1st world country dump their surplus grain on Elbonia by the shipload thereby making an effective economy impossible in their little country.

      --
      I used to have a cool sig, back when I cared
    12. Re:Who cares about some damage to a few cars... by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      I actually farm, so I feel the need to step in here and correct you a little bit. The richest soils I know are only 5% organic matter.

      The richest soils commonly used for agriculture are 10% organic matter, but that's agriculture today.

      And you are wrong about corn being produced by top soil. Crops can grow in soils without any organic matter at all (I know because I've done it), but without organic matter you have to provide 100% of the nutrients the plant needs.

      I'm not wrong. They start with top soil. Then they deplete it, which was the entire point of my comment.

      High organic matter soils are rich because they have a greater capacity to produce the fundamental nutrients by breaking down plant matter. But no matter how you cut it, if you aren't fertilizing in some way (synthetic or manure) you're just mining your soil of nutrients and eventually you'll run out.

      One one hand, that's true. You really can't have organic farming without poop. There's an excellent song on South Park which sums up my views on crap, I think you may know the one. But it's also true that you can plant guilds instead of monocultures, and then you have (for example) nitrogen-users and nitrogen-fixers, and then the range of what you have to add to the soil is much reduced.

      Crop rotation has little to do with organic matter or soil richness. Crop rotation is almost all about disease and weed management.

      Uh no. That is a benefit of crop rotation, but it is not the primary purpose. The point of planting successions is that each plant changes the constituents of the soil in a way that the next plant in the succession can use. If you continually plant the same crop, then adding manure isn't sufficient. If you plant guilds or successions then it is.

      I'm also in a position to comment on your thoughts on food production. The real problem with corn ethanol and food production is that it's driving up costs of all food commodities (wheat, beef, dairy) and inputs at a dramatic rate on a global level.

      That's a problem, but that's still not why people are starving. People starve because we'd rather see food rot than experience fluctuations in a commodities market designed to permit playing bullshit games with other people's money.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    13. Re:Who cares about some damage to a few cars... by dfm3 · · Score: 1

      The GP doesn't mean continuous as in "365 days a year", but rather "year after year after year." Because different plants have different nutritional requirements, and because certain crops can actually help replenish nutrients that other plants need (for example, soybean roots harbor symbiotic bacteria that actually add nitrogen to soil), crop rotation has been practiced for thousands of years as a way to increase yields and prevent soil depletion. The same is true of allowing a field to lie fallow, which is the practice of not planting a crop but instead allowing weeds or whatever else to grow for a season or two, then plowing them under before plating the crop you actually want. Typically, it's not uncommon to have higher yields in the long run if you allow your fields to lie fallow every so often versus growing the same crops every single year.

    14. Re:Who cares about some damage to a few cars... by dbIII · · Score: 2

      Organic material is the difference between soil and regolith (moon dust). Beyond that is gets a bit complicated, it's one of those "why is the sky blue" questions that looks like it has an easy answer until you think about it.

    15. Re:Who cares about some damage to a few cars... by RazorSharp · · Score: 1

      The real issue here is that food is being used to make fuel.

      Well, if you think about it, that makes sense. Fuel is just food for machines. Or food is just fuel for animals. Just because most machine fuels are poisonous to animals doesn't mean the inverse is true. However, in this case it is true. Ethanol fuel will poison my lovely sports car.

      Maybe I mistook what you're saying. Are you complaining about food being wasted? Because, really, there's enough food on the planet to feed everyone regardless of whether we put alcohol in cars. Not to mention that corn's a pretty poor source of sustenance.

      --
      "From the depths of my skeptical and rationalist soul, I ask the Lord to protect me from California touchie-feeliedom."
    16. Re:Who cares about some damage to a few cars... by mapkinase · · Score: 1

      Ilya Ehrenburg, famous Soviet journalist, WWII propaganda scribe, writer and socialite, extensively traveled abroad and he wrote in his memoir "People, years, life" about overproduction crisis in 1929-1931:

      In 1929 Americans had an excess of wheat of 240K bushels. Prices fell catastrophically, farmers went bankrupt and starving. At the same time there were 40M registered unemployed around the world. Import of wheat into Western Europe shrank seven-fold.

      Representatives of 46 states gathered in Rome to decide what to do with excess of wheat in 1931. Everybody went insane. Brasilians burned coffee. US burned cotton. It was suggested to denaturate wheat with eosin: red grains would go as a food for cattle.

      Cows were eating first grade wheat - manitoba or barleta (?). But after a few months newspapers informed us that there are too much butter and meat in the world, and that's why people are dying from hunger.

      In 1933 I was in Denmark. I saw an amazing machine that converted cows into round cakes for feeding pigs.

      --
      I do not believe in karma. "Funny"=-6. Do good and forbid evil. Yours, Oft-Offtopic Flamebaiting Troll.
    17. Re:Who cares about some damage to a few cars... by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Ilya Ehrenburg, famous Soviet journalist, WWII propaganda scribe, writer and socialite, extensively traveled abroad and he wrote in his memoir "People, years, life" about overproduction crisis in 1929-1931:

      The excerpt is a fascinating indictment of capitalism, is it not? We need food, but we created an imaginary system for its management that leads to starvation during periods of overproduction. God damn we're smart fucking monkeys, eh?

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    18. Re:Who cares about some damage to a few cars... by mapkinase · · Score: 1

      >The excerpt is a fascinating indictment of capitalism

      Well, marxists have been very good at that from day one. Commies did not fall far behind in that either: Mao and Stalin were quite successful in creating artificial problems as well.

      --
      I do not believe in karma. "Funny"=-6. Do good and forbid evil. Yours, Oft-Offtopic Flamebaiting Troll.
    19. Re:Who cares about some damage to a few cars... by vandamme · · Score: 1

      The SAD part is, we could be drinking all that ethanol ourselves!

    20. Re:Who cares about some damage to a few cars... by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      >>Corn for ethanol is grown continuously, which means not only do they not let fields lie fallow, but they actually don't even practice crop rotation!

      That's not true. During the ethanol price spike around 2008, farmers grew two back to back crops of corn to meet demand and take advantage of the high prices, but that was not normal practice, and they resumed their rotations afterwards.

      >>Nobody is starving because we make corn into fuel.

      Tell that to the people in Mexico that rioted over the sharp spike in tortilla prices due to corn ethanol a few years back.

      If you're interested in an unbiased study on the subject, I highly recommend this book:
      http://www.amazon.com/The-Economics-Food-Feeding-Fueling/dp/0137006101/

    21. Re:Who cares about some damage to a few cars... by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      >The GP doesn't mean continuous as in "365 days a year", but rather "year after year after year."

      And he's wrong. Corn and soybeans are typically rotated against each other. Corn can be grown back to back to meet high price demands, but then they go back to soya.

    22. Re:Who cares about some damage to a few cars... by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      Food policy generally takes the form of: make food cheaper in country A, which makes food more expensive in country B.

      Most countries have policies to make food both more expensive (to support its farmers) and cheaper (to support its customers). If this sounds contradictory, it is.

      As Ronald Reagan said when he took office: I found that there were four policies in place to increase production of eggs, and another program in place to buy all the excess eggs!

    23. Re:Who cares about some damage to a few cars... by caseih · · Score: 1

      Two weeks later, but hey, why not. Are you a farmer yourself? Do you grow organically? It doesn't sound like it.

      And when you talk about 10% organic matter, you're too funny. 10% organic matter exists in tropical forest floors, but not in any farmland in north america. http://www.soils.wisc.edu/courses/SS325/organic.htm . Brazilian farmers get pretty excited about burning down rainforest to plant in that 10% soil. All that organic matter reduces inputs dramatically and generates extremely high yields, for a few years. Then the soil is depleted to the normal levels typical on North American farms and they find their input costs are driven way up, so they abandon that land and burn some more rainforest down. In North America we don't have that luxury if you want to call it that. One thing I do know about replenishing the soil is that erosion can harm soil and it will never ever recover.

      Organic farming, really, is similar to Brazilian soil mining, unless you fertilize (manure can provide a lot of this) a lot. You will run out of the other nutrients also. That's why organic farming is no more sustainable than any other form of farming. That gets into weed control.

      I repeat rotation is about weed and disease control plain and simple. You telling me it is otherwise is kind of like telling me I'm putting gas in my car for reasons other than I need fuel. I've told you that I rotate crops for weed and disease control.

      Sadly in both of these particular areas, organic farming is falling way short. We had a near lawsuit over organic farming in my area because one guy's organic operation was spreading weeds far and wide an forcing neighbors to spray a lot more than they would normally, and for the next several years. Didn't impress me at all.

    24. Re:Who cares about some damage to a few cars... by caseih · · Score: 1

      My bad. reading the charts wrong. 10% is indeed in some farm land in North America. 5% seems more typical though. And the lucky ones, such as those in my area, 2%.

  5. Ethanol and corn by NetNinja · · Score: 1

    Did yah ever think farmers were going to stop producing corn for food and instead make themselves rich selling thier food to make fuel?
    Food prices would of course go up since so much of our food contains corn.
    The shortage of corn for food would make the farmers rich on both ends.
    What is the cost to make 1 gallon of Ethanol? Time+materials+ labor = 2 gallons of Diesel to make 1 gallon of Ethanol?

    If Ehtanol is so great how come it's not used in the Aviation industry?

    Hooray!

    1. Re:Ethanol and corn by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      If Ehtanol is so great how come it's not used in the Aviation industry?

      Hooray!

      Two things:

      - It lowers the specific energy of the fuel. Ethanol does not have the joules per unit weight that gasoline has. In a car, that isn't all that much of an issue, just get a bigger tank, in aircraft it is a bigger problem. That means less payload. That's a hassle both for economic and practical reasons.
      - You now have to rejigger all of the fuel line components to make it alcohol tolerant. That for many aircraft that aren't even made currently. It's not like people toss airplanes after a decade - they just get rebuilt. They get rebuilt in low volumes so there is no significant financial incentive to do all the research for every odd ball plane in General Aviation. Somebody has to pay to design it, build it and get it passed the EPA. It could certainly possible, but nobody is going to be arsed to do it.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
  6. Re:Next year: by khallow · · Score: 2

    Actually, let's mind the car. Think of all those new jobs that are created whenever you pump the wrong fuel into your tank. Only way it could get better is if we pay people to break cars. New economy, here we come!

  7. Economic Remedy? by BlueMonk · · Score: 1

    Could the additional internal cash flow improve the country's general economy?

    1. Re:Economic Remedy? by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      See: Broken Window Fallacy.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    2. Re:Economic Remedy? by larry+bagina · · Score: 1

      Have you ever witnessed the anger of the good shopkeeper, James Goodfellow, when his careless son has happened to break a pane of glass? If you have been present at such a scene, you will most assuredly bear witness to the fact that every one of the spectators, were there even thirty of them, by common consent apparently, offered the unfortunate owner this invariable consolation—"It is an ill wind that blows nobody good. Everybody must live, and what would become of the glaziers if panes of glass were never broken?"

      Now, this form of condolence contains an entire theory, which it will be well to show up in this simple case, seeing that it is precisely the same as that which, unhappily, regulates the greater part of our economical institutions.

      Suppose it cost six francs to repair the damage, and you say that the accident brings six francs to the glazier's trade—that it encourages that trade to the amount of six francs—I grant it; I have not a word to say against it; you reason justly. The glazier comes, performs his task, receives his six francs, rubs his hands, and, in his heart, blesses the careless child. All this is that which is seen.

      But if, on the other hand, you come to the conclusion, as is too often the case, that it is a good thing to break windows, that it causes money to circulate, and that the encouragement of industry in general will be the result of it, you will oblige me to call out, "Stop there! Your theory is confined to that which is seen; it takes no account of that which is not seen."

      It is not seen that as our shopkeeper has spent six francs upon one thing, he cannot spend them upon another. It is not seen that if he had not had a window to replace, he would, perhaps, have replaced his old shoes, or added another book to his library. In short, he would have employed his six francs in some way, which this accident has prevented.

      --
      Do you even lift?

      These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.

    3. Re:Economic Remedy? by BlueMonk · · Score: 1

      Doesn't applying the Broken Window Fallacy ignore my point that we are currently paying other countries money that could be spent within this country. My understanding is that acknowledging the Broken Window Fallacy only acknowledges that money spent on repairing damage could just as well have been spent on something constructive, but that the overall spending within the system is the same. But we are spending on something external to the country when it could be more internal.

      I had not encountered the Broken Window Fallacy before, so feel free to correct my understanding, but my interpretation of its point is that there's no point in causing damage in order to benefit the business of those who repair damage. But adding more Ethanol to gasoline is not any kind of damage. It actually encourages increased production.

    4. Re:Economic Remedy? by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      I thought you were referring to potential damage since that's the topic of this discussion.

      Damage aside, you're right that it would be better for the local economy to "in-source" some fuel production.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    5. Re:Economic Remedy? by BlueMonk · · Score: 1

      Ah, I should have emphasized the word internal.

  8. Irony by Dan+East · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There's a lot of irony to this. For starters, the actual change in regulation by the EPA won't require E15 gas. It simply allows individual states to require it if they want. So in other words this is the federal government giving the states more control, which normally is a good thing. However there are states that are so influenced by corn production that they will certainly make E15 the standard in their state, but for all the wrong reasons. So it might be a bad thing for the Feds to give up some control here, which I hate to have to say.

    The second irony is this is the EPA making this decision, and this decision will harm the environment. If the valves and rings in older cars wear out faster from using higher ethanol fuel than they were designed for, then they will begin burning oil, vastly increasing harmful emissions. I thought the EPA was supposed to protect the environment?

    --
    Better known as 318230.
    1. Re:Irony by cellocgw · · Score: 1

      So in other words this is the federal government giving the states more control, which normally is a good thing

      Rather a large number of us non-TeaBagger US citizens disagree 100% with that statement. IMHO there is no logic whatever in allowing different states to generate contradictory laws.

      --
      https://app.box.com/WitthoftResume Code: https://github.com/cellocgw
    2. Re:Irony by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      I suspect that degradation of the old equipment is seen by the EPA as a feature rather than a bug, as it means that those old cars will come off the road, their owners either buying newer (and more efficient?) vehicles or being forced to switch to public transportation.

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    3. Re:Irony by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      Some of us can't afford a new car every few years. Some of us who can have things we'd rather spend our money on. It's not a problem for me as I know how to do a valve job but for many others it's rather dire.

    4. Re:Irony by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      They're happy for you to give up your car and upgrade to a bus. Buses are more efficient than cars (when full, and when they don't take passengers too far out of their way, but they're always full and convenient, right?), so they're much better for everybody. You'll thank them later.

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    5. Re:Irony by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      I guess I need to move somewhere that has bus service. Of course, my job is here. I kind of need it.

    6. Re:Irony by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      What's the point of having different states, then?

    7. Re:Irony by cellocgw · · Score: 1

      IMHO, none whatsoever. States should have about as much autonomy from the Feds as town gov'ts do from the states.

      --
      https://app.box.com/WitthoftResume Code: https://github.com/cellocgw
    8. Re:Irony by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Do you really think a unitary state as large as US would ever work? It's too different culturally, you'd get constant deadlocks over various strongly felled issues. I mean, it's already happening (abortions, guns, gay marriage etc) - but how much worse would it be when everything is decided on the federal level?

  9. Re:Too much ado about nothing by SIGBUS · · Score: 5, Informative

    My 2010 Honda's manual very specifically says not to use ethanol blends higher than 10%. I'll trust Honda's word over those of the corn lobby.

    --
    Oh, no! You have walked into the slavering fangs of a lurking grue!
  10. big $$$ for ngk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    i have found that it generaly fouls sparkplugs, especially in stationary motors (generators -fixed speed)
    around 1/4 plug life.

    1. Re:big $$$ for ngk by unitron · · Score: 1

      i have found that it generaly fouls sparkplugs, especially in stationary motors (generators -fixed speed)
      around 1/4 plug life.

      No need to worry about that. It'll gum up the carburetor and stop it running long before then.

      --

      I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

    2. Re:big $$$ for ngk by swalve · · Score: 1

      What is ethanol going to gum up the carburetor with? Ethanol evaporates and leaves nothing behind.

    3. Re:big $$$ for ngk by unitron · · Score: 1

      The same stuff with which it fouls the spark plugs?

      --

      I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

  11. Greenwashing at its finest by Tridus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Corn Ethanol is the ultimate in greenwashing. It's not green at all. It's not even energy positive. We're not gaining energy here. We're just using fossil fuel based products to grow corn and turning the corn into an inferior fuel without any gain whatsoever.

    Shows the power of the corn lobby, but it's a disaster for the overwhelming majority of the population. If they want an easy thing to cut as part of the fiscal cliff negotiations, all ethanol industry subsidies are a great place to start. They're a total waste of money.

    --
    -- "So they told me that using the download page to download something was not something they anticipated." - Bill Gates
    1. Re:Greenwashing at its finest by rmdingler · · Score: 1

      This. And don't kid yourselves, the ubiquity of high fructose corn syrup as Big Food's sweetener of choice is another negative fallout from these insane corn subsidies.

      --
      Happiness in intelligent people is the rarest thing I know.

      Ernest Hemingway

    2. Re:Greenwashing at its finest by ChunderDownunder · · Score: 1

      Yeah I never understood that. Sugar from cane surely tastes better and has a higher energy efficiency as ethanol than maize.

      Time to drop the embargo and buy Cuban sugarcane? :)

    3. Re:Greenwashing at its finest by dbIII · · Score: 1

      It's not just the Cuban embargo that is the problem. They've got huge tarriffs to stop the importation of Jamaican sugar and importation of Australian sugar was blocked by something falsely named a "free trade agreement". A Florida sugar growers lobby with huge amounts of political power did the damage but in their greed managed to price themselves out of their market and expensive corn syrup suddenly became cheaper than sugar from a protected market.

      Dropping the restrictions is going to damage both the Corn lobby (since cheap sugar would replace expensive corn syrup almost overnight) and the Sugar lobby since they've been wrapped in cotton wool for so long they wouldn't have any idea how to compete on price. Thus actual free trade is the mortal enemy of the party that keeps on screaming about the wonders of free trade - so it's no wonder that large portions of US politics can only be described as batshit insane liars.

    4. Re:Greenwashing at its finest by unitron · · Score: 1

      This. And don't kid yourselves, the ubiquity of high fructose corn syrup as Big Food's sweetener of choice is another negative fallout from these insane corn subsidies.

      Don't forget to credit the sugar lobby for making sugar so expensive that everyone switched over to HFCS.

      --

      I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

    5. Re:Greenwashing at its finest by mlts · · Score: 1

      Call me crazy, but instead of ethanol, why not get more vehicles that can run B100 diesel? If people want to talk about a fuel that doesn't take dino carbon and put it in the air, nothing beats WVO, WMO [1] or other waste oils.

      Of course, a diesel car has to have a lot more subsystems than a gas engine (EGR, DEF, DPF, multiple pumps, glow plugs, and many other components that have to be maintained.) However, if one really wants to be "green", B100 is as good as it gets. To boot, it doesn't take crop space away.

      IMHO, a diesel engine is the way to go. Chrysler has been developing a true multifuel engine that is a Diesel cycle (not an Otto cycle) engine... but it has the option to use gasoline, as well as diesel.

      [1]: Waste motor oil is still dino juice, but better have it used as fuel than have to reside in tanks to be disposed of. On some diesel sites, people report success with submicron filtering, mixing it with regular diesel, and using that.

    6. Re:Greenwashing at its finest by rmdingler · · Score: 1

      Right. I understand they retained the lobbying firm Pyrrhic & Associates for that boondoggle.

      --
      Happiness in intelligent people is the rarest thing I know.

      Ernest Hemingway

  12. E15 may be an issue... and not just for cars by Constantin · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The percentage of ethanol is not just an issue for cars... boat owners have reported extreme issues with molded-in-place gas tanks where the fiberglass resin mix wasn't just right, which then led to the resins softening and dissolving into the gas. The resin juices then proceeded to destroy the engines in the boats by coating / clogging the fuel system and the chambers with this juice. Folks were allegedly going up and down the coast looking for gas stations that could guarantee 0% ethanol gas or forced to undertake a $$$ diesel repower of their power boats.

    It's not as if refineries are going to ship a different blend of gas to most ship docks, doesn't make sense, is a distribution nightmare. They're going to ship whatever they have.

    And here's the rub: The ethanol will also result in worse gas mileage because the stuff does not have the same bang per cubic volume as gasoline (i.e. 66%). Thus, the higher the ethanol volume fraction, the lower your vehicle's range is going to be. It's why cars designed to run on E100 in Brazil and elsewhere feature bigger gas tanks than cars designed for use with gasoline, for example.

    At the end of the day, the ethanol debate is one of the best examples of how lobbying results in extreme market distortions, i.e. the adoption of a fuel substitute at the behest of the corn farmers in the midwest and the large corporate interests (ADM, etc.) which profit from the processing and marketing of the stuff. Now that natural gas is too practically too cheap to meter, expect even more fuel conversion efforts of this sort.

    1. Re:E15 may be an issue... and not just for cars by thegarbz · · Score: 3, Interesting

      It's not as if refineries are going to ship a different blend of gas to most ship docks, doesn't make sense, is a distribution nightmare. They're going to ship whatever they have.

      Actually in many cases the ethanol is added post blend of the gasoline giving refineries exactly that level of control. A station in some state wants zero ethanol, send them straight gasoline. If they want it blended, dump some into the tank before sending it out.

      Heck in some cases it's not even the refineries themselves which blend ethanol but rather the distribution terminals. Although there is a trend towards making refineries do the blending since they have an in house lab and if they certify the product they can actually hit the octane target. The alternative is having to hit the octane target without ethanol and then adding it after. Since ethanol has a high octane it results in giveaway (product better than spec)

    2. Re:E15 may be an issue... and not just for cars by cdrudge · · Score: 2

      Heck in some cases it's not even the refineries themselves which blend ethanol but rather the distribution terminals. Although there is a trend towards making refineries do the blending since they have an in house lab and if they certify the product they can actually hit the octane target.

      Even then there can still be problems. Just see the recent contaminated gas in the Chicago-land.

    3. Re:E15 may be an issue... and not just for cars by thegarbz · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Interesting conclusion by the paper. This is actually par for the course and can typically happen once a week at a refinery the size of whiting. It is the job of the lab to pick this up, and the fuel should have been independently retested after transfer to ship/distribution facility/pipeline etc. That's one of the reasons you typically don't trust the QA certificates when you buy oil / fuel. But it happens all the time. The lab sends through the certificates, a different department plans the load, and then operations lines up the wrong tank to the pipeline and you get off spec product at the other end.

      One of our vendors sent us a case study on a large terminal with 100+ tanks which suffered on average 400+ valve lineup issues each year. Some small picked up quickly, some quite bad. The ones that really cause a shitstorm is when you blend the wrong dye into fuel. So the petrol looks like diesel and then you send it to the other end without noticing and suddenly you have a tank full of flammable liquids which is not designed to hold flammable liquids.

      I can actually give you another problem caused in part by ethanol. It's hygroscopic. The company I worked for released standard unleaded to the local pipeline to send to a terminal, all certificates were in order and all specs met. When it got to the terminal it was put into a tank which had a water layer in the bottom. The ethanol absorbed the water and the terminal's laboratory failed the batch as not meeting spec. Shitfight ensued while both sides were trying to figure out what happened. In this case it was caught and not sent out.

    4. Re:E15 may be an issue... and not just for cars by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      boat owners have reported extreme issues with molded-in-place gas tanks where the fiberglass resin mix wasn't just right, which then led to the resins softening and dissolving into the gas.

      Those tanks should always have been illegal. Requiring a metal cell (I am opposed to all plastic tanks for the reason of later fuel reformulations) would have been good sense.

      Now that natural gas is too practically too cheap to meter, expect even more fuel conversion efforts of this sort.

      Uh what? It costs about as much to get that stuff into your vehicle as gasoline. The cheapest I'm aware of is $3.50 and guess what? It has the same energy density problem as ethanol.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  13. Re:This sounds like NRA-like topic - full of error by wonkey_monkey · · Score: 1

    Homeland security?

    --
    systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
  14. Start with ethanol mandates on the farm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    The government should mandate that ONLY pure ethanol be allowed to be used in farm machinery used to harvest corn. No tractors running on diesel. If that experiment works out, then we can consider it in our cars.

  15. Re:Too much ado about nothing by NIK282000 · · Score: 4, Informative

    That's true for every gasoline engine that isn't specifically designed for alcohol. Alcohol makes rubber gaskets dry out and crack, it also does a pretty good job at taking the lubricating oil off of everything. Its a wonder that old motors last hours let alone years on the 10% stuff.

    --
    Dear aunt, let's set so double the killer delete select all
  16. more corn lower price by night_flyer · · Score: 2

    Ive been watching the pumps around my area, the E-10 regularly is cheaper than the E-85.

    I dont understand the big push to ethanol anyway (well yeah I do, the big grain growing states get a kickback) it takes more energy to produce a gallon of ethanol than 100% gasoline.

    --


    Thanks to file sharing, I purchase more CDs
    Thanks to the RIAA, I buy them used...
  17. Re:This sounds like NRA-like topic - full of error by rmdingler · · Score: 1

    ACs?

    --
    Happiness in intelligent people is the rarest thing I know.

    Ernest Hemingway

  18. Ethanol breaks specific parts by dutchwhizzman · · Score: 2

    Ethanol in gasoline fuel breaks specific parts in your car.

    Fuel lines and parts of the fuel circuit that contain rubber. Unless special formulated rubber is used that is ethanol proof, the rubber will deteriorate.

    Fuel pumps and injectors. Some of these are still manufactured from materials that are not adapted to ethanol.

    Carburetors. Older cars that are not using injection systems, may have parts inside the carburetors that dissolve in the ethanol. Most common carburetors will have replacement parts available that are resistant to ethanol, so retrofits can often be done.

    This is mostly a cost issue and for only $100 more or so a new vehicles components can be resistant to ethanol in such a way that you could easily run E85 without problems for the life of the vehicle. Any modern car that is not capable of doing so, is made so on purpose. Even your 69 mustang can be made to run just fine on ethanol, providing you retrofit the carbs with some new floats and seals and replace the fuel pump and fuel lines with something modern too. Corn Ethanol may not be cost effective or "green" in the USA, but in large parts of the world, ethanol is the cheapest and most environment friendly fuel option. Don't hate on Ethanol just because the way it's being done in the USA isn't right. It has it's place and merits, if you do it right.

    --
    I was promised a flying car. Where is my flying car?
  19. A few things by fermion · · Score: 3, Insightful
    First, any auto manufacture that claims they have no idea how ethanol is going to effect their engine is simply incompetent. The question is what will happen with higher temperatures and maybe increased reactions. This has been around for ove 5 years in the US, and longer in other countries, so the testing has been done. In particular US studies has shown that up to 20% is not going to harm the engine. So what we are saying here is we believe hand waving from lazy manufacturers over data. This kind of cognative dissidence is all to common around here.

    Second, no manufacturer is going to extend a warranty beyond minimum requirements. Can you imagine going to a dealer, after not changing the oil for a year, saying they would fix an unrelated warranty issue? Of course not. The purpose of a dealer is deny as many warranty repars as possible. So why would they say they would warranty a uncovered fuel that might mean even an additional warranty repair. Much better to blame the fuel even if the repair is unrelated. Of course flex fuel cars are warrentied to run on flexible fuels.

    Third, the issue with ethanol is really an issue with corn production in the US as our only crop for such purposes. Corn is about the worst thing one can use for ethanol, but the US has a corn economy. There are many weeds that can be made into ethanol, but little money has been put into developing that technology. Sugarcane can also be used, but the sugarcane economy in the US has been systematically decimated in the US by northern interests who value politics over national security.

    So it is clear that this is just another FUD article to promote the fossil fuel economy. Things are going to change, interests that have become fat and lazy on the backs of americans workers are going to become less fat and lazy, and this simply scares them, so they have to scare us.

    --
    "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    1. Re:A few things by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

      Second?

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    2. Re:A few things by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      Higher temperatures? Ethanol burns cooler than gasoline...

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    3. Re:A few things by OneAhead · · Score: 1
      I think you just pulled a slashdot:

      Second, no manufacturer is going to extend a warranty beyond minimum requirements...

  20. Re:Again this BS? by qazwsx · · Score: 1

    Brasilian cars can easilly handle this mixture:
    link

  21. FUD by kervin · · Score: 1

    Safeguards can obviously be taken if needed. For instance, surprisingly it's also bad for the car to put diesel in your gas engine. Yet just about every station sell both types of fuel. Personally, I'm looking forward to E25, which has been used in Brazil since the late seventies and they seem to be doing ok with that decision.

    1. Re:FUD by O('_')O_Bush · · Score: 1

      I don't care much about the safeguards, I agree that is FUD. What I do care about is how ethanol is produced, and how Brazil can produce it efficiently with sugarcane, but we can't because of the corn lobby.

      Because of this, I hope E25 never comes on corn, and prefer there to be an E0.

      --
      while(1) attack(People.Sandy);
    2. Re:FUD by kervin · · Score: 1

      I agree Corn is not the best crop for producing ethanol. But it can be used as a stepping stone since it's readily available here.

      I'm guessing at some point Ethanol producing firms will seriously investigate other crops and challenge the Corn lobby. But none of this will happen until Ethanol becomes a bigger part of our fuel consumption.

    3. Re:FUD by faedle · · Score: 1

      The difference is it is almost impossible to put diesel into your gasoline automobile, at least in the United States. It is pumped from a different nozzle and hose, and the nozzle is typically a larger size that won't fit most passenger cars. It also is dyed a different color (green), smells different, and is labelled quite differently. You are even supposed to use a different color gas can (yellow) for transporting diesel.

    4. Re:FUD by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      A stepping stone to what, though? A crop that isn't readily available here? Ethanol works in brazil because they get it from sugar cane and sugar cane happens to grow quite well in brazil's climate.

      Here, we can get almost as much energy from corn ethanol as we put in from the petro feedstock (fuel for the machines and fertilizers, etc), and corn already grew pretty well in the US before we started using petro fertilizers and machine harvesters. What crop do you suggest we could use instead, on the land that we have, that would be better?

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
  22. It isn't the engine that's being harmed... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    ...it's the fuel storage and delivery systems in the vehicle that are suffering the damage... all the rubber, plastic, and aluminum components that are getting dissolved or corroded by the ethanol.

    A piston engine can run just fine on ethanol, but everything from the tank, the pump(s), hoses, seals, fuel injectors, etc, all must be made from materials that specifically can withstand constant contact with ethanol, and ethanol with water dissolved in it, without deteriorating. Most automotive fuel system component materials really cannot withstand this (even E10 is harmful over time), and materials that can withstand the ethanol are expensive and have shorter limited service lifespan too.

    Also keeping all the water out of the fuel is problematic too. The entire fuel system must be sealed from the atmosphere since ethanol will absorb water vapor from the air anytime there is exposure to the atmosphere.... even for a few seconds.

    1. Re:It isn't the engine that's being harmed... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Is water in the fuel really such a big problem? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_ethanol_fuel_mixtures#hE15

    2. Re:It isn't the engine that's being harmed... by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      Flex fuel cars can actually adjust for a range of gasoline/ethanol mix using a sensor that detects the fuel mix, it's not just a handful of different "profiles."

      I'm going to hook up a flex-fuel sensor to my sports car next year but it's more for longevity than performance, I just run whatever pump gas is available and the compression ratio isn't high enough for any meaningful gains.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
  23. No one knows! by sd4f · · Score: 2

    Article is pretty bad, of course people know, it's just that no one can say it without boring non-technical people to death. Sounds like this article was written by those pommie top gear clowns, as soon as anything technical related is mentioned, they cut it out and proclaim it dark mysterious magic!

    I think the problem will probably be that the fuel map won't be made to cater for a 15% blend, issue with ethanol is that the stoichiometric mixture requires more fuel relative to mass than hydrocarbon gasoline, since the car can't identify the fuel, and it either sticks to a predetermined fuel map, or uses O2 sensors to adjust, i'm not sure what they'd have selected to do, and i'm not sure what by product gasses you get when you have lean alcohols (being oxygen, hydrogen and carbon). With that said, if the mixture isn't made stoichiometric, then you will be down on power and NOx emissions will go up, which the latter is probably why manufacturers state not to use higher mixtures of ethanol.

    I doubt the engine or other parts would suffer any damage, aluminium doesn't like alcohols, corrodes with them, but i don't think 15% is high enough to cause problems, still, and rubber parts might not last as long if in contact with ethanol, but again, just as before, upping the concentration to 15% won't has serious and immediate effects. Valve and cylinder head issues is completely wrong, all cars made to run unleaded have hardened valve seats and valves as it was the tetraethyl lead that reduced wear in those parts, with that being long gone, manufacturers have been making the engines withstand unleaded, this remain unchanged with ethanol mixes.

    The real drawback with ethanol is that the energy density is about two thirds of ordinary hydrocarbon gasoline, which means operating with stoichiometric mixtures, ethanol engines won't be significantly changed with power, but to do the same amount of work, will consume a higher volume of fuel as opposed to gasoline engines. So from a simple cost benefit point of view, 1 unit of ethanol is worth two thirds of straight, unadulterated gasoline, therefore to get your money's worth, 15% ethanol should be approximately 1.7% cheaper than 10% ethanol, and 5% cheaper against straight gasoline.

    1. Re:No one knows! by JustNiz · · Score: 1

      My undertanding is that E15 also eats rubber and plastic quickly, so think all your seals, hoses, fuel pump etc.

      Even if your guess is right (and I am a long way from convinced you're right), that valve seats etc wont get more harmed by burning E15, just the side-effects of long-term running with incorrect timing (i.e. caused by unnig E15 with any ECU not explicitly rpogrammed for it) will surely wear out your engine much quicker.

      As for the potential for damage, you only have to imagine the increased danger of a corroded fuel hose leaking fuel onto a hot exhaust manifold, or an engine running with bits of corroded plastic or seal floating about inside.

      Everything I've read that isnt US government controlled says that that adding any ethanol at all to gasoline has no actual benefits and a lot of disadvantages.

      The reality is that even the existence of E10 or any etahnol in our fuel at all is just the US government selling out to the corn lobby in return for campaign funding. E15 is beyond sane.

    2. Re:No one knows! by sd4f · · Score: 1

      It's a two fold problem, if the fuel map is incapable of adjusting to provide a proper stoichiometric mixture, then you will have a lean mixture. This makes combustion hotter, which increases possibilities of detonation. Timing can be adjusted to alleviate this if the vehicle has a knock sensor, but another drawback of lean mixtures is that the NOx emissions go up. Knock doesn't wear out engines, it actually damages them.

      As for the corrosion due to a 5% increase in ethanol, i think you're off the planet, even straight ethanol won't melt the rubber and make lines corrode immediately, petrol is already a good at dissolving rubber, this is just laughable because it's so wrong.

      There are advantages to burning ethanol, but like anything, it's a compromise, unless you are a mechanical engineer, you wouldn't have much chance of understanding them. From a hot rodders juvenile point of view, ethanol seems crap, but the main reasons why there's research and a slight shift towards ethanol is that it's better at reducing emissions. This is very important, because the car industry has to adhere to emissions, not high horsepower demands, so a whole team of engineers spend hundreds of man hours tuning a factory engine for optimal performance, whilst adhering to set laws governing the emissions. It's easy for car hoons to know nothing about this, and while they know how an engine works, and sound knowledgeable about engines, they're completely oblivious to the science behind it, with aspects of thermodynamics and what is actually going on in an engine, they just have empirical experience, which counts for very little when you start venturing into the unknown.

  24. Care to back that up? by kervin · · Score: 1

    First, we are only currently using fossil fuel based products to grow corn. That can easily change, especially with the advances we're seeing with green energy.

    Secondly what research indicates that growing corn for energy on a wide scale would use more energy than it produces? There are many studies that conclude ethanol from corn is Energy Positive.

    1. Re:Care to back that up? by ericloewe · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Any energy gain would be similar to the energy produced by photovoltaic arrays, which have the advantage (over corn) of not needing fertile soil and water.

    2. Re:Care to back that up? by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 4, Informative

      This research:

      Ethanol Production Using Corn, Switchgrass, and Wood; Biodiesel Production Using Soybean and Sunflower David Pimentel and Tad W. Patzek Natural Resources Research, Vol. 14, No. 1, March 2005 doi:10.1007/s11053-005-4679-8

      Which was cited by the article you cited.

      Here is another discussion:

      http://www.theoildrum.com/story/2006/8/25/221617/881

      The latter is more interesting because not only does it point out the economic issues, but also that there are other issues such as water consumption, soil erosion, political costs etc. associated with using ethanol for fuel.

      The Oil Drum is a very worthy site because it presents a useful hard economic view of alternative energies. I think it's probably overly pessimistic, however it's probably a lot closer to the truth than a lot of the advocacy positions that appear in the media.

    3. Re:Care to back that up? by Rob+Simpson · · Score: 1

      This one shows it barely breaks even. There are a lot more useful things one could do with cropland than barely break even.

      In short, we find no support for the assertion that either biofuel requires more energy to make than it yields. However, the NEB for corn grain ethanol is small, providing 25% more energy than required for its production. Almost all of this NEB is attributable to the energy credit for its DDGS coproduct, which is animal feed, rather than to the ethanol itself containing more energy than used in its production. Corn grain ethanol has a low NEB because of the high energy input required to produce corn and to convert it into ethanol. In contrast, soybean biodiesel provides 93% more energy than is required in its production. The NEB advantage of soybean biodiesel is robust, occurring for five different methods of accounting for the energy credits of coproducts (see Table 9, which is published as supporting information on the PNAS web site).

  25. Boat owners also report problems... by kervin · · Score: 1

    when they put diesel in their gas engines.

    Not every change deserves a corporate conspiracy theory. The fuel you use has never been just gas. There's always been many various additives, octane, levels, season mixes, etc.

    High ethanol mixes have been available in many countries without a major collapse in infrastructure. I'm pretty sure we'll do alright as well.

  26. RTFA (or summary for that matter) by Reschekle · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The environmentalists are actually against it

    1. Re:RTFA (or summary for that matter) by lightknight · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Then they need to scream a little louder about this one, because guess who is going to receive the blame for it? "Oh, we had to do the ethanol route! The environmentalists demanded it! It's good for the planet!" - part of being a politician is knowing who to blame, while collecting money for making the mistake.

      And while they're at it, if they could undo the NIMBY / anti-nuclear stuff, it would be much obliged. Yes, yes, I know they are now behind nuclear technology, especially when faced with coal and other fun alternatives...but the old propaganda from their fore-bearers / similar groups is still driving the people away from it, and it's really getting out of hand. Something needs to be done before people are so scared of electricity generating technologies, that they turn to burning forests for warmth. And yes, we are approaching that level of stupidity: "Nuclear is bad, oil is bad, coal is bad, but wood is a renewable resource! So, let's just light the forest on fire, and all our neighbors will be warm with us!."

      And before you say it, you know someone, somewhere will do this.

      --
      I am John Hurt.
    2. Re:RTFA (or summary for that matter) by slackware+3.6 · · Score: 1

      My parents finnally got rid of their wood stove (figured the $500 extra a year for insurance was not worth it) OTOH my neighbors in town half the town all of a sudden is putting in wood stoves somewhat due to the cost of electricity going up every month .

  27. Umm.. by Reschekle · · Score: 1

    It's been a while since I've used a full-service pump but they ALWAYS ask you what kind of gas you want in your vehicle..

    What, do you think that people who drive diesels are constantly getting regular gasoline in their tanks because the pump boy doesn't know how to ask you what fuel you want?

    1. Re:Umm.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I can go right over to the nearest five gas stations, and the Diesel pump is mated with a regular one. It does come out of a different tank, and uses different hosing, but other than being on the other side, it's not that different.

      You know what I call people that only think they know better than somebody else, but are substantially incorrect? A pretentious jackass.

    2. Re:Umm.. by LoRdTAW · · Score: 1

      There are dual pumps that also have diesel. Basically there are two hoses, one for gasoline, the other for diesel. There are four buttons, three to select the grade of gasoline and the forth selects diesel. But you have to have the green colored diesel hose unhooked to get diesel. The small service station near me has two such pumps. One for diesel/gasoline and one for E85/Gasoline.

      Here is an example: http://www.racetrac.com/aboutus/ourfuel/diesel.aspx

    3. Re:Umm.. by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      Requesting "regular", et al, is different from requesting "regular, ethanol 10 or less", especially if the driver doesn't know that they may encounter E15 and/or what it could do to their engine. And the possibility of the wrong grade gasoline at a pump - doesn't have to be the aviation fuel at a gas station linked to by the OP - then what? Getting regular instead of high-test won't cause the same problems as getting E15 when your car can't handle it.

      Come on, it will be just like Starbucks "Low Octane grande with two shots of E-10, no whip". If people can get it straight for coffee, they can do it for gasoline.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    4. Re:Umm.. by slackware+3.6 · · Score: 1

      A lot of our diesel nozzels are right next to the gas nozzel on the same pump but the diesel nozzel is usually yellow or black. I drive a diesel truck and other than truckstops diesel is rarely on a separate island

    5. Re:Umm.. by rmdpgh · · Score: 2

      It's been a while since I've used a full-service pump but they ALWAYS ask you what kind of gas you want in your vehicle..

      What, do you think that people who drive diesels are constantly getting regular gasoline in their tanks because the pump boy doesn't know how to ask you what fuel you want?

      You may not know this, but leaded gas, unleaded gas, and diesels fuel pumps all have different O.D. spouts. E85 doesn't - it's the same as E10. If the nozzle doesn't go in, that's usually an indicator that it *shouldn'* go in. (Somebody screwed up with E85, and didn't spec the spout...damned near pumped it into my care before I realised what I was about to do.)

    6. Re:Umm.. by Patch86 · · Score: 1

      In petrol stations I use, all the types of fuel have separate hoses lined up next to each other at each pump. You pick the hose for your type of fuel, and squeeze the trigger. That's different hoses for diesel, standard unleaded petrol, high octane petrol, leaded petrol (where still available). Presumably this would be the same setup for "high ethanol" and "low ethanol" fuel. Our stations are self service, but I'm assuming the technology is more or less the same the world over.

      So at a full-service station, you're relying on the attendant picking up the correct hose. Or alternatively, picking up the shared hose and pressing the correct trigger. You rely on him listening to the driver's instructions to use the correct fuel.

      How is this any different between the existing 3 or 4 fuel types, and adding one or two more variants to the line-up?

  28. Re:It's not just the rubber parts... by Electricity+Likes+Me · · Score: 2

    Man what?

    Ethanol is not dissolving fluorinated polymer seals anymore then octane or the other components of gasoline are - you know, given time and contact. In all the fear-mongering people forget that regular octane is a pretty damn effective solvent.

  29. Lost yard equipment to E10. Now I'm more careful. by NetRanger · · Score: 1

    I didn't really care about the difference between 100% gas and E10. I thought it was a bunch of hoopla from competing political interests. Then I lost a trimmer and a tiller to ethanol's corrosive powers. Within a couple of weeks of being fueled with E10, both had developed holes in the gas tanks and were dead. Happily my mower didn't suffer the same fate.

    The moral? Don't let E10 sit in your trimmer or other yard equipment. In fact, use 100% gas in them when possible.

    --
    -- We live in a world where lemonade is artificial and soap has real lemon.
  30. Laugh.. by koan · · Score: 1

    Sure burn up our food and use it for cars in a starving World.

    --
    "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
  31. Re:Again this BS? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Brazilian cars can easilly handle this mixture: link

    Brazilian cars can handle any mixture. I still have to wonder why the US keeps up with this bullshit over and over. Guess their informed citizens would know better, but no. Just another case of not-invented-here syndrome.

  32. quit pandering to corn lobby - not green energy by iggymanz · · Score: 1

    ethanol is a horrible fuel, less energy dense than gasoline, corrodes and dissolves parts, and is net energy loss. We need to stop this nonsense, our lawmakers are out of control and in the pockets of the wealthy.

  33. I don't think we'll see beyond E10.... by MtViewGuy · · Score: 1

    ....Mostly due to potential engine damage and the fact you have to redesign the fuel-delivery system to take full advantage of E15 fuel--not a cheap option!

  34. Re:more corn lower price by kervin · · Score: 1

    That is not true. Corn Ethanol is not the best source of Ethanol but it's still Energy Positive.

  35. Re:Next year: by lightknight · · Score: 1

    And if we pay some people to dig ditches, while others fill them in, we can employ hundreds of thousands of people.

    --
    I am John Hurt.
  36. Ironically... by Lumpy · · Score: 1

    Those corn farmers refuse to use the stuff in their tractors. Every gas station in farming areas sells 0% ethanol gasoline. Because farmers refuse to use any blends in their equipment due to the damage even 10% causes.

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
  37. Why by rossdee · · Score: 1

    Why are we still using inefficient hydrocarbon burning internal combustion engines to power automobiles anyway?

    1. Re:Why by iggymanz · · Score: 2

      reality. hydrocarbons have high energy density, while whatever alternative you are imagining we should use does not.

    2. Re:Why by faedle · · Score: 3, Informative

      Because the power density of hydrocarbon fuels far outweighs any other technology presently available.

      10 gallons of gasoline weighs around 90 pounds. In even a fairly inefficient car (like, say my 1985 Volkswagen Vanagon Camper) that will get the car about 150 miles. Most compact cars easily get twice that from a 10-gallon tank. My other car, a Volkswagen New Beetle (which is diesel), gets close to 40 MPG (easily over if you drive conservatively), and while that's burning diesel fuel, the weight is comparable. So, 150-400 miles on 90 pounds of fuel for your "inefficient hydrocarbon burning internal combustion engine."

      By comparison, the LiIon batteries in many electric vehicles weighs in the range of 90-200 pounds, depending on the car (The Tesla, I'm told, weighs even more). At most, the range of a typical electric is 200 miles, and most manufacturers only promise between 100 and 150 miles between charging.

      CNG weighs a little less (the fuel is significantly lighter, but the tank is heavier). LNG weighs about the same as gasoline. Both will range at the lower end of the MPG figures quoted above. Fuel cells may alter the dynamics a bit, but the best sources of hydrogen for them is still hydrocarbon fuels.. they will just push the kW/gallon energy output higher, potentially increasing MPG if we can get the weight of a fuel-cell generator and electric motors to something close to an internal combustion engine.

      Pound for pound, hydrocarbon fuels provide the most bang for the pound of any power technology we presently have available.

    3. Re:Why by IronChef · · Score: 1

      As others have said, hydrocarbons have a great energy density. This excellent article discusses the issue.

      http://thebulletin.org/web-edition/columnists/kurt-zenz-house/the-limits-of-energy-storage-technology

  38. Already Studied for a Half Decade by Kagato · · Score: 1

    Minnesota did extensive E-15 and E-20 studies that completed back in 2008. They didn't find a many problems, which is why the EPA passed the waivers without much fanfare. It's been lawful to sell E15-E20 in MN for some time. Here's the thing though, there's no reason to make a big deal out of the blends. Ethanol can be blended at the pump. Give consumers the choice on how much they want and how much they want to pay.

    1. Re:Already Studied for a Half Decade by iggymanz · · Score: 1

      politicians have agendas. the corrosive nature of ethanol's oxidizing products are well known (for tanks, pipelines, engine components), as well as its ozone problem.

  39. Re:Too much ado about nothing by Demonantis · · Score: 1

    What? Ethanol is terrible for the engine since it pulls water out of the air plus it has less energy per unit of volume. So now your car needs more gas to go the same distance. And the water causes pitting on all the engine parts. Plus ethanol disintegrated the rubber hoses on an old motorcycle I have. And ethanol is a net energy loss so you don't make more energy than you consume manufacturing it. I have yet to see one benefit of ethanol in gas.

  40. Warning Straight From The Manual by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Straight from a G37 2012 manual:

    "Do not use E-15 or E-85 fuel in your vehicle. Your vehicle is not designed to run on E-15 or E-85 fuel. Using E-15 or E- 85 fuel in a vehicle not specifically designed for E-15 or E-85 fuel can adversely affect the emission control devices and systems of the vehicle. Damage caused by such fuel is not covered by the INFINITI new vehicle limited warranty."

    Enough said.

  41. Vehicle range by tepples · · Score: 1

    But how easy is it to store the energy produced by a PV array for a long road trip? Chemical fuels still have a higher energy density, as I understand it.

    1. Re:Vehicle range by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      You're thinking about the problem wrong. What we should do is electrify the highways (induction charging lanes, perhaps?) so that cars going over them don't need to rely on stored energy. Then it doesn't matter if your car only has a 40 mile range battery, since any trip that approaches that would probably require using a highway anyway.

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    2. Re:Vehicle range by ericloewe · · Score: 1

      Certainly more efficient than processing corn into ethanol

    3. Re:Vehicle range by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      Any gap between the road and the vehicle -- and one inch is a HUGE gap -- makes inductive charging very inefficient. Any sort of electrified highway will be expensive and a maintenance nightmare. (The alternative to induction, conductive rails or a bumper-car arrangement, is an invitation to electrocution lawsuits.)

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
  42. Use of Alternative Fuel == Voided Warranty by CodeBuster · · Score: 1

    Although it's not in vogue here on Slashdot, many vehicle owners do actually RTM and it generally states quite clearly in the fuel requirements section that use of fuels other than specified, generally 87-95 octane unleaded gasoline with not more than 10% ethanol, voids the warranty . Now I ask you, when faced with a warning sticker on the E15 gas pump about engine damage, what would the average consumer do? This will become like the E85 pumps. Most stations won't even offer it, because almost nobody wants it, and those that do will see very little use. If a product is so great that the government has to make use of alternatives illegal, it's time to throw the bums out. To all you politicians out there, you want to make people really hopping MAD? Damage the engines on their 10 year old cars during the slowest economic recovery from the deepest recession since WWII and see what happens. Go ahead, we dare you.

  43. Insightful indeed, why don't you migrate by Su27K · · Score: 1

    to a socialist country then? There're not many socialist countries left last time I checked, Cuba is probably the only one that is even close to socialism ideology. The problem with socialist countries are they tend to be dictatorships where laws do not matter, sure the dictator can pass legislation that favor individuals, but there's no check and balance to make sure the legislation is actually implemented, it's just a piece of paper to serve propaganda purposes.

  44. Re:It's not just the rubber parts... by tuxicle · · Score: 1

    There's also the effect of water absorption causing corrosion to metal parts, and promoting water absorption in certain plastic fuel tanks. The latter has resulted in a lawsuit with motorcycle manufacturer Ducati, where they agreed to replace the tanks that were swelling and in some cases, rupturing due to water absorption. This only happened in the US, after E-10 fuel became popular. Regular octane does not absorb water.

    My Ducati's past warranty, so the tank replacement offer doesn't cover me, once my tank swells or ruptures, I'm hosed.

  45. Right, Wrong, and Not Even Wrong by Guppy · · Score: 2

    I dont understand the big push to ethanol anyway (well yeah I do, the big grain growing states get a kickback) it takes more energy to produce a gallon of ethanol than 100% gasoline.

    That is not true. Corn Ethanol is not the best source of Ethanol but it's still Energy Positive [wikipedia.org].

    I would file both of your answers under the category of neither right nor wrong, but rather not even wrong. The minimum EROI required to sustain a modern civilization has been estimated to be anywhere from 3:1 to 15:1 (with broad variations depending on assumptions of things like what "minimums" might still constitute a modern civilization). If we have to argue the fine details of Ethanol's energy balance to determine if it is energy positive or not, we are already answering the wrong question.

    For small-scale, local purposes, a low EROI may be acceptable for its non-energy benefits -- but a large-scale reliance on such a power source would be disastrous.
     

  46. not "small" "tweaks" by SuperBanana · · Score: 3, Informative

    Brazil has been using E20 and E25 for decades. All it requires is some small tweaks.

    If by "small tweaks" you mean replacing every single component in the entire fuel system that has rubber (which means all the seals, any lines that aren't completely metal, all the fuel injectors, the fuel pump, which is often inside the fuel tank and very difficult to reach, and the fuel pressure regulator), adjusting the engine computer's timing maps (not really possible except in vehicles made after 2000 or so, which tend to have electronically-reflashable computers) *and* better-sealing the fuel system (ethanol is very hygroscopic.) ...then yes, "small tweaks." You're probably looking at upwards of $1,000 in labor alone, and at least half that again in parts (fuel pump, injectors, fuel pressure regulator, and replacement lines, mostly. Seals are comparatively cheap.)

    1. Re:not "small" "tweaks" by ifiwereasculptor · · Score: 1

      While those are real problems, they are nevertheless largely exaggerated. Carbureted Harleys from the 90s have been running for years on E20. Those are imports, mind you, so none of the usual preparations for coping with ethanol have been made. Rubber does last less, and you do have to replace to your seals and jets after about 30k miles or so (depending on how often you ride), but it's not the end of the world, as quite a few Anonymous Cowards here seem to think. By the way, my friend's 1998 gasoline Chevrolet Astra usually ran with pure ethanol. Converting was a piece of cake and extremely cheap. A kit with hoses, an extra small fuel tank (for housing gasoline, to help the vehicle start in cold days) and some extra parts that I can't recall right now ran for around $250. Installation was simple and easy, about $50 but you could do it yourself.

    2. Re:not "small" "tweaks" by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Yes, but the difference between Brazil and the USA is a relatively high tech vehicle industry with things like Scania trucks instead of whatever dinosaurs are on life support from Detroit. I think they also regulated to use some additives to the fuel to get around the corrosion problems, while in the USA those are left out.

    3. Re:not "small" "tweaks" by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      adjusting the engine computer's timing maps (not really possible except in vehicles made after 2000 or so, which tend to have electronically-reflashable computers) *and* better-sealing the fuel system (ethanol is very hygroscopic.) ...then yes, "small tweaks." You're probably looking at upwards of $1,000 in labor alone, and at least half that again in parts (fuel pump, injectors, fuel pressure regulator, and replacement lines, mostly. Seals are comparatively cheap.),

      Anything made since 2000 or so has all synthetic seals anyway, and they aren't going to give a shit about gasohol. Then the only problem you have is that most vehicles don't have enough compression to burn it worth a crap. Except, of course, the really old vehicles. My first car had 12:1 compression off the showroom floor. Lead substitute AND octane booster, baby, by the time I got it.

      --
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    4. Re:not "small" "tweaks" by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

      $1000 is what they mean by "tweaks".

      For about $2500 in "tweaks", you can make your engine run on natural gas, too. We don't do that here, either.

      Netherlands did it, and you could optionally get that mod (and you get a nice switch to flip the engine back and forth) and they then immediately slapped a severe tax on it so you had to drive 20km per year just to break even again vs. gas. Thanks for nothing!

      There is nothing government can't get involved in that it can't muck things up. Problem isn't power hunger so much as the ability to suavely persuade useful idiots to gang up behind them.

      --
      (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
  47. corn prices skyrocketed - yes people are starving by SuperBanana · · Score: 1

    Nobody is starving because we make corn into fuel.

    Pretty much anyone who doesn't live in the US and uses corn for a large part of their diet, saw their food costs skyrocket.

    It became more profitable in the US to sell corn for ethanol, but there was still demand for corn for food, so import demand for corn rose, and world corn prices skyrocketed such that even people in Mexico who grow corn can't afford to eat what they're making (opportunity cost.) Same problem with south american countries since quinoa became popular in the US/Europe; people's diets changed to less-nutritious foods.

    Certainly not everyone in Mexico is starving - but cost of living increases always affect the poorest people the most, because "cost of living" is a much larger portion of their budget, and is not elastic.

    Yes, it destroys topsoil. But it's also food being used as fuel, and it's a net-negative-energy fuel that takes more energy to create than it yields. That is simply idiotic.

    People are not starving because nobody cares. People are starving because politicians are protecting local producers and making it impossible for developing countries to sell cash crops.

  48. 15% means 20% by Alien+Being · · Score: 1

    While they are claiming 10% it's often more than that. It's enough to ruin many fuel systems. The customer gets their tanks filled with crap that doesn't burn well, resulting in poor mileage and big repair bills. We need independent testing and reporting of what comes out of the pumps. These bogus distributors are increasing their obscene profits by poisoning our engines. I know of fleet managers who have learned this the hard way.

    The fact of the matter is that most of the cars on the road should not burn any ethanol. They managed to get 10% allowed as an acceptable amount of contamination. They are already sabotaging our cars. We'd be better off it they kept their damned ethanol and replaced it with air.

  49. Re:Too much ado about nothing by nabsltd · · Score: 1

    My 2010 Honda's manual very specifically says not to use ethanol blends higher than 10%. I'll trust Honda's word over those of the corn lobby.

    Most car manuals have that phrasing, but it really means "don't use the only other widely available ethanol blend, which is 85% ethanol", since E85 will do some serious damage in vehicles that aren't designed to use it.

  50. Re:Too much ado about nothing by JamesP · · Score: 1

    Yes, please keep perpetuating the oil industry myths.

    Also gas does not dissolve anything like polystyrene, really, it's the perfect fuel, I forgot

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  51. drawbacks, fuel maps by ace37 · · Score: 1

    Thank you for mentioning the details of what the damage means and for mentioning energy density. That's a real-world drawback we experience immediately. Ethanol does create domestic supply chains for oil for many nations though, and it's always beneficial to have a variety of effective methods to meet major demands of our societies. While the octane rating is higher for ethanol than gas, since we still buy the same ratings I can only assume oil companies are reducing the refining costs of the gasoline to minimize the net cost of the fuel.

    For a data point on the car's behavior and how well optimized it would be to use a blend, I retuned the ECU on my 2006 Honda S2000 with a product by Hondata. The fuel injectors used a preset fuel-air ratio settings map for wide open throttle across the RPM range, and it used an oxygen sensor to approach ~14.7:1 air:fuel for part or light throttle. It was an open loop system with a long and short term fuel trim adjustment to keep it close to that target. The wide open throttle settings map was a little more rich than stoichiometric to keep the motor safe since running lean produces detonation--it targeted around 13:1, but the precise number seemed to vary by car model and even by individual years of the same make and model; a major trend was turbocharged cars typically were more rich than naturally aspirated vehicles. I understand my 370Z and others work generally the same way.

  52. MANY ISSUES by barv · · Score: 1

    Most issues below have been raised above. Many inaccurately, or incomplete.

    Soil v dirt. It is my understanding that to grow anything, all that is needed is something for the roots to grab, and the appropriate chemicals, water and sunlight supplied. True, crop rotation can reduce the chemicals required (Nitrogen a good example, use sub-clover.)

    Grain costs. Ethanol can be made from most organic matter. Grains of any type are good producers of ethanol. The production of ethanol for use as a fuel additive certainly appears to have driven up the cost of grains. For instance, look at a graph of "world grain prices" v time. ( http://www.ifpri.org/node/8436 ).

    It does seem logical that higher grain costs would correlate very well with the increased starvation of people (especially children, about 6 million per annum) in the poorer parts of the world. (e.g. http://www.wfp.org/hunger/stats) There are reports that agricultural areas in third world countries are being bought up and utilized for ethanol production.

    Just incidentally, Ethanol has a lower HCV (Higher Calorific Value) than petrol. (approx 30,000 MJ/Kg -v- 45,000 MJ/Kg.) This means that ethanol is only worth ~2/3 as much as petrol as a fuel, because it only does 2/3 the work. So for a (say) 10% mix (E10) the value per gallon or liter should be (0.9 + 2/3*.1)/1 ~ 0.967% of the straight (ULP) price. Or for each $1.00 paid for regular ULP, the price for E10 should be 3.3c less. For a 20% mix, (E20) the cost should be 6.7c per $1.00 less.

    So there we have it. If you want to (1) help the farmers, (2) damage your car's engine, and (3) help the environment by (4) killing off millions of children in third world countries, then just vote to increase the mandated amount of ethanol in petrol.

  53. Re:Too much ado about nothing by wagnerrp · · Score: 1

    I don't recall seeing any polystyrene parts in my engine...

  54. Speaking as a person stuck in a Capitalist country by rsilvergun · · Score: 1

    after a lifetime of getting my ass kicked here I don't have enough to offer true socialist country (they do still have immigration standards). My education was pretty low quality (meant to keep me off the streets while I was young and potentially violent), my falling wages have left me in debt up to my ears with virtually no assets. The one asset I had (a house) is now worthless since I'm stuck moving every few years to go where the work is.

    If you look at where creativity and innovation is coming from it's almost exclusively socialist countries. In reality You need a strong safe net to take those risks. The Mitt Romney's of the world never take risks. They're fathers and mothers and buddies shield them from all that.

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  55. For what I hope is the last time by rsilvergun · · Score: 1

    the USSR was not, was never, and probably never will be a socialist country. It was and is a dictatorship that happens to use socialist rhetoric. China also falls into this. I think the best description for both is 'Kleptocracy', government run by thieves stealing for themselves. For a real socialist country see Canada and Germany.

    While I'm on the subject, if socialism means nobody will work if they don't have to how come Mitt Romney still has a job?

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    1. Re:For what I hope is the last time by SteveFoerster · · Score: 1

      So, the workers own the means of production in Canada and Germany? I wasn't aware of that.

      --
      Space game using normal deck of cards: http://BattleCards.org
    2. Re:For what I hope is the last time by SteveFoerster · · Score: 3, Insightful

      In fairness, though, I can actually understand why people bringing out the example of the Soviet Union would annoy a true socialist, because as a libertarian it annoys me when people describe the system in countries like the U.S. as capitalist. It's not even close -- when the policy makers of a powerful central state cooperate with executives who run large businesses for mutual advantage, that's corporatism, not capitalism.

      (Because it's Christmas I thought I'd give you a real answer in addition to the sarcastic one.)

      --
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    3. Re:For what I hope is the last time by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      because as a libertarian it annoys me when people describe the system in countries like the U.S. as capitalist. It's not even close -- when the policy makers of a powerful central state cooperate with executives who run large businesses for mutual advantage, that's corporatism, not capitalism.

      I find it curious that you gave the correct definition of socialism in your other post, but then get capitalism wrong like that. Capitalism is an economic system that results from the private (transferable) ownership of capital, i.e. the means of production - hence the name. There is nothing in that definition that requires democracy, free market, laissez-faire and so on. Corporatism is one of the modes of capitalism. So is anarcho-capitalism.

      Similarly, by the way, one could reasonably argue that Soviet Union was socialist (it depends on whether you consider Soviet state to meaningfully be a representative of the society as a whole or not -opinions differ; and note that it doesn't need to be democratic to represent the majority). The comparison annoys people who don't understand that socialism is just an economic system, and think that it is always necessarily democratic - or rather, usually, that only their particular brand of socialism is the "real thing". In practice, again, socialism spans all the way from anarchist communes to Maoism and beyond.

    4. Re:For what I hope is the last time by SteveFoerster · · Score: 1

      I find it curious that you gave the correct definition of socialism in your other post, but then get capitalism wrong like that.

      It's not so curious when you remember that different people from different schools of thought become accustomed to different definitions. But I can see how that lends itself to confusion when people try to communicate across ideological divides. I was referring to capitalism in a sort of Ayn Rand sense. But you're right that I should have made that clear, and I do recognize that your definition is at least as valid.

      --
      Space game using normal deck of cards: http://BattleCards.org
    5. Re:For what I hope is the last time by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      I think that Randian definition is not particularly useful, as it is too narrow. Besides, it came much later compared to the original, purely economic definition (which was already in heavy use in 19th century), which also had the benefit of being etymologically tied to the word itself. I think that, in this case, it's worth just being more specific - i.e. "laissez-faire capitalism" describes it accurately and unambiguously for everyone.

    6. Re:For what I hope is the last time by SteveFoerster · · Score: 1

      Hmm. Okay, you're right.

      What got me, though, is that in most political conversations, when people talk negatively about "capitalism", they're rightfully pointing out the externalities of corporatism but wrongfully blaming laissez faire capitalism. I believe that most people (especially progressives), don't understand that there's a significant difference, and it makes them erroneously conclude that free market advocates are pleased with corporatism, which gets in the way of what otherwise might be useful discussion.

      --
      Space game using normal deck of cards: http://BattleCards.org
    7. Re:For what I hope is the last time by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Well, as a leftie myself, I can tell that, while I don't confuse corporatism with laissez-faire, I believe that the latter inevitably leads to the former in practice - monopolies can form just as well without government intervention into markets (in fact, if anything, they form easier) - and, unchecked, they can acquire economic power that rivals the monopoly on violence normally associated with the state (the classic example is horrible conditions for workers during the Gilded Age - it's not that they were okay with them, it's just that the only other choice was to starve to death). From that perspective, laissez-faire capitalism is distinct only as an utopian ideology, not in practice.

      (Socialism also has a similar issue - in theory, you can have democratic Marxist socialism, but in practice it inevitably gravitates to an authoritarian state where party apparatus forms the new ruling class, controls wealth distribution, and distributes it for its own benefit, rather than that of the workers.)

    8. Re:For what I hope is the last time by pnutjam · · Score: 1

      Here is some excellent light reading to help you both out.

      http://gutenberg.net.au/ebooks05/0500881h.html

  56. Welp... by FyberOptic · · Score: 1

    I guess I'm going to be asked to fix a lot more lawn equipment soon.

    How are we saving the environment when we're destroying so much equipment in the process?

  57. We're from the government and we're here to help.. by h8sg8s · · Score: 1

    Just another case of the Obama EPA running amok. Nothing new here, run along..

    --
    Organization? You must be joking..
  58. Humidity by dbIII · · Score: 3, Informative

    The stuff fresh out of the pump is perfectly fine (for a while), but in humid environments the ethanol sucks in water which can cause corrosion problems in those motorcycles, lawnmowers, chain saws etc especially if the level of the fuel is constant for days or weeks at a time. The corrosion happens in the metal adjacent to the surface of the fuel, and it's not just in the tank since there will be some fuel sitting for extended times in a lot of portions of the engine. That's why it's a bigger deal in engines that are not run a lot - it's apparently a huge deal in outboard motors for boats that are only run on weekends.
    I use ethanol fuel (E10) in my car at times but only if I know I'm going to be driving a lot and get the stuff out of the system in under a week if the weather is humid. I don't use it in my lawn mower. If I didn't live in the humid subtropics I probably wouldn't care about it. If there isn't much water in the air a few percent of ethanol alone isn't very corrosive so the time you can leave it in the tank is a lot longer.

    1. Re:Humidity by adolf · · Score: 1

      Where do you buy non-E10? Around here (NW Ohio), we have extremely humid summers and E10 seems to be simply all that is available.

    2. Re:Humidity by HornWumpus · · Score: 2

      Try a marina or gas station right next to a popular boat ramp.

      You can get genuine 110 octane tetra-ethyl lead pure gas goodness at a light airport. Get lubed up before you go. Still cheaper then replacing all your light engine tools and only option in some areas.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  59. Time and humidity + ethanol is the problem by dbIII · · Score: 1

    It's a big deal if the stuff sits for weeks in the same spot of an engine that isn't moving and the stuff corrodes right next to the fuel/air line. It's not about it burning, since it burns well enough.
    Some people alternate between a tank of E10 and zero ethanol, but in something that gets a lot of use it's not likely to matter much. In a boat outboard motor that only runs every now and again it's a huge deal - the ethanol soaks up water and the fuel/air line doesn't move much so you get corrosion cells going for a long time in the same spots, so in extreme cases the top half of the fuel tank may break off at the level where the top of the fuel was, and meanwhile similar stuff is happening inside the engine.
    Then there's what it does to neoprene rubber after the fuel has soaked up a bit of water. You end up with ruined seals.

    All this depends on the fuel having enough time to absorb a lot of water from the air and there being a lot of water there in the first place. I use E10 in a car in a very humid subtropical area because I drive enough that it takes a depressingly short time to go through an entire tank. I'm not using it in a lawn mower though.

  60. Then you don't know what socialist countries are by Su27K · · Score: 1

    like since you have never been to one. In your imagination, socialist countries are equivalent to paradise, this is understandable given the problems you're facing, but I'm sorry to say your belief is incorrect. I don't know much about Cuba, but in the other so-called socialist countries, there're tons of people like you, and a lot of them don't even have roof over their head. On top of this, they're oppressed by the dictator and his cronies.

    As for creativity and innovation coming from socialist countries, seriously? The one thing socialist fails miserably is innovation, since it requires freedom of thinking, freedom of communication, which is lacking in these authoritarian countries. Give me one thing a socialist country has innovated in the recent news, can you think of even one thing?

    BTW, socialist countries are big on inheritance of power, Romney is nothing comparing to how Kim gives the country to his son or how Castro gives the country to his brother.

    PS: All the word "socialist" in my posting should be quoted, these so-called socialist countries are far from the ideal of socialism and communism. I'm not a believer of capitalism, I believe in "From each according to his ability, to each according to his need", but authoritarian dictatorship is not the way to achieve this.

  61. Reality gets in the way by dbIII · · Score: 1

    It's not the energy from fossil fuels that is consumed, it's the actual chemicals in the fossil fuels that is the thing that is required to make the fertilizer. For instance turning butane/propane/etc into hydrogen and then ultimately ammonia based fertilizers.
    Reality gets firmly in the way of "easily".
    And don't go pretending that using hydrogen from nuclear reactors is going to do it "easily", it's a decade or two before we'll really know if we can do that "easily".

  62. Ethanol is for Drinking, NOT Driving. by speedlaw · · Score: 1

    I've had three jetski carbs destroyed by this stuff, one snowblower, and various friends have had issues with motorcycle and boat motors. Please get this crap out of my gas tank. Please.

  63. Re:Too much ado about nothing by RazorSharp · · Score: 1

    Yes, some cars 'may' be damaged. But if they withstand E10, E15 is really a non issue

    Just like if you can handle 10 drinks of a 10% wine, 10 drinks of a 15% wine is a non-issue. . .

    Not to mention ethanol is better for the engine in some ways (less carbon deposits)

    It's not like gasoline engines are like diesels where carbon deposits are a huge issue (and really, modern diesels have mitigated this issue). Furthermore, it's a bad trade-off. Less efficiency and more corrosion so my engine won't be as dirty after 300k miles? Uh, no thanks. Trading gasoline for ethanol is like trading mice for roaches. Give me the mice, they're easy to deal with. Trading gasoline for ethanol 'enhanced' gasoline is like trading mice for mice and roaches.

    --
    "From the depths of my skeptical and rationalist soul, I ask the Lord to protect me from California touchie-feeliedom."
  64. Nonsense by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

    'Nobody really knows what negative effects [E15 is] going to have on the vehicle,'
    On your vehicle? None.
    On your engine? None.
    On your pipes transmitting gasoline to the engine, perhaps some. Depends on the material.

    No one knows? What a nonsense! It is pretty well known what effects it has: basically none. The EU has E15 and other gasolines since ... 10 or 20 years!

    --
    Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
  65. Re:Again this BS? by Yomers · · Score: 1

    Thailand slowly adopting ethanol mixtures - highest now is E20. It's cheaper than pure gasoline or E10, so it's widely used. Absolutely cheapest fuel is LPG (Propane), but car needs to be converted to use it.

  66. Re:Too much ado about nothing by JamesP · · Score: 1

    "Less efficiency and more corrosion"

    It's not less efficient. It has less energy per volume BUT THIS IS A NON ISSUE if the price matches. (except for autonomy of course, but unless there are no gas stations where you're going, non issue)
    Ethanol running engines also produce more power which seem to be conveniently ignored (granted, your engine may not take advantage of this)

    More corrosion? Not if you engine is built to support it. Then guess what, no corrosion.

    And of course don't use E85 on a E10 engine, but E15? Your fuel system either supports ethanol or it doesn't. It's not really concentration dependent (and you don't use E85 then because of engine calibration and cold starts)

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  67. Re:Too much ado about nothing by Patch86 · · Score: 1

    Probably wise. But Honda may well have said that simply because they haven't tested and certified it for higher blends. A "may contain traces of nuts" style disclaimer, so that if it turns out to be bad for the engine you can't complain to them about it.

    As the Toyota spokesperson said in TFS, they want to do a lot more testing before they're willing to accept high-blend ethanol as being safe in their vehicles (and so covered by their warranty). Or to put it another way, they just don't know at the moment.

  68. Sigh... by sribe · · Score: 1

    E10 has significant detrimental effects on small 2-cyle engines already. So right now, it is already a pain in the ass to maintain chain saws, blowers, trimmers, etc because most gas you can find will corrode engine parts if you're not very very careful about handling and storage. So now it just gets worse.

  69. Free market indeed by rmdingler · · Score: 1

    Government has become the tool of lobbying and corporations, and we sit idly by while the system continues to allow these powerful entities to write regulations that suppress competition. "Political corruption always exists. The extent to which it effects (sic) the people is the same as the extent to which government is allowed to interfere in the markets and in people's private lives." -TMosley, /., 03/04/12

    --
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    Ernest Hemingway

  70. Re:corn prices skyrocketed - yes people are starvi by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

    The US imports corn? The rest of your post makes less sense.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  71. Re:Bad for those of us with older cars by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

    You're doomed. You should just sell the car to me for cheap.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  72. not a valid comparison by SuperBanana · · Score: 1

    Carbureted Harleys from the 90s have been running for years on E20.

    A carburetor motorcycle is not a valid comparison to a fuel injected car. The Harley does not have a fuel pump.
    Doesn't have pressurized fuel lines.
    Doesn't have banjo fittings that each contain 2 o-rings
    Doesn't have numerous seals inside the injectors.
    Doesn't have fuel injectors with o-ring seals on the fuel rail.
    Doesn't have a fuel pressure regulator.
    Doesn't have closed-loop emissions - in fact, it doesn't have any sort of emissions control.

    1. Re:not a valid comparison by ifiwereasculptor · · Score: 1

      Well, injected Harleys are also running pretty good, no concerns there. Plenty of Kawas, too. An overwhelming number of Hondas. And all pre-2008 Citroens, Renaults, Mitusbishis, Hondas and Toyotas. Including plenty from the late 90s, early 2000s (the average age of our fleet is about 12 years). I'm telling you, while those concerns are pretty reasonable, they are blown out of proportion. In practice, effects aren't that noticeable.

      There are plenty of carbureted bikes with all sorts of emissions control, though (all of them, in fact, since about 2001 or so). At least here and in most of Europe, I don't know about the US.

  73. Re:Too much ado about nothing by ebvwfbw · · Score: 1

    That's true for every gasoline engine that isn't specifically designed for alcohol. Alcohol makes rubber gaskets dry out and crack, it also does a pretty good job at taking the lubricating oil off of everything. Its a wonder that old motors last hours let alone years on the 10% stuff.

    Ethanol melts natural rubber. It doesn't dry it out. Buy a Cessna 140 fuel sample ring. That's natural rubber. Put it into some 10%. Try to pick it up after just 10 seconds. ewww. After a few minutes it usually useless. Ethanol is bad news. It's destroyed many many engines. It would be nice if we could hold the politicians that voted for it accountable.

  74. Re:Too much ado about nothing by Demonantis · · Score: 1
    The oil industry loves ethanol. You pay for gas by volume not energy content so less energy content means more fill ups. I don't think you understand.

    Less Power: http://www.eia.gov/tools/faqs/faq.cfm?id=27&t=10

    Eating Hoses: http://riderinfo.com/forums/archive/index.php/t-6668.html

    And yes gas is a non-polar solvent. My point is that older vehicles are not designed with ethanol in the fuel mix.

    Net Energy Balance: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethanol_fuel_energy_balance.

    I guess my information was dated on that one, so you are right. You are producing more energy than is consumed.

    Finally, I have no idea what the perfect fuel is. Gas and ethanol are decent fuels. I do know that mixing the two fuels was a bad idea.