The BioDiesel Emperor Has No Clothes
by William “Jack” Paige Founder, Ag-Underground of America
What would you say if I told you every American farmer growing corn and/or soybeans is being systematically extorted to further a nation-wide fraud, the likes of which would make even the most accomplished con man green with envy? What would you say if I told you the fraud is being knowingly committed by Ag organizations in concert with government agencies? What would you say if I told you that every effort is being made to cover up this fraud and to legislate it on a national level, putting in place a system that would be nearly impossible to circumvent and dismantle? It sounds like a conspiracy theory worthy of a best-selling novel or even a movie, doesn't it?
Now, what would you say if I told you that it is all true, and getting dangerously close to the point of no return? Unfortunately, it is the truth, and it’s called the American BioDiesel initiative.
The systematic extortion is known as check-off. As any farmer will tell you, check-off is a mandatory levy paid on every bushel of corn or soybeans they produce. The money is supposedly paid to promote corn and soy, thus bettering individual farmers. Most would agree that, in theory, this is a good thing. The reality of it, when examining the BioDiesel issue, proves sadly otherwise.
The environment would benefit from cleaner exhaust emissions from cars, trucks and stationary sources. America would reduce dependence on foreign oil. Ultimately, the American farmer would benefit from being the supplier of the ingredients necessary to make it all happen. Had things come to pass in this manner, we, as Americans, and as members of American agriculture, would find ourselves in quite an enviable position.
After more than a decade and expenditures in excess of $83 million, American farmers are now, and always have been, unknowingly promoting a BioDiesel product that is everything but what it was intended to be. Instead of being made from domestic products such as corn-based ethanol and oil from soybeans, it is made from foreign products such as methanol and palm oil. Instead of being a clean burning fuel or additive for diesel, it is a product that has consistently failed to meet established emission mandates, including still stricter mandates that become effective in 2010.
Unfortunately, the BioDiesel Beast continues to gain strength and propagate lies. The initiative rolls on, undaunted by glaring fact. Methyl esters remain a dangerous chemical when combusted- emitting, among other things, formaldehyde and formic acid into the atmosphere and waterways. The initiative continues to fight established scientific fact with new legislation. Official press releases and the
http://biodiesel.org/ website continue to advertise that BioDiesel is derived from domestically produced commodities, which is true only if you concede that "derived" means "funded by".Am I for bio fuels, absolutely, I fight to keep another group from becoming a monopoly. It is not now or ever a good idea to convert food to energy, when a great deal of the world is starving. It will continue to vilify our fantastic country to the rest of the world.
The warn tattered statements of lessening our dependence on middle east oil is not true now nor has it been. If you are interested in seeing where are oil comes from look at the import and export numbers at http://tonto.eia.doe.gov/country/index.cfm Yes, I said exports, we are currently exporting The 1.6 million barrels a day in record petroleum exports represented 9 percent of total U.S. refining capacity of 17.6 million barrels a day. However, with refiners operating at 85 percent of capacity during the January-April period, the shipments represented a much a larger share of total U.S. oil products produced. By the way if we didn't export oil we would stop our dependence on middle east oil which is only 11% of our total use to start with.
The exports were also equal to half the 3.2 million barrels of gasoline, diesel fuel and other petroleum products the United States imported each day over the 4-month period. at the current export rate, by the time the first barrel of oil could be produced from increased offshore drilling, America would have already exported the equivalent of nearly 40 percent of the oil that is projected to lie beneath protected areas offshore.As Jack says in his aphorisms: don't believe the "deciders", look it up, educate your self and share your knowledge.
1 comment:
This should be of interest to you.
http://www.politico.com/blogs/bensmith/1108/Climate_on_the_agenda.html
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