The Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS) was pushed through under the Bush 43 administration at a time when rising gas prices and global warming were both weighing heavily on the minds of the public.
Ethanol blending was touted as a way to fight both of those concerns.
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So how has it worked out? According to the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) it hasnâ€
A federal program requiring the use of corn-based ethanol and biodiesel in gasoline supplies hasnâ€
Gasoline prices outside of the corn-rich Midwest likely rose by a few pennies a gallon at the pump because of the Renewable Fuel Standard, while falling slightly in areas with ethanol plants, the GAO said in a report posted online Monday. The pump price effects likely diminished over time. Refiners benefited from installing equipment for the fuel-blending requirement “that, over time, reduced refining costs for gasoline,†according to the report.
In addition, the GAO found that “most of the experts we interviewed generally agreed that to date the RFS has likely had a limited effect, if any, on greenhouse gas emissions.†Thatâ€
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So let’s just see how the soothsayers have done.
The Great Lakes are running dry except that now they are flooding.
The glaciers in Glacier National park are evaporating except now they are growing.
The Polar Bear is going extinct except there are more bears than ever now.
Al Gore still has a house by the seashore and Leonardo Di Caprio jets to global warming conventions.
And it’s all over in 12 years.