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Friday, November 17, 2017
Study Says Ethanol Production Creates More Carbon Emissions
A study by
the University of Wisconsin says carbon emissions increase when land is
converted into crops for ethanol. The study released this week says the
carbon emissions increase since the ethanol mandate in 2007 is
equivalent to 20 million new cars driving on American roadways every
year. The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reports the study underscores the
unintended consequences of a federal policy meant to reduce America's
reliance on fossil fuels. While adding ethanol means burning fewer
fossil fuels, the study found that the benefits were lost as even
greater amounts of carbon held in the soil were released into the
atmosphere in newly cultivated farm fields. The study noted major land
changes between 2008 and 2012, and the shifting of more than seven
million acres into cropland. The Renewable Fuels Association responded
to the study, saying the results were “grossly overstated." The
association pointed out that corn production has fallen more than three
percent between 2007 and 2017, while production per-acre increased by 16
percent over that time.*