Ethanol: viable as a transportation fuel?

Continuing about autos, the tutor turns the ignition on another topic: ethanol as a fuel in North America.

Sometime in the 2000s, if not before, ethanol’s use as an alternative auto fuel became a hot topic. Its use in Brazil is famous; why not in the US?

As I understand it, a couple of motivations spurred the use of ethanol:

  1. Possible ecological benefits.
  2. Relieving the high US expenditure on imported fossil fuels.

The first motivation, I believe, has come under serious question. For instance: some people mistook “renewable” to mean “reduced carbon footprint”; the two concepts aren’t necessarily related. Wood, for example, is a renewable fuel; yet, burning wood to meet America’s energy needs would probably not be ecologically sound.

The second motivation is possibly more rational. However, to make a fair judgment, one must realize that ethanol has only two thirds the energy of gasoline; therefore, the price of ethanol needs to be less than two thirds the price of gasoline for ethanol to be viable.

Today, the price of gasoline is $3.43/gallon, according to fuelgaugereport.com. The price of ethanol, at $2.17, (dtnprogressivefarmer.com) is less than two thirds the price of gasoline. Therefore, today, ethanol makes economic sense as an alternative to gasoline – theoretically, anyway. However, the prices of both fuels are volatile.

In future posts I’ll be exploring the ecological dimension of ethanol as a gasoline alternative as well as its economic aspect.

My children await their return to school; all the best to those trying to reach a settlement:)

Jack of Oracle Tutoring by Jack and Diane, Campbell River, BC.

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