![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
|
![]() Enthusiast ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Joined Feb 7, '07 From Portland, Oregon Currently Offline Reputation: 67 (96%) ![]() |
Okay, so on a more intellegent note in hopes of redeeming myself from participating in the debachery that was the SUV debate from hell thread, I saw this on CNN.com today. Any opinions?
Congress sends bill raising fuel efficiency standards to Bush It's really better to read the whole article, but here's a brief synopsis (quoted from the article):
The automakers have repeatedly fought an increase in the federal fuel standard, known as CAFE, maintaining it would limit the range of vehicles consumers will have available in showrooms and threaten auto industry jobs. Bush also has argued against an arbitrary, numerical increase in the fuel efficiency requirement, preferring instead legislation to streamline the federal requirements and market incentives to get rid of gas guzzling vehicles. -------------------- ![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
|
Enthusiast ![]() ![]() ![]() Joined Jul 28, '06 From Delaware Currently Offline Reputation: 0 (0%) ![]() |
One day america will wake up and realize Ethanol is corrosive, must still be mixxed with oil, and is NOT the answer to curbing oil consumption in the US. Nuclear energy, our long forgotten friend (thanks terror-phobes), is cleaner, more cost-efficient . . . and a hell of a lot safer than most of you think.
Ethanol uses CORN. Hey, lets logically think this through one moment. What else uses corn? OH, how could I have forgotten.. cattle feed. And why are cattle important? RIGHT, they provide sustinence for the ENTIRE world. So, IF we don't want to plow over Chicago, Seattle and say Houston to expand production of corn ..what do we do? Its called opportunity cost. How valuable is that resource in its next appropriate use? Ethanol companies can afford to pay more for corn because they see a higher profit margin than those who sell corn-feed mixes to cattle ranchers. So that raises the price of corn to cattle ranchers, who then in turn must raise the price of beef to achieve set profit margins. Now in the US, the increase in the price of beef would not be AS drastic as say ... developing nations. Ethanol production will create a large imbalance between the developed nations, and the rapidly-developing nations who rely on US meat and grain imports to achieve growth, both economically as well as having a generally healthier population. Back to Ethanol being corrosive.. what seals your head and block? A rubber gasket...7a is metal, same principle though. What seals every piece of metal to every other piece of metal in an engine? RUBBER. What eats rubber? corrosive stuff. You know what else corrosive stuff eats? metal. So that means all those Ethanol pipelines being installed around the country delivering the ethanol form the farms and factories its produced on to transportation depots, and all the tanker trucks used to deliver ethanol to gas stations will have to be replaced every few years (Best estimate points at 3-5 years). So while it looks cost-efficient now, it won't be the case when we have to continuously replace infrastructure, resulting in higher prices at the pumps...why? because they aren't going to cover the upkeep from their 25-35% profit margins of course. #While this was a long post, i ensure you that I've done A LOT of research on the topic and its simply a band-aid in Baghdad. Sure, you could make the argument that it ensures that the US will consume oil, allowing us to protect our domestic oil producers from economic failure, but business is business, and if your product isn't making money -- you need to adapt your business plan and find something that will, or you will fail. 2 options, thats it. |
![]() ![]() |
Lo-Fi Version | Time is now: September 20th, 2025 - 5:23 AM |