• Subscribe feeds.gif
  • Advertising

    Send Us Money


    Amount:
    Website(Optional):


    DOLLAR.gif Add to Technorati Favorites bbgad.gif BlogBlogs.Com.Br

    « Companies Going Green May Create Environmental Domino Affect | Home | Biofuel Boom Sparks Beer Price Fight »

    Communities Buck Ethanol Trend

    By Mr Ethanol | May 30, 2007

    Plant opponents say environmental concerns outweigh benefits.

    us_money.jpg

    Ohio.com:
    Editor’s note: Ethanol, whose fortunes as a gasoline additive have risen and fallen with the price of oil, is in the middle of a boom. Biofuel plants are sprouting up across the Midwest and corn farmers are rushing to cash in. But this agriculture gold rush carries many questions, not the least of which centers on demand. In Part 5, the last of a series of reports, the Associated Press examines the promise and pitfalls of ethanol in detail.

    Barney Lavin ought to be the poster child for ethanol.

    A fifth-generation corn farmer, working the land his family homesteaded in 1842, Lavin should see dollar signs over a proposed ethanol plant in this small southeastern Wisconsin town.

    Instead, Lavin put down his pitchfork and picked up his cell phone, joining the ranks of other unlikely opponents organizing against ethanol plants, fearing air pollution, increased traffic and groundwater depletion.

    “I’m unwilling to give up the obvious quality of life we have here for some added income,” said Lavin, who grows corn on a 300-acre farm on rolling hills that include recently restored wetlands. “We feel very strongly about this area and we don’t want it ruined.”

    Across the corn belt and beyond — from Minnesota to Missouri, Illinois to Pennsylvania, Kansas to Indiana — residents in areas targeted for ethanol plants are refusing to go along with politicians who say it is a more sustainable alternative to foreign oil and a way to save dying Main Streets.

    There are 115 ethanol plants operating in the United States. Most of them are in Midwest states, including top producers Iowa, Nebraska, Illinois and Minnesota. Another 79 are under construction or planned, according to the Renewable Fuels Association trade group.

    Topics: Biodiesel, Biofuel, Ethanol Prices, Gas, Investing, Market |


    Related Posts



    New Way Of Making Easy Money Online

    Comments

    Monetize Your Site