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Wikipedia article:
"The American company Range Fuels announced in July 2007 that it was awarded a construction permit from the state of Georgia to build the first commercial-scale 100-million-gallon-per-year cellulosic ethanol plant in the United States. Construction began in November, 2007."
No industry, eh? You might also want to note that there are numerous demonstration plants operating around the world to fine tune the process so that large plants, such as the one mentioned above may be developed.
Nope, no industry as that plant is not up and running yet. Demonstration plants are just that, demonstration plants. And just to satisfy you, I have looked at studies on ethanol. It will be a marginal fuel source.
That's a pretty strong statement. Ethanol already comprises 4 billion gallons of the 140 billion gallon annual US gasoline consumption. For an industry that has only seen large scale investment in the last few years, that is already a fairly large chunk. Production grew in 2004 by about 20%. The cost of corn based ethanol is essentially in line with wholesale gasoline prices. Your statement doesn't really reflect reality.
Afransen, you have failed to grasp reality here. Look at the statistic you provided: the reality is that 4 billion out of 140 billion. You don't appear to grasp that this number is extremely marginal. Ethanol presently derived, for example, from corn production is driving food prices up. Land used for food production should not be used for producing fuel in ever larger quantities. Also, you confuse the present with the future. Gasoline consumption will grow along with ethanol consumption. Ethanol will remain a marginal fuel.
Ethanol does burn much more cleanly than gasoline. Ethanol emits GHGs in the way that you do when you exhale, but cellulosic ethanol by existing processes displaces 90% of fossilised CO2 emissions when compared to the equivalent amount of gasoline
There are still studies pending concerning the general health effects of burning ethanol in large quantities. The fact is that ethanol is also not as efficient as gasoline as a fuel. Equivalent amount means a U.S. gallon, but you need roughly three gallons of ethanol to equal one gallon of gasoline. This is why ethanol appears as a fraction of total fuel quantity at the pumps.
I totally agree with your last two paragraphs, though I find it a bit troubling that you usually start with quite an extreme point of view, then finally admit something reasonable and claim that that is what you had been espousing all along.
I've never started with an extreme point of view. I've said all along that there are very good reasons beyond worrying about C02 emissions to move away from fossil fuels. I've outlined those reasons again in the paragraph you mention. I've never said that ethanol is completely useless, but it will never be useful as an actual complete replacement to gasoline. If carefully introduced (and from non-food source land or produce) it will gradually help to somewhat lessen the contemporary dependency on oil. There is no one single solution to meeting energy needs; there are many.