Economics of blending 10 percent corn ethanol into gasoline

HERO ID

10308872

Reference Type

Technical Report

Year

2022

Language

English

HERO ID 10308872
Year 2022
Title Economics of blending 10 percent corn ethanol into gasoline
Authoring Organization U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
Publisher Text U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
City Washington, D.C.
Abstract The increase in ethanol blended into U.S. gasoline is often attributed to the Renewable Fuels Program (RFS), however, other factors such as rising gasoline prices and the phase-out of MTBE were also factors driving ethanol demand at the same time that the RFS program was being implemented. This study conducts a detailed evaluation of ethanol’s blending cost into E10 gasoline, including octane and volatility costs, production cost and spot prices, distribution costs, and federal and state subsidies, while omitting RIN values, to assess whether ethanol would have been economical to blend into gasoline regardless of the RFS program. Based on this analysis, economic factors alone were sufficient to cause the observed growth in ethanol use.
Report Number EPA-420-R-22-034
Url https://cfpub.epa.gov/si/si_public_record_Report.cfm?dirEntryId=356454&Lab=OTAQ
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Number Of Pages 210
Comments EPA Draft Technical Report (under review under EPA contract #68-HE0C-18-C0001)
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
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