The US ethanol and biofuels boom: Its origins, current status, and future prospects

Tyner, WE

HERO ID

5044219

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2008

Language

English

HERO ID 5044219
In Press No
Year 2008
Title The US ethanol and biofuels boom: Its origins, current status, and future prospects
Authors Tyner, WE
Journal BioScience
Volume 58
Issue 7
Page Numbers 646-653
Abstract This article explains why we are experiencing a boom in ethanol and other biofuels, the current status of biofuels, and prospects for the future under different policy regimes. I argue that todays boom is in a sense an unintended consequence of a fixed ethanol subsidy that was keyed to $20-per-barrel crude oil, combined with a surge in crude oil prices-initially to $60 per barrel, and later doubling to $120 per barrel. Future prospects for corn ethanol depend on the crude oil price, the price of corn and distillers grains, the market value of ethanol, plant capital and operating costs, and federal ethanol and biofuels policies. I examine the impacts of a wide range of policies for subsidies and renewable fuels standards. Policy choices will be absolutely critical in determining the extent to which biofuels targets are achieved and at what cost. However, if the price of oil remains above $100 per barrel, biofuels will continue to be produced even without government interventions.
Doi 10.1641/B580718
Wosid WOS:000258014700012
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Keyword biofuels; ethanol; energy policy; renewable fuels