WASHINGTON - September 28 - President Bush must put
his words about ethanol development into action after speaking in Hoover,
Alabama, today on the potential of home-grown ethanol to wean America off our
dependence on oil. According to the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC),
President Bush is right to support the development of ethanol into America's
primary transportation fuel, but he and Congress must enact forward-thinking
policies to bring this fuel quickly to the vehicles and pumps across the
nation.
In his February, 2006 State of the Union address, the
president mentioned the potential of ethanol, and promised $150 million in
research money into advanced ethanol fuels. But this is just a fraction of the
amount authorized in last year's Energy Policy Act for research and development
and commercialization of biofuels like ethanol.
"The president is on a forward-looking road by supporting
these advanced fuels, but he's keeping his foot off the gas pedal when American
farmers and families want to go full speed ahead," said Nathanael Greene, an
NRDC senior policy analyst. "His administration and Congress need to enact
policies that will advance these fuels quickly and affordably to move America
beyond oil and cut global warming pollution."
According to NRDC analysis and advice from biofuel experts,
below are the four things Washington could do now to increase the flow of
ethanol, safely and affordably:
- Invest in a package of research, development and
demonstration. To spur the development of ethanol
along at the proper pace and ensure that biofuels are affordable for American
consumers, our leaders in Washington should invest about $1.1 billion between
2006 and 2015 in biofuels development.
- Offer incentives for deploying the first billion gallons
of cellulosic biofuels. To make sure that at least 1
billion gallons of cellulosic biofuels are produced by 2015, the government
should offer $1 billion in incentives to production facilities.
- Give consumers a meaningful choice at the
pump. So American families don't just choose between
oil and oil at the pump, the government should require that all vehicles sold by
2015 be flex-fuel vehicles (able to use both traditional fuels and biofuels) and
that at least one-quarter of gasoline stations have at least one pump dedicated
to biofuels.
- Raise fuel performance standards. The administration has had six years to raise the fuel performance
standards for vehicles sold in America, and has only submitted anemic increases
that will not move America beyond oil. Simply by raising the fuel economy
standard for SUVs and other light trucks like those in the Hoover, Alabama, city
fleet, by just one mile per gallon per year over the next five years -- to 27.2
mpg by model year 2012 -- we could save one million barrels of oil per day by
2020. That's twice as much oil as we buy from Iraq, and would also mean more
efficient use of ethanol fuels grown here at home.
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