I’d rather hope that the environment editor of The Telegraph would actually, in a comment piece, look at the facts behind a subject, or at least report the claims, before swallowing the industry line. Clearly, I hope in vain:
President George W Bush’s aim to cut American petrol
usage by 20 per cent over 10 years looks achievable – though not
necessarily through the way he has chosen to do it.
Half
of the target, set out in his State of the Union address, is to be
achieved by developing supplies of ethanol, the other half by an
increase in vehicle efficiency.
As David Pimental has repeatedly pointed out, corn ethanol requires more energy to produce than it provides. The past attempt to increase fuel efficiency, the CAFE standards, are what lead to the creation of the SUV in the first place so perhaps that’s not a wise route to go down either. There’s a simple way to reduce petrol consumption: raise the gas tax.
Why does everyone insist on doing things the difficult way?
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