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To: Scanian; philman_36
From the article: could process 39 million bushels of corn and produce 110 million gallons of ethanol annually.

And from philman_36's post:

...consuming close to 1.6 billion bushels of grain, about 15 percent of our total corn production.

An a little math by theymakemesick:

If 39 million bushels of corn produces 110 million gallons of ethanol annually,then 110,000,000 / 42 = 2,649,047 barrels annually. We consume about 20,000,000 barrels of petroleum per day in the USA. That plant produces about 13% of what we use in one day. 1.6 billion bushels total / 39 million bushels = 41. 41 X .13 = 5. So, we consume 15% of our annual corn production to offset 5 days worth of our petroleum consumption. This does not include the petroleum required to farm, fertilize, water or transort the corn. Great use of natrual resorces, not.

5 posted on 04/18/2009 3:26:25 AM PDT by theymakemesick (You may be a terrorist if you went to church last Sunday or think "shall not be infringed" means it)
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To: theymakemesick
That plant produces about 13% of what we use in one day.

I meant to say "that plant produces in one year about 13% of what we consume in one day".

6 posted on 04/18/2009 3:33:33 AM PDT by theymakemesick (You may be a terrorist if you went to church last Sunday or think "shall not be infringed" means it)
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To: theymakemesick

22 bushels of corn to produce 1 gallon of ethanol,corn juice not a good idea.


15 posted on 04/18/2009 4:09:31 AM PDT by Vaduz
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To: theymakemesick

“This does not include the petroleum required to farm, fertilize, water or transort the corn. Great use of natrual resorces.......”
WATER! The National Academy of Sciences recently published a report titled “Water Implications of Biofuel Production in the United States”. The paper outlines impacts and limitations on both water availability and water quality that would follow the pursuit of a national strategy to replace liquid fossil fuels with those made from biomass. COMMITTEE ON WATER IMPLICATIONS OF BIOFUELS PRODUCTION IN THE UNITED STATES http://www.theoildrum.com/node/3285

In some areas of the country, water resources already are significantly stressed. For example, large portions of the Ogallala (or High Plains) aquifer, which extends from west Texas up into South Dakota and Wyoming, show water table declines of over 100 feet. Deterioration in water quality may further reduce available supplies. Increased biofuels production adds pressure to the water management challenges the nation already faces.

It is equivalent to “mining” the water resource, and the loss of the resource is essentially irreversible.
Existing and planned ethanol facilities (2007) and their estimated total water use mapped
with the principal bedrock aquifers of the United States and total water use in year 2000.(Source USGS) Click to enlarge.
http://www.theoildrum.com/node/3285


36 posted on 04/18/2009 6:22:01 AM PDT by anglian (0bama's Stealth Reparations: "Mouthfulls of gimme and handfulls of much obliged")
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