Must Read Articles
Corn Based Ethanol Subsidies Eat Up 75 % of Green Energy Program
http://www.ewg.org/featured/722
Great web site for info on Ethanol
http://www.ewg.org/agmag/category/biofuels/
1-21-10 THE ETHANOL ILLUSION
http://harvardmagazine.com/2006/11/the-ethanol-illusion.html
1-21-10 Corn Based Ethanol Woes VIDEO
http://vodpod.com/watch/1931818-pbs-nightly-business-report-on-corn-ethanol-woes
Stephen Colbert’s “Kernel of Truth”
GREAT VIDEO: http://sierraclub.typepad.com/compass/2008/04/stephen-colbert.html
BIOFUELS THREATEN WATER SUPPLIES
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/30158655/
LINK TO PETITION AGAINST 15% ETHANOL
http://www.fueltestkit.com/petition_e15.html
BIOFUELS VS BIOMASS ELECTRICITY
http://www.technologyreview.com/energy/22628/
potential food
safety concerns.
elevated rates of E. coli in cattle. And now, distillers grain is facing
further scrutiny because the
Food and Drug Administration has found that it often contains
antibiotics left over from making ethanol.
into fuel. And just as the wrong bacteria in the body can sicken people,
it can also cause a variety of ailments in a batch of ethanol.
said in ethanol production, the main enemy is a bacterial bug that makes
lactic acid.
sugar,” said von Keitz. “But instead of making alcohol, they
make primarily lactic acid.”
ruined.
properly produce ethanol, and then you’re stuck with a big batch of corn
mash,” said von Keitz.
problem, producers rely on medicine.
these lactic acid bacteria in check,” said von Keitz. “And one
way of doing that is with the help of antibiotics.”
virginiamycin to kill bacteria. And that raises two potential
concerns.
are resistant to antibiotics. The development of these
“superbugs” is a major concern in
health care because
they reduce the effectiveness of medicines.
Von Keitz found some bacteria that were, in fact, resistant when he
sampled bacteria at four Midwest ethanol plants several years
ago.
The second concern is that the antibiotics could find their way to humans
through the food chain.
The
U.S. Food and Drug Administration has taken a mostly hands-off
approach to the use of antibiotics in the ethanol industry. But amid
increasing concerns over food safety in recent years, the agency is
taking a closer look.
“A year ago we put a survey out to the FDA field people to collect
samples of those distillers grains, and start analyzing for antibiotic
residues,” said Linda Benjamin, a chemist with the FDA’s Center of
Veterinary Medicine.
Samples were requested from 60 ethanol plants, including some in
Minnesota. She said testing showed that many contained antibiotics,
mainly four types.
“Penicillin, virginiamycin, erythromycin and tylosin,” said
Benjamin.
At this point the story gets murky. Benjamin won’t say if any of the
antibiotics exceeded federal guidelines.
Those guidelines are part of the problem; they’re a patchwork and far
from definitive on what levels of antibiotics in distillers grain are
safe.
If the FDA decides to restrict antibiotics in the ethanol industry, it
could have far-reaching consequences.
Distillers grain is a major source of low-cost livestock feed. Any
restrictions on its sale and use as feed will hurt the profit-scarce
ethanol industry and the livestock farmers who rely on it.
Charlie Staff, executive director of the Distillers Grain Technology
Council, said distillers grain is one of the few dependable moneymakers
left for the ethanol industry.
“If they didn’t have distillers grain as a revenue, many more of
them wouldn’t be able to operate,” said Staff.
Meanwhile the regulatory process continues to play out. The FDA will test
more