U.S. Lacks Infrastructure To Consume More Ethanol
The U.S. doesn't have the infrastructure to meet the federal mandate for renewable fuel use with ethanol but could meet the standard with significant increases in cellulosic and next-generation biofuels, a Purdue University study says.
January 7, 2011
The U.S. doesn't have the infrastructure to meet the federal mandate for renewable fuel use with ethanol but could meet the standard with significant increases in cellulosic and next-generation biofuels, a Purdue University study says.
Wally Tyner, the James and Lois Ackerman Professor of Agricultural Economics, and co-authors Frank Dooley, a Purdue professor of ag economics, and Daniela Viteri, a former Purdue graduate student, used U.S. Department of Energy and Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) data to determine that the U.S. is at the "blending wall," the saturation point for ethanol use. Without new technology or a significant increase in infrastructure, Tyner says the country won’t be able to consume more ethanol than is being currently produced.
The federal Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS) requires an increase of renewable fuel production to 36 billion gals./year by 2022. About 13 billion gals. was required for 2010, the same amount Tyner predicts is the threshold for U.S. infrastructure and consumption ability.
"You can't get there with ethanol," says Tyner, whose findings were published in the December issue of the American Journal of Agricultural Economics.
Tyner says there simply aren't enough flex-fuel vehicles, which use an 85% ethanol blend, or E85 stations to distribute more biofuels. According to EPA estimates, flex-fuel vehicles make up 7.3 million of the 240 million vehicles on the nation's roads. Of those, about 3 million of flex-fuel vehicle owners aren't even aware they can use E85 fuel.
There are only about 2,000 E85 fuel pumps in the U.S., and it took more than 20 years to install them.
"Even if you could produce a whole bunch of E85, there’s no way to distribute it," Tyner says. "We’d need to install about 2,000 pumps/year through 2022 to do it. You're not going to go from 100/year to 2,000/year overnight. It's just not going to happen."
Even if the fuel could be distributed, E85 would have to be substantially cheaper than gasoline to entice consumers to use it because E85 gets lower mileage, Tyner says. If gasoline were $3/gal., E85 would have to be $2.34/gal. to break even on mileage.
There’s talk of increasing the maximum amount of ethanol that can be blended with gasoline for regular vehicles from 10% to 15%. But Tyner says that even if the EPA does allow it, the blending wall would be reached again in about four years.
Tyner says advances in the production of thermo-chemical biofuels, created by using heat to chemically alter biomass and create fuels, would be necessary to meet the RFS. He says those fuels would be similar enough to gasoline to allow unlimited blending and would increase the amount of biofuel that could be used.
"Producing the hydrocarbons directly doesn't have the infrastructure problems of ethanol, and there’s no blend wall because you're producing gasoline," Tyner says. "If that comes on and works, then we get there. There is significant potential to produce drop-in hydrocarbons from cellulosic feedstocks."
-- Purdue University release
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