Just re-read my posts and no I did not say that.
But since you brought it up, I will say this. Five years ago a U.S. General Accounting Office report showed that ethanol received $11.6 billion in tax incentives since 1968, while the oil industry had received over $150 billion in tax benefit over the same period.
Sounds like Big Oil is really raking in those government cheques now doesn't it? Well hold on there partner.
The oil industry produced 1,068 times more energy so the subsidy rate per unit of energy was <b>54</b> times higher for ethanol.
That’s like ethanol getting 54¢ for every 1¢ oil gets.
So, no, oil is not a pure free market ride either, but it is one heck of a lot closer to it than ethanol.
Ask yourself this, if you took away all those oil subsidies do you think oil would vanish? Now ask yourself the same question about ethanol, if you're honest you'll get a different answer.
One can try to play the moral equivalency card here but it doesn't get you very far. It's like trying to argue that because Canadian grain farmers get crop insurance they are in the same subsidy league as the supply management folks. We all know that they aren't.
But since you brought it up, I will say this. Five years ago a U.S. General Accounting Office report showed that ethanol received $11.6 billion in tax incentives since 1968, while the oil industry had received over $150 billion in tax benefit over the same period.
Sounds like Big Oil is really raking in those government cheques now doesn't it? Well hold on there partner.
The oil industry produced 1,068 times more energy so the subsidy rate per unit of energy was <b>54</b> times higher for ethanol.
That’s like ethanol getting 54¢ for every 1¢ oil gets.
So, no, oil is not a pure free market ride either, but it is one heck of a lot closer to it than ethanol.
Ask yourself this, if you took away all those oil subsidies do you think oil would vanish? Now ask yourself the same question about ethanol, if you're honest you'll get a different answer.
One can try to play the moral equivalency card here but it doesn't get you very far. It's like trying to argue that because Canadian grain farmers get crop insurance they are in the same subsidy league as the supply management folks. We all know that they aren't.
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