USDA program seeks to increase use of E-85 fuel

Ethanol pumps
This July 9, 2009 photo shows ethanol E-85 enthusiast Donald O. Brown talking to a motorist in Minneapolis where he tried to convince her to try the high-ethanol blend of E85. The federal government announced Friday that it wants to boost the production of E85, which has an 85 percent ethanol content and 15 percent gasoline.
AP Photo/Jim Mone

By MICHAEL J. CRUMB, Associated Press

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) - The federal government wants to increase production and use of a higher blend of ethanol fuel by giving financial assistance to gas stations that install more pumps for the fuel, U.S. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack announced Friday.

Vilsack said President Barack Obama wants the U.S. Department of Agriculture to help ensure 10,000 flex-fuel pumps for E-85 are available across the country within the next five years.

E-85 is a blend of 85 percent ethanol and 15 percent gasoline. Current ethanol blends contain 10 percent ethanol. There are 8 million flexible fuel vehicles currently on the nation's roads and 2,300 stations where people can get E-85, Vilsack said.

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"The president was pretty clear that he wants to reduce our nation's net dependence on foreign oil by one-third by 2025," Vilsack told The Associated Press. "One way to do that is to increase production and increase use of renewable biofuels."

He said the government will use funds from the Rural Energy for American Program to provide financial assistance to gas station owners who install E-85 pumps. The assistance would be through grants and guaranteed loans, he said.

Vilsack had initially planned to announce the program at a plant in Greensboro, N.C., that makes pumps for the fuel, but he canceled the trip because of the ongoing budget negotiations in Washington D.C. He made the announcement during a conference call with reporters from Washington D.C.

"We want to spread this industry to all four corners of the country and not just have it focused in the Midwest."

He said the program will help the U.S. in its effort to achieve the goal of producing 36 billion gallons of biofuels by 2022. The nation currently produces about 13 billion gallons, Vilsack said.

Vilsack said he believes the U.S. has enough production capacity to meet the demand of the expansion effort.

"But the more demand we create, the more opportunity there will be for those who make the pumps," he added. "There is the side benefit, I believe, for additional job growth."

Vilsack also said Obama has instructed the USDA to finance four biorefineries to produce biofuels from a variety of sources, not just corn. Other possible materials that could be used are agricultural waste, such as corn cobs or husks, switch grass and animal waste, Vilsack said.

"We want to spread this industry to all four corners of the country and not just have it focused in the Midwest," he said.

The funds for the biorefineries will come from existing energy programs contained in the 2008 Farm Bill.

Vilsack spoke to the AP Thursday, the same day the Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers, the leading advocacy group for the auto industry, testified before the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee that it is willing to work with the ethanol industry to increase ethanol use.

Bob Dineen, chief executive of the Renewable Fuels Association, said using higher ethanol blends "is critical to our national energy goals."

"That means more flexible fuel vehicles, more conventional vehicles using blends about E10, and more blender pumps at gas stations," Dineen said in a written statement.

(Copyright 2011 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)