Order Code RL32712
Agriculture-Based Renewable Energy Production
Updated October 16, 2007
Randy Schnepf
Specialist in Agricultural Policy
Resources, Science, and Industry Division

Agriculture-Based Renewable Energy Production
Summary
Since the late 1970s, U.S. policy makers at both the federal and state levels have
enacted a variety of incentives, regulations, and programs to encourage the
production and use of agriculture-based renewable energy. Motivations cited for
these legislative initiatives include energy security concerns, reduction in greenhouse
gas emissions, and raising domestic demand for U.S.-produced farm products.
Agricultural households and rural communities have responded to these
government incentives and have expanded their production of renewable energy,
primarily in the form of biofuels and wind power, every year since 1996. The
production of ethanol (the primary biofuel produced by the agricultural sector) has
risen from about 175 million gallons in 1980 to nearly 4.9 billion gallons per year in
2006. The U.S. ethanol production capacity has also been expanding rapidly,
particularly since mid-2006, with important implications for the food and fuel
sectors. Current ethanol production capacity is 5.6 billion gallons per year
(February 28, 2007), with another 6.2 billion gallons of capacity under construction
and potentially online by late 2008. Biodiesel production is at a much smaller level,
but has also shown growth rising from 0.5 million gallons in 1999 to an estimated
386 million gallons in 2006. Wind energy systems production capacity has also
grown rapidly, rising from 1,706 megawatts in 1997 to an estimated 12,633
megawatts by July 1, 2007. Despite this rapid growth, agriculture- and rural-based
energy production accounted for only about 0.7% of total U.S. energy consumption
in 2006.
Key points that emerge from this report are:
! substantial federal and state programs and incentives have facilitated
development of agriculture’s renewable energy production capacity;
! rising fossil fuel prices improve renewable energy’s market
competitiveness, whereas higher costs for feedstock and plant
operating fuel (e.g., natural gas) dampen profitability;
! technological improvements for biofuel production (e.g., cellulosic
conversion) enhance its economic competitiveness with fossil fuels;
! farm-based energy production is unlikely to substantially reduce the
nation’s dependence on petroleum imports unless there is a
significant decline in energy consumption; and
! ethanol-driven higher corn prices have raised concerns from corn
users over rising food and feed costs, as well as the potential for
increased soil erosion and chemical usage from substantially
expanded corn production.
This report provides background information on farm-based energy production
and how this fits into the national energy-use picture. It briefly reviews the primary
agriculture-based renewable energy types and issues of concern associated with their
production, particularly their economic and energy efficiencies and long-run supply.
Finally, this report examines the major legislation related to farm-based energy
production and use. This report will be updated as events warrant.


Contents
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Agriculture’s Share of Energy Production . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Agriculture-Based Biofuels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Ethanol . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Ethanol Pricing Issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Corn-Based Ethanol . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Ethanol from Cellulosic Biomass Crops . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
Methane from an Anaerobic Digester . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
Biodiesel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
Wind Energy Systems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
Public Laws That Support Agriculture-Based Energy Production and Use . . . . 42
Tariff on Imported Ethanol . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990 (CAAA; P.L. 101-549) . . . . . . . . . . . 42
Energy Policy Act of 1992 (EPACT; P.L. 102-486) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
Biomass Research and Development Act of 2000 (Biomass Act; Title III,
P.L. 106-224) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
Energy Provisions in the 2002 Farm Bill (P.L. 107-171) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
The Healthy Forest Restoration Act of 2003 (P.L. 108-148) . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
The American Jobs Creation Act of 2004 (P.L. 108-357) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48
Energy Policy Act of 2005 (EPACT; P.L. 109-58) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48
Tax Relief and Health Care Act of 2006 (P.L. 109-432) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
Agriculture-Related Energy Bills in 110th Congress . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
House-passed New Farm Bill — H.R. 2419 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
State Laws and Programs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52
Administration Proposals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
State of the Union (SOU) 2006 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
State of the Union (SOU) 2007 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
USDA’s New Farm Bill Proposal (January 2007) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
For More Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54
Renewable Energy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54
Biofuels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54
Wind Energy Systems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58

List of Figures
Figure 1. U.S. Motor Vehicle Fuel Use, 2006 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Figure 2. Ethanol Versus Gasoline Prices, 2000-2007 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Figure 3. U.S. Ethanol Production: Actual and Projected,Versus the Renewable
Fuels Standard (RFS) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Figure 4. Corn Versus Ethanol Prices, 2000-2007 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Figure 5. U.S. Biodiesel Production, 1998-2007 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
Figure 6. Soybean Oil Versus Diesel Fuel Price, 2000-2007 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
Figure 7. U.S. Installed Wind Energy Capacity, 1981-2007 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
Figure 8. Natural Gas Price, Wholesale, 1994-2007 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
Figure 9. U.S. Areas with Highest Wind Potential . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
List of Tables
Table 1. U.S. Energy Production and Consumption, 2006 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Table 2. Energy and Price Comparisons for Alternate Fuels, July 2007 . . . . . . . 4
Table 3. Ethanol Production Capacity by State, October 1, 2007 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Table 4. Ethanol Dry Mill Cost of Production Estimates, 2002 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
Table 5. U.S. Diesel Fuel Use, 2005 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
Table 6. U.S. Potential Biodiesel Feedstock, 2005-2006 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
Table 7. Installed Wind Energy Capacity by State, Ranked by Capacity as
of December 31, 2006 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35

Agriculture-Based
Renewable Energy Production
Introduction
Agriculture’s role as a consumer of energy is well known.1 However, under the
encouragement of expanding government support the U.S. agricultural sector also is
developing a capacity to produce energy, primarily as renewable biofuels and wind
power. Farm-based energy production — biofuels and wind-generated electricity —
has grown rapidly in recent years, but still remains small relative to total national
energy needs. In 2006, ethanol, biodiesel, and wind provided 0.7% of U.S. energy
consumption (Table 1). Ethanol accounted for about 78% of agriculture-based energy
production in 2006; wind energy systems for 19%; and biodiesel for 3%.

Historically, fossil-fuel-based energy has been less expensive to produce and use
than energy from renewable sources.2 However, since the late 1970s, U.S. policy
makers at both the federal and state levels have enacted a variety of incentives,
regulations, and programs to encourage the production and use of cleaner, renewable
agriculture-based energy.3 These programs have proven critical to the economic
success of rural renewable energy production. The benefits to rural economies and to
the environment contrast with the generally higher costs, and have led to numerous
proponents as well as critics of the government subsidies that underwrite agriculture-
based renewable energy production.
Proponents of government support for agriculture-based renewable energy have
cited national energy security, reduction in greenhouse gas emissions, and raising
domestic demand for U.S.-produced farm products as viable justification.4 In
addition, proponents argue that rural, agriculture-based energy production can enhance
rural incomes and employment opportunities, while encouraging greater value-added
for U.S. agricultural commodities.5
1 For more information on energy use by the agricultural sector, see CRS Report RL32677,
Energy Use in Agriculture: Background and Issues, by Randy Schnepf.
2 Excluding the costs of externalities associated with burning fossil fuels such as air
pollution, environmental degradation, and illness and disease linked to emissions.
3 See section on “Public Laws That Support Agriculture-Based Energy Production and Use,”
below, for a listing of major laws supporting farm-based renewable energy production.
4 For examples of proponent policy positions, see the Renewable Fuels Association (RFA)
at [http://www.ethanolrfa.org], the National Corn Growers Association (NCGA) at
[http://www.ncga.com/ethanol/main/index.htm], and the American Soybean Association
(ASA) at [http://www.soygrowers.com/policy/].
5 Several studies have analyzed the positive gains to commodity prices, farm incomes, and
(continued...)

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In contrast, petroleum industry critics of biofuel subsidies argue that
technological advances such as seismography, drilling, and extraction continue to
expand the fossil-fuel resource base, which has traditionally been cheaper and more
accessible than biofuel supplies.6 Other critics argue that current biofuel production
strategies can only be economically competitive with existing fossil fuels in the
absence of subsidies if significant improvements in existing technologies are made or
new technologies are developed.7 Until such technological breakthroughs are
achieved, critics contend that the subsidies distort energy market incentives and divert
research funds from the development of other potential renewable energy sources,
such as solar or geothermal, that offer potentially cleaner, more bountiful alternatives.
Still others question the rationale behind policies that promote biofuels for energy
security. These critics question whether the United States could ever produce
sufficient feedstock of either starches, sugars, or vegetable oils to permit biofuel
production to meaningfully offset petroleum imports.8 Finally, there are those who
argue that the focus on development of alternative energy sources undermines efforts
to conserve and reduce the nation’s energy dependence.
The economics underlying agriculture-based renewable energy production
include decisions concerning capital investment, plant or turbine location (relative to
feedstock supplies and by-product markets or power grids), production technology,
and product marketing and distribution, as well as federal and state production
incentives and usage mandates.9 Several additional criteria may be used for
comparing different fuels, including performance, emissions, safety, and infrastructure
needs.10 This report will discuss and compare agriculture-based energy production of
ethanol, biodiesel, and wind energy based on three criteria:
5 (...continued)
rural employment attributable to increased government support for biofuel production. For
examples, see the “For More Information” section at the end of this report.
6 For example, see Elizabeth Ames Jones, “Energy Security 101,” editorial, The Washington
Post
, October 9, 2007.
7 Advocates of this position include free-market proponents such as the Cato Institute, and
federal budget watchdog groups such as Citizens Against Government Waste and Taxpayers
for Common Sense.
8 For example, see James and Stephen Eaves, “Is Ethanol the ‘Energy Security’ Solution?”
editorial, Washingtonpost.com, October 3, 2007; or R. Wisner and P. Baumel, “Ethanol,
Exports, and Livestock: Will There be Enough Corn to Supply Future Needs?,” Feedstuffs,
no. 30, vol. 76, July 26, 2004.
9 For more information on the economics underlying the capital investment decision see D.
Tiffany and V. Eidman. Factors Associated with Success of Fuel Ethanol Producers, Dept
of Appl. Econ., Univ. of Minnesota, Staff Paper P03-7, August 2003; hereafter referred to
as Tiffany and Eidman (2003). For a discussion of ethanol plant location economics see B.
Babcock and C. Hart, “Do Ethanol/Livestock Synergies Presage Increased Iowa Cattle
Numbers?” Iowa Ag Review, Vol. 12 No. 2, Spring 2006.
10 For more information on these additional criteria and others, see CRS Report RL30758,
Alternative Transportation Fuels and Vehicles: Energy, Environment, and Development
Issues
, by Brent Yacobucci. For information concerning greenhouse gas emissions
associated with ethanol use, see CRS Report RL33290, Fuel Ethanol: Background and
Public Policy Issues
by Brent Yacobucci.

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! Economic Efficiency compares the price of agriculture-based
renewable energy with the price of competing energy sources,
primarily fossil fuels.
! Energy Efficiency compares energy output from agriculture-based
renewable energy relative to the fossil energy used to produce it.
! Long-Run Supply Issues consider supply and demand factors that
are likely to influence the growth of agriculture-based energy
production.
Table 1. U.S. Energy Production and Consumption, 2006
Production & Imports
Consumption
Quadrillion
% of
Quadrillion
% of
Energy source
Btu
total
Btu
total
Total
100.7
100.0%
100.7
100.0%
Fossil Fuels
56.1
79.5%
86.1
85.4%
Petroleum and products
13.2
13.1%
40.6
40.3%
Coal
23.8
23.6%
23.1
23.0%
Natural Gas
19.1
19.0%
22.4
22.2%
Nuclear
8.2
8.1%
8.2
8.1%
Renewables
6.8
6.7%
6.8
6.7%
Hydroelectric power
2.8
2.8%
3.0
3.0%
Biomass
3.0
3.0%
2.4
2.4%
Wood, waste, other
2.4
2.4%
2.4
2.4%
Ethanol
0.6
0.9%
0.6
0.6%
Biodiesel
0.0
0.0%
0.0
0.0%
Geothermal
0.4
0.3%
0.4
0.3%
Solar
0.1
0.1%
0.2
0.2%
Wind
0.2
0.2%
0.1
0.1%
Total Domestic Production
71.1
70.6%
Net Imports
29.8
29.6%
Source: For ethanol data: Renewable Fuels Association, [http://www.ethanolrfa.org]; for biodiesel data:
National Biodiesel Board, [http://www.biodiesel.org]; for all other data: DOE, Energy Information
A g e n c y ( E I A ) , A n n u a l E n e r g y O u t l o o k 2 0 0 7 ( e a r l y r e l e a s e ) ,
[http://www.eia.doe.gov/oiaf/aeo/index.html].
Agriculture’s Share of Energy Production
In 2006, the major agriculture-produced energy source — ethanol — accounted
for about 0.6% of total U.S. energy consumption (see Table 1) In addition, the
agricultural sector produced other types of renewable energy — biodiesel, wind, and
methane from anaerobic digesters and non-traditional biomass — although their
production volume remains small relative to ethanol’s.

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Table 2. Energy and Price Comparisons for Alternate Fuels,
July 2007
National
National
Btu’s per
Avg. Price:
Avg. Price:
Fuel type
Unit
unita
$ per unit
GEGb
$ per GEG
Gasoline: regular
gallon
115,400
$3.03
1.00
$3.03
Ethanol (E85)c
gallon
81,630
$2.63
0.71
$3.70
Diesel fuel
gallon
128,700
$2.96
1.11
$2.67
Biodiesel (B20)
gallon
126,940
$2.96
1.10
$2.69
Biodiesel (B100)
gallon
117,093
$3.27
1.01
$3.24
Propane
gallon
83,500
$2.58
0.72
$3.58
Compressed
Natural Gasd
1,000 ft.3
960,000
$2.09
1.00
$2.09
Natural Gase
1,000 ft.3
1,030,000
$7.58
8.24
$0.92
Biogas
1,000 ft.3
10 x (% of
methane)f
na
na
na
Electricityg
kilowatt-
3,413
5.73¢
na
na
hour
Source: Prices and conversion rates (unless otherwise cited in a footnote below) are for July 2007,
from DOE, EIA, Clean Cities Alternative Fuel Price Report, July 2007; available at
[http://www.eere.energy.gov/afdc/resources/pricereport/price_report.html].
na = not applicable.
a. Conversion rates for petroleum-based fuels and electricity are from DOE, Alternative Fuel Price
Report, July 2007, p. 14. A Btu (British thermal unit) is a measure of the heat content of a fuel
and indicates the amount of energy contained in the fuel. Because energy sources vary by form
(gas, liquid, or solid) and energy content, the use of Btu’s provides a common benchmark for
various types of energy.
b. GEG = gasoline equivalent gallon. The GEG allows for comparison across different forms — gas,
liquid, kilowatt, etc. It is derived from the Btu content by first converting each fuel’s units to
Btu’s, then dividing each fuel’s Btu unit rate by gasoline’s Btu unit rate of 115,400, and finally
multiplying each fuel’s price by the resulting ratio.
c. 100% ethanol has an energy content of 75,670 Btu per gallon (see table source, p. 14).
d. Compressed natural gas (CNG) is generally stored under pressure at between 2,000 to 3,500 pounds
per square inch (psi). The energy content varies with the pressure. Conversion data is from
DOE, Alternative Fuel Price Report, July 2007, p. 14.
e. Natural Gas prices, $ per 1,000 cu. ft., are industrial prices for the month of July 2007, from DOE,
EIA, available at [http://tonto.eia.doe.gov/dnav/ng/ng_pri_sum_dcu_nus_m.htm].
f. When burned, biogas yields about 10 Btu per percentage of methane composition. For example,
65% methane yields 650 Btu per cubic foot or 650,000 per 1,000 cu. ft.
g. Prices are for total industry electricity rates per kilowatt-hour for 2005; from DOE, EIA, available
at [http://www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/electricity/epa/epat7p4.html].
Renewable energy sources must compete with a large number of conventional
petroleum-based fuels in the marketplace (see Table 2). However, an expanding list
of federal and state incentives, regulations, and programs that were enacted over the
past decade have helped to encourage more diversity in renewable energy production
and use. In late September 2006, the House Agriculture Committee expressed its
support for the continued expansion of energy production from renewable sources

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when it reported favorably a resolution (H.Con.Res. 424) that expressed the sense of
Congress that, “not later than January 1, 2025, the agricultural, forestry, and working
land of the United States should provide from renewable resources not less than 25%
of the total energy consumed in the United States.”11
Agriculture-Based Biofuels
Biofuels are liquid fuels produced from biomass. Types of biofuels include
ethanol, biodiesel, methanol, and reformulated gasoline components; however, the
two principal biofuels are ethanol and biodiesel.12 The Biomass Research and
Development Act of 2000 (P.L. 106-224; Title III) defines biomass as “any organic
matter that is available on a renewable or recurring basis, including agricultural crops
and trees, wood and wood wastes and residues, plants (including aquatic plants),
grasses, residues, fibers, and animal wastes, municipal wastes, and other waste
materials.”
Biofuels are primarily used as transportation fuels for cars, trucks, buses,
airplanes, and trains. As a result, their principal competitors are gasoline and diesel
fuel. Unlike fossil fuels, which have a fixed resource base that declines with use,
biofuels are produced from renewable feedstock. Despite rapid growth in recent years
(as discussed below), the two major biofuels — ethanol and biodiesel — still account
for very small shares of U.S. motor-vehicle fuel consumption (Figure 1).

Under most circumstances biofuels are more environmentally friendly (in terms
of emissions of toxins, volatile organic compounds, and greenhouse gases) than
petroleum products. Supporters of biofuels emphasize that biofuel plants generate
value-added economic activity that increases demand for local feedstock, which raises
commodity prices, farm incomes, and rural employment.
Ethanol
Ethanol, or ethyl alcohol, is an alcohol made by fermenting and distilling simple
sugars.13 As a result, ethanol can be produced from any biological feedstock that
contains appreciable amounts of sugar or materials that can be converted into sugar
such as starch or cellulose. Sugar beets and sugar cane are examples of feedstock that
contain sugar. Corn contains starch that can relatively easily be converted into sugar.
11 The resolution was also referred to the House Energy and Commerce Committee and the
House Resources Committee. Only the Agriculture Committee acted upon it. No further
action was taken on H.Con.Res. 424 by the 109th Congress. The same bill has been
reintroduced in the 110th Congress in the House (Rep. Peterson) as H.Con.Res. 25 and in the
Senate (Sen. Salazar) as S.Con.Res. 3.
12 For more information on alternative fuels, see CRS Report RL30758, Alternative
Transportation Fuels and Vehicles: Energy, Environment, and Development Issues
, by
Brent D. Yacobucci. See also DOE, National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL),
Biomass Energy Basics, available at [http://www.nrel.gov/learning/re_biomass.html].
13 For more information, see CRS Report RL33290, Fuel Ethanol: Background and Public
Policy Issues
, by Brent D. Yacobucci.

CRS-6
In the United States corn is the principal ingredient used in the production of ethanol;
in Brazil, sugar cane is the primary feedstock. Trees and grasses are made up of a
significant percentage of cellulose which can also be converted to sugar, although with
more difficulty than required to convert starch. In recent years, researchers have
begun experimenting with the possibility of growing hybrid grass and tree crops
explicitly for ethanol production. In addition, sorghum and potatoes, as well as crop
residue and animal waste, are potential feedstocks.
Figure 1. U.S. Motor Vehicle Fuel Use, 2006
160
Ethanol (2.4% share)
120
s
n
o
ll
a
g

80
n
io
ill
B

Biodiesel (0.5% share)
40
0
Gasoline
Diesel Fuel
Source: Motor vehicle fuel use: U.S. DOE, EIA, 2007 Annual Outlook: Ethanol use: Renewable Fuels
Association; Biodiesel use: National Biodiesel Board.
Note: Ethanol is in gasoline-equivalent gallons (GEG).
Ethanol production has shown rapid growth in the United States since 2001 and
expectations are for this trend to continue to at least 2010 (Figure 3). In 2005, the
United States surpassed Brazil as the world’s leading producer of ethanol. Several
events contributed to the historical growth of U.S. ethanol production: the energy
crises of the early and late 1970s; a partial exemption from the motor fuels excise tax
(legislated as part of the Energy Tax Act of 1978); ethanol’s emergence as a gasoline
oxygenate; and provisions of the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990 that favored
ethanol blending with gasoline.14 Ethanol production is projected to continue growing
14 USDA, Office of Energy Policy and New Uses, The Energy Balance of Corn Ethanol: An
(continued...)

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rapidly through at least 2010 on the strength of both the extension of existing and the
addition of new government incentives including a per gallon tax credit of $0.51, a
Renewable Fuels Standard (RFS) of 7.5 billion gallons by 2012, and $0.51 per gallon
tariff on most imported ethanol.15
U.S. ethanol production presently is underway or planned in 28 states based
primarily around the central and western Corn Belt, where corn supplies are most
plentiful (see Table 3).16 Corn accounts for about 99% of the feedstock used in
ethanol production in the United States. As of October 1, 2007, existing U.S. ethanol
plant capacity was a reported 6.9 billion gallons per year (BGPY), with an additional
planned capacity of 7.6 BGPY under construction (as either new plants or expansion
of existing plants). Thus, total annual U.S. ethanol production capacity in existence
or under construction is nearly 14.5 billion gallons, well in excess of the 7.5 billion
gallon RFS mandated for 2012 (Figure 3).
14 (...continued)
Update, AER-813, by Hosein Shapouri, James A. Duffield, and Michael Wang, July 2002.
15 For more information, see CRS Report RL33572, Biofuels Incentives: A Summary of
Federal Programs
by Brent D. Yacobucci.
16 The source for this data is “Ethanol Plant List,” The Ethanol Monitor; published by Oil
Intelligence Link, Inc., Editor & Publisher: Tom Waterman; The Ethanol Monitor©2007
October 1, 2007. An additional reference with slightly different reported data is Renewable
Fuels Association, Industry Statistics, at [http://www.ethanolrfa.org/industry/statistics/].

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Table 3. Ethanol Production Capacity by State,
October 1, 2007
Total planned
Currently
Under
capacity
operating
construction
Million
Million
Million
Rank
State
gal/yr
%
gal/yr %
gal./yr.
1
Iowa
3,399
23%
1,979
29%
1,420
2
Nebraska
2,153
15%
955
14%
1,198
3
South Dakota
1188
8%
750
11%
438
4
Illinois
1,180
8%
834
12%
346
5
Minnesota
1,142
8%
499
7%
643
6
Indiana
977
7%
382
6%
595
7
Kansas
643
4%
253
4%
390
8
Ohio
551
4%
3
0%
548
9
Wisconsin
534
4%
284
4%
250
10
Texas
470
3%
0
0%
470
11
North Dakota
354
2%
134
2%
220
12
Michigan
257
2%
157
2%
100
13
California
253
2%
79
1%
174
14
Tennessee
205
1%
67
1%
138
15
New York
164
1%
0
0%
164
Others
1,008
7%
488
4%
520
U.S. Total
14,476
100%
6,863
100%
7,614
Source: “Ethanol Plant List,” The Ethanol Monitor; published by Oil Intelligence Link, Inc., Editor
& Publisher: Tom Waterman; The Ethanol Monitor©2007 October 1, 2007.
Ethanol Pricing Issues. From a national perspective, marketing channels,
pricing arrangements, and distribution networks are still evolving in an attempt to
keep up with the ethanol industry’s rapid growth in production and the federally
mandated use requirements. These circumstances can contribute to substantial price
volatility. For example, in early 2006, several market circumstances combined to
push ethanol prices to levels substantially above gasoline prices (see Figure 2). In
May 2006, the spot market price per gallon for ethanol reached $3.75 in Chicago and
$4.50 in New York, while the monthly average ethanol rack price, f.o.b. Omaha,
reached $3.58 in June 2006.
These price surges generated considerable concern among consumers regarding
possible price manipulation in the marketplace and the reliability of ethanol as a fuel
source. However, a review of the circumstances suggests that two market phenomena
appear to be the behind the rise in ethanol prices and the ethanol-to-gasoline price
disparity — the general price rise in petroleum and natural gas markets,17 and the
elimination of the oxygen requirement for reformulated gasoline (legislated by the
Energy Policy Act of 2005, P.L. 109-58), which resulted in a rapid shift from MTBE
17 For more information see CRS Report RL32530, World Oil Demand and its Effect on Oil
Prices
, by Robert Pirog.

CRS-9
to ethanol by the automotive fuel industry and pushed near-term demand substantially
above available ethanol supplies.18
Figure 2. Ethanol Versus Gasoline Prices, 2000-2007
4
Ethanol
3
g
n
llo
2
a
/g
$

1
Gasoline
0
Jan-00
Jan-01
Jan-02
Jan-03
Jan-04
Jan-05
Jan-06
Jan-07
Source: Ethanol and unleaded gasoline rack prices per gallon. F.O.B. Omaha Ethanol Board, Lincoln,
NE. Nebraska Energy Office, Lincoln, NE.
Most dry-mill ethanol plants typically employ one or more of three pricing
strategies for marketing their ethanol production: sell at the rack price to nearby
refinery and fuel blending sites; forward contract at a fixed price for future delivery;
and forward contract where the ethanol price is based on a monthly futures contract
price (e.g., the wholesale ethanol contract at either the Chicago or New York Boards
of Trade or the wholesale gasoline contract at the New York Mercantile Exchange)
plus a per-gallon premium.19 Because a large portion of ethanol is sold under forward
contract, the market is vulnerable to near-term, temporary price rises when demand
exceeds available non-contracted supplies — as was the case in late 2005 and 2006
when the MTBE-phase-out-induced demand surged above existing supplies while the
ethanol industry was already operating near full capacity.
By May 2007 ethanol prices had fallen below the Omaha gasoline rack price; by
September 2007 they were below $2 per gallon and any concerns of price
manipulation had long since dissipated. The ethanol-to-gasoline price disparity is
expected to diminish gradually as more ethanol production capacity comes online.
18 For more information on the MTBE phase-out, see CRS Report RL33564, Alternative
Fuels and Advanced Technology Vehicles: Issues in Congress
, by Brent Yacobucci.
19 Tiffany and Eidman (2003), p. 20.

CRS-10
Corn-Based Ethanol. USDA estimated that 1.6 billion bushels of corn (or
14.4% of total U.S. corn production) from the 2005 corn crop were used to produce
ethanol during the 2005/06 (September-August) corn marketing year.20 Ethanol’s
share of corn production expanded to 20.2% (or 2.125 billion bushels) in 2006/07, and
is projected to reach 24.8% and 3.3 billion bushels in 2007/08.21 In its annual
baseline projections (February 2007), USDA projected that U.S. ethanol production
would reach 11 billion gallons and use 30% (3.9 billion bushels) of the corn crop.
However, the rapid expansion of ethanol production capacity in the later half of 2006
outpaced USDA projections. In August 2007, the Food and Agricultural Policy
Research Institute (FAPRI) — using more recent data — projected that by 2010 U.S.
ethanol production would reach 13.7 billion gallons and use 36.2% (4.9 billion
bushels) of the U.S. corn crop (see Figure 3).22 Even FAPRI’s more recent
projections appear to be behind the current pace of plant capacity expansion.
Figure 3. U.S. Ethanol Production: Actual and Projected,
Versus the Renewable Fuels Standard (RFS)
20
FAPRI
Aug. '07
16
Production capacity
s
under construction
n
o
12
ll
(10-01-07)
a
USDA
G
n

Feb. '07
Existing production
illio
8
B
capacity
(10-01-07)
RFS
4
Actual
0
80
82
84
86
88
90
92
94
96
98
00
02
04
06
08
10
12
14
16
19
19
19
19
19
19
19
19
19
19
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
Source: 1980-2006, Renewable Fuels Association (RFA); current and planned capacity are from The
Ethanol Monitor;
projections are from FAPRI's August 2007 Baseline Update, and USDA's USDA Agr.
Projections to 2016
, Feb. 2007.
Despite its rapid growth, ethanol production represents a minor part of U.S.
gasoline consumption (Figure 1). In calendar 2006, U.S. ethanol production of 4.9
billion gallons accounted for about a 2.4% projected share of national gasoline use
20 Corn use for ethanol: USDA, World Agricultural Outlook Board, World Agricultural
Supply and Demand Estimates
, September 12, 2007.
21 Ibid.
22 FAPRI, August Baseline Update for U.S. Agricultural Markets, FAPRI-UMC Report
#28-076, University of Missouri.

CRS-11
(3.3 billion gasoline-equivalent gallons (GEG) out of an estimated 140.3 billion
gallons).23
Economic Efficiency. Apart from government incentives, the economics
underlying corn-based ethanol’s market competitiveness hinge primarily on the
following factors:
! the price of feedstock, primarily corn;24
! the price of the processing fuel, primarily natural gas or electricity,
used at the ethanol plant;
! the cost of transporting feedstock to the ethanol plant and transporting
the finished ethanol to the user;
! the price of feedstock co-products (for dry-milled corn: distillers
dried grains (DDGs); for wet-milled corn: corn gluten feed, corn
gluten meal, and corn oil); and
! the price of gasoline, ethanol’s main competitor in the marketplace.
Higher prices for corn, processing fuel, and transportation hurt ethanol’s market
competitiveness, while higher prices for corn by-products and gasoline improve
ethanol’s competitiveness in the marketplace. Using 2002 data (see Table 4), USDA
estimated that the average production cost for a gallon of ethanol was $0.958 when
corn prices averaged about $2.32 per bushel and natural gas cost about $4.10 per
1,000 cubic feet (mcf). Feedstock costs are the largest expense item in the production
of ethanol, representing about 57% of total ethanol production costs (net of by-product
credits obtained by selling the DDGs and carbon dioxide) or about $0.55 per gallon.
Each $1.00 increase in the price of corn raises the per gallon production cost of
ethanol by about $0.36 per gallon ($0.54 per GEG).25
Processing fuel (usually natural gas) is the second largest expense representing
about 14% of total costs or about $0.14 per gallon. Natural gas prices have risen
substantially since 2002 (see Figure 8). However, because of its smaller cost share,
each $1.00 increase in the price of natural gas only raises the per gallon production
cost of ethanol by about $0.034 per gallon ($0.051 per GEG).
23 Based on a conversion rate of 0.67 GEG per gallon of ethanol.
24 Note that the price for corn and other major program crops grown in the United States are
directly influenced by the various federal farm programs which have been shown to
encourage over-production during periods of low prices by muting market signals.
25 Based on CRS simulations of an ethanol dry mill spreadsheet model developed by Tiffany
and Eidman (2003).

CRS-12
Table 4. Ethanol Dry Mill Cost of Production Estimates, 2002
Item
Unit
Value
Share
PRICESa
Ethanol (rack, f.o.b. Omaha)
$/gal.
$1.12
Corn (average farm price received)
$/bushel
$2.32
Distiller’s Dried Grain (Lawrenceburg, IN)
$/short ton
$82.44
COSTSb
Feedstock (Corn, Sorghum, or Other)
$/gal.
$0.803
By-Product Credit
$/gal.
$0.258
Distiller’s Dried Grain
$/gal.
$0.252
Carbon Dioxide
$/gal.
$0.006
Net Feedstock Costs
$/gal.
$0.545
56.9%
Total Processing Costs
$/gal.
$0.413
43.1%
Processing Fuel Costs
$/gal.
$0.136
14.1%
Chemical Costs
$/gal.
$0.102
10.6%
Labor, Maintenance, & Repair Costs
$/gal.
$0.091
9.5%
Administrative & Miscellaneous Costs
$/gal.
$0.048
5.0%
Electricity Costs
$/gal.
$0.037
3.9%
Total Processing Costs & Net Feedstock Costs
$/gal.
$0.958
100.0%
aPrices are for 2002.
bAll costs are in 2002 dollars.
Source: Ethanol prices from Nebraska Ethanol Board, Lincoln, NE. Nebraska Energy Office, Lincoln,
NE; Corn and DDGS prices from ERS, USDA; Natural Gas prices from DOE/EIA; Ethanol cost of
production data from Hosein Shapouri and Paul Gallagher, USDA’s 2002 Ethanol Cost-of-Production
Survey
, AER 841, USDA, Office of Energy Policy and New Uses, July 2005.
These ethanol production costs ignore capital costs (e.g., depreciation, interest
charges, return on equity, etc.), which may play a significant role depending on market
conditions. Capital costs for a 40 million gallon per year ethanol plant with an initial
capital investment of $60 million (of which 60% is debt financed) have been
estimated at roughly $0.14 per gallon assuming a 12% rate of return on equity.26
Because ethanol delivers only about 67% of the energy of a gallon of gasoline,
the 2002 cost of production in gasoline equivalent gallons is $1.43. However, the
federal tax credit (see below) of $0.51 per gallon of pure (100%) ethanol is a direct
offset to the production costs. To date, ethanol has been used at low blend ratios (5%
or 10%) with gasoline, functioning primarily either as an oxygenate or as a fuel
extender. At higher blend ratios (e.g., 85% ethanol), ethanol competes directly with
gasoline as a motor fuel.
26 Ibid.

CRS-13
Since corn is the largest expense in the production of ethanol, the relative
relationship of corn to ethanol prices provides a strong indicator of the ethanol
industry’s well-being (see Figure 4). From mid-2005 through mid-2006, the general
trend was clearly in ethanol’s favor, as average monthly ethanol rack prices (f.o.b.
Omaha) surged above the $2.00 per gallon level while corn prices fluctuated around
the $2.00 per bushel level. Since each bushel of corn yields approximately 2.75
gallons of ethanol, the profitability of ethanol production escalated rapidly with the
increase in ethanol prices. Since mid-2006, ethanol prices have fallen back near the
$2.00 per gallon level while corn prices have risen sharply. By November 2006, corn
prices had surged to $3.50 per bushel or higher in most cash markets, while nearby
futures contracts were trading near $4.00 per bushel.
Figure 4. Corn Versus Ethanol Prices, 2000-2007
5
4
Ethanol
4
3
hel
llon
/ga
bus 3
2
: $
: $/
rn

nol
o
C

tha
E

2
1
Corn
1
0
Jan-00
Jan-01
Jan-02
Jan-03
Jan-04
Jan-05
Jan-06
Jan-07
Source: Prices are monthly averages: Corn, No.2, yellow, Central Illinois; USDA, AMS; Ethanol are
rack, f.o.b. Omaha, Nebraska Ethanol Board, Lincoln, NE. Nebraska Energy Office, Lincoln, NE.
The price relationship that persisted between ethanol, corn, and natural gas
during late 2005 and through much of 2006, coupled with the federal production tax
credit (PTC) of 51¢ per gallon of pure ethanol, represented a period of enormous
profitability for ethanol producers and helps to explain the surge in ethanol production
capacity since late 2005. For example, a model simulation based on prices of $2.50
per gallon for ethanol, $2.20/bushel for corn, and $6.00/mcf for natural gas (as existed
during the summer of 2006) suggests that a 40 million gallon-per-year ethanol plant
with initial capital of $60 million (of which 60% is debt financed) would be able to
recover its entire capital investment in substantially less than a year.27 When ethanol
prices are lowered to $1.80, while corn prices are raised to $4.50, the simulation
27 Ibid. Note, the results of these scenarios are merely suggestive of an average plant’s
situation and are not intended to imply uniformity in profitability across all ethanol plants.

CRS-14
model suggests that the ethanol plant still remains profitable. After removing the
ethanol PTC of 51¢ per gallon from the simulation, the ethanol plant’s per unit
profitability falls to zero with corn prices of about $3.80 per bushel.
Government Support. Federal subsidies have played an important role in
encouraging investment in the U.S. ethanol industry. The Energy Tax Act of 1978
first established a partial exemption for ethanol fuel from federal fuel excise taxes.28
In addition to the partial excise tax exemption, certain income tax credits are available
for motor fuels containing biomass alcohol. However, the different tax credits are
coordinated such that the same biofuel cannot be claimed for both income and excise
tax purposes. The primary federal incentives include:29
! a production tax credit of 51¢ per gallon of pure (100%) ethanol —
the tax incentive was extended through 2010 and converted to a tax
credit from a partial tax exemption of the federal excise tax under the
American Jobs Creation Act of 2004 (P.L. 108-357);
! a small producer income tax credit (26 U.S.C. 40) of 10¢ per gal. for
the first 15 million gal. of production for ethanol producers whose
total output does not exceed 60 million gal. of ethanol per year;
! a Renewable Fuels Standard (RFS) (Energy Policy Act of 2005, P.L.
109-58) that mandates renewable fuels blending requirements for fuel
suppliers — 4 billion gallons of renewable fuels must be blended into
gasoline in 2006; the blending requirement grows annually until 7.5
billion gallons in 2012; and
! a 54¢ per gallon most-favored-nation tariff on most imported ethanol
(extended through December 2008 by a provision in P.L. 109-432).
Also important was USDA’s now-expired Bioenergy Program (7 U.S.C. 8108),
which provided incentive payments (contingent on annual appropriations) on year-to-
year production increases of renewable energy during the FY2001 to FY2006 period.
Indirectly, other federal programs support ethanol production by requiring federal
agencies to give preference to biobased products in purchasing fuels and other
supplies and by providing incentives for research on renewable fuels. Also, several
states have their own incentives, regulations, and programs in support of renewable
fuel research, production, and consumption that supplement or exceed federal
incentives.
Energy Efficiency. The net energy balance (NEB) of a fuel can be expressed
as a ratio of the energy produced from a production process relative to the energy used
in the production process. An output/input ratio of 1.0 implies that energy output
equals energy input. The critical factors underlying ethanol’s energy efficiency or
NEB include:
28 For a legislative history of federal ethanol incentives, see GAO, Tax Incentives for
Petroleum and Ethanol Fuels
, RCED-00-301R, September 25, 2000.
29 For more information on federal incentives for biofuel production, see CRS Report
RL33572, Biofuels Incentives: A Summary of Federal Programs, by Brent D. Yacobucci,
or see section on “Public Laws That Support Agriculture-Based Energy Production and
Use,” later in this report.

CRS-15
! corn yields per acre (higher yields for a given level of inputs
improves ethanol’s energy efficiency);
! the energy efficiency of corn production, including the energy
embodied in inputs such as fuels, fertilizers, pesticides, seed corn,
and cultivation practices;
! the energy efficiency of the corn-to-ethanol production process —
clean burning natural gas is the primary processing fuel for most
ethanol plants, but several plants (including an increasing number of
new plants) are designed to use coal; and
! the energy value of corn by-products, which act as an offset by
substituting for the energy needed to produce market counterparts.
Over the past decade, technical improvements in the production of agricultural
inputs (particularly nitrogen fertilizer) and ethanol, coupled with higher corn yields
per acre and stable or lower input needs, appear to have raised ethanol’s NEB. About
82% of the corn used for ethanol is processed by “dry” milling (a grinding process)
and about 18% is processed by “wet” milling plants (a chemical extraction process).30
All new plants under construction or coming online are expected to dry mill corn into
ethanol, thus the dry milling share will continue to rise for the foreseeable future.
In 2004, USDA reported that, assuming “best production practices and state of
the art processing technology,” the NEB of corn-ethanol (based on 2001 data) was a
positive 1.67 — that is, 67% more energy was returned from a gallon of ethanol than
was used in its production.31 Other researchers have found much lower NEB values
under less optimistic assumptions, leading to some dispute over corn-to-ethanol’s
representative NEB.32 A review (Farrel et al., 2006) of several major corn-to-ethanol
NEB analyses found that, when by-products are properly accounted for, the corn-to-
ethanol process has a positive NEB (i.e., greater than 1.0) and that the NEB is
improving with technology.33 This result was confirmed by another comprehensive
study (Hill et al., 2006) that found a NEB of 1.25 for corn ethanol.34 However, these
studies clearly imply that inefficient processes for producing corn (e.g., excessive
30 Dry milling and wet milling production shares are from the Renewable Fuels Association,
Ethanol Industry Outlook 2007. According to USDA, dry milling is more energy efficient
than wet milling, particularly when corn co-products are considered. These ethanol yield
rates have been improving gradually overtime with technological improvements in the
efficiency of ethanol processing from corn.
31 H. Shapouri, J. Duffield, and M. Wang, New Estimates of the Energy Balance of Corn
Ethanol
, presented at 2004 Corn Utilization & Technology Conference of the Corn Refiners
Association, June 7-9, 2004, Indianapolis, IN (hereafter cited as Shapouri (2004)).
32 For example, Prof. David Pimentel, Cornell Univ., College of Agr. and Life Sciences, has
researched and published extensive criticisms of corn-based ethanol production.
33 Alexander E. Farrel, Richard J. Pleven, Brian T. Turner, Andrew D. Jones, Michael
O’Hare, and Daniel M. Kammon, “Ethanol Can Contribute to Energy and Environmental
Goals,” Science, vol. 311 (January 27, 2006), pp. 506-508.
34 Hill, J., E. Nelson, D. Tilman, S. Polasky, and D. Tiffany. “Environmental, economic,
and energetic costs and benefits of biodiesel and ethanol biofuels,” Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences
, Vol. 103, No. 30, July 25, 2006, 11206-11210.

CRS-16
reliance on chemicals and fertilizer or bad tillage practices) or for processing ethanol
(e.g., coal-based processing), or extensive trucking of either the feedstock or the
finished ethanol long distances to plant or consumer, can result in a NEB significantly
less than 1.0. In other words, not all ethanol production processes have a positive
energy balance.
Long-Run Supply Issues. The sharp rise in corn prices that has occurred
since July 2006 owes its origins largely to the rapid expansion of corn-based ethanol
production capacity that has occurred in the United States since 2004.35 With
6.9 billion gallons of annual ethanol production capacity currently online (October 1,
2007) and another 7.6 billion gallons of capacity under construction and potentially
online by early 2009, the U.S. ethanol sector is projected to need over 4.2 billion
bushels of corn as feedstock in 2008/09 to service this capacity. This would be an
95% increase from the 2.15 billion bushels of corn projected as ethanol feedstock in
2006/07. Such a strong jump in corn demand is highly unusual and has already fueled
substantially higher prices — for both current market prices (Figure 4) as well as for
long-run projected prices. In its February 2007 baseline report, USDA projects U.S.
farm-gate prices to remain in the $3.30 to $3.50 per bushel range through 2016.36
Questions Emerge Surrounding Further Subsidy-Fueled Corn
Ethanol Expansion. Market participants, economists, and biofuels skeptics have
begun to question the need for continued large federal incentives in support of ethanol
production, particularly when the sector would have been profitable during much of
2006 without such subsidies. Their concerns focus on the potential for widespread
unintended consequences that might result from excessive federal incentives adding
to the rapid expansion of ethanol production capacity and the demand for corn to feed
future ethanol production.37 Such consequences include a rapid expansion of corn
area (crowding out other field crops and agricultural activities) and the likelihood of
both expanded fertilizer and chemical use and increased soil erosion. Growth in corn-
for-ethanol use would reduce both exports and domestic feed use unless accompanied
by offsetting growth in domestic production.
Rapidly Expanding Corn Planting. As corn prices rise, so too does the
incentive to expand corn production (whether by expanding onto more marginal soil
environments or by altering the traditional corn-soybean rotation that dominates Corn
Belt agriculture), crowding out other field crops, primarily soybeans, and other
agricultural activities. Large-scale shifts in agricultural production activities will likely
have important regional economic consequences that have yet to be fully explored or
understood. Further, corn production is among the most energy-intensive of the major
field crops. An expansion of corn area would likely have important and unwanted
35 International market factors such as the failure of the 2006 Australian wheat and barley
crops added psychological momentum to the corn price runup; however, ample U.S. feed
grain supplies at the time of the rising corn price (fall 2006) strongly imply that future corn
demand attributable to the rapid surge in investment in U.S. ethanol production capacity is
the principal factor behind higher corn prices.
36 USDA Agricultural Projections to 2016, OCE-2007-1, USDA, February 2007; available
at [http://www.ers.usda.gov/Briefing/Baseline/].
37 For a list or related articles, see the Reference Section entitled, “Consequences of
Expanded Agriculture-Based Biofuel Production” at the end of this report.

CRS-17
environmental consequences due to the resulting increase in fertilizer and chemical
use and soil erosion.
Domestic Feed Market Distortions. Corn traditionally represents about 57%
of feed concentrates and processed feedstuffs fed to animals in the United States.38
As corn-based ethanol production increases, so does total corn demand and corn
prices. Dedicating an increasing share of the U.S. corn harvest to ethanol production
will likely lead to higher prices for all grains and oilseeds that compete for the same
land, resulting in higher feed costs for cattle, hog, and poultry producers. In addition,
distortions are likely to develop in protein-meal markets related to expanding
production of the ethanol processing by-product Distiller’s Dried Grains (DDG),
which averages about 30% protein content and can substitute in certain feed and meal
markets.39 While DDG use would substitute for some of the lost feed value of corn
used in ethanol processing, about 66% of the original weight of corn is consumed in
producing ethanol and is no longer available for feed. Furthermore, not all livestock
species are well adapted to dramatically increased consumption of DDG in their
rations — dairy cattle appear to be best suited to expanding DDG’s share in feed
rations; poultry and pork are much less able to adapt. Also, DDG must be dried
before it can be transported long distances. Will large-scale movements of livestock
production occur to relocate near new feed sources? Such a relocation would likely
have important regional economic effects.
Domestic and International Food Markets. Most corn grown in the United
States is used for animal feed. Higher feed costs ultimately lead to higher meat prices.
The feed-price effect will first translate into higher prices for poultry and hogs, which
are less able to use alternate feedstuffs. Dairy and beef cattle are more versatile in
their ability to shift to alternate feed sources, but eventually a sustained rise in corn
prices will push their feed costs upward as well. The price of corn is also linked to the
price of other grains, including those destined for food markets, through their
competition in both the feed marketplace and the producer’s planting choices for his
(or her) limited acreage. The price runup in the U.S. corn market has already clearly
spilled over into the market for soybeans (and soybean oil).
Since food costs represent a relatively small share of consumer spending in the
United States, the price runup is more easily absorbed in the short run. However, the
situation is very different for lower-income households as well as in many foreign
markets, where food expenses can represent a substantial portion of the household
budget. This is becoming a concern since, because of trade linkages, the increase in
U.S. corn prices has carried into international markets as well. In January 2007,
Mexico experienced riots following a nearly 30% price increase for tortillas, the
country’s dietary staple. In China, where corn is also an important food source, the
government has recently put a halt to its planned ethanol plant expansion due to the
38 USDA, ERS, Feed Situation and Outlook Yearbook, FDS-2003, April 2003.
39 For a discussion of potential feed market effects due to growing ethanol production, see
Bob Kohlmeyer, “The Other Side of Ethanol’s Bonanza,” Ag Perspectives (World
Perspectives, Inc.), December 14, 2004; and R. Wisner and P. Baumel, “Ethanol, Exports,
and Livestock: Will There be Enough Corn to Supply Future Needs?,” Feedstuffs, no. 30,
vol. 76, July 26, 2004.

CRS-18
threat it poses to the country’s food security. Similarly, humanitarian groups have
expressed concern for the potential difficulties that higher grain prices imply for net-
food-importing developing countries.
U.S. Corn Exports. The United States is the world’s leading producer and
exporter of corn. Since 1980 U.S. corn production has accounted for over 40% of
world production, while U.S. corn exports have represented nearly a 66% share of
world trade during the past decade. In 2006/2007, the United States exported about
20% of its corn production.40 Higher corn prices would likely result in lost export
sales. It is unclear what type of market adjustments would occur in global feed
markets, since several different grains and feedstuffs are relatively close substitutes.
Price-sensitive corn importers may quickly switch to alternate, cheaper sources of
energy depending on the availability of supplies and the adaptability of animal rations.
In contrast, less price-sensitive corn importers, such as Japan and Taiwan, may choose
to pay a higher price in an attempt to bid the corn away from ethanol plants. There
could be significant economic effects to U.S. grain companies and to the U.S.
agricultural sector if ethanol-induced higher corn prices cause a sustained reshaping
of international grain trade.
Ethanol Processing Energy Needs. As ethanol production increases, the
energy needed to process the corn into ethanol (derived primarily from natural gas in
the United States) can be expected to increase. For example, if the entire 4.9 billion
gallons of ethanol produced in 2006 used natural gas as a processing fuel, it would
have required an estimated 243 billion cu. ft. of natural gas.41 The energy needed to
process the entire 2006 corn crop of 10.5 billion bushels into ethanol would be
approximately 1.4 trillion cubic feet of natural gas. Total U.S. natural gas
consumption was an estimated 22.2 trillion cu. ft. in 2005.42 The United States has
been a net importer of natural gas since the early 1980s. Because natural gas is used
extensively in electricity production in the United States, a significant increase in its
use as a processing fuel in the production of ethanol would likely result in increases
of both prices and imports of natural gas.
Ethanol as a Substitute for Imported Fuel. Despite improving energy
efficiency, the ability for domestic ethanol production to measurably substitute for
petroleum imports is questionable, particularly when U.S. ethanol production depends
almost entirely on corn as the primary feedstock. The import share of U.S. petroleum
consumption was estimated at 65% in 2004, and is expected to grow to 71% by
2030.43 Presently, ethanol production accounts for less than 3% of U.S. gasoline
consumption while using about 20% of the U.S. corn production. If the entire 2006
U.S. corn crop of 10.5 billion bushels were used as ethanol feedstock, the resultant 28
billion gallons of ethanol (18.9 billion gasoline-equivalent gallons (GEG)) would
40 USDA, WAOB, WASDE Report, October 12, 2007; available at
[http://www.usda.gov/oce/].
41 CRS calculations based on Shapouri (2004) energy usage rates of 49,733 Btu/gal of
ethanol.
42 DOE, EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2007.
43 Ibid.

CRS-19
represent about 13.4% of estimated national gasoline use of approximately 140 billion
gallons.44 In 2006, an estimated 71 million acres of corn were harvested. Nearly 137
million acres would be needed to produce enough corn (20.5 billion bushels) and
subsequent ethanol (56.4 billion gallons or 37.8 billion GEG) to substitute for 50%
of petroleum imports.45 Since 1950, U.S. corn harvested acres have never reached 76
million acres. Thus, barring a drastic realignment of U.S. field crop production
patterns, corn-based ethanol’s potential as a petroleum import substitute appears to be
limited by a crop area constraint.46
These supply issues suggest that corn’s long-run potential as an ethanol feedstock
is somewhat limited. The Department of Energy (DOE) suggests that the ability to
produce ethanol from low-cost biomass will ultimately be the key to making it
competitive as a gasoline additive.47
In light of these growing concerns, particularly as relates to livestock feed
markets, the Nebraska Cattlemen (NC), at their annual convention on November 30,
2006, adopted two resolutions relating to federal policy intervention in the U.S.
ethanol sector that are perhaps indicative of the looming tradeoff between feed and
fuel and the types of policy options that will likely be debated in the coming months:48
First Resolution: NC support a transition to a market-based approach for the usage
and production of ethanol and are opposed to any additional federal or state
mandates for ethanol usage and/or production.
Second Resolution: NC favor the implementation of a variable import levy to
prevent the price of oil, and its derivatives from dropping below long-term
equilibrium prices. This should be the sole incentive for the development of
alternative energy facilities in the United States.
Similarly, the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association (NCBA), at their industry
convention on February 3, 2007, approved an interim policy calling for: a phase-out
of government incentives for ethanol production and an end to the 54 cent per gallon
44 Based on USDA’s February 9, 2007, World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimates
(WASDE) Report
, and using comparable conversion rates.
45 CRS calculations — which assume corn yields of 150 bushel per acre and an ethanol yield
of 2.75 gal/bu. — are for gasoline only. Petroleum imports are primarily unrefined crude
oil, which is then refined into a variety of products.
46 Two recent articles by economists at Iowa State University examine the potential for
obtaining a 10 million acre expansion in corn planting: Bruce Babcock and D. A. Hennessy,
“Getting More Corn Acres From the Corn Belt”; and Chad E. Hart, “Feeding the Ethanol
Boom: Where Will the Corn Come From?” Iowa Ag Review, Vol. 12, No. 4, Fall 2006.
47 DOE, EIA, “Outlook for Biomass Ethanol Production and Demand,” by Joseph DiPardo,
July 30, 2002, available at [http://www.eia.doe.gov/oiaf/analysispaper/biomass.html];
hereafter referred to as DiPardo (2002).
48 “Nebraska Cattlemen Adopts Ethanol Policy,” News Release, December 1, 2006;
a
v
a
i
l
a
b
l
e

a
t
[http://www.nebraskacattlemen.org/home/News/NewsReleases/tabid/116/articleType/Art
icleView/articleId/142/Nebraska-Cattlemen-Adopts-Ethanol-Policy.aspx].

CRS-20
tariff on imported ethanol; a transition to a market-based approach to renewable
energy production; and greater policy emphasis on transitioning from corn-based to
cellulosic ethanol. The NCBA also announced support for a segmentation of the RFS
whereby different biofuels would be given a specific portion of the RFS rather than
letting it be filled on a first-come, first-serve basis. This would involve carving out
a specific portion for cellulosic ethanol and biodiesel.
Ethanol from Cellulosic Biomass Crops.49 Besides corn, several other
agricultural products are viable feedstock and appear to offer attractive long-term
supply potential — particularly cellulose-based feedstock such as prairie grasses and
fast-growing woody crops such as hybrid poplar and willow trees, as well as waste
biomass materials — logging residues, wood processing mill residues, urban wood
wastes, and selected agricultural residues such as sugar cane bagasse and rice straw.50
In particular, native prairie grasses such as switchgrass appear to offer large potential
as a cellulosic feedstock because they thrive on marginal lands (as well as on prime
cropland) and need little water and no fertilizer.51
The main impediment to the development of a cellulose-based ethanol industry
is the state of cellulosic conversion technology (i.e., the process of gasifying cellulose-
based feedstock or converting them into fermentable sugars). Currently, cellulosic
conversion technology is rudimentary and expensive. In 2002, the DOE estimated that
the cost of producing ethanol from cellulose was between $1.15 and $1.43 per gallon
in 1998 dollars ($1.43 and $1.78 per gallon in current January 2007 dollars).52 This
compares with USDA’s estimated cost of producing corn-based ethanol in 2002 of
$0.958 per gallon ($1.08 per gal. in current January 2007 dollars).53
The projected high cost of production coupled with the uncertainty surrounding
the commercial application of a new technology has inhibited commercial investments
into cellulosic ethanol production. In addition, the logistics of harvesting,
transporting, and storing large volumes of bulky cellulosic material for daily
processing at a central plant remain daunting. As of October 2007, no commercial
cellulose-to-ethanol facilities are in operation in the United States, although plans to
49 For more information on biomass from non-traditional crops as a renewable energy, see
the DOE, EERE, Biomass Program, “Biomass Feedstock,” at [http://www1.eere.energy.
gov/biomass/biomass_feedstocks.html]. See also, Ethanol From Cellulose: A General
Review
, P.C.Badger, Purdue University, Center for New Crops and Plant Products at
[http://www.hort.purdue.edu/newcrop/ncnu02/v5-017.html].
50 USDA and DOE. Biomass as Feedstock for a Bioenergy and Bioproducts Industry: The
Technical Feasibility of a Billion-Ton Annual Supply
, April 2005; available at
[http://feedstockreview.ornl.gov/pdf/billion_ton_vision.pdf]; referred to hereafter as the
Billion Ton Study (2005).
51 Hill, Jason. Overcoming Barriers to Biofuels: Energy from Diverse Prairie Biomass,
presentation to staff of House Committee on Agriculture, Dept of Applied Economics and
Dept. of Ecology, Evolution, and Behavior, University of Minnesota, February 26, 2007.
52 DiPardo, Joseph. Outlook for Biomass Ethanol Production and Demand, DOE, undated:
available at [http://www.eia.doe.gov/oiaf/analysispaper/biomass.html].
53 Shapouri (2004).

CRS-21
build several facilities are underway.54 Private sector investment received a
substantial federal policy boost on February 28, 2007, when the DOE announced the
awarding of up to $385 million in cost-share funding for the construction of six
cellulosic ethanol plant projects.55 When fully operational, the six plants are expected
to produce up to 130 million gallons per year of cellulosic ethanol. The combined
cost-share plus federal funding for the six projects represents total planned investment
of more than $1.2 billion. The six companies (and their proposed funding levels) are:
! Abengoa Bioenergy Biomass of Kansas, LLC of Chesterfield,
Missouri (up to $76 million). The proposed plant will be located in
Kansas. The plant will produce 11.4 million gallons of ethanol
annually and enough energy to power the facility, with any excess
energy being used to power the adjacent corn dry grind mill. The
plant will use 700 tons per day of corn stover, wheat straw, milo
stubble, switchgrass, and other feedstock.
! ALICO, Inc. of LaBelle, Florida (up to $33 million). The proposed
plant will be in LaBelle, Florida. The plant will produce 13.9 million
gallons of ethanol a year and 6,255 kilowatts of electric power, as
well as 8.8 tons of hydrogen and 50 tons of ammonia per day. For
feedstock, the plant will use 770 tons per day of yard, wood, and
vegetative wastes and eventually energy cane.
! BlueFire Ethanol, Inc. of Irvine, California (up to $40 million). The
proposed plant will be in Southern California. The plant will be sited
on an existing landfill and produce about 19 million gallons of
ethanol a year. As feedstock, the plant would use 700 tons per day of
sorted green waste and wood waste from landfills.
! POET (originally Broin Companies) of Sioux Falls, South Dakota (up
to $80 million). The plant is in Emmetsburg, Iowa, and after
expansion, it will produce 125 million gallons of ethanol per year, of
which roughly 25% will be cellulosic ethanol. For feedstock in the
production of cellulosic ethanol, the plant expects to use 842 tons per
day of corn fiber, cobs, and stalks.
! Iogen Biorefinery Partners, LLC, of Arlington, Virginia (up to $80
million). The proposed plant will be built in Shelley, Idaho, and will
produce 18 million gallons of ethanol annually. The plant will use
700 tons per day of agricultural residues including wheat straw,
barley straw, corn stover, switchgrass, and rice straw as feedstocks.
! Range Fuels (formerly Kergy Inc.) of Broomfield, Colorado (up to
$76 million). The proposed plant will be constructed in Soperton,
Georgia. The plant will produce about 40 million gallons of ethanol
54 Perkins, Jerry. “New Crops Could Fuel New Wave of Ethanol,” Des Moines Register,
February 25, 2007.
55 For more information see the DOE news release at [http://www.doe.gov/news/4827.htm].

CRS-22
per year and 9 million gallons per year of methanol. As feedstock,
the plant will use 1,200 tons per day of wood residues and wood
based energy crops.
Celunol Corporation has a pilot cellulosic plant in Jennings, Louisiana, but is
currently building a demonstration plant at the same location that will use sugar cane
residues (called bagasse), as is done in Brazil, to fuel its ethanol production.56 Celunol
says that it will use the demonstration plant to train its plant operators in anticipation
of a commercial-scale plant scheduled for construction starting in late 2008.
Economic Efficiency. The conversion of cellulosic feedstock to ethanol
parallels the corn conversion process, except that the cellulose must first be converted
to fermentable sugars. As a result, the key factors underlying cellulosic-based
ethanol’s price competitiveness are similar to those of corn-based ethanol, with the
addition of the cost of cellulosic conversion. Cellulosic feedstock are significantly
less expensive than corn; however, at present they are more costly to convert to
ethanol because of the extensive processing required. Currently, cellulosic conversion
is done using either dilute or concentrated acid hydrolysis — both processes are
prohibitively expensive. However, the DOE suggests that enzymatic hydrolysis,
which processes cellulose into sugar using cellulase enzymes, offers both processing
advantages as well as the greatest potential for cost reductions. Current cost estimates
of cellulase enzymes range from 30¢ to 50¢ per gallon of ethanol.57 The DOE is also
studying thermal hydrolysis as a potentially more cost-effective method for processing
cellulose into sugar. Iogen — a Canadian firm with a pilot-scale cellulosic ethanol
plant in Ottawa, Canada, and one of the six companies receiving a DOE award for
construction of a commercial-scale ethanol plant (see above) — uses recombinant
DNA-produced enzymes to break apart cellulose to produce sugar for fermentation
into ethanol.
Based on the state of existing technologies and their potential for improvement,
the DOE estimates that improvements to enzymatic hydrolysis could eventually bring
the cost to less than 5¢ per gallon, but this may still be a decade or more away. Were
this to happen, then the significantly lower cost of cellulosic feedstock would make
cellulosic-based ethanol dramatically less expensive than corn-based ethanol and
gasoline at current prices. Both the DOE and USDA are funding research to improve
cellulosic conversion as well as to breed higher yielding cellulosic crops. In 1978, the
DOE established the Bioenergy Feedstock Development Program (BFDP) at the Oak
Ridge National Laboratory. The BFDP is engaged in the development of new crops
and cropping systems that can be used as dedicated bioenergy feedstock. Some of the
crops showing good cellulosic production per acre with strong potential for further
gains include fast-growing trees (e.g., hybrid poplars and willows), shrubs, and grasses
(e.g., switchgrass).
Government Support. Although no commercial cellulosic ethanol production
has occurred yet in the United States, several federal laws support the development
56 For more information on Celunol, visit: [http://www.celunol.com/].
57 DOE, EERE, Biomass Program, “Cellulase Enzyme Research,” available at [http://www1.
eere.energy.gov/biomass/cellulase_enzyme.html].

CRS-23
of cellulose-based ethanol in the United States. These include various provisions
under the Biomass Research and Development Act of 2000, two provisions (Section
2101 and Section 9008) of the 2002 farm bill (P.L. 107-171), and several provisions
of the Energy Policy Act of 2005 (EPACT; P.L. 109-58).58 The specifics of these
provisions are discussed later in the report (see “Public Laws That Support
Agriculture-Based Energy Production and Use,” below). In addition to coordinating
the activities of USDA and DOE, these provisions provide competitive grants, loans,
and loan guarantees in support of research, education, extension, production, and
market development of cellulosic biomass-based ethanol. In addition, both the Senate
and House of passed new energy bills this year that include several provisions
supportive of cellulosic ethanol production.59
In addition to existing legislation, the 2007 farm bill is likely to retain an energy
title with updated and/or expanded provisions concerning agriculture-based renewable
energy.60 On July 27, 2007, the House approved a new farm bill — the Farm,
Nutrition, and Bioenergy Act of 2007 (H.R. 2419) — which includes an energy title
(Title IX). H.R. 2419, as amended and passed by the House, expands and extends
several provisions from the energy title of the enacted 2002 farm bill with substantial
increases in funding and a heightened focus on developing cellulosic ethanol
production. A key departure from current farm-bill related energy provisions is that
most new funding would be directed away from corn-starch-based ethanol production
and towards either cellulosic-based biofuels production or to new as-yet-undeveloped
technologies with some type of agricultural linkage. The Senate Agriculture
Committee (SAC) is expected to mark up its version of a 2007 farm bill in late-
October.
President Bush has mentioned renewable energy in his past two State of the
Union (SOU) speeches. In his 2006 SOU, President Bush introduced the notion of
“switchgrass” as a potential energy source and announced the “Advanced Energy
Initiative,” which included a goal of making cellulosic ethanol cost competitive with
corn-based ethanol by 2012. In his 2007 SOU, President Bush announced his “20 in
10” plan, which calls for reducing U.S. gasoline consumption by 20% in 10 years (i.e.,
by 2017).
Energy Efficiency. The use of cellulosic biomass in the production of ethanol
yields a higher net energy balance compared to corn — a 34% net gain for corn vs. a
100% gain for cellulosic biomass — based on a 1999 comparative study.61 While
corn’s net energy balance (under optimistic assumptions concerning corn production
58 For more information, see Biomass Research and Development Initiative, USDA/DOE,
at [http://www.biomass.govtools.us/].
59 more information on these energy bills, see CRS Report RL34136, Biofuels Provisions
in H.R. 3221 and H.R. 6: A Side-by-Side Comparison
, by Brent Yacobucci.
60 For more information, see CRS Report RL34130 Renewable Energy Policy in the 2007
Farm Bill
by Randy Schnepf.
61 Argonne National Laboratory, Center for Transportation Research, Effects of Fuel Ethanol
Use on Fuel-Cycle Energy and Greenhouse Gas
, ANL/ESD-38, by M. Wang, C. Saricks,
and D. Santini, January 1999, as referenced in DOE, DiPardo (2002).

CRS-24
and ethanol processing technology) was estimated at 67% by USDA in 2004, it is
likely that cellulosic biomass’s net energy balance would also have experienced
parallel gains for the same reasons — improved crop yields and production practices,
and improved processing technology. A recent review of research on ethanol’s energy
efficiency found that cellulose-based ethanol had a NEB ratio of 10, i.e., a 1,000% net
gain.62 As with corn-based ethanol, the NEB varies based on the production process
used to grow, harvest, and process the feedstock.
Another factor that favors cellulosic ethanol’s energy balance over corn-based
ethanol relates to by-products. Corn-based ethanol’s by-products are valued as animal
feeds, whereas cellulosic ethanol’s by-products are expected to serve directly as a
processing fuel at the plant. This adaptation is expected to greatly improve both the
economic efficiency and the net energy balance of cellulose ethanol over corn-based
ethanol.
Long-Run Supply Issues. Cellulosic feedstock have an advantage over corn
in that they grow well on marginal lands, whereas corn requires fertile cropland (as
well as timely water and the addition of soil amendments). This greatly expands the
potential area for growing cellulosic feedstock relative to corn. For example, in 2006
about 78 million acres were planted to corn, of which 75%, or about 59 million acres,
were from the nine principal corn belts (IA, IL, IN, MN, MO, NE, OH, SD, WI). In
contrast, that same year the United States had 243 million acres planted to the eight
major field crops (corn, soybeans, wheat, cotton, barley, sorghum, oats, and rice), 433
million acres of total cropland (including forage crops and temporarily idled
cropland), and 578 million acres of permanent pastureland, most of which is
potentially viable for switchgrass production.63
A 2003 USDA study suggests that if 42 million acres of cropped, idle, pasture,
and CRP acres were converted to switchgrass production, 188 million dry tons of
switchgrass could be produced annually (at an implied yield of 4.5 metric tons per
acre), resulting in the production of 16.7 billion gallons of ethanol or 10.9 billion
GEG.64 This would represent about 8% of U.S. gasoline use in 2005. Existing
research plots have produced switchgrass yields of 15 dry tons per acre per year,
suggesting tremendous long-run production potential. However, before any supply
potential can be realized, research must first overcome the cellulosic conversion cost
issue through technological developments.
In a 2005 study of U.S. biomass potential, USDA concluded that U.S. forest land
and agricultural land had the potential to produce over 1.3 billion dry tons per year of
biomass — 368 million dry tons from forest lands and 998 million dry tons from
62 Alexander E. Farrel, Richard J. Pleven, Brian T. Turner, Andrew D. Jones, Michael
O’Hare, and Daniel M. Kammon, “Ethanol Can Contribute to Energy and Environmental
Goals,” Science, vol. 311 (January 27, 2006), pp. 506-508.
63 United Nations, Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO), FAOSTATS.
64 USDA, Office of Energy Policy and New Uses (OEPNU), The Economic Impacts of
Bioenergy Crop Production on U.S. Agriculture
, AER 816, by Daniel De La Torre Ugarte
et al., February 2003; available at [http://www.usda.gov/oce/reports/energy/index.htm].

CRS-25
agricultural lands — while still continuing to meet food, feed, and export demands.65
According to the study, this volume of biomass would be more than ample to displace
30% or more of current U.S. petroleum consumption.
USDA’s very optimistic assessment is tempered somewhat by a 2005 University
of Minnesota study that uses the results from three major biofuels studies to estimate
the potential supplies of biofuels from both corn-based ethanol and cellulosic-based
ethanol from biomass crops and crop residue.66 The analysis suggests that about 130.4
million tons of biomass could be produced directly from switchgrass with another
130.5 million tons from crop residue. If the biomass total of 260.9 million tons were
converted to ethanol at a rate of 89.7 gallons per ton, it would produce 23.4 billion
gallons of anhydrous ethanol. Adding 2% denaturant yields 23.9 billion gallons.
Adding an additional 7 billion gallons of corn-based ethanol brings the total to 30.9
billion gallons or 20.7 billion GEG. This would represent about 22.7% of total U.S.
gasoline consumption in 2005.
Methane from an Anaerobic Digester
An anaerobic digester is a device that promotes the decomposition of manure or
“digestion” of the organics in manure by anaerobic bacteria (in the absence of oxygen)
to simple organics while producing biogas as a waste product.67 The principal
components of biogas from this process are methane (60% to 70%), carbon dioxide
(30% to 40%), and trace amounts of other gases. Methane is the major component of
the natural gas used in many homes for cooking and heating, and is a significant fuel
in electricity production. Biogas can also be used as a fuel in a hot water heater if
hydrogen sulfide is first removed from the biogas supply. As a result, the generation
and use of biogas can significantly reduce the cost of electricity and other farm fuels
such as natural gas, propane, and fuel oil.
By early 2005, there were 100 digester systems in operation at commercial U.S.
livestock farms, with an additional 94 planned for construction.68 EPA estimates that
anaerobic digester biogas systems are technically feasible at about 7,000 dairy and
swine operations in the United States. The majority of existing systems are farm
owned and operated using only livestock manure, and are found in the dairy
production zones of California, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, and New York. In 2005,
65 USDA and DOE, Billion Ton Study (2005)
66 Eidman, Vernon R. Agriculture’s Role in Energy Production: Current Levels and Future
Prospects
, paper presented at a conference, “Energy from Agriculture: New Technologies,
Innovative Programs and Success Stories,” December 14-15, 2005, St. Louis, Missouri. The
three studies used to generate the estimate are listed in the “For More Information” section
as FAPRI (2005); Ugarte et al (2003); and Gallagher et al (2003).
67 For more information on anaerobic digesters, see Appropriate Technology Transfer for
Rural Areas (ATTRA), Anaerobic Digestion of Animal Wastes: Factors to Consider, by
John Balsam, October 2002, at [http://www.attra.ncat.org/energy.html#Renewable]; or Iowa
State University, Agricultural Marketing Resource Center, Anaerobic Digesters, at
[http://www.agmrc.org/agmrc/commodity/biomass/].
68 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), AgStar Digest, Winter 2006; available at
[http://www.epa.gov/agstar/].

CRS-26
they are estimated to have generated over 130 million kWh and to have reduced
methane emissions by over 30,000 metric tons.
Anaerobic digestion system proposals have frequently received funding under the
Renewable Energy Program (REP) of the 2002 farm bill (P.L. 107-171, Title IX,
Section 9006). For example, in 2004 37 anaerobic digester proposals from 26
different states were awarded funding under the REP.69 Also, the AgStar program
— a voluntary cooperative effort by USDA, EPA, and DOE — encourages methane
recovery at confined livestock operations that manage manure as liquid slurries.
Economic Efficiency. The primary benefits of anaerobic digestion are animal
waste management, odor control, nutrient recycling, greenhouse gas reduction, and
water quality protection. Except in very large systems, biogas production is a highly
useful but secondary benefit. As a result, anaerobic digestion systems do not
effectively compete with other renewable energy production systems on the basis of
energy production alone. Instead, they compete with and are cost-competitive when
compared to conventional waste management practices according to EPA.70
Depending on the infrastructure design — generally some combination of storage
pond, covered or aerated treatment lagoon, heated digester, and open storage tank —
anaerobic digestion systems can range in investment cost from $200 to $500 per
Animal Unit (i.e., per 1,000 pounds of live weight). In addition to the initial
infrastructure investment, recurring costs include manure and effluent handling, and
general maintenance. According to EPA, these systems can have financially attractive
payback periods of three to seven years when energy gas uses are employed. On
average, manure from a lactating 1,400-pound dairy cow can generate enough biogas
to produce 550 Kilowatts per year.71 A 200-head dairy herd could generate 500 to 600
Kilowatts per day. At 6¢ per kilowatt hour, this would represent potential energy cost
savings of $6,000 to $10,000 per year.
The principal by-product of anaerobic digestion is the effluent (i.e., the digested
manure). Because anaerobic digestion substantially reduces ammonia losses, the
effluent is more nitrogen-rich than untreated manure, making it more valuable for
subsequent field application. Also, digested manure is high in fiber, making it
valuable as a high-quality potting soil ingredient or mulch. Other cost savings include
lower total lagoon volume requirements for animal waste management systems (which
reduces excavation costs and the land area requirement), and lower cover costs
because of smaller lagoon surface areas.
Government Support. Federal assistance in the form of grants, loans, and loan
guarantees is available under USDA’s Renewable Energy Program (2002 farm bill,
69 USDA, News Release No. 0386.04, September 15, 2004; Veneman Announces $22.8
Million to Support Renewable Energy Initiatives in 26 States
, available at
[http://www.usda.gov/Newsroom/0386.04.html]. For funding and program information on
t h e R e n e w a b l e E n e r g y a n d E n e r g y E f f i c i e n c y P r o g r a m , s e e
[http://www.rurdev.usda.gov/rd/energy/].
70 EPA, OAR, Managing Manure with Biogas Recovery Systems, EPA-430-F-02-004, winter
2002.
71 ATTRA, Anaerobic Digestion of Animal Wastes: Factors to Consider, October 2002.

CRS-27
Title IX, Section 9006) and Rural Development Programs (Title VI, Sections 6013,
6017, and 6401). See the section below on public laws for more details.
Energy Efficiency. Because biogas is essentially a by-product of an animal
waste management activity, and because the biogas produced by the system can be
used to operate the system, the energy output from an anaerobic digestion system can
be viewed as achieving even or positive energy balance. The principal energy input
would be the fuel used to operate the manure handling equipment.
Long-Run Supply Issues. Anaerobic digesters are most feasible alongside
large confined animal feeding operations (CAFOs). According to EPA, biogas
production for generating cost effective electricity requires manure from more than
500 cows at a dairy operation or at least 2,000 head of swine at a pig feeding
operation. As animal feeding operations steadily increase in size, the opportunity for
anaerobic digestion systems will likewise increase. In addition, some digester systems
may qualify for cost-share funds under USDA’s Environmental Quality Incentives
Program (EQIP).
Biodiesel
Biodiesel is an alternative diesel fuel that is produced from any animal fat or
vegetable oil (such as soybean oil or recycled cooking oil). About 90% of U.S.
biodiesel is made from soybean oil. As a result, U.S. soybean producers and the
American Soybean Association (ASA) are strong advocates for greater government
support for biodiesel production.
According to the National Biodiesel Board (NBB), biodiesel is nontoxic,
biodegradable, and essentially free of sulfur and aromatics. In addition, it works in
any diesel engine with few or no modifications and offers similar fuel economy,
horsepower, and torque, but with superior lubricity and important emission
improvements over petroleum diesel.72 Biodiesel is increasingly being adopted by
major fleets nationwide. The U.S. Postal Service, the U.S. military, and many state
governments are directing their bus and truck fleets to incorporate biodiesel fuels as
part of their fuel base.
U.S. biodiesel production has shown strong growth in recent years, increasing
from under 1 million gallons in 1999 to an estimated 386 million gallons in 2006
(Figure 5). However, U.S. biodiesel production remains small relative to national
diesel consumption levels. In 2005, estimated biodiesel production of 200 million
gallons represented 0.4% of the 44.9 billion gallons of diesel fuel used nationally for
vehicle transportation.73 In addition to vehicle use, 18.5 billion gallons of diesel fuel
were used for heating and power generation by residential, commercial, and industry,
and by railroad and vessel traffic in 2005, bringing total U.S. diesel fuel use to nearly
63.1 billion gallons.
72 For more information, visit the National Biodiesel Board at [http://www.biodiesel.org].
73 Diesel consumption estimates are from DOE, IEA, Annual Energy Outlook 2007.

CRS-28
Figure 5. U.S. Biodiesel Production, 1998-2007
600
500
s
n
400
llo
Ga 300
n
io
ill
200
M
100
0
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005 2006P 2007P
Source: 1998-2003: National Biodiesel Board; 2004-07 projected by FAPRI, March 2007.
According to the NBB, as of October 15, 2007, there were 165 companies in the
United States with the potential to produce biodiesel commercially that were either in
operation, under expansion, or under construction but scheduled to be completed
within the next 18 months.74 The NBB reported that the combined annual biodiesel
production capacity (within the oleochemical industry) of these 165 plants once fully
operational (including capacity under construction) would be an estimated 1.85 billion
gallons per year. Because many of these plants also can produce other products such
as cosmetics, estimated total capacity (and capacity for expansion) is far greater than
actual biodiesel production.
Economic Efficiency. Despite the rapid expansion of biodiesel production
capacity, there are two major economic impediments to future growth. First, biodiesel
production is not profitable under the current set of market prices for vegetable oil
feedstocks and the biodiesel produced. Second, the cost of producing biodiesel is
generally more than the cost of producing its fossil fuel counterpart making the
finished biodiesel uncompetitive with its fossil fuel counterpart in the marketplace.
A 2004 DOE study suggests that, since the cost of the feedstock (whether vegetable
oil or restaurant grease) is the largest single component of biodiesel production, the
cost of producing biodiesel varies substantially with the choice of feedstock.75 For
example, in 2004/05 it cost $0.75 to produce a gallon of petroleum-based diesel,
compared with about $2.86 to produce a gallon of biodiesel from soybean oil, and
$1.59 from restaurant grease (all prices are quoted in 2002 dollars). However,
wholesale soybean oil prices have doubled since 2002 — a pound of soybean oil sold
74 A description of biodiesel production capacity with maps of existing and proposed plants
is available at [http://www.biodiesel.org/resources/fuelfactsheets/default.shtm].
75 Radich, Anthony. “Biodiesel Performance, Costs, and Use,” Modeling and Analysis
Papers, DOE/EIA, June 2004; available at [http://www.eia.doe.gov/oiaf/analysispaper/
biodiesel/].

CRS-29
for $0.18 in U.S. wholesale markets in 2002 compared with the September 2007
average wholesale price of nearly $0.37.
The production cost differentials generally manifest themselves at the retail level
as well. During July 2007, the retail price of B100 (100% biodiesel) averaged $3.27
per gallon, compared with $2.96 for conventional diesel fuel (Table 2).
Table 5. U.S. Diesel Fuel Use, 2005
Hypothetical scenario:
Total
2% of total useb
Soybean oil
equivalents:
Million
Million
million
U.S. Diesel Use in 2004
gallonsa
%
gallons
poundsa
Total Vehicle Use
44,887
71%
898
6,733
On-Road
38,053
60%
761
5,708
Off-Road
3,030
5%
61
455
Military
272
0%
5
41
Farm
3,532
6%
71
530
Total Non-vehicle Use
18,532
29%
365
2,736
All uses
63,129
100%
1263
9,469
Source: DOE, EIA, U.S. Annual Adjusted Sales of Distillate Fuel Oil by End Use.
a. Pounds are converted from gallons of oil using a 7.5 pounds-to-gallon conversion rate.
b. Hypothetical scenario included for comparison purposes only.
The prices of biodiesel feedstock, as well as petroleum-based diesel fuel, vary
over time based on domestic and international supply and demand conditions. About
7.5 pounds of soybean oil are needed to produce a gallon of biodiesel. A comparison
of the relative price relationship between soybean oil and petroleum diesel is
indicative of the general economic viability of biodiesel production (Figure 6). As
diesel fuel prices rise relative to biodiesel or biodiesel feedstock, and/or as biodiesel
production costs fall through lower commodity prices or technological improvements
in the production process, biodiesel becomes more economical. In addition, federal
and state assistance helps to make biodiesel more competitive with diesel fuel.
Since late 2006, the soybean oil to diesel wholesale price comparison has turned
against the use of soybean oil for biodiesel production — soybean oil prices have risen
steadily (along with corn prices) above the 35¢ per pound ($2.63 per gallon) range,
while diesel fuel have varied around $2 per gallon. Since early September 2007, the
nearby CBOT futures contract for soybean oil has traded near 40¢ per pound ($3.00
per gallon), while more deferred contracts have been at or above 40¢. At such high
soybean oil prices, biodiesel production is unprofitable even with the government
subsidy of $1.00 per gallon.

CRS-30
Figure 6. Soybean Oil Versus Diesel Fuel Price, 2000-2007
40
2.5
Diesel Fuel
35
2
/lb
s

lon
30
gal
1.5
il: cent
: $/
25
1
Fuel
ean O
el
b 20
y
ies
Soybean Oil
So
0.5
D
15
10
0
Jan-00
Jan-01
Jan-02
Jan-03
Jan-04
Jan-05
Jan-06
Jan-07
Source: No.2 diesel fuel national average wholesale price: DOE, EIA; soybean oil, Decatur, IL, USDA,
FAS "Oilseed Circular."
The tremendous surge in soybean oil prices in particular, and vegetable oil prices
in general that has occurred since 2001 is being driven in large part by rapid economic
growth in China and India. As incomes of the lower economic strata grow in these
countries, their demand for vegetable oil and other high quality food products has
grown commensurately. The long-run outlook, as projected by both USDA and
FAPRI, is for continued strong economic growth in China, India, and other developing
countries over the next ten years. As a consequence, sustained strong vegetable oil
prices are expected to curtail growth in the U.S. biodiesel sector under the current
policy and market setting.
Government Support. The primary federal incentives for biodiesel
production are somewhat similar to ethanol and include the following.76

! A production excise tax credit signed into law on October 22, 2004,
as part of the American Jobs Creation Act of 2004 (Sec. 1344; P.L.
109-58). Under the biodiesel production tax credit, the subsidy
amounts to $1.00 for every gallon of agri-biodiesel (i.e., virgin
vegetable oil and animal fat) that is used in blending with petroleum
diesel. A 50¢ credit is available for every gallon of non-agri-
biodiesel (i.e., recycled oils such as yellow grease). However, unlike
the ethanol tax credit, which was extended through 2010, the
biodiesel tax credit expires at the end of calendar year 2008.
! A small producer income tax credit (Sec. 1345; P.L. 109-58) of 10¢
per gallon for the first 15 million gallons of production for biodiesel
76 See also section on “Public Laws That Support Agriculture-Based Energy Production and
Use,” below.

CRS-31
producers whose total output does not exceed 60 million gallons of
biodiesel per year.
! Incentive payments (contingent on annual appropriations) on year-to-
year production increases of renewable energy were previously
available under USDA’s Bioenergy Program (7 U.S.C. 8108);
however, funding for this program expired at the end of FY2006.
Indirectly, other federal programs support biodiesel production by requiring
federal agencies to give preference to biobased products in purchasing fuels and other
supplies and by providing incentives for research on renewable fuels. Also, several
states have their own incentives, regulations, and programs in support of renewable
fuel research, production, and consumption that supplement or exceed federal
incentives.
Energy Efficiency. Biodiesel appears to have a significantly better net energy
balance than ethanol, according to a joint USDA-DOE 1998 study that found biodiesel
to have an NEB of 3.2 — that is, 220% more energy was returned from a gallon of
pure biodiesel than was used in its production.77
Long-Run Supply Issues. Both the ASA and the NBB are optimistic that the
federal biodiesel tax incentive will provide the same boost to biodiesel production that
ethanol has obtained from its federal tax incentive.78 However, many commodity
market analysts are skeptical of such claims. They contend that the biodiesel industry
still faces several hurdles: the retail distribution network for biodiesel has yet to be
established; the federal tax credit, which expires on December 31, 2008, does not
provide sufficient time for the industry to develop; and potential domestic oil
feedstock are relatively less abundant than ethanol feedstock, making the long-run
outlook more uncertain.
In addition, biodiesel production confronts the same limited ability to substitute
for petroleum imports and the same type of consumption tradeoffs as ethanol
production. As an example consider a hypothetical scenario (as shown in Table 5)
whereby a 2% usage requirement for vehicle diesel fuel were to be adopted. (This
would replicate the European Union’s goal of 2% of transportation fuels originating
from biofuels by 2005, then growing to 5.75% by 2010). This hypothetical mandate
would require about 898 million gallons of biodiesel (compared to estimated 2006
production of about 386 million gallons) or approximately 6.7 billion pounds of
vegetable oil. During 2005/06, a total of 36.7 billion pounds of vegetable oils and
animal fats were produced in the United States (Table 6); however, most of this
production was committed to other food and industrial uses. Uncommitted biodiesel
feedstock (as measured by the available stock levels on September 30, 2006) were
about 4 billion pounds. Thus, after exhausting all available feedstock, an additional
2.7 billion pounds of oil would be needed to meet the hypothetical 2% biodiesel
77 DOE, National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL), An Overview of Biodiesel and
Petroleum Diesel Life Cycles
, NREL/TP-580-24772, by John Sheehan et al., May 1998,
available at [http://www.nrel.gov/docs/legosti/fy98/24772.pdf].
78 For more information, see NBB, “Ground-Breaking Biodiesel Tax Incentive Passes,” at
[http://www.biodiesel.org/resources/pressreleases/gen/20041011_ FSC_Passes_Senate.pdf].

CRS-32
blending requirement. This exceeds the 2 billion pounds of total vegetable oils
exported by the United States in 2005/06, and is nearly double the 1.3 billion pounds
of soybean oil exported that during same period.79
If U.S. soybean vegetable oil exports were to remain unchanged, the deficit
biodiesel feedstock could be obtained either by reducing U.S. exports of whole
soybeans by about 250 million bushels (then crushing them for their oil) or by
expanding soybean production by approximately 6 million acres (assuming a yield of
about 42 bushels of soybeans per acre).80 Of course, any area expansion would likely
come at the expense of some other crop such as corn, cotton, or wheat. Current high
corn prices make such an area shift seem unlikely, at least in the near term. A further
possibility is that U.S. oilseed producers could shift towards the production of higher-
oil content crops such as canola or sunflower.
The bottom line is that a small increase in demand of fats and oils for biodiesel
production could quickly exhaust available feedstock supplies and push vegetable oil
prices significantly higher due to the low elasticity of demand for vegetable oils in
food consumption.81 Rising vegetable oil prices would reduce or eliminate biodiesel’s
competitive advantage vis-à-vis petroleum diesel, even with the federal tax credit,
while increased oilseed crushing would begin to disturb feed markets.
As with ethanol production, increased soybean oil production (dedicated to
biodiesel production) would generate substantial increases in animal feeds in the form
of high-protein meals. When a bushel of soybeans is processed (or crushed), nearly
80% of the resultant output is in the form of soybean meal, while only about 18%-
19% is output as soybean oil. Thus, for every 1 pound of soybean oil produced by
crushing whole soybeans, over 4 pounds of soybean meal are also produced.
Crushing an additional 250 million bushels of soybeans for soybean oil would
produce over 7.5 million short tons (s.t.) of soybean meal. In 2005/06, the United
States produced 41.2 million s.t. of soybean meal. An additional 7.5 million s.t. of
soybean meal (an increase of over 18%) entering U.S. feed markets would compete
directly with the feed by-products of ethanol production (distillers dried grains, corn
gluten feed, and corn gluten meal) with economic ramifications that have not yet been
fully explored. Also similar to ethanol production, natural gas demand would likely
rise with the increase in biodiesel processing.82
79 U.S. export data is from USDA, FAS, PSD Online, February 9, 2007.
80 Assuming 18% oil content per bushel of soybeans.
81 ERS reported the U.S. own-price elasticity for “oils & fats” at -0.027 — i.e., a 10%
increase in price would result in a 0.27% decline in consumption. In other words, demand
declines only negligibly relative to a price rise. Such inelastic demand is associated with
sharp price spikes in periods of supply shortfall. USDA, ERS, International Evidence on
Food Consumption Patterns
, Tech. Bulletin No. 1904, September 2003, p. 67.
82 Assuming natural gas is the processing fuel, natural gas demand would increase due to
two factors: (1) to produce the steam and process heat in oilseed crushing and (2) to produce
methanol used in the conversion step. NREL, An Overview of Biodiesel and Petroleum
Diesel Life Cycles
, NREL/TP-580-24772, by John Sheehan et al., May 1998, p. 19.

CRS-33
Table 6. U.S. Potential Biodiesel Feedstock, 2005-2006
Oil Production,
Ending Stocks:
2005-2006
Sept. 30, 2006
Wholesale
pricea
Million
Million
Million
Million
Oil type
$/lb
pounds
gallonsb
pounds
gallonsb
Crops
25827
3444
3711
495
Soybean
23
20,393
2719
3020
403
Corn
28.4
2450
327
156
21
Cottonseed
28.9
950
127
101
14
Sunflowerseed
44.5
545
731
55
7
Canola
30.7
880
117
262
35
Peanut
50.6
219
298
60
8
Flaxseed/linseed
64.6
335
454
45
6
Safflower
72.2
56
7
11
1
Animal fat & other
10885
1451
326
43
Lard
21.1
795
106
13
2
Edible tallow
19.4
1780
237
22
3
Inedible tallowc
na
7110
948
238
32
Yellow greasec
11.6
1200
160
53
7
Total supply
36,712
4895
4,037
538
Source: USDA, ERS, Oil Crops Yearbook, OCS-2006, March 2006, Table 31. Rapeseed was
calculated by multiplying oil production by a 40% conversion rate. The inedible tallow and yellow
grease supplies come from Dept of Commerce, Bureau of Census, Fats and Oils, Production,
Consumption and Stocks, December 2006
; [http://www.census.gov/cir/www/311/m311k.html].
na = not available.
a. Average of monthly wholesale price quotes for vegetable oils are for 2005 calendar from USDA,
FAS, Oilseeds: World Markets and Trade. Lard and edible tallow prices are for calendar 2005
from USDA, ERS, Oil Crops Yearbook, OCS-2006, March 2006, Tables 42 and 44. Yellow
grease price is 1993-95 average from USDA, ERS, AER 770, Sept. 1998, p. 9.
b. Pounds are converted to gallons of oil using a 7.5 pounds-to-gallon conversion rate.
c. CRS annual projections for production and stocks based on Dept of Commerce Dec. 2006 monthly
estimates from source cited above.
Wind Energy Systems
In 2006, electricity from wind energy systems accounted for about 0.1% of U.S.
total energy consumption (Table 1). However, wind-generated electricity has been
a much larger share of electricity used by the U.S. agriculture sector (28%), and of
total direct energy used by U.S. agriculture (9%).83 According to the American Wind
Energy Association (AWEA), total installed wind energy production capacity has
83 Data for agricultural use of wind-generated electricity is for 2003. For more information
on energy consumption by U.S. agriculture, see CRS Report RL32677, Energy Use in
Agriculture: Background and Issues
, by Randy Schnepf.

CRS-34
expanded rapidly in the United States since the late 1990s, rising from 1,848
megawatts (MW) in 1998 to a reported 12,634 MW by June 30, 2007 (Figure 7).84
According to the AWEA, on-line capacity is projected to expand to over 14,600 MW
by the end of 2007. (See “Box: Primer on Measuring Electric Energy,” later in this
report, for a description of megawatts and other energy terminology.)
Figure 7. U.S. Installed Wind Energy Capacity, 1981-2007
16000
r 12000
hou
8000
tts per
a

gaw
e
M

4000
0
1
3
*
85
7
9
91
93
5
97
99
01
3
05
198
198
19
198
198
19
19
199
19
19
20
200
20
2007
*2007 is projected
Source: American Wind Energy Association (AWEA).
About 7% of installed production capacity is in 10 predominantly midwestern
and western states (see Table 7).
What Is Behind the Rapid Growth of Installed Capacity? Over the past
20 years, the cost of wind power has fallen approximately 90%, while rising natural
gas prices have pushed up costs for gas-fired power plants, helping to improve wind
energy’s market competitiveness.85 In addition, wind-generated electricity production
and use is supported by several federal and state financial and tax incentives, loan and
grant programs, and renewable portfolio standards.
84 American Wind Energy Association (AWEA), at [http://www.awea.org/projects/].
85 AWEA, The Economics of Wind Energy, March 2002.

CRS-35
Table 7. Installed Wind Energy Capacity by State,
Ranked by Capacity as of December 31, 2006
UCa or
Current
Planned
Total
State
MW
Share
MW
MW
Share
1 Texas
3,352
26.5%
1,246
4,599
23.7%
2 California
2,376 18.8%
565

2,941
15.2%
3 Iowa
967
7.7%
203
1,170
6.0%
4 Minnesota
897 7.1%
406
1,303
6.7%
5 Washington
818
6.5%
140
958
4.9%
6 Oklahoma
595
4.7%
95
689
3.6%
7 New Mexico
496
3.9%
-
496
2.6%
8 Oregon
438
3.5%
501
939
4.8%
9 New York
390
3.1%
282
672
3.5%
10 Colorado
366
2.9%
700
1,066
5.5%
11 Kansas
364
2.9%
-
364
1.9%
12 Illinois
305
2.4%
80
385
2.0%
13 Wyoming
288
2.3%
220
508
2.6%
14 Pennsylvania
179
1.4%
115
294
1.5%
15 North Dakota
178
1.4%
159
337
1.7%
16 Montana
146
1.2%
20
166
0.9%
Other
478
3.8%
2,037
2,515
13.0%
U.S. Total
12,634
100%
6,769
19,403
100%
Source: AWEA, [http://www.awea.org/projects/].
aUC = Under construction.
As of February 2007, renewable portfolio standards (RPSs) had been adopted by
21 states and the District of Columbia.86 An RPS requires that utilities must derive a
certain percentage of their overall electric generation from renewable energy sources
such as wind power. Environmental and energy security concerns also have
encouraged interest in clean, renewable energy sources such as wind power. Finally,
rural incomes receive a boost from companies installing wind turbines in rural areas.
sLandowners have typically received annual lease fees that range from $2,000 to
$4000 per turbine per year for up to 20 years depending on factors such as the project
size, the capacity of the turbines, and the amount of electricity produced.
Economic Efficiency. The per-unit cost of utility-scale wind energy is the
sum of the various costs — capital, operations, and maintenance — divided by the
86 AWEA, “State-Level Renewable Energy Portfolio Standards (RPS),” downloaded March
7, 2007, from [http://www.awea.org/legislative/pdf/State_RPS_Fact_Sheet_UPdated.pdf].

CRS-36
annual energy generation. Utility-scale wind power projects — those projects that
generate at least 1 MW of electric power annually for sale to a local utility — account
for over 90% of wind power generation in the United States.87 For utility-scale
sources of wind power, a number of turbines are usually built close together to form
a wind farm.
In contrast with biofuel energy, wind power has no fuel costs. Instead, electricity
production depends on the kinetic energy of wind (replenished through atmospheric
processes). As a result, its operating costs are lower than costs for power generated
from biofuels. However, the initial capital investment in equipment needed to set up
a utility-scale wind energy system is substantially greater than for competing fossil or
biofuels. Major infrastructure costs include the tower (30 meters or higher) and the
turbine blades (generally constructed of fiberglass; up to 20 meters in length; and
weighing several thousand pounds). Capital costs generally run about $1 million per
MW of capacity, so a wind energy system of 10 1.5-MW turbines would cost about
$15 million. Farmers generally find leasing their land for wind power projects easier
than owning projects. Leasing is easier because energy companies can better address
the costs, technical issues, tax advantages, and risks of wind projects. In 2004, less
than 1% of wind power capacity installed nationwide was owned by farmers.88
While the financing costs of a wind energy project dominate its competitiveness
in the energy marketplace, there are several other factors that also contribute to the
economics of utility-scale wind energy production. These include:89
! the wind speed and frequency at the turbine location — the energy
that can be tapped from the wind is proportional to the cube of the
wind speed, so a slight increase in wind speed results in a large
increase in electricity generation;
! improvements in turbine design and configuration — the taller the
turbine and the larger the area swept by the blades, the more
productive the turbine;
! economies of scale — larger systems operate more economically than
smaller systems by spreading operations/maintenance costs over more
kilowatt-hours;
! transmission and market access conditions (see below); and
! environmental and other policy constraints — for example, stricter
environmental regulations placed on fossil fuel emissions enhance
wind energy’s economic competitiveness; or, alternately, greater
protection of birds or bats,90 especially threatened or endangered
species, could reduce wind energy’s economic competitiveness.
87 GAO, Wind Power, GAO-04-756, September 2004, p. 66.
88 Ibid., p. 6.
89 AWEA, The Economics of Wind Energy, at [http://www.awea.org].
90 Justin Blum, “Researchers Alarmed by Bat Deaths From Wind Turbines,” Washington
Post
, by January 1, 2005.

CRS-37
A modern wind turbine can produce electricity for about 4.3¢ to 5.8¢ per kilowatt
hour. In contrast to wind-generated electricity costs, modern natural-gas-fired power
plants produce a kilowatt-hour of electricity for about 5.5¢ (including both fuel and
capital costs) when natural gas prices are at $6 per million Btu’s (or equivalently per
1,000 cu.ft.).91
Wellhead natural gas prices have shown considerable volatility since the late
1990s (Figure 8), but spiked sharply upward in September 2005 following Hurricane
Katrina’s damage to the Gulf Coast petroleum and natural gas importing and refining
infrastructure. Prices have fallen back substantially from their November 2005 peak
of $11.92 per 1,000 cu.ft., however, market conditions suggest that the steady price
rise that has occurred since 2002 is unlikely to weaken anytime soon.92 If natural gas
prices continue to be substantially higher than average levels in the 1990s, wind power
is likely to be competitive in parts of the country where good wind resources and
transmission access can be coupled with the federal production tax credit.
Figure 8. Natural Gas Price, Wholesale, 1994-2007
12
f)
c
10
m
(
et

8
e
f
c

ubi
6
c
0
00

4
r 1,
e
p

2
$
0
Jan-94
Jan-96
Jan-98
Jan-00
Jan-02
Jan-04
Jan-06
Source: DOE, EIA; monthly average wholesale (Industrial) price.
According to a wind energy consultant, wind turbine ownership offers
substantially greater returns than crop farming.93 For example, installing two 1.5 MW
wind turbines producing 9 million kWh per year would generate about $325,000
(based on 3.5¢ per kWh and 16 miles per hour wind speed at 50 meters height). As
an example, this compares with a 160-acre corn and soybean farm with average annual
gross receipts of about $66,000 (80 acres of corn at 170 bushels/acre and $3.00 per
91 Rebecca Smith, “Not Just Tilting Anymore,” Wall Street Journal, October 14, 2004.
92 For a discussion of natural gas market price factors, see CRS Report RL33714, Natural
Gas Markets in 2006
, by Robert Pirog.
93 Tom Wind, Wind Utility Consulting, “Wind Power,” presentation given on March 2,
2007, USDA Annual Outlook Forum 2007, Crystal City, VA.

CRS-38
bushel; and 80 acres of soybeans at 45 bushels at $7.00 per bushel). The consultant
also suggests that carbon trading could potentially add another $100,000 per year
within a decade.
Government Support. In addition to market factors, the rate of wind energy
system development for electricity generation has been highly dependent on federal
government support, particularly a production tax credit that provides a 1.8¢ credit for
each kilowatt-hour of electricity produced by qualifying turbines built by the end of
2008 for a 10-year period.94 The usefulness of the tax credit may be limited by a
restriction under current U.S. tax law (IRC § 469) whereby individuals are not eligible
to deduct losses incurred in businesses that they do not actively participate in.
Legislation (H.R. 2007) was introduced in the 109th Congress to allow passive
investors that provide capital for wind energy facilities and projects to be eligible for
up to a $25,000 passive loss deduction in the Internal Revenue Code. The legislation
was referred to the House Committee on Ways and Means but no further action was
taken, and similar legislation has yet to be introduced in the 110th Congress.
Currently, the $25,000 passive loss offset is only available for oil, gas, and real estate
investments.
The inclusion of the federal tax credit reduces the cost of producing wind-
generated electricity to 2.5¢ to 4¢ per kilowatt hour. In some cases the tax credit may
be combined with a five-year accelerated depreciation schedule for wind turbines, as
well as with grants, loans, and loan guarantees offered under several different
programs.95 To the extent that they offset a substantial portion (30% to 40%) of the
price risk and initial financing charges, government incentives often provide the
catalyst for stimulating new investments in rural wind energy systems.
Long-Run Supply Issues. Despite the advantages listed above, U.S. wind
potential remains largely untapped, particularly in many of the states with the greatest
wind potential, such as North and South Dakota (see Figure 9). Factors inhibiting
growth in these states include lack of either (1) major population centers with large
electric power demand needed to justify large investments in wind power, or (2)
adequate transmission capacity to carry electricity produced from wind in sparsely
populated rural areas to distant cities.
Areas considered most favorable for wind power have average annual wind
speeds of about 16 miles per hour or more. The minimum wind velocity needed for
electricity production by a wind turbine is 10 miles per hour.96 The turbines operate
94 The federal production tax credit was initially established as a 1.5¢ tax credit in 1992
dollars in the Energy Policy Act of 1992 (P.L. 102-146). The tax credit was extended
through 2007 in the American Jobs Creation Act of 2004 (P.L. 108-357; Sec. 710), with an
adjustment for annual inflation that raised it to its current value of 1.8¢ per kWh. The tax
credit was further extended through 2008 by a provision in P.L. 109-432.
95 A five-year depreciation schedule is allowed for renewable energy systems under the
Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981, as amended (P.L. 97-34; Stat. 230, codified as 26
U.S.C. § 168(e)(3)(B)(vi)).
96 Tiffany, Douglas G. Economic Analysis: Co-generation Using Wind and Biodiesel-
(continued...)


CRS-39
at higher capacity with increasing wind speed until a “cut-out speed” is reached at
about 50 miles per hour. At this speed the turbine is stopped and the blades are turned
90 degrees out of the wind and parked to prevent damage.
Figure 9. U.S. Areas with Highest Wind Potential
The DOE map of U.S. wind potential confirms that the most favorable areas tend
to be located in sparsely populated regions, which may disfavor wind-generated
electricity production for several reasons. First, transmission lines may be either
inaccessible or of insufficient capacity to move surplus wind-generated electricity to
distant demand sources. Second, transmission pricing mechanisms may disfavor
moving electricity across long distances due to distance-based charges or according
to the number of utility territories crossed. Third, high infrastructure costs for the
initial hook-up to the power grid may discourage entry, although larger wind farms
can benefit from economies of scale on the initial hook-up. Fourth, new entrants may
see their access to the transmission power grid limited in favor of traditional
customers during periods of heavy congestion. Finally, wind plant operators are often
penalized for deviations in electricity delivery to a transmission line that result from
the variability in available wind speed.
96 (...continued)
Powered Generators, Staff Paper P05-10, Dept of Applied Econ., Univ. of Minn., October
2005.

CRS-40
Environmental Concerns. Three potential environmental issues — impacts on
the visual landscape, bird and bat deaths, and noise issues — vary in importance based
on local conditions. In some rural localities, the merits of wind energy appear to have
split the environmental movement. For example, in the Kansas Flint Hills, local
chapters of the Audubon Society and Nature Conservancy oppose installation of wind
turbines, saying that they would befoul the landscape and harm wildlife; while Kansas
Sierra Club leaders argue that exploiting wind power would help to reduce America’s
dependence on fossil fuels.

CRS-41
Box: Primer on Measuring Electric Energy
News stories covering electric generation topics often try to illustrate the worth of
a megawatt (MW) in terms of how many homes a particular amount of generation could
serve. However, substantial variation may appear in implied household usage rates. So
what really is a MW and how many homes can one MW of generation really serve?
Basics. A watt (W) is the basic unit used to measure electric power. Watts measure
instantaneous power. In contrast, a watt-hour (Wh) measures the total amount of energy
consumed in an hour. For example, a 100 W light bulb is rated to consume 100 W of
power when turned on. If a 100 W bulb were on for 4 hours it would consume 400 Wh
of energy. A kilowatt (kW) equals 1,000 W and a megawatt (MW) equals 1,000 kW or
1 million W. Electricity production and consumption are measured in kilowatt-hours
(kWh), while generating capacity is measured in kilowatts or megawatts. If a power plant
that has 1 MW of capacity operated nonstop (i.e, 100%) during all 8,760 hours in the year,
it would produce 8,760,000 kWh.
More realistically, a 100 MW rated wind farm is capable of producing 100 MW
during peak winds, but will produce much less than its rated amount when winds are light.
As a result of these varying wind speeds, over the course of a year a wind farm may only
average 30 MW of power production. On average, wind power turbines typically operate
the equivalent of less than 40% of the peak (full load) hours in the year due to the
intermittency of the wind. Wind turbines are “on-line” — actually generating electricity
— only when wind speeds are sufficiently strong (i.e., at least 9 to 10 miles per hour).
Average MW per Household. In its 2004 analysis of the U.S. wind industry, the
Government Accountability Office (GAO) assumed that an average U.S. household
consumed about 10,000 kWh per year (GAO, Renewable Energy: Wind Power’s
Contribution to Electric Power Generation and Impact on Farms and Rural Communities
,
GAO-04-756, Sept. 2004). However, the amount of electricity consumed by a typical
residential household varies dramatically by region of the country. According to 2001
Energy Information Administration (EIA) data, New England residential homes consumed
the least amount of electricity, averaging 653 kWh of load in a month, while the East
South Central region, which includes states such as Georgia and Alabama and Tennessee,
consumed nearly double that amount at 1,193 kWh per household. The large regional
disparity in electric consumption is driven by many factors including the heavier use of
air conditioning in the South. As a result, a 1 MW generator in the Northeast would be
capable of serving about twice as many households as the same generator located in the
South because households in the Northeast consume half the amount of electricity as those
in the South.
So how many homes can a wind turbine rated at 1 MW really serve? In the United
States, a wind turbine with a peak generating capacity of 1 MW, rated at 30% annual
capacity, placed on a tower situated on a farm, ranch, or other rural land, can generate
about 2.6 million kilowatt-hours [=(1MW)*(30%)*(8.76 kWh)] in a year which is enough
electricity to serve the needs of 184 (East South Central) to 354 (New England) average
U.S. households depending on which region of the country you live in.
Source: Bob Bellemare, UtiliPoint International Inc., Issue Alert, June 24, 2003; available
at [http://www.utilipoint.com/issuealert/article.asp?id=1728].

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Public Laws That Support Agriculture-Based Energy
Production and Use
This section provides a brief overview of the major pieces of legislation that
support agriculture-based renewable energy production. It is noteworthy that many
of the federal programs that currently support renewable energy production in general,
and agriculture-based energy production in particular, are outside the purview of
USDA and have legislative origins outside of the farm bill.
Federal support is provided in the form of excise and income tax credits; loans,
grants, and loan guarantees; research, development, and demonstration assistance;
educational program assistance; procurement preferences; user mandates, and a tariff
on imported ethanol from countries outside of the Caribbean Basin Initiative.97 In
addition, this section briefly reviews major proposals by the Administration and bills
introduced by the 110th Congress that relate to agriculture-based renewable energy.
Tariff on Imported Ethanol
A most-favored-nation tariff of 54 cents per gallon is imposed on most imported
ethanol. The tariff is intended to offset the 51-cents-per-gallon production tax credit
available for every gallon of ethanol blended in gasoline. Exceptions to the tariff are
ethanol imports from the Caribbean region and Central America under the Caribbean
Basin Initiative (CBI). The CBI — which is designed to promote development and
stability in the Caribbean region and Central America — allows the imports of most
products, including ethanol, duty-free. In many cases, the tariff presents a significant
barrier to imports as it negates lower production costs in other countries. For example,
by some estimates, Brazilian production costs are 40% to 50% lower than in the
United States.98 The tariff, which was set to expire October 1, 2007, was extended
through 2008 by a provision in P.L. 109-432.
Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990 (CAAA; P.L. 101-549)
The Reformulated Gasoline and Oxygenated Fuels programs of the CAAA have
provided substantial stimuli to the use of ethanol.99 In addition, the CAAA requires
the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to identify and regulate air emissions
from all significant sources, including on- and off-road vehicles, urban buses, marine
engines, stationary equipment, recreational vehicles, and small engines used for lawn
and garden equipment. All of these sources are candidates for biofuel use.
97 For more information on federal incentives for biofuel production, see CRS Report
RL33572, Biofuels Incentives: A Summary of Federal Programs, by Brent D. Yacobucci.
98 For more information, see CRS Report RS21930,Ethanol Imports and the Caribbean
Basin Initiative
, by Brent D. Yacobucci.
99 CRS Report RL33290, Fuel Ethanol: Background and Public Policy Issues, by Brent D.
Yacobucci.

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Energy Policy Act of 1992 (EPACT; P.L. 102-486)
Energy security provisions of EPACT favor expanded production of renewable
fuels. Provisions related to agriculture-based energy production included:
! EPACT’s alternative-fuel motor fleet program implemented by DOE
requires federal, state, and alternative fuel providers to increase
purchases of alternative-fueled vehicles. Under this program, DOE
has designated neat (100%) biodiesel as an environmentally positive
or “clean” alternative fuel.100
! A 1.5¢ per kilowatt/hour production tax credit (PTC) for wind energy
was established. The PTC is applied to electricity produced during
a wind plant’s first ten years of operation.
Biomass Research and Development Act of 2000
(Biomass Act; Title III, P.L. 106-224)

The Biomass Act (Title III of the Agricultural Risk Protection Act of 2000 [P.L.
106-224]) contains several provisions to further research and development in the area
of biomass-based renewable fuel production.
! (Sec. 304) The Secretaries of Agriculture and Energy shall cooperate
with respect to, and coordinate, policies and procedures that promote
research and development leading to the production of biobased fuels
and products.
! (Sec. 305) A Biomass Research and Development Board is
established to coordinate programs within and among departments
and agencies of the Federal Government for the purpose of promoting
the use of biofuels and products.
! (Sec. 306) A Biomass Research and Development Technical
Advisory Committee is established to advise, facilitate, evaluate, and
perform strategic planning on activities related to research,
development, and use of biobased fuels and products.
! (Sec. 307) A Biomass Research and Development Initiative (BRDI)
is established under which competitively awarded grants, contracts,
and financial assistance are provided to eligible entities undertaking
research on, and development and demonstration of, biobased fuels
and products.101
! (Sec. 309) The Secretaries of Agriculture and Energy are obliged to
submit an annual joint report to Congress accounting for the nature
and use of any funding made available under this initiative.102
100 NBB, “Biodiesel Emissions,” at [http://www.biodiesel.org/pdf_files/fuelfactsheets/
emissions.pdf].
101 The official website for the Biomass Research and Development Initiative may be found
at [http://www.brdisolutions.com/].
102 This report is available at [http://www.brdisolutions.com/].

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! (Sec. 310) To undertake these activities, Commodity Credit
Corporation (CCC) funds of $49 million per year were authorized for
FY2002-FY2005.
Biomass-related program funding levels were expanded through FY2007 by
Section 9008 of the 2002 farm bill (P.L. 107-171) which also made available (until
expended) new funding of $5 million in FY2002 and $14 million in each of FY2003-
FY2007; however, FY2006 funding was reduced to $12 million (P.L. 109-97; Title
VII, Sec. 759). Subsequently, Title II of the Healthy Forest Restoration Act of 2003
(P.L. 108-148) raised the annual authorization from $49 million to $54 million.
Finally Sections 942-948 of the Energy Policy Act of 2005 (P.L. 109-58) raised the
annual authorization from $54 million to $200 million starting in FY2006, and
extended it through FY2015. In addition to new funding, many of the original
biomass-related provisions were expanded and new provisions were added by these
same laws as described below.
Energy Provisions in the 2002 Farm Bill (P.L. 107-171)103
In the 2002 farm bill, three separate titles — Title IX: Energy, Title II:
Conservation, and Title VI: Rural Development — each contain programs that
encourage the research, production, and use of renewable fuels such as ethanol,
biodiesel, and wind energy systems.
Federal Procurement of Biobased Products (Title IX, Section 9002).
Federal agencies are required to purchase biobased products under certain conditions.
A voluntary biobased labeling program is included. Legislation provides funding of
$1 million annually through the USDA’s Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC) for
FY2002-FY2007 for testing biobased products. USDA published final rules in the
Federal Register (vol. 70, no. 1, pp. 41-50, January 3, 2005). The regulations define
what a biobased product is under the statue, identify biobased product categories, and
specify the criteria for qualifying those products for preferred procurement.
Biorefinery Development Grants (Title IX, Section 9003). Federal
grants are provided to ethanol and biodiesel producers who construct or expand their
production capacity. Funding for this program was authorized in the 2002 farm bill,
but no funding was appropriated. Through FY2006, no funding had yet been
proposed; therefore, no implementation regulations have been developed.
Biodiesel Fuel Education Program (Title IX, Section 9004).
Administered by USDA’s Cooperative State Research, Education, and Extension
Service, competitively awarded grants are made to nonprofit organizations that
educate governmental and private entities operating vehicle fleets, and educate the
public about the benefits of biodiesel fuel use. Final implementation rules were
published in the Federal Register (vol. 68, no. 189, September 30, 2003). Legislation
provides funding of $1 million annually through the CCC for FY2003-FY2007 to fund
103 USDA, 2002 Farm Bill, “Title IX — Energy,” online information available at [http://
www.ers.usda.gov/Features/Farmbill/titles/titleIXenergy.htm]. For more information, see
CRS Report RL31271, Energy Provisions of the Farm Bill: Comparison of the New Law
with Previous Law and House and Senate Bills
, by Brent D. Yacobucci.

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the program. As of January 2006, only two awardees — the National Biodiesel Board
and the University of Idaho — had been selected.104
Energy Audit and Renewable Energy Development Program (Title
IX, Section 9005). This program is intended to assist producers in identifying their
on-farm potential for energy efficiency and renewable energy use. Funding for this
program was authorized in the 2002 farm bill, but through FY2006 no funding has
been appropriated. As a result, no implementation regulations have been developed.
Renewable Energy Systems and Energy Efficiency Improvements
(Renewable Energy Program) (Title IX; Section 9006). Administered by
USDA’s Rural Development Agency, this program authorizes loans, loan guarantees,
and grants to farmers, ranchers, and rural small businesses to purchase renewable
energy systems and make energy efficiency improvements.105 Grant funds may be
used to pay up to 25% of the project costs. Combined grants and loans or loan
guarantees may fund up to 50% of the project cost. Eligible projects include those
that derive energy from wind, solar, biomass, or geothermal sources. Projects using
energy from those sources to produce hydrogen from biomass or water are also
eligible. Legislation provides that $23 million will be available annually through the
CCC for FY2003-FY2007 for this program. Unspent money lapses at the end of each
year. Final implementation rules, including program guidelines for receiving and
reviewing future loan and loan guarantee applications, were published in the Federal
Register
(vol. 708, no. 136, July 18, 2005).
Prior to each fiscal year, USDA publishes a Notice of Funds Availability
(NOFA) in the Federal Register inviting applications for the Renewable Energy
Program, most recently on February 22, 2006, when the availability of $22.8 million
(half as competitive grants, and half for guaranteed loans) was announced. Not all
applications are accepted. On February 22, 2006, USDA announced that $11.8
million in grants for FY2006 and $176.5 million in loan guarantees were available for
renewable energy and energy efficient projects.106 USDA estimates that loans and
loan guarantees are more effective than grants in assisting renewable energy projects,
because program funds would be needed only for the credit subsidy costs (i.e.,
government payments made minus loan repayments to the government).107
Hydrogen and Fuel Cell Technologies (Title IX, Section 9007).
Legislation requires that USDA and DOE cooperate on research into farm and rural
applications for hydrogen fuel and fuel cell technologies under a memorandum of
understanding. No new budget authority is provided.
104 These awardees were selected in August 2003; more information is available at
[http://www.biodiesel.org/usda/].
105 For more information on this program, see [http://www.rurdev.usda.gov/rbs/farmbill/
index.html].
106 USDA News Release 0051.06, February 22, 2006.
107 USDA News Release 0261.05, July 15, 2005. For more information on the broader
potential of loan guarantees see, GAO, Wind Power, GAO-04-756, September 2004, pp. 54-
55.

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Biomass Research and Development (Title IX; Section 9008).108 This
provision extends an existing program — created under the Biomass Research and
Development Act (BRDA) of 2000 — that provides competitive funding for research
and development projects on biofuels and bio-based chemicals and products,
administered jointly by the Secretaries of Agriculture and Energy. Under the BRDA,
$49 million per year was authorized for FY2002-FY2005. Section 9008 extended the
$49 million in budget authority through FY2007, and added new funding levels of
$5 million in FY2002 and $14 million for FY2003-FY2007 — unspent funds may be
carried forward, making the additional funding total $75 million for FY2002-FY2007.
(The $49 million in annual funding for FY2002-FY2007 was raised to $54 million for
that same period by P.L. 108-148, then raised to $200 million per year for FY2006-
FY2015 by Sec. 941 of P.L. 109-58; see below). In November 2006, USDA and DOE
jointly announced the selection of 17 projects to receive total funding of
approximately $17.5 million from the agencies under the BRDI. Cost-sharing by
private sector partners increases the total value to over $27 million.109
Cooperative Research and Development — Carbon Sequestration
(Title IX; Section 9009). This provision amends the Agricultural Risk Protection
Act of 2000 (P.L. 106-224, Sec. 221) to extend through FY2011 the one-time
authorization of $15 million of the Carbon Cycle Research Program, which provides
grants to land-grant universities for carbon cycle research with on-farm applications.
Bioenergy Program (Title IX; Section 9010). This is an existing program
(7 C.F.R. 1424) in which the Secretary makes payments from the CCC to eligible
bioenergy producers — ethanol and biodiesel — based on any year-to-year increase
in the quantity of bioenergy that they produce (fiscal year basis). The goal is to
encourage greater purchases of eligible commodities used in the production of
bioenergy (e.g., corn for ethanol or soybean oil for biodiesel). The Bioenergy Program
was initiated on August 12, 1999, by Executive Order 13134. On October 31, 2000,
then-Secretary of Agriculture Glickman announced that, pursuant to the executive
order, $300 million of discretionary CCC funds ($150 million in both FY2001 and
FY2002) would be made available to encourage expanded production of biofuels. The
2002 farm bill extended the program and its funding by providing that $150 million
would be available annually through the CCC for FY2003-FY2006. The final rule for
the Bioenergy Program was published in the Federal Register (vol. 68, no. 88, May
7, 2003).
The FY2003 appropriations act limited spending for the Bioenergy Program
funding for FY2003 to 77% ($115.5 million) of the $150 million; however, the full
$150 million was eventually spent. In FY2004, no limitations were imposed.
However, a $50 million reduction from the $150 million was contained in the FY2005
appropriations act, followed by a $90 million reduction in the FY2006 appropriations
act. Funding authority for this program ended after FY2006.
108 For more information, see the joint USDA-DOE website at [http://www.biomass.
govtools.us/].
109 Ibid.

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Renewable Energy on Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) Lands
(Title II; Section 2101). This provision amends Section 3832 of the Farm Security
Act of 1985 (1985 farm bill) to allow the use of CRP lands for biomass (16 USC
3832(a)(7)(A)) and wind energy generation (16 USC 3832(a)(7)(B)) harvesting for
energy production.
Rural Development Loan and Grant Eligibility Expanded to More
Renewables (Title VI). Section 6013 — Loans and Loan Guarantees for
Renewable Energy Systems — amends Section 310B of the Consolidated Farm and
Rural Development Act (CFRDA) (7 U.S.C. 1932(a)(3)) to allow loans for wind
energy systems and anaerobic digesters. Section 6017(g)(A) — Business and Industry
Direct and Guaranteed Loans — amends Section 310B of CFRDA (7 U.S.C. 1932)
to expand eligibility to include farmer and rancher equity ownership in wind power
projects. Limits range from $25 million to $40 million per project. Section
6401(a)(2) — Value-Added Agricultural Product Market Development Grants —
amends Section 231 of CFRDA (7 U.S.C. 1621 note; P.L.106-224) to expand
eligibility to include farm- or ranch-based renewable energy systems. Competitive
grants are available to assist producers with feasibility studies, business plans,
marketing strategies, and start-up capital. The maximum grant amount is $500,000
per project.
Additional support for renewable energy projects is available in the form of
various loans and grants from USDA’s Rural Development Agency under other
programs such as the Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) grants and
Value-Added Producer Grants (VAPG).110 In keeping with a trend started in 2003,
USDA is giving priority consideration to grant applications that dedicate at least 51%
of the project costs to biomass energy. Most recently, on January 9, 2006, Agriculture
Secretary Johanns announced the availability of $19 million in grants in support of the
development of renewable energy projects and value-added agricultural business
ventures.111
The Healthy Forest Restoration Act of 2003 (P.L. 108-148)
Title II of P.L. 108-148 amended the Biomass Act of 2000 by expanding the use
of grants, contracts, and assistance for biomass to include a broader range of forest
management activities. In addition, Sec. 201(b) increased the annual amount of
discretionary funding available under the Biomass Act for FY2002-FY2007 from $49
million to $54 million (7 USC 8101 note). Section 202 granted authority to the
Secretary of Agriculture to establish a program to accelerate adoption of biomass-
related technologies through community-based marketing and demonstration
activities, and to establish small-scale businesses to use biomass materials. It also
authorized $5 million annually to be appropriated for each of FY2004-FY2008 for
such activities. Finally, Sec. 203 established a biomass utilization grant program to
provide funds to offset the costs incurred in purchasing biomass materials for
110 For more information see [http://www.rurdev.usda.gov/rd/energy/].
111 USDA News Release 0002.06, January 9, 2006.

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qualifying facilities. Funding of $5 million annually was authorized to be
appropriated for each of FY2004-FY2008 for this biomass utilization grant program.
The American Jobs Creation Act of 2004 (P.L. 108-357)
The American Jobs Creation Act — signed into law on October 22, 2004 —
contains two provisions (Sections 301 and 701) that provide tax exemptions for three
agri-based renewable fuels: ethanol, biodiesel, and wind energy.
Federal Fuel Tax Exemption for Ethanol (Section 301). This provision
provides for an extension and replaces the previous federal ethanol tax incentive (26
U.S.C. 40). The tax credit is revised to allow for blenders of gasohol to receive a
federal tax exemption of $0.51 per gallon for every gallon of pure ethanol. Under this
volumetric orientation, the blending level is no longer relevant to the calculation of
the tax credit. Instead, the total volume of ethanol used is the basis for calculating the
tax.112 The tax credit for alcohol fuels was extended through December 31, 2010.
Federal Fuel Tax Exemption for Biodiesel (Section 301). This
provision provides for the first ever federal biodiesel tax incentive — a federal excise
tax and income tax credit of $1.00 for every gallon of agri-biodiesel (i.e., virgin
vegetable oil and animal fat) that is used in blending with petroleum diesel; and a 50¢
credit for every gallon of non-agri-biodiesel (i.e., recycled oils such as yellow grease).
The tax credits for biodiesel fuels were extended through December 31, 2006
(extended through 2008 by P.L. 109-58; see below).
Federal Production Tax Exemption for Wind Energy Systems
(Section 710). This provision renews a federal production tax credit (PTC) that
expired on December 31, 2003. The renewed tax credit provides a 1.5¢ credit
(adjusted annually for inflation) for a 10-year period for each kilowatt-hour of
electricity produced by qualifying turbines that are built by the end of 2005 (extended
through 2007 by P.L. 109-58; see below). The inflation-adjusted PTC stood at 1.8¢
per kWh as of December 2003.
Energy Policy Act of 2005 (EPACT; P.L. 109-58)
The Energy Policy Act of 2005 — signed into law on August 8, 2005 — contains
several provision related to agriculture-based renewable energy production including
the following.113
National Renewable Fuels Standard (RFS) (Sec. 1501). Requires that
4.0 billion gallons of renewable fuel be used domestically in 2006, increasing to 7.5
billion gallons by 2012.
112 For more information, see the American Coalition for Ethanol, Volumetric Ethanol
Excise Tax Credit (VEETC)
at [http://www.ethanol.org/veetc.html]
113 For more information, see CRS Report RL32204, Omnibus Energy Legislation:
Comparison of Non-Tax Provisions in the H.R. 6 Conference Report and S. 2095
, by Mark
Holt and Carol Glover, coordinators.

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Minimum Quantity of Ethanol from Cellulosic Biomass (Sec. 1501).
For calendar 2013 and each year thereafter, the RFS volume shall contain a minimum
of 250 million gallons derived from cellulosic biomass.
Special Consideration for Cellulosic Biomass or Waste Derived
Ethanol (Sec. 1501). For purposes of the RFS, each gallon of cellulosic biomass
ethanol or waste derived ethanol shall be counted as the equivalent of 2.5 gallons of
renewable fuel.
Small Ethanol Producer Credit Adjusted (Sec. 1347). The definition of
a small ethanol producer was extended from 30 million gallons per year to 60 million
gallons per year. Qualifying producers are eligible for an additional tax credit of 10¢
per gallon on the first 15 million gallons of production.
Biodiesel Tax Credit Extension Through 2008 (Sec. 1344). Extends
the $1.00 per gallon biodiesel tax credit through 2008.
Small Biodiesel Producer Credit Established (Sec. 1345). Agri-
biodiesel producers with a productive capacity not in excess of 60 million gallons are
eligible for an additional tax credit of 10¢ per gallon on the first 15 million gallons of
production.
Funding Support for Research, Development, and Demonstration of
Alternate Biofuel Processes. Several alternate forms of assistance including
(Sec. 1512) grants for conversion assistance of cellulosic biomass, waste-derived
ethanol, and approved renewable fuels; (Sec. 1514) establish a demonstration program
for advanced biofuel technologies; (Sec. 1515) extend biodiesel feedstock sources to
include animal and municipal waste; and (Sec. 1516) provide loan guarantees for
demonstration projects for ethanol derived from sugarcane, bagasse, and other
sugarcane byproducts.
Wind PTC Extension Through 2007 (Sec. 1301). Provides a two-year
extension through December 31, 2007, for the production tax credit for wind;
maintains the PTC inflation adjustment factor of current law; and (Sec. 1302) extends
the PTC to agricultural cooperatives.
Agricultural Biomass Research and Development Programs (Sec.
942-948). This section of EPACT provides several amendments to the BRDA as
follows. Section 941 updates BRDA to intensify focus on achieving the scientific
breakthroughs (particularly with respect to cellulosic biomass) required for expanded
deployment of biobased fuels, products, and power, including:
! increased emphasis on feedstock production and delivery, including
technologies for harvest, handling and transport of crop residues;
! research and demonstration (R&D) of opportunities for synergy with
existing biofuels production, such as use of dried distillers grains
(DDGs) as a bridge feedstock;
! support for development of new and innovative biobased products
made from corn, soybeans, wheat, sunflower, and other raw
agricultural commodities;

CRS-50
! ensuring a balanced and focused R&D approach by distributing
funding by technical area (20% to feedstock production; 45% to
overcoming biomass recalcitrance; 30% to product diversification;
and 5% to strategic guidance), and within each technical area by
value category (15% to applied fundamentals; 35% to innovation; and
50% to demonstration); and
! increasing annual program authorization from the current $54 million
to $200 million for 10 years — FY2006-FY2015.
Section 942 expands the production incentives for cellulosic biofuels by directing
the Secretary of Energy to establish a program of production incentives to deliver the
first billion gallons of annual cellulosic biofuels production by 2015. Funds are
allocated for proposed projects through set payments on a per gallon basis for the first
100 million gallons of annual production, followed by a reverse auction competitive
solicitation process to secure low-cost cellulosic biofuels production contracts.
Production incentives are awarded to the lowest bidders, with not more than 25% of
the funds committed for each auction awarded to a single bid. Awards may not
exceed $100 million in any year, nor $1 billion over the lifetime of the program. The
first auction shall take place within one year of the first year of annual production of
100 million gallons of cellulosic biofuels, with subsequent auctions each year
thereafter until annual cellulosic biofuels production reaches 1 billion gallons.
Funding of $250 million, until expended, is authorized to carry out this section subject
to appropriations.
Section 943 expands the Biobased Procurement Program authorized under
Section 9002 of the 2002 farm bill by applying the provision to federal government
contractors. Currently the program requires only federal agencies to give preference
to biobased products for procurement exceeding $10,000 when suitable biobased
products are available at reasonable cost. Section 943 also directs the Architect of the
Capitol, the Sergeant at Arms of the Senate, and the Chief Administrative Officer of
the House of Representatives to comply with the Biobased Procurement Program for
procurement of the United States Capitol Complex. Furthermore, it directs the
Architect of the Capitol to establish within the Capitol Complex a program of public
education regarding its use of biobased products.
Sections 944-946 establish USDA grants programs to assist small biobased
businesses with marketing and certification of biobased products (Sec. 944; funding
of $1 million is authorized for FY2006, and such sums as necessary thereafter); to
assist regional bioeconomy development associations and Land Grant institutions in
supporting and promoting the growth of regional bioeconomies (Sec. 945; funding
of $1 million is authorized for FY2006, and such sums as necessary thereafter); and
for demonstrations by farmer-owned enterprises of innovations in pre-processing of
feedstocks and multiple crop harvesting techniques, such as one-pass harvesting, to
add value and lower the investment cost of feedstock processing at the biorefinery
(Sec. 946; annual funding of $5 million is authorized for FY2006-FY2010).
Section 947 establishes a USDA program of education and outreach consisting
of (1) training and technical assistance for feedstock producers to promote producer
ownership and investment in processing facilities; and (2) public education and
outreach to familiarize consumers with biobased fuels and products. Annual funding

CRS-51
of $1 million is authorized for FY2006-FY2010. Finally, Section 948 requires a
report on the economic potential of biobased products through the year 2025 as well
as the economic potential by product area (within one year of enactment or by August
8, 2006), and analysis of economic indicators of the biobased economy (within two
years of enactment or by August 8, 2007).
Tax Relief and Health Care Act of 2006 (P.L. 109-432)
The Tax Relief and Health Care Act of 2006 — signed into law on December 20,
2006 — contains two major provisions related to agriculture-based renewable energy
production.
Extension of Production Tax Credit. The production tax credit available
for electricity produced from certain renewable resources including wind energy
(referred to earlier in P.L. 109-58; Section 1301) was extended by one year through
December 31, 2008.
Extension of Ethanol Import Tariff. The 54¢ per gallon most-favored-
nation tariff on most imported ethanol (referred to in the earlier section of this report
“Tariff on Imported Ethanol”) was extended through December 31, 2008.
Agriculture-Related Energy Bills in 110th Congress
As of October 15, 2007, numerous bills have been introduced in the 110th
Congress that seek to enhance or extend current provisions in existing law that support
agriculture-based energy production and use. For a listing of related legislation in the
110th Congress, see CRS Report RL33831, Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy
Legislation in the 110th Congress
by Fred Sissine.
House-passed New Farm Bill — H.R. 2419. On July 27, 2007, the House
approved a new farm bill — the Farm, Nutrition, and Bioenergy Act of 2007 (H.R.
2419) — which includes an energy title (Title IX). H.R. 2419, as amended and passed
by the House, expands and extends several provisions from the energy title of the
enacted 2002 farm bill with substantial increases in funding and a heightened focus
on developing cellulosic ethanol production. A key departure from current farm-bill
related energy provisions is that most new funding would be directed away from corn-
starch-based ethanol production and towards either cellulosic-based biofuels
production or to new as-yet-undeveloped technologies with some type of agricultural
linkage. A funding complication relating to “pay-go” budget restrictions on new
energy funding arose during the House Agriculture Committee’s (HAC’s) bill
preparation because the Congressional Budget Office’s March baseline showed no
funding in the farm bill for a new energy title. However, the House Ways and Means
Committee resolved this issue for the HAC by finding $2.4 billion in revenue offsets
from outside of the agriculture budget.
The Senate Agriculture Committee (SAC) is expected to mark up its version of
a 2007 farm bill in late-October. The Senate is also expected to adhere to “pay-go”
budget restrictions which may, in and of themselves, lead to different funding choices

CRS-52
than made by the House. For more information, see CRS Report RL34130,
Renewable Energy Policy in the 2007 Farm Bill, by Randy Schnepf.
In addition to 2007 farm bill developments, both the House and Senate have
passed different versions of new energy bills that contain many biofuel provisions
similar to those contained in Title IX of the 2002 farm bill.114 The Senate approved
its version of an energy bill, H.R. 6 (the Renewable Fuels, Consumer Protection, and
Energy Efficiency Act of 2007) on June 21, 2007, while the House approved its own
energy bill, H.R. 3221 (the New Direction for Energy Independence, National
Security, and Consumer Protection Act of 2007) on August 4, 2007. In particular,
Title V of H.R. 3221 contains provisions similar or identical to provisions passed in
Title IX of H.R. 2419. For more information on these energy bills, see CRS Report
RL34136, Biofuels Provisions in H.R. 3221 and H.R. 6: A Side-by-Side Comparison,
by Brent Yacobucci.
Also, on October 15, 2007, the House approved H.Con.Res. 25 expressing the
sense of Congress that it is the goal of the United States that, not later than January 1,
2025, the agricultural, forestry, and working land of the United States should provide
from renewable resources not less than 25 percent of the total energy consumed in the
United States and continue to produce safe, abundant, and affordable food, feed, and
fiber. A similar bill, S.Con.Res. 3, has been introduced in the Senate and referred to
the Agriculture Committee.
In addition, several bills will likely be introduced that seek to provide incentives
for the production and use of alternative fuel vehicles. See CRS Report RL33564,
Alternative Fuels and Advanced Technology Vehicles: Issues in Congress, by Brent
D. Yacobucci, for a listing of proposed legislation on alternative fuel vehicles. See
CRS Report RS22351, Tax Incentives for Alternative Fuel and Advanced Technology
Vehicles
, by Brent D. Yacobucci, for a description of existing alternative-fuel vehicle
tax incentives.
State Laws and Programs
Several state laws and programs influence the economics of renewable energy
production and use by providing incentives for research, production, and consumption
of renewable fuels such as biofuels and wind energy systems.115 In addition, demand
for agriculture-based renewable energy is being driven, in part, by state Renewable
Portfolio Standards (RPS) that require utilities to obtain set percentages of their
electricity from renewable sources by certain target dates. The amounts and deadlines
vary, but as of January 2006, 34 states had laws instituting RPSs requiring, at a
minimum, that state vehicle fleets procure certain volumes or percentages of
renewable fuels. In several states, the RPS applied state-wide on all motor vehicles;
for example see Minnesota Statutes Section 239.77 which requires that all diesel fuel
114 For more information on these energy bills, see CRS Report RL34136, Biofuels
Provisions in H.R. 3221 and H.R. 6: A Side-by-Side Comparison
, by Brent Yacobucci.
115 For more information on state and federal programs, see State and Federal Incentives and
Laws
, at the DOE’s Alternative Fuels Data Center, [http://www.eere.energy.gov/afdc/
laws/incen_laws.html].

CRS-53
sold or offered for sale in the state for use in internal combustion engines must contain
at least 2% biodiesel fuel by volume. This mandate was to take effect by June 30,
2005, provided certain market conditions were met.116
Administration Proposals
State of the Union (SOU) 2006. In his 2006 SOU, President Bush
introduced the notion of “switchgrass” as a potential energy source and announced the
“Advanced Energy Initiative,” which included a goal of making cellulosic ethanol cost
competitive with corn-based ethanol by 2012.117
State of the Union (SOU) 2007. In his 2007 SOU, President Bush
announced his “20 in 10” plan, which calls for reducing U.S. gasoline consumption
by 20% in 10 years (i.e., by 2017).118 The President proposed two major approaches
for achieving his “20 in 10” goal.
! Increasing the supply of renewable and alternative fuels by setting a
mandatory fuels standard to require 35 billion gallons of renewable
and alternative fuels in 2017. This would be nearly five times the
2012 RFS target of 7.5 billions now in law. If accomplished, the
Administration estimates that this would displace 15% of projected
annual gasoline use in 2017.
! Reforming and modernizing corporate average fuel economy (CAFÉ)
standards for cars and extending the current light truck rule.
According to the Administration, this will reduce projected annual
gasoline use by up to 8.5 billion gallons by 2017, a further 5%
reduction that, in combination with increasing the supply of
renewable and alternative fuels, will bring the total reduction in
projected annual gasoline use to 20%.
According to the Administration, the President’s FY2008 budget will request
$2.7 billion for the advanced energy initiative — an increase of 26% above the 2007
request and 53% above 2006. President Bush has called for increased federal
investment in hydrogen fuel technology research, as well as increased investment in
advanced batteries for hybrids and plug-in hybrids, biodiesel fuels, and new methods
of producing ethanol and other biofuels.
USDA’s New Farm Bill Proposal (January 2007). On January 31, 2007,
Agriculture Secretary Mike Johanns announced USDA’s 2007 farm bill proposal. The
116 For more information on Minnesota vehicle fuel acquisition requirements, visit
[http://www.eere.energy.gov/afdc/laws/incen_laws.html].
117 More information on the Advanced Energy Initiative from the 2006 SOU is available at
[http://www.whitehouse.gov/stateoftheunion/2006/energy/index.html].
118 More information see the White House “Fact Sheet: Strengthening America’s Energy
Security and Improving the Environment,” January 24, 2007; available at [http://www.
whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2007/01/20070124-5.html].

CRS-54
proposal includes $1.6 billion in new funding over ten years for energy innovation,
including bio-energy research, energy efficiency grants, and $2 billion in loans for
cellulosic ethanol plants.119
For More Information
Renewable Energy
DOE, Energy Information Agency (EIA), [http://www.eia.doe.gov/].
DOE, National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL), Renewable Energy,
[http://www.nrel.gov/].
USDA, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy
Program, Renewable Energy, [http://www.ornl.gov/sci/eere/renewables/index.htm].
USDA, Office of the Chief Economist, Office of Energy Policy and New Uses
(OEPNU), [http://www.usda.gov/oce/energy/index.htm].
The Sustainable Energy Coalition, [http://www.sustainableenergy.org/].
Eidman, Vernon R. “Agriculture as a Producer of Energy,” presentation at USDA
conference Agriculture as a Producer and Consumer of Energy, June 24, 2004.
Biofuels
American Coalition for Ethanol, [http://www.ethanol.org/].
Bio, Achieving Sustainable Production of Agricultural Biomass for Biorefinery
Feedstock
, ©2006 Biotechnology Industry Organization; available at [http://www.
bio.org/ind/biofuel/SustainableBiomassReport.pdf].
CRS Report RL33290, Fuel Ethanol: Background and Public Policy Issues, by Brent
D. Yacobucci.
CRS Report RL33564, Alternative Fuels and Advanced Technology Vehicles: Issues
in Congress
, by Brent D. Yacobucci.
CRS Report RL33572, Biofuels Incentives: A Summary of Federal Programs, by
Brent D. Yacobucci.
Distillery and Fuel Ethanol Worldwide Network, [http://www.distill.com/].
119 Title-by-Title details of USDA’s 2007 Farm Bill proposal are available at [http://www.
usda.gov/wps/portal/usdafarmbill?navtype=SU&navid=FARM_BILL_FORUMS].

CRS-55
DOE, Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE), Alternative Fuels Data
Center
, [http://www.eere.energy.gov/afdc/].
Eidman, Vernon R. Agriculture’s Role in Energy Production: Current Levels and
Future Prospects
, paper presented at a conference, “Energy from Agriculture: New
Technologies, Innovative Programs and Success Stories,” December 14-15, 2005, St.
Louis, Missouri; available at [http://www.farmfoundation.org/projects/documents/
EIDMANpaperrevisedTOPOST12-19-05.pdf].
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Fuels and Fuel Additives, Alternative Fuels,
[http://www.epa.gov/otaq/consumer/fuels/altfuels/altfuels.htm].
Hill, Jason, Erik Nelson, David Tilman, Stephen Polasky, and Douglas Tiffany.
“Environmental, economic, and energetic costs and benefits of biodiesel and ethanol
biofuels,” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Vol. 103, No. 30, July
25, 2006, 11206-11210.
Koplow, Doug. Biofuels — At What Cost? Government Support for Ethanol and
Biodiesel in the United States
, Global Subsidies Initiative of the International Institute
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[http://www.globalsubsidies.org].
National Biodiesel Board (NBB), [http://www.biodiesel.org/].
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USDA, The Economic Feasibility of Ethanol Production from Sugar in the United
States
, Office of Energy Policy and New Uses (OEPNU), Office of the Chief
Economist (OCE), USDA, and Louisiana State University (LSU), July 2006; available
at [http://www.usda.gov/oce/reports/energy/EthanolSugarFeasibilityReport3.pdf].
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Economic Benefits of Biofuel Production
De La Torre Ugarte, D., M. Walsh, H. Shapouri, and S. Slinsky. The Economic
Impacts of Bioenergy Crop Production on U.S. Agriculture
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of the Chief Economist (OCE), Office of Energy Policy and New Uses (OEPNU),
February 2003; available at [http://www.usda.gov/oce/reports/energy/AER816Bi.pdf].
Food and Agricultural Policy Research Institute (FAPRI), Implications of Increased
Ethanol Production for U.S. Agriculture
, FAPRI-UMC Report #10-05, August 22,
2005; available at [http://www.fapri.missouri.edu/].
FAPRI, Returns to Biofuels Production, FAPRI-UMC Report #06-07, March 2007.
FAPRI, Economic Impacts of Not Extending Biofuels Subsidies, FAPRI-UMC Report
#17-07, May 2007.

CRS-56
FAPRI, Impacts of a 15 Billion Gallon Biofuels Use Mandate, FAPRI-UMC Report
#22-07, June 2007.
Gallagher, P. Otto, H. Shapouri, J. Price, G. Schamel, M. Dikeman, and H. Brubacker,
The Effects of Expanding Ethanol Markets on Ethanol Production, Feed Markets, and
the Iowa Economy
, Staff Paper #342, Dept. of Economics, Iowa St. Univ., June 30,
2001.
Gallagher, P., E. Wailes, M. Dikeman, J. Fritz, W. Gauther, and H. Shapouri, Biomass
From Crop Residues: Cost and Supply Estimates,
AER 819, USDA, OCE, OEPNU,
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McElroy, Michael B. “Chapter 12: Ethanol from Biomass: Can it Substitute for
Gasoline?” Draft from book in progress available at [http://www-as.harvard.edu/
people/faculty/mbm/Ethanol_chapter1.pdf]
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analysispaper/biodiesel/].
Shapouri, Hosein, James Duffield, Andrew McAloon, Michael Wang. “The 2001 Net
Energy Balance of Corn-ethanol.” Paper presented at the Corn Utilization and
Technology Conference, June 7-9, 2004, Indianapolis, IN.
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Swenson, Dave S. Input-Outrageous: The Economic Impacts of Modern Biofuels
Production
, Iowa State University webpapers, June 2006; available at
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Tiffany, Douglas G. and Vernon R. Eidman. Factors Associated with Success of Fuel
Ethanol Producers
, Dept of Applied Economics, Univ. of Minnesota, Staff Paper P03-
7, August 2003.
Urbanchuk, J. M. The Contribution of the Ethanol Industry to the American Economy
in 2004
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Requirement for Highway Motor Fuels
, November 7, 2001.
USDA. An Analysis of the Effects of an Expansion in Biofuel Demand on U.S.
Agriculture
, OCE/ERS, May 2007.

CRS-57
Anaerobic Digestion Systems
The Agricultural Marketing Research Center, Bio-Mass/Forages, at
[http://www.agmrc.org/agmrc/commodity/biomass/].
Consequences of Expanded Agriculture-Based Biofuel Production
Avery, Dennis. “Biofuels, Food, or Wildlife? The Massive Land Costs of U.S.
Ethanol,” No. 5, Competitive Enterprise Institute, September 21, 2006.
Babcock, Bruce, and D.A. Hennessy, “Getting More Corn Acres From the Corn Belt”
Iowa Ag Review, Vol. 12, No. 4, Fall 2006, pp. 6-7
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Agriculture, Food & Resource Issues
, No. 5, 2004, pp. 204-211.
Doornbosch, Richard, and Ronald Steenblik. Biofuels: is the Cure Worse that the
Disease?
, SG/SD/RT(2007)3, paper presented at OECD Roundtable on Sustainable
Development, Paris, September 11-12, 2007.
Elobeid, Amani, S. Tokgoz, D.J. Hayes, B.A. Babcock, and C.E. Hart. “The Long-
Run Impact of Corn-Based Ethanol on the Grain, Oilseed, and Livestock Sectors: A
Preliminary Assessment,” CARD Briefing Paper 06-BP 49, November 2006.
Hart, Chad E. “Feeding the Ethanol Boom: Where Will the Corn Come From?” Iowa
Ag Review
, Vol. 12, No. 4, Fall 2006, pp. 2-3
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Perspectives, Inc.), December 14, 2004.
McElroy, Michael B. “Chapter 12: Ethanol from Biomass: Can it Substitute for
Gasoline?” Draft from book in progress available at [http://www-as.harvard.edu/
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United States
, National Research Council, ISBN: 0-309-11360-1, 2007; available at
[http://www.nap.edu/catalog/12039.html].
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the U.S. Corn Industry
, Agribusiness & Applied Economics Report No. 580, Center
for Agricultural Policy and Trade Statistics, North Dakota St. Univ., March 2006.
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Energy, and Crop Markets,” Working Paper 06-EP 435, CARD, November 2006.
Wisner, R., and P. Baumel, “Ethanol, Exports, and Livestock: Will There be Enough
Corn to Supply Future Needs?,” Feedstuffs, no. 30, vol. 76, July 26, 2004.

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Wind Energy Systems
American Wind Energy Association (AWEA), [http://www.awea.org/].
DOE, Wind Energy Program, [http://www1.eere.energy.gov/windandhydro/].
The Utility Wind Interest Group, [http://www.uwig.org].
Tiffany, Douglas G. Co-Generation Using Wind and Biodiesel-Powered Generators,
Dept of Applied Econ., Univ. of Minnesota, Staff Paper P05-10, October 2005.