In early March, the State of Minnesota and the Renewable Fuels Association (RFA) released parts of a screening study in response to legislation passed by the State of Minnesota requiring the use of 20% volume ethanol blended gasoline (E20). Under the Clean Air Act, E20 must meet certain tests before being allowed for use in most vehicles and small engines.
After one year of testing, the study sponsors concluded that E20 will not harm current automotive fuel systems. They also claimed E20 provided similar power and performance to 10% ethanol blended fuel throughout the entire calendar year. As a result, Minnesota Governor Tim Pawlenty's lauded the study and urged for an increase in the blend rate.
As a member of AllSAFE, an organization that represents 13 national consumer, manufacturing, and gasoline retailer associations and speaks on fuel-related legislation for over 250 million Americans that own and operate over 400 million products, the study's conclusions set off some very loud alarm bells.
Let's be clear. We are not anti-ethanol. We certainly support the national move toward the increased use of ethanol, turning plants and plant material into fuel that can decrease our dependence on gasoline and help the U.S. achieve "energy security."
Many point to Brazil as a prime example of higher ethanol blends helping a country become energy independent, but we can't compare ourselves to this model. Brazil is a different market place with much less stringent emission standards and a different climate. Also, because higher ethanol blended fuels are available in large amounts, Brazil has invested in a host of new "flex-fuel" vehicles (FFV), which are specifically designed to run on any level of ethanol. With the exception of flex-fuel vehicles, U.S. products were designed to run on zero or 10% ethanol only.
Our main concern at AllSAFE is just as our name implies -- the safety of more than 400 million products currently in use, including recreational boats and marine engines, chainsaws, lawnmowers, motor vehicles, motorcycles, all terrain vehicles (ATVs), snowmobiles, generators, and related vehicles and equipment.
There are several flaws with the released study. First, it tested only recent model automobiles, but the national fleet still includes hundreds of millions of older model cars. Also, it failed to study the millions of small engine products currently used by consumers and to test emission impacts and vehicle durability over time.
When ethanol levels are raised, small engines react differently and in a potentially dangerous way -- boat engines may seize up and gas may leak, the RPM increases on chainsaws as the clutch and chain are constantly engaged, and rubber and other components in small engine products grow corroded. All of this can lead to engine and product failure, and potentially, safety hazards.
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